Ancient Greece: Philosophy, Democracy, and Endless War — Fexingo History
In 425 BCE, as the Peloponnesian War dragged on and Athenian farmers fled their countryside, the comic playwright Aristophanes staged a radical fantasy: a single man making a private peace with Sparta. This episode dives into The Acharnians, the earliest surviving comedy in Western literature. We explore how Aristophanes used satire to critique the democratic war machine, the role of the comic poet as a truth-teller in the city, and the real-life reactions to his anti-war message. Along the way, we meet the chorus of charcoal-burners, the hero Dicaeopolis, and the relentless general Lamachus. We also touch on the City Dionysia festival, the politics of the theater, and the limits of free speech in ancient Athens. How did a comedy about a personal peace treaty become one of the most daring political acts of the 5th century? #Aristophanes #Acharnians #AncientGreekComedy #PeloponnesianWar #Dicaeopolis #Lamachus #CityDionysia #AthenianDemocracy #AntiWar #Satire #ComicPoet #Chorus #Cleon #OldComedy #Theater #AncientHistory #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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