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==Summary==
==Summary==
''This obscure Greek drama from the fourth century BCE, thought lost for over a millennium, contains one of the earliest descriptions of ancient Byzantium, referring to the city as a rowdy port full of drunks and crooks. Whether this was surprising to audiences at the time is unknown, but that this was worth mentioning seems significant of something. Jealousy, perhaps.''
''This obscure Greek drama from the fourth century BCE, thought lost for over a millennium, contains one of the earliest descriptions of ancient Byzantium, referring to the city as a rowdy port full of drunks and crooks. Whether this was surprising to audiences at the time is unknown, but that this was worth mentioning seems significant of something. Jealousy, perhaps.''
==Trivia==
*Even if Ezio allegedly retrieved a copy of the play, it actually is lost in real life and survives only in fragments.


==Reference==
==Reference==

Revision as of 21:09, 26 November 2016


The Flute Girl was a book written by Menander obtained by Ezio Auditore in the 16th century in Constantinople.

Summary

This obscure Greek drama from the fourth century BCE, thought lost for over a millennium, contains one of the earliest descriptions of ancient Byzantium, referring to the city as a rowdy port full of drunks and crooks. Whether this was surprising to audiences at the time is unknown, but that this was worth mentioning seems significant of something. Jealousy, perhaps.

Trivia

  • Even if Ezio allegedly retrieved a copy of the play, it actually is lost in real life and survives only in fragments.

Reference