The Pot Of Gold Lar Familiaris Characters

Although the characters within the Aulularia speak Latin, nearly everything else about them is Greek: The Role Of Lar Familiaris In Plautus’s Pot Of Gold, they need Greek names, Greek clothing, and Greek customs. The action takes place on a residential street in Athens. All of Plautus’ actors were men or boys, and that they wore masks. Lar Familiaris presents the prologue of the play, which sets the stage for the action that follows. The System Of Dowry In The Pot Of Gold, it's by Lar Familiaris that the audience is informed that Euclio’s grandfather, being a superb miser, had buried a pot of gold within the central hall of his house. Plautus here upholds the hollowness of the society through the image of Euclio, one of ine main (stock) characters in the play. The plot of the play The Pot of Gold revolves a round Euclio and his magnanimous pot of gold which he gets from his household god (i.e. Lar Familiaris).

Lar Familiaris presents the prologue of the play, which sets the stage for the action that follows. It is by Lar Familiaris that the audience is informed that Euclio’s grandfather, being a great miser, had buried a pot of gold in the central hall of his house. This wealth had remained undiscovered until Lar. The “Pot of Gold” by Plautus is a story about a pot of gold that was entrusted by Euclio’s grandfather to his deity by burying it in the ground. The pot is kept hidden from all until Euclio.

THE POT OF GOLD QUESTION ANSWERS MARK 5

1 .Describe Euclio efforts to keep his gold hidden from everybody?

Ans: Plautus’ Pot of Gold focuses on how human beings become infatuated by materialistic things like gold. This is manifested beautifully through the central character of the play, Euclio. The obsession that he forms concerning the pot of gold given to him by the household god Lar Familiaris, is very significant here. He forgets everything after getting the pot of gold even his humanly qualities like compassion, sympathy, empathy, etc.

For example, when Megadorus, a wealthy gentleman offers to marry Euclio’s daughter, Phaedria without any dowry, Euclio suspects him of wanting to possess the pot of gold. Apart from this, at the beginning of the play, we see that Euclio beats Staphyla, his old slave who is very loyal to him because he thinks that Staphyla is going to take his pot of gold which he has hidden safely behind the idol of the household god.

The pot of gold lar familiaris characters list

Again, when he finds a number of cooks working in his house, he immediately jumps to the conclusion that they have already stolen his pot of gold, and that they had been sent to his house by Megadorus with a malicious purpose. Subsequently, Euclio decides to take out his pot of gold from its hiding place in his house and to take it to the shrine of Good Faith where he thinks it would be safer than it is in his house.

Unanimously, all the frantic efforts of Euclio to hide his pot of gold and keep it safe brings out fun and laughter among the audience and the readers, and this is the untold magic of Plautus.

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  1. What role does Lar Familiaris play in Pot of Gold?

Ans: Lar Familiaris is the name of the guardian spirit or the household god of Euclio’s house. Euclio’s daughter worships him and looks after him regularly. Lar Familiaris is not a human being, he is a god, who is invisible but appears on the stage to deliver the prologue. In the prologue of the play Lar Familiaris provides many information to the audience:

At first, he says that Euclio’s grandfather had buried a pot full of gold coins beneath the fire-place in the central hall of his house without having told anybody. So, Euclio did not have any idea about the buried treasure in his own house.

Apart from this, Lar Familiaris says that he is greatly pleased by the admiration and gratitude of Phaedria, daughter of Euclio, who worships him daily by offering incense and flowers. Again, he further says that he would give Euclio those buried gold coins so that he would use them at his daughter’s wedding. In conclusion, we may say that Lar Familiaris plays a very crucial role in the action of the play The Pot of Gold.

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  1. What does Eunomia suggest to her brother? What was his reaction?

Ans: Eunomia is one of the important characters of Plautus’ Pot of Gold. We met her first when she comes to her brother Megadorus with a matrimonial proposal. She makes him understand the desirability of his getting married and fathering a family. She says that men do not like their sisters because they think that sisters talk too much.

Anyway, she tells him that he should get married and should have a family. Again, she informs him that she has found a middle-aged woman whom he should marry and who would bring him a rich dowry

But Megadorus does not pay any heed to this proposal. This proposal appears to him like a great shock. When Eunomia asks what is the matter with him, he replies that any talk of marriage to him is like beating his brains out with a stone. But finally, he tells Eunomia that, if he has to marry at all, then he would marry the younger daughter of Euclio even though he would not receive any dowry from him.

Familiaris

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  1. Describe the role of slaves in Plautus’ Pot of Gold.

The pot of gold lar familiaris characters names

Ans: In The Pot of Gold, various slaves and servants are used as what is called stock characters. …..

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INDIAN CLASSICAL LITERATURE

VYASA:

  1. MAHABHARATA MARKS-10
  2. THE TEMPTATION OF KARNA MARKS-10
  3. THE TEMPTATION OF KARNA MARKS-05

SUDRAKA:

  1. MRICHHAKATIKA MARKS-02
  2. MRICHHAKATIKA MARKS-05
  3. MRICHHAKATIKA MARKS-10

BANBHATTA:

  1. KADAMBARI MARKS-10

KALIDASA :

  1. ABHIJYANAMSHAKUNTALAM MARKS-02
  2. ABHIJYANAMSHAKUNTALAM MARKS-05
  3. ABHIJYANAMSHAKUNTALAM MARKS-10

ILANGO ADIGAL :

Lar
  1. THE BOOK OF VANCI MARKS-02
  2. THE BOOK OF VANCI MARKS-05

EUROPEAN CLASSICAL LITERATURE

HOMER : THE ILIAD MARKS-10

SOPHOCLES : OEDIPUS THE KING MARKS-10

OVID : METAMORPHOSIS BOOK-III , BOOK-IV, BOOK-VI— MARKS- 02, 05 & 10

PLAUTUS : THE POT OF GOLD MARKS-02

THE POT OF GOLD MARKS-05

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From Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Aulularia
Written byPlautus
CharactersLar Familiaris
Euclio
Staphyla
Eunomia
Megadorus
Strobilus
Lyconides
Phaedria
Phygia
Settinga street in Athens, before the houses of Euclio and Megadorus, and the shrine of Fides

Aulularia is a Latin play by the early Roman playwright Titus Maccius Plautus. The title literally means The Little Pot, but some translators provide The Pot of Gold, and the plot revolves around a literal pot of gold which the miserlyprotagonist, Euclio, guards zealously. The play's ending does not survive, though there are indications of how the plot is resolved in later summaries and a few fragments of dialogue.

Plot summary[edit]

Lar Familiaris, the household deity of Euclio, an old man with a marriageable daughter named Phaedria, begins the play with a prologue about how he allowed Euclio to discover a pot of gold buried in his house. Euclio is then shown almost maniacally guarding his gold from real and imagined threats. Unknown to Euclio, Phaedria is pregnant by a young man named Lyconides. Phaedria is never seen on stage, though at a key point in the play the audience hears her painful cries in labor.

Euclio is persuaded to marry his daughter to his rich neighbor, an elderly bachelor named Megadorus, who happens to be the uncle of Lyconides. This leads to much by-play involving preparations for the nuptials. Eventually Lyconides and his slave appear, and Lyconides confesses to Euclio his ravishing of Phaedria. Lyconides' slave manages to steal the now notorious pot of gold. Lyconides confronts his slave about the theft.

At this point the manuscript breaks off. From surviving summaries of the play, we know that Euclio eventually recovers his pot of gold and gives it to Lyconides and Phaedria, who marry in a happy ending. In the Penguin Classics edition of the play, translator E.F. Watling devised an ending as it might have been originally, based on the summaries and a few surviving scraps of dialogue.[1] Other writers over the centuries have also written endings for the play, with somewhat varying results (one version was produced by Antonio Urceo in the late 15th century, another by Martinus Dorpius in the early 16th century).

Key themes[edit]

The figure of the miser has been a stock character of comedy for centuries. Plautus does not spare his protagonist's various embarrassments caused by the vice, but he is relatively gentle in his satire. Euclio is eventually shown as basically a good-hearted man who has been only temporarily affected by greed for gold.

The play also ridicules the ancient bachelor Megadorus for his dream of marrying the nubile and far younger Phaedria. The silly business of preparing for the marriage provides much opportunity for satire on the laughable lust of an old man for a young woman, in a clever parallel to Euclio's lust for his gold. Again, Megadorus is eventually shown as sensible and kind-hearted enough to abandon his foolish dream.

Lar

The Pot Of Gold Lar Familiaris Characters List

Plautus' frequent theme of clever servants outwitting their supposed superiors finds its place in this play too. Not only does Lyconides' slave manage to filch Euclio's beloved gold, but also Euclio's housemaid Staphyla is shown as intelligent and kind in her attitude toward the unfortunately pregnant Phaedria.

Adaptations[edit]

Another play, Querolus seu Aulularia, was at one time ascribed to Plautus but is now believed to be a late 4th-century Latin imitation. It provides a kind of sequel in which Euclio dies abroad and informs a parasite of the hiding place of his treasure, which the latter is to share with Euclio's son Querolus.

During the Renaissance there were a number of adaptations of the Aulularia. One of the earliest was Giovanni Battista Gelli's La Sporta (The Basket), which was published in Florence in 1543. A Croatian version by Marin Držić was titled Skup (The Miser, 1555) and set in Dubrovnik. In 1597 Ben Jonson adapted elements of the plot for his early comedy The Case is Altered. At about the same time it was also used by the Danish Hieronymus Justesen Ranch (1539–1607) as the basis for his play Karrig Nidding (The Stingy Miser).

The very successful Dutch play, Warenar, based on Aulularia, was written by Pieter Corneliszoon Hooft and Samuel Coster in 1617. In 1629, the German poet laureate Joannes Burmeister published a Neo-Latin adaptation, also called Aulularia, that reworked Plautus' comedy to a play featuring Achan and Rahab from the biblical Book of Joshua.[2]Molière's French adaptation, L'Avare of 1668, was even more successful and thereafter served as the basis for dramatic imitations, rather than Plautus' work.[3]

Translations[edit]

The Pot Of Gold Lar Familiaris Characters Chart

  • Edward Holdsworth Sugden, 1893: Aulularia full text
  • Henry Thomas Riley, 1912: Aulularia full text
  • Paul Nixon, 1916–38: Aulularia full text
  • Sir Robert Allison, 1942
  • Lionel Casson, 1963
  • The Pot of Gold and Other Plays by Plautus, translated and introduced by E.F. Watling, Penguin Classics 1965 ISBN0-14-044149-2
  • Palmer Bovie, 1995
  • Erich Segal, 1996
  • Wolfang de Melo, 2011[4]

References[edit]

  1. ^Plautus: The Pot of Gold and other plays, London 1965, Google Books
  2. ^Fontaine, Michael. 2015. Joannes Burmeister: Aulularia and Other Inversions of Plautus. Leuven: Leuven University Press.
  3. ^There is a discussion of Plautus' play and of the various imitations in: John Colin Dunlop, History of Roman literature Volume 1, London 1823, pp.160 ff
  4. ^Plautus; Translated by Wolfgang de Melo (2011). Plautus, Vol. I: Amphitryon; The Comedy of Asses; The Pot of Gold; The Two Bacchises; The Captives. Loeb Classical Library. ISBN0674996534.

External links[edit]

The Pot Of Gold Lar Familiaris Characters Names

  • Latin Wikisource has original text related to this article: Aulularia

The Pot Of Gold Lar Familiaris Characters Pictures

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