Timocles (Ancient Greek: Τιμοκλῆς, fl. c. 345 BC – c. 317 BC) was one of the last Athenian comic poets of the Middle Comedy,[1] although Pollux listed him among the writers of New Comedy.[2] He is known to have won first prize at the Lenaea once, between 330 and 320 BC.[3] The Suda claims that there were two comic poets of this name,[4] but modern scholars equate the two.[5] Unlike most Middle Comedy plays, his works featured a good deal of personal ridicule of public figures, especially orators like Demosthenes and Hyperides.
At least 26, and possibly 28, titles of Timocles' works survive.[1]
- Egyptians
 - The Bath-House
 - The Farmer
 - The Ring
 - Delos, or the Man from Delos
 - Public Satyrs
 - Woman Celebrating the Dionysia
 - Dionysus
 - Little Dragon
 - Letters
 - Rejoicing at Another's Misfortune
 - Heroes
 - Icarians, or Satyrs
 - Men from Caunos
 - The Centaur, or Dexamenus
 - Conisalus
 - Forgetfulness
 - Men From Marathon
 - Neaira
 - Orestautocleides
 - The Busybody
 - The Man from Pontus
 - Porphyra
 - The Boxer
 - Sappho
 - Co-Workers
 - Philodicastes
 - The False-Robbers
 
References
- 1 2 Constantinides 1969, p. 49.
 - ↑ Pollux 10.154
 - ↑ OCD.
 - ↑ Suda τ 623, 624
 - ↑ Constantinides 1969, p. 50.
 
Works cited
- Constantinides, Elizabeth (1969). "Timocles' Ikarioi Satyroi: A Reconsideration". Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association. 100: 49–61. doi:10.2307/2935900. JSTOR 2935900.
 - Dover, K. J. "Timocles". Oxford Classical Dictionary (4th ed.).
 
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