Nicostratus (comic poet)
Nicostratus (Νικόστρατος) was a Greek playwright of the Middle Comedy. He was said to be the youngest son of Aristophanes. Photius claims that Nicostratus leaped from the Leucadian Rock due to an unrequited love for a woman named Tettigidaea (Ancient Greek: Τεττιγιδαία) from Myrrinous and was "cured" of his love.[1]
Surviving Titles and Fragments
The following twenty three titles, along with associated fragments, are all that survive of Nicostratus' work:
- Favorite Slave
- Female Love-Rival
- Antyllus
- Man Being Driven Away
- Kings
- The Accuser
- Hecate
- Hesiod
- The Hierophant
- The Bed
- Laconians
- The Cook
- Oenopion
- The Bird-Catcher
- Pandarus
- Pandrosus
- Woman Swimming Alongside
- Citizens
- Wealth
- The Syrian
- The Moneylender
- The Falsely-Branded
- The Bustard-Bird
gollark: How unexpected.
gollark: It *might* be. But that code path shouldn't be being run.
gollark: Though if you deploy this you'll face my wrath anyway.
gollark: Fix it or face my wrath?
gollark: It... doesn't? Please fix that.
References
- Photius, Cod, 190, p. 153, ed. Bekk.
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