Book contents
- Ancient Theatre and Performance Culture around the Black Sea
- Frontispiece
- Ancient Theatre and Performance Culture around the Black Sea
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Notes on Contributors
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- Map
- Part I Approaches
- Part II Places
- 4 The Tragedians of Heraclea and Comedians of Sinope
- 5 The Phanagoria Chous
- 6 Theatre and Performance in the Bosporan Kingdom
- 7 Ancient Theatre in Tauric Chersonesus
- 8 Theatre at Olbia in the Black Sea
- 9 Celebrating Dionysus in Istros and Tomis: Theatrical Manifestations and Artistic Life in Two Ionian Cities of the Black Sea
- 10 Ancient Theatres and Theatre Art of the Bulgarian Black Sea Coast and Thracian Hinterland
- Part III Plays
- Part IV Performative Presences
- Epilogue: Dancing around the Black Sea: Xenophon, Pseudo-Scymnus and Lucian’s Bacchants
- References
- Black Sea Index
6 - Theatre and Performance in the Bosporan Kingdom
from Part II - Places
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 November 2019
- Ancient Theatre and Performance Culture around the Black Sea
- Frontispiece
- Ancient Theatre and Performance Culture around the Black Sea
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Notes on Contributors
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- Map
- Part I Approaches
- Part II Places
- 4 The Tragedians of Heraclea and Comedians of Sinope
- 5 The Phanagoria Chous
- 6 Theatre and Performance in the Bosporan Kingdom
- 7 Ancient Theatre in Tauric Chersonesus
- 8 Theatre at Olbia in the Black Sea
- 9 Celebrating Dionysus in Istros and Tomis: Theatrical Manifestations and Artistic Life in Two Ionian Cities of the Black Sea
- 10 Ancient Theatres and Theatre Art of the Bulgarian Black Sea Coast and Thracian Hinterland
- Part III Plays
- Part IV Performative Presences
- Epilogue: Dancing around the Black Sea: Xenophon, Pseudo-Scymnus and Lucian’s Bacchants
- References
- Black Sea Index
Summary
If we are to understand the theatre and broader culture of the Bosporan kingdom, it is important to be clear from the outset about the kingdom’s development and physical environment. For, although details are scarce, we may be sure enough that the kingdom’s history and geography were key to its theatre, most obviously in its links to Athens and its ritual and cultural responses to its volcanic landscape. That holds good both for the works created in and for the Bosporus itself and also for the selection of Athenian and other works that might be presented in the Bosporus. Aeschylus’ Persae, for example, gains a new dimension when located on a Bosporan stage (if indeed it ever was) not only by virtue of Bosporan links to Athens, but also on account of the Bosporus’ own emergence from Persian control. Similarly, the apparently distant Women of Etna by the same playwright would have much in common with a Bosporan kingdom in which too autocrats were concerned to found cities in a volcanic landscape, as we shall see.
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- Ancient Theatre and Performance Culture Around the Black Sea , pp. 82 - 105Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2019
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