Portal:Comedy/Selected picture/33

Detail, side A from a Sicilian red-figured calyx-krater (c. 350 BC – 340 BC).
Detail, side A from a Sicilian red-figured calyx-krater (c. 350 BC – 340 BC).
Credit: Jastrow

Ancient Greek comedy was one of the final three principal dramatic forms in the theatre of classical Greece (the others being tragedy and the satyr play). Athenian comedy is conventionally divided into three periods, Old Comedy, Middle Comedy, and New Comedy. Old Comedy survives today largely in the form of the eleven surviving plays of Aristophanes, while Middle Comedy is largely lost, i.e. preserved only in relatively short fragments by authors such as Athenaeus of Naucratis. New Comedy is known primarily from the substantial papyrus fragments of Menander.