词条 | Amphitryon (Plautus play) |
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| image = | caption = | writer = Plautus | characters = Mercury Jupiter Sosia (Amphitryon’s slave) Amphitryon Alcmena (Amphitryon’s wife) Blepharo (ship’s pilot) Bromia (Alcmena’s maid) | setting = Thebes, before the house of Amphitryon }} Amphitryon or Amphitruo is a Latin play for the early Roman theatre by playwright Titus Maccius Plautus. It is Plautus’ only play on a mythological subject; he refers to it as a tragicomoedia (tragic comedy) in the prologue. The play is mostly extant, but includes several large missing sections in its latter portion. The plot of the play involves Amphitryon’s jealous and confused reaction to Alcmena’s seduction by Jupiter, and ends with the birth of Hercules. PlotAmphitryon begins with a prologue given by the god Mercury, in which he gives some background information to the audience. Amphitryon and his slave Sosia have been away at war and are returning to Thebes. Meanwhile, the god Jupiter is sleeping with Amphitryon’s wife Alcmena. Jupiter is in the guise of Amphitryon so that Alcmena is unaware that he is not her husband. Mercury's job is to buy his father Jupiter some time by deceiving those who would interfere. He changes his appearance to look like the slave Sosia, and when the real Sosia arrives, he beats him up and sends him away from the house. Thoroughly confused by having been beat up by himself, Sosia returns to the ship to relay what happened to his master Amphitryon. The following morning, Amphitryon sets off for the house, annoyed by his slave's foolish sounding story. Jupiter leaves only moments before Amphitryon arrives, and when Alcmena sees her real husband, she is confused as to why he has returned. Amphitryon doesn't appreciate this strange welcome after being gone for so many months, and confusion turns to anger and jealousy after learning that she has slept with a man who is not himself. After a long argument, Alcmena is ready to leave her untrusting husband but is stopped by Jupiter. He soon begins to set things right, and in a miraculous event, Alcmena gives birth to twin boys. One is the son of Amphitryon, the other is Hercules, the son of Jupiter. To quell Amphitryon’s anger, he explains to him what he did, and Amphitryon is then honored to have shared his wife with a god. AdaptationsIn 1621 the German poet laureate Joannes Burmeister published a Neo-Latin adaptation, titled Mater-Virgo (The Virgin Mother), about the Nativity of Jesus. In it Amphitryon became Joseph, Alcmena became the Virgin Mary, and Sosia became the angel Gabriel.[1] The last known copy of the book went missing from the Berlin library in World War II and exists now only in fragments. Translations
References1. ^Fontaine, Michael. 2015. Joannes Burmeister: Aulularia and Other Inversions of Plautus. Leuven: Leuven University Press. 2. ^{{cite book |author=Plautus |title=The Comedies of Plautus |translator=Henry Thomas Riley |year=1912 | publisher=G. Bell and Sons}} 3. ^{{cite book |author=Plautus |author2=Translated by Paul Nixon |title= Plautus, I, Amphitryon. The Comedy of Asses. The Pot of Gold. The Two Bacchises. The Captives |year=1916 |ISBN=978-0-674-99067-8 |publisher=Loeb Classical Library}} 4. ^{{cite book |author=Sir Robert Allison |title=The Complete Roman Drama |year=1942 |publisher=Random House}} 5. ^{{cite book |title=Plautus: The Rope and Other Plays |author=Plautus |author2=Translated by E. F. Watling | year=1964 |publisher=Penguin}} 6. ^{{cite book |title=Three Plays by Plautus |author=Plautus |author2=Translated by Paul Roche |year=1968 |publisher=Mentor}} 7. ^{{cite book |year=1970 |title=Five Roman Comedies |author=Constance Carrier |editor=Palmer Bovie |publisher=E.P. Dutton}} 8. ^{{cite book |title=Plautus: Amphitryon and Two Other Plays |author=Plautus |author2=Translated by Lionel Casson |publisher=W.W. Norton |year=1971}} 9. ^{{cite book |author=Plautus |author2=Translated by Wolfgang de Melo |title=Plautus, Vol. I: Amphitryon; The Comedy of Asses; The Pot of Gold; The Two Bacchises; The Captives |year=2011 |ISBN=0674996534 |publisher=Loeb Classical Library}} Further reading
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2 : Plays by Plautus|Tragicomedy plays |
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