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| | | Drama |
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| 484 BC |
| | Aeschylus wins the prize for tragedy at the City Dionysia in Athens | |
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| 468 BC |
| | Sophocles wins the prize for tragedy in Athens, defeating Aeschylus in the competition | |
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| 454 BC |
| | Euripides enters the drama contest at the City Dionysia in Athens for the first time | |
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| 423 BC |
| | Socrates is now sufficiently prominent to be satirized in Clouds, a comedy by Aristophanes | |
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| c. 425 BC |
| | Aristophanes wins first prize in Athens for his comedy The Acharnians | |
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| c. 185 BC |
| | Plautus and Terence, in the second and third century BC, create a Roman drama based on Greek originals | |
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| c. 380 |
| | Kalidasa, the most distinguished of India's authors in classical Sanskrit, is at the Gupta court in Patna | |
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| c. 1250 |
| | Tannhäuser is one of the Minnesinger, the German equivalents of the French troubadours | |
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| 1587 |
| | Marlowe's first play, Tamburlaine the Great, introduces the swaggering blank verse of Elizabethan and Jacobean drama | |
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| 1592 |
| | After tentative beginnings in the three parts of Henry VI, Shakespeare achieves his first masterpiece on stage with Richard III | |
| | William Shakespeare, engraving by Martin Droeshout, 1623 National Portrait Gallery, London
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