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Licensed Unlicensed Requires Authentication Published by De Gruyter (A) November 18, 2011

Theatres for Hire

  • William J. Slater
From the journal Philologus

Abstract

The Piraeus were certainly leased out to private individuals in classical antiquity. It has been suggested that this was common and was true even for the Theatre of Dionysus in Athens, and that this model was true for impermanent wooden theatres. This article argues a contrary position: that there is only one certain example of a leased theatre, which may for all we know have been unique. The other alleged parallel, the deme theatre in Acharnae, is argued to be wrongly supplemented and explained. Some other epigraphical examples of theatres are cited for different funding mechanisms, and it is also argued that wooden theatres were neither leased nor necessarily impermanent. We have especially no reason to think that the Theatre of Dionysus was leased in the time of Theophrastus.

Published Online: 2011-11-18
Published in Print: 2011-11

© by Akademie Verlag, Ontario L8S 4M2, Germany

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