Home Classical, Ancient Near Eastern & Egyptian Studies Cyprus and its Myths on the Roman Stage
Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed Requires Authentication

Cyprus and its Myths on the Roman Stage

  • Costas Panayotakis
Become an author with De Gruyter Brill

Abstract

This chapter deals with the Roman perceptions of Cyprus in the Latin comedy of the early Republic (late third to late second centuries BCE). By focussing on the representation of Cyprus in select non-dramatic works of Ennius and in the corpus of the comic playwrights Plautus, Terence, and Turpilius, this chapter argues that the sources seem to have portrayed the island culturally and geographically as a distant but certainly accessible and commercially important location which had strong associations with sex (but not with love) in the Roman theatrical imagination. This portrayal may not have represented historical reality, but it surely squares with the stereotypical themes dominating the fabula palliata.

Abstract

This chapter deals with the Roman perceptions of Cyprus in the Latin comedy of the early Republic (late third to late second centuries BCE). By focussing on the representation of Cyprus in select non-dramatic works of Ennius and in the corpus of the comic playwrights Plautus, Terence, and Turpilius, this chapter argues that the sources seem to have portrayed the island culturally and geographically as a distant but certainly accessible and commercially important location which had strong associations with sex (but not with love) in the Roman theatrical imagination. This portrayal may not have represented historical reality, but it surely squares with the stereotypical themes dominating the fabula palliata.

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter I
  2. Preface and Acknowledgements V
  3. Contents VII
  4. Introduction 1
  5. Part I: Cyprus in Latin Literature
  6. Cyprus and its Myths on the Roman Stage 13
  7. Venus on Cyprus: Interlinked Lists of Aphrodite’s Cypriot Sanctuaries in Latin Poetry 33
  8. Idalion, Satrachus and the Annales of Volusius: The Reception of Cyprus in the Carmina Catulli 51
  9. Nil desperandum …. cras ingens iterabimus aequor (Hor. Carm. 1.7): The Foundation of Salamis by a Bastard Archer as an Exemplum in Latin Literature 65
  10. Balance and Excess in Ovid’s Pygmalion Story 87
  11. Was Cyprus Special? The Case of Two Latin Poets 103
  12. Infamem nimio calore Cypron: Ancient Epigrams on Flacci in Cyprus 111
  13. The Digression on Cyprus in Claudian’s Epithalamium de nuptiis Honorii et Mariae 131
  14. Part II: Cyprus after Antiquity
  15. Venus and Adonis from Enheduanna to Shakespeare: The Significance of Ovid’s Cypriot Metamorphoses 153
  16. Pilgrims, Merchants and Lovers: The Island of Cyprus in Boccaccio’s Decameron (via Ovid’s Metamorphoses) 175
  17. Venus of Paphos in the Latin Poetry of the Quattrocento 201
  18. Ovid’s ‘Good’ Women: The Cypriot Exemplum Against the Background of the Statue (R)evolution 221
  19. Osmosis between High Genres: Ovid’s Tragic Formation of Myrrha’s Tale (Met. 10.298–502) and its Reception in Alfieri’s Homonymous Tragedy 249
  20. Travel, Classical Traditions and Empire: Western Travellers to Cyprus in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries 265
  21. List of Contributors 289
  22. General Index 293
  23. Index Locorum 299
Downloaded on 31.12.2025 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783110984309-002/html
Scroll to top button