Aeschylus (c. 525/524 – c. 456/455 BC), the father of Greek tragedy, crafted a path that many dramatists followed in the classical world. Born into a noble family at Eleusis, near Athens, his early works were likely composed during the period of the Persian invasions of Greece, a theme potent in his only surviving trilogy, 'The Oresteia.' The trilogy comprises 'Agamemnon,' 'The Libation Bearers,' ...