Euripides first competed in the
Dionysia, the famous Athenian dramatic festival, in 455 BC, one year after the death of Aeschylus. He came in third, reportedly because he refused to cater to the fancies of the judges. It was not until 441 BC that he won first prize, and over the course of his lifetime, Euripides claimed a mere four victories. He also won one posthumous victory.
He was a frequent target of Aristophanes' humour. He appears as a character in
The Acharnians,
Thesmophoriazusae, and most memorably in
The Frogs, where
Dionysus travels to
Hades to bring Euripides back from the dead. After a competition of poetry, the god opts to bring Aeschylus instead.
Euripides' final competition in Athens was in 408 BC; there is a story that he left Athens embittered over his defeats. He accepted an invitation by the king of Macedon in 408 or
407 BC, and once there he wrote
Archelaus in honour of his host. He is believed to have died there in winter 407/6 BC; ancient biographers have told many stories about his death, but the simple truth was that it was probably his first exposure to the harsh Macedonia winter which killed him. (Rutherford 1996).
The Bacchae was performed after his death in 405 BC and won first prize.
When compared with Aeschylus, who won thirteen times, and Sophocles, with eighteen victories, Euripides was the least honoured of the three—at least in his lifetime. Later in the 4th century BC, the
dramas of Euripides became the most popular. His works influenced
New Comedy and
Roman drama, and were later idolized by the
French classicists; his influence on drama reaches modern times.
Euripides' greatest works include
Alcestis,
Medea,
Electra, and
The Bacchae. Also considered notable is
Cyclops, one of the only complete
satyr plays currently in existence.
The manuscript, apparently part of a multiple volume, alphabetically-arranged collection of Euripides' works, whose preservation accounts for the comparatively large number of extant plays of Euripides, was rediscovered after lying in a monastic collection for approximately eight hundred years.
In June
2005, classicists at
Oxford University employed
infrared technology—previously used for
satellite imaging—to detect previously unknown material by Euripides in fragments of the
Oxyrhynchus papyri, http://www.papyrology.ox.ac.uk/ a collection of ancient manuscripts held by the university.
http://www.ox.ac.uk/blueprint/2004-05/3006/25.shtml