Didascaly Explained
Didascaly, Greek Antiquity [modern ad. Greek ''διδασκαλία'' instruction, teaching; in plural as in quotation. So modern French ''didascalie''.][1]
- In The Catalogues of the ancient Greek Dramas, with their writers, dates, etc., such as were compiled by Aristotle and others.[2]
- The instruction of the chorus in ancient Greek theatre.[3]
- In ancient Greek theatre, the performance of a tetralogy.[4]
Examples
- 1831 T. L. Peacock, Crotchet Castle vi. M887 70 "Did not they give to melopoeia,, and the sundry forms of didascalies [printed -ics], the precedence of all other matters, civil and military?"
- 1849 Grote Greece 11. lxvii. (1862) VI. 26 "The first, second and third [tetralogies] are specified in the Didaskalics or Theatrical Records."
See also
Notes and References
- Oxford English Dictionary (2003)
- James Murray, Editor (1897) A New English Dictionary on Historical Principles, Clarendon Press Oxford
- Encyclopædia Britannica (2010)
- August Witzschel (1850) The Athenian Stage, F. & J. Rivington, London (translated from the German, digitized by Google Books)