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Corinna


Corinna (Ancient Greek: Κοριννα Korinna) was an ancient Greek lyric poet from Tanagra in Boeotia. Although ancient testimonia say that she was a contemporary of Pindar, modern scholars are divided on the accuracy of this tradition, and some claim that she is more likely to be from the Hellenistic period. Though her poetry is of interest as one of the few preserved female poets from ancient Greece, it is generally regarded poorly by modern critics.

Corinna was from Tanagra in Boeotia. According to ancient tradition, she lived during the 5th century BC. She was supposed to have been a contemporary of Pindar, either having taught him, or been a fellow-pupil of Myrtis of Anthedon with Pindar. Corinna was said to have competed with Pindar, defeating him in at least one competition, though some sources claim five.

However, from the early twentieth century, scholars have been divided over the accuracy of the traditional chronology of Corinna's life. As early as 1930, Edgar Lobel argued that the language used in Corinna's surviving poetry seems to favour a later date than tradition suggests, and that there is no reason to believe that Corinna significantly predated the mid-fourth century BC, the point at which the orthography preserved in the Berlin Papyrus of Corinna's poetry began to be used. More recently, M. L. West has argued for dating Corinna to the late-third century BC, and W. J. Henderson supports a middle-ground, between West's very late and the traditional early date. Other scholars such as Archibald Allen and Jiri Frel argue for the accuracy of the traditional date, writing that a Hellenistic Corinna as argued for by West would be "astonishing".

Corinna, like Pindar, wrote choral lyric poetry – as demonstrated by her invocation of Terpsichore, the Muse of dance and chorus, in one of her fragments. According to Derek Collins "the most distinctive feature of Corinna's poetry is her mythological innovation", and one ancient story says that Corinna considered that myth was the proper subject for poetry, and rebuked Pindar for not paying sufficient attention to it. Corinna's poetry concentrates on local legends, and she makes use of the Boeotian dialect, possibly to convey her local pride and patriotism.


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