eul_aid: dkc
Καλλίας ὁ κωμικός
Callias the Comic Poet
2 works

Callias was an Athenian comic poet active in the 5th century BCE during the period known as Old Comedy. He is often identified as Callias, son of Hipponicus, a member of a famously wealthy and prominent Athenian family. The date of his career is firmly placed by his competition against major playwrights like Aristophanes; ancient records indicate he defeated Aristophanes' first version of The Clouds at the City Dionysia in 423 BCE.

He is credited with a small number of comedies, of which only two titles survive with certainty from fragments and ancient references: Pedetai (The Prisoners) and Grammatike Theoria (The Scholarship Tour or The Alphabet Show). Both plays are lost and known only through fragments.

Callias is historically significant as a successful contemporary of Aristophanes, illustrating the vibrant competitive atmosphere of Athenian theater. His victory over the original Clouds is a notable event in the history of comedy. His play Grammatike Theoria is of particular interest to scholars. According to modern interpretations, its fragments suggest it was a satire of intellectual and sophistic trends, possibly featuring a contest between letters of the alphabet. This places his work within a subgenre of Old Comedy that engaged with contemporary linguistic and philosophical debates. As a probable aristocrat, his comedies provide a perspective from within the social elite that was often the target of comic ridicule.

Available Works

Ἀποσπάσματα περὶ Βίου Καθημερινοῦ
Fragments on Daily Life
19 passages
Ἀποσπάσματα
Symposium and Satirical Fragments
37 passages

Sources