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GREEK LITERATURE.
Title: GREEK LITERATURE.
Category: /Social Sciences/Education
Details: Words: 4154 | Pages: 15 (approximately 235 words/page)
GREEK LITERATURE.
Category: /Social Sciences/Education
Details: Words: 4154 | Pages: 15 (approximately 235 words/page)
The great British philosopher-mathematician Alfred North Whitehead once commented that all philosophy is but a footnote to Plato . A similar point can be made regarding Greek literature as a whole. Over a period of more than ten centuries, the ancient Greeks created a literature of such brilliance that it has rarely been equaled and never surpassed. In poetry, tragedy, comedy, and history, Greek writers created masterpieces that have inspired, influenced, and challenged readers to the
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people. This literature including poems, romances, and epics was only written from the 12th century onward. Of the epics, the most memorable is the story of Digenis Akritas, based on a historical figure who died in about 788. It presents Akritas as the ideal medieval Greek hero. After the capture of Constantinople by the Turks, Greek national life and culture ended for centuries, as did literary production. It was only revived when Greece became independent in 1829.