Two comedies of the fifth and fourth century BC respectively are known to have been titled
Anagyros and dealt with his grim story of revenge, both lost; one was by
Aristophanes and produced no earlier than 417 BC, and the other by
Diphilus (though Diphilus' might have actually been
Anargyros, "penniless"). Aristophanes' play might have been modelled after and intended as a parody of Euripides' play
Hippolytus, a tragedy in which Queen Phaedra fails to seduce her husband's son Hippolytus and then accuses him of rape. As Anagyros' grim tale is rather unsuitable for a comedy, the best evidence for the poorly-preserved comedy's subject comes from the title, the myth connected to the name, and a fragmentary scene that seems to parody Phaedra and the nurse's dialogue from
Hippolytus. The myths of Hippolytus and Anagyros are very similar; both feature a man, his son from another woman, a wife, and an offended deity who takes revenge so that the new wife accuses the son of wanton behaviour. Additionally, another tragedy by Euripides that Aristophanes must have used is his
Phoenix, which had a similar plot. Several south Italian vases have been identified as potentially depicting scenes from the
Anagyros. It is possible that the farmer represented the
deme, and his misfortunes the disastrous
Sicilian Expedition. == See also ==