Abstract
The Cypria is first of six poems in the ‘Trojan Cycle’, dated sometimes to the seventh, but more usually to the late sixth century BC. The later dating relies on the doubtful evidence of isolated, rarely attested forms. These occur in particularly high concentration in PEG F1(= D., W.), but even here their implications are not clear-cut. Attempts to supply a terminus ante quem by identifying the influence of the Cypria on art and poetry are also beset by methodological problems, chiefly the difficulty of identifying the source of the influence as the Cypria rather than another, similar, poem or the epic tradition quite generally. The Judgment of Paris is depicted on the ‘Chigi Olpe’ of c. 630 BC ‘much as we see it in the Cypria’; but that does not make it an illustration of the Cypria. The Cypria or a poem like it may have been known to the poet of the Iliad, Archilochus, Sappho and Alcaeus. Rarely does the textual record permit one to say with any confidence that it is the Cypria that is known; Euripides' verbatim allusions to Cypria PEG F 1 (below) are exceptional.
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