Author(s):
Zimmermann, Bernhard (Freiburg)
[German version] (ἡ τετραλογία/
hē tetralogía). Originally a technical term in rhetoric to describe four speeches treating the same case from different perspectives (Antiphon [4] A.), later also used to summarize the Platonic dialogues in groups of four (Diog. Laert. 3,57; Plato [1] C. 1. - 2.). Since the Hellenistic era, philology has used the term primarily for four theatre pieces connected by content: three tragedies (Trilogy) and one satyr play [2. 80 f.]. The 'originator' of the tetralogy was probably Aeschylus [1]; his
Oresteia (458 BC) survives (without the satyr play); for an overview of certain and inferred content of tetralogies by Aeschylus: TrGF III, pp. 111-119. A
Telepheia by Sophocles [1] is recorded in an inscription ([1. 259 f.], TrGF IV, p. 434); by Euripides [1], the
Alexander,
Palamedes and
Trojan Women (415 BC) and the
Oenomaus,
Chrysippus and
Phoenician Women are connected by content. Further tetralogies are recorded for Polyphrasmon (
Lykourgeia), Philocles [4] (
Pandionis) and Meletus [4] (
Oidipodeia). The change from the Aeschylean content tetralogy or trilogy to the self-contained pieces of Sophocles and Euripides can be explained by the hypothesis [3. 21] that, for a certain time after 450 BC, one tragedy was staged on each of the three tragedy days of the Greater Dionysia from one of the competing tragedians ('drama versus dra…