Homer, Hesiod, Sappho, Pindar among many others.
There is more than one golden age. Which are you asking about Ovid and Hesiod were poets in the Golden Age of ancient Greece.
Plato wanted to banish poets from Greece because he believed that poets had no intellectual utility, rather they played with the audeince's lower part of the mind which dealt with emotions. Plato believed that emotions had a negative effect on the men of Greece. This is a very elementary answer. Plato's 'Republic' has a chapter dedicated to this question.
They were great tragic playwrights (tragic poets, tragedians) of Athens, in ancient Greece.
In Ancient Greece In Ancient Greece In Ancient Greece
The three tragic poets of ancient Greece are Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides. They each wrote plays that explored themes of fate, morality, and the human condition, and their works are considered masterpieces of classical literature.
In Ancient Greece, a storyteller was often referred to as a "rhapsode." Rhapsodes were poets who recited epic poetry, particularly works by Homer, during public performances. They played a crucial role in preserving and sharing cultural narratives and myths through oral tradition.
No, slavery was legal in ancient Greece.
its from ancient Greece
The Olympics were invented in Ancient Greece
Ancient Greece!
ancient greece
Democracy had its origins in ancient Greece.