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Quiz about I Write the Plays Very Old Plays
Quiz about I Write the Plays Very Old Plays

I Write the Plays (Very Old Plays) Quiz


We have around eighty surviving plays works by eight ancient dramatists: Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides, Aristophanes, Menander, Plautus, Terence, and Seneca. The following are questions about their plays.

A multiple-choice quiz by Ampelos. Estimated time: 4 mins.
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Author
Ampelos
Time
4 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
358,377
Updated
Jul 23 22
# Qns
10
Difficulty
Tough
Avg Score
5 / 10
Plays
400
Awards
Top 20% Quiz
Last 3 plays: Guest 31 (7/10), Guest 206 (3/10), Guest 108 (2/10).
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Question 1 of 10
1. In what tragedy would we meet a character who murders his brother's sons and then serves them in a stew to their unknowing father? Hint


Question 2 of 10
2. "Make love, not war" would be an appropriate sub-title for what comedy by Aristophanes? Hint


Question 3 of 10
3. What comedy was discovered on papyrus and first published in 1957? Hint


Question 4 of 10
4. "Adelphoe" or "The Brothers" is considered to be the masterpiece by what ancient dramatist? Hint


Question 5 of 10
5. Which of these tragedies by Sophocles does NOT deal in some way with the Trojan War? Hint


Question 6 of 10
6. In what play by Euripides does a wife die willingly to save her husband? Hint


Question 7 of 10
7. Which comedy by Plautus was the inspiration for Shakespeare's "A Comedy of Errors"? Hint


Question 8 of 10
8. Which is not one of the tragedies that make up Aeschylus' famed trilogy, "Oresteia"? Hint


Question 9 of 10
9. Which Greek play does not feature a woman killing a member of her own family? Hint


Question 10 of 10
10. Which heroine in Sophocles loyally accompanies her father into exile? Hint



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Most Recent Scores
Mar 30 2024 : Guest 31: 7/10
Mar 20 2024 : Guest 206: 3/10
Mar 02 2024 : Guest 108: 2/10
Mar 01 2024 : Guest 50: 5/10

Score Distribution

quiz
Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. In what tragedy would we meet a character who murders his brother's sons and then serves them in a stew to their unknowing father?

Answer: "Thyestes" by Seneca.

Seneca (4 BC to AD 65) was a dramatist from the Roman period, who was among other things the tutor of the young emperor Nero. His "Thyestes" is one of the most gruesome plays from any world literature. Atreus, father of Agamemnon and Menelaus, pretends to be reconciled with his estranged brother, Thyestes, but in fact murders Thyestes' children and then serves them in a stew to their father.
2. "Make love, not war" would be an appropriate sub-title for what comedy by Aristophanes?

Answer: Lysistrata

"Lysistrata" was staged in 411 BC, during the long and bloody war between Athens and Sparta (the Peloponnesian War). In Aristophanes' comedy all the wives of Greece stage a sex-strike to force their men to make peace and thus come home from fighting the war. The strike is very effective and the enemy states of Athens and Sparta are reconciled.
3. What comedy was discovered on papyrus and first published in 1957?

Answer: "Dyskolos" by Menander

Before 1957 we had only fragments and incomplete scenes by Menander, who had an immense reputation in the ancient world for his comedies. "Dyskolos", first produced in 316 BC, refers to the main character, Knemon, and has been translated as "The Grouch", "The Bad-Tempered Man", and "Old Cantankerous". Unfortunately for Menander, "Dyskolos" did not live up to his reputation.
4. "Adelphoe" or "The Brothers" is considered to be the masterpiece by what ancient dramatist?

Answer: Terence

Terence (195 - 159 BC) was a Roman comic dramatist, known for his comic dramas with elegant language and subtle interaction between characters. He wrote only six known plays, of which "Brothers" (produced in 160 BC) is considered his best work. It depicts a crotchety old man, with two very different sons, the "brothers" of the title.
5. Which of these tragedies by Sophocles does NOT deal in some way with the Trojan War?

Answer: The Women of Trachis

"The Women of Trachis" tells the story of the death of Heracles at the hands of his unwitting wife, Deianeira. "Ajax" and "Philoctetes" are both set during the tenth year of the Trojan War, while "Electra" is part of the aftermath of Agamemnon's return home from Troy.
6. In what play by Euripides does a wife die willingly to save her husband?

Answer: Alcestis

In "Alcestis", first produced in 438 BC, Admetus, king in Thessaly, has been granted a favour by the god Apollo by which he does not have to die if he can persuade someone else to die in his place. Only his wife, Alcestis, is willing to die for him, and the play shows her death and his intense sorrow, before an unexpected happy ending reverses all that has gone before.
7. Which comedy by Plautus was the inspiration for Shakespeare's "A Comedy of Errors"?

Answer: The Brothers Menaechmus

Plautus (254-184 BC) was a Roman comic dramatist, of whose plays twenty have survived complete. In "The Brothers Menaechmus" we have a pair of twins, separated while they were still young and both now conveniently called "Menaechmus". One, Menaechmus of Syracuse, travels to Epidamnus, where unknown to him his brother lives. A comedy of mistaken identities ensues.
8. Which is not one of the tragedies that make up Aeschylus' famed trilogy, "Oresteia"?

Answer: Suppliants

"Oresteia" was first produced in 458 BC and is made up of "Agamemnon", "Libation Bearers", and "Eumenides". It dramatises the story of Agamemnon's return from Troy and his murder at the hands of his wfie Clytemnestra, her murder some years later by her son Orestes, and Orestes' trial and acquittal at the first murder trial in human history, held at Athens and presided over by the goddess Athena.
9. Which Greek play does not feature a woman killing a member of her own family?

Answer: "Iphigenia at Aulis" by Euripides

There is family murder in Euripides' "Iphigeneia at Aulis", but it is Iphigeneia who is killed by her father, Agamemnon. Medea slays her own two children to spite their father Jason, Clytemnestra kills her husband Agamemnon to avenge Iphigeneia, and Electra (with her brother Orestes) murders Clytemnestra in her turn.
10. Which heroine in Sophocles loyally accompanies her father into exile?

Answer: Antigone

All these are characters in Sophocles' plays. In "Oedipus at Colonus" Antigone goes into exile with her father Oedipus when he has blinded himself after discovering the horrible truth about his own life. Ismene is her sister, who does join them during the play, but has not accompanied her father all through his exile. Deineira is the wife of Heracles who unwittingly brings about his death in "The Women of Trachis", and Tecmessa is the concubine of Ajax in "Ajax".
Source: Author Ampelos

This quiz was reviewed by FunTrivia editor looney_tunes before going online.
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