Ion
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Ion
Summary
Ion is a dramatic work[1]. Ion draws 143 Wikipedia views per month (dramatic_work category, ranking #122 of 285).[2]
Key Facts
- Ion authored Euripides[3].
- Ion's instance of is recorded as dramatic work[4].
- Ion's genre is Greek tragedy[5].
- Ion's genre is melodrama[6].
- Ion's Commons category is recorded as Ion (Euripides)[7].
- Ion's language of work or name is recorded as Ancient Greek[8].
- Ion's characters is recorded as Ion son of Xuthus[9].
- Ion's characters is recorded as Creusa[10].
- Ion's characters is recorded as Xuthus[11].
- Ion's characters is recorded as Hermes[12].
- Ion's characters is recorded as Athena[13].
- Ion's has edition or translation is recorded as Ion[14].
- Ion's has edition or translation is recorded as Ion[15].
- Ion's has edition or translation is recorded as Ion[16].
- Ion's has edition or translation is recorded as Ion[17].
- Ion's has edition or translation is recorded as Iôn[18].
- Ion's has edition or translation is recorded as Ion[19].
- Ion's narrative location is recorded as Delphi[20].
- Ion's date of first performance is recorded as 413 BC[21].
- Ion's date of first performance is recorded as 412 BC[22].
- Ion's date of first performance is recorded as 412 BC[23].
- Ion's described by source is recorded as Ion[24].
- Ion's described by source is recorded as The Complete Greek Tragedies; Volume IV: Euripides[25].
- Ion's described by source is recorded as Euripides[26].
- Ion's described by source is recorded as Euripides and His Age[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Ion authored Euripides[3].
Publication
Ion's language of work or name is recorded as Ancient Greek[8]. Genres include Greek tragedy[5] and melodrama[6].
Why It Matters
Ion draws 143 Wikipedia views per month (dramatic_work category, ranking #122 of 285).[2] Ion has Wikipedia articles in 15 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28]