Created page with "{{Imageneed}} '''Learn about the various forms of entertainment that existed in Alexandria.''' <tabber> |-|Greek Entretainment= Like most Greek cities, Alexand..."
'''Learn about the various forms of entertainment that existed in [[Alexandria]].'''
'''Learn about the various forms of entertainment that existed in [[Alexandria]].'''
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|-|Greek Entretainment=
|-|Greek Entretainment=
[[File:DTAE - Wrestlers statuette.png|thumb|250px|Wrestlers (Such Athletes would appear during the Ptolemaia, the royal games) / Ptolemaic Era]]
Like most [[Greece|Greek]] cities, Alexandria offered multiple forms of entertainment. Most were related to cults, religious practices and the festivities surrounding those practices.
Like most [[Greece|Greek]] cities, Alexandria offered multiple forms of entertainment. Most were related to cults, religious practices and the festivities surrounding those practices.
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|-|Games & Competitions=
|-|Games & Competitions=
[[File:DTAE - Red figure vase.png|thumb|250px|Vase with figures in red / 5th Century BCE]]
Games and competitions were organized whenever possible in Locations such as the stadium, the hippodreme and the gymnasium.
Games and competitions were organized whenever possible in Locations such as the stadium, the hippodreme and the gymnasium.
The residents of Alexandria favored such events, where athletes, poets and musicians from [[Egypt|Egypt]] and other cities of the Greek world competed.
The residents of Alexandria favored such events, where athletes, poets and musicians from [[Egypt]] and other cities of the Greek world competed.
|-|The Theater of Alexandria=
|-|The Theater of Alexandria=
(Behind the Scenes)<br><br>Like all good Greek cities, Alexandria had a theater.
[[File:DTAE - Epidaurus Theater.png|thumb|250px|The hills and valleys of Greece: The Epidaurus Theater / 20th Century]]
(Behind the Scenes)
Like all good Greek cities, Alexandria had a theater.
The architecture of this structure is [[Rome|Roman]] in style. This is because the team duplicated a theater from [[Cyrene]].
The architecture of this structure is [[Rome|Roman]] in style. This is because the team duplicated a theater from [[Cyrene]].
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|-|The Grouch=
|-|The Grouch=
[[File:DTAE - Ostrakon.png|thumb|250px|Ostrakon with Menander's "Sentences" / circa 580-640]]
At the theater, one could witness the plays of contemporary, comic and tragic authors.
At the theater, one could witness the plays of contemporary, comic and tragic authors.
Latest revision as of 10:32, 3 September 2022
Learn about the various forms of entertainment that existed in Alexandria.
Wrestlers (Such Athletes would appear during the Ptolemaia, the royal games) / Ptolemaic Era
Like most Greek cities, Alexandria offered multiple forms of entertainment. Most were related to cults, religious practices and the festivities surrounding those practices.
Among those festivities, the most important ones were the dynastic celebrations instituted in honor of the deified Ptolemaic kings and queens.
These celebrations could go on for many days and included sacrifices, offerings, processions and public banquets.
Vase with figures in red / 5th Century BCE
Games and competitions were organized whenever possible in Locations such as the stadium, the hippodreme and the gymnasium.
The residents of Alexandria favored such events, where athletes, poets and musicians from Egypt and other cities of the Greek world competed.
The hills and valleys of Greece: The Epidaurus Theater / 20th Century
(Behind the Scenes)
Like all good Greek cities, Alexandria had a theater.
The architecture of this structure is Roman in style. This is because the team duplicated a theater from Cyrene.
Roman theaters were usually semicircular and built from scratch on a flat area with structures designed to enhance oration.
Greek theaters were more oblong in shape, similar to a horseshoe and favored the slopes of natural hills to support their acoustics.
Ostrakon with Menander's "Sentences" / circa 580-640
At the theater, one could witness the plays of contemporary, comic and tragic authors.
The play you are witnessing below is Menander's Dyskolos, more commonly known as The Grouch, a late and popular entry in the Greek comedies.