Furman Classics. Dramaturg Editions. C. Blackwell, 2026. CC-BY-NC. Code and instructions on Github.

Aristophanes Frogs

Aristophanes, Frogs (βάτραχοι, Ranae). Digital edition based on: Aristophanes Comoediae, vol. 2, F.W. Hall and W.M. Geldart edd. Oxford. Clarendon Press (1907). Original SGML digital edition 1988 by The Perseus Project, G. Crane, ed. This derived edition, C. Blackwell and L. Butler, Furman University. 2026. Source texts and code for this page (and others) on GitHub. Licensed CC-BY-NC. urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0019.tlg009:

Table of Contents

Passages 1–153
Passages 154–338
Passages 339–548
Passages 549–737
Passages 738–916
Passages 917–1063
Passages 1064–1218
Passages 1219–1410
Passages 1411–1533

Aristophanes

Aristophanes was born circa 446 BCE in Athens, in the urban deme of Cydathenaeum (also spelled Kydathenaion), as the son of Philippus. Details of his family background remain sparse, with evidence suggesting a household of sufficient means to afford an education in literature and possibly rhetoric, though not among the elite aristocracy. His deme affiliation placed him within the citizen body of Attica, where participation in the assembly and juries exposed young Athenians to the mechanisms of direct democracy, including its vulnerabilities to charismatic demagogues and impulsive collective decisions.

The early years of Aristophanes coincided with the height of Athenian imperial power under Pericles, but his adolescence aligned with the outbreak of the Peloponnesian War in 431 BCE, when he was approximately 15 years old. This protracted conflict (431–404 BCE) between Athens and Sparta, marked by devastating plagues, naval overreach, and internal factionalism, profoundly influenced his worldview, fostering a persistent critique of warmongering policies and the erosion of traditional civic virtues amid wartime hysteria. Empirical records from Thucydides and contemporary inscriptions underscore how the war amplified democratic excesses, such as the execution of generals after Arginusae in 406 BCE, events that Aristophanes later satirized as symptomatic of mob rule over reasoned governance.

Frogs

Frogs (βάτραχοι, Ranae) (405 BCE): Revived successfully at the Lenaea amid post-Arginusae oligarchic fears and Euripides' death, Dionysus descends to Hades on Heracles' quest to retrieve a tragedian for Athens' depleted stage, judging Aeschylus over Sophocles and Euripides in poetic contest, emphasizing moral instruction over novelty.