menander was a greek playwriter. Menander was born in Athens and lived in Athens his whole entire freakin life. menander wrote over 100+ plays only bits and pieces have been found, today. expet for one which was like his crappy one that was made when he was extremely drunk and high.
Miles Menander Dawson was born in 1863.
Miles Menander Dawson died in 1941.
Menander is pronounced "men-AN-der" with the emphasis on the second syllable.
Menander. has written: 'La donna di Samo (Hellenica et byzantina neapolitana)' 'The Dyskolos' 'The Samia' 'Menandro' 'Menander Rhetor' -- subject(s): Early works to 1800, Public speaking 'Four Plays Of Menander' 'Menander, The Plays and Fragments' 'La Samia (Guide)'
menander was a greek playwriter. Menander was born in Athens and lived in Athens his whole entire freakin life. menander wrote over 100+ plays only bits and pieces have been found, today. expet for one which was like his crappy one that was made when he was extremely drunk and high.
The phrase "Whom the gods love die young" is attributed to the Greek playwright Menander.
Menander
Nobody. Julius Caesar says it in a play by Menander
The famous scientist of the Hellenistic era was Archimedes.
Sebastiana Giuseppina Nervegna has written: 'Studies in the reception of Menander in antiquity (Greece)'
Menander was a famous Greek dramatist/playwright until his death in 290 BC. Most of what we know of him comes from documents of his attendance at various venues, such as the Lenaia festival, and the accounts of others. Although he penned more than a hundred comedies, "Dyskolos" is only surviving play we have on record. All others have been lost to time.
The best example of Hellenistic New Comedy is often attributed to Menander, a prominent playwright of the period. His works, characterized by their focus on everyday life and social situations, include the play "Dyskolos" (The Bad-Tempered Man), which exemplifies the style and themes of New Comedy. Menander's influence can be seen in later Roman comedies, particularly in the works of Plautus and Terence.