Addison’s play "Cato"

E233946

Addison’s play "Cato" is an early 18th-century English tragedy dramatizing the final days and stoic principles of the Roman statesman Cato the Younger, influential in both literary and political circles, including among the American Founding Fathers.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Addison’s play "Cato" canonical 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (49)

Predicate Object
instanceOf English play
neoclassical tragedy
stage play
tragedy
associatedWith Whig political ideology
author Joseph Addison
basedOn life of Cato the Younger
containsCharacter Juba
Marcia
Marcus
Portius
Sempronius
Syphax
countryOfOrigin Kingdom of Great Britain
dramaticStyle Senecan
firstPerformanceDate 1713
firstPerformancePlace Theatre Royal Drury Lane
surface form: Theatre Royal, Drury Lane
firstPublisher Jacob Tonson
form blank verse
genre political tragedy
historicalContext Caesar’s civil war
historicalSubject Cato the Younger
influenced Alexander Hamilton
United States Founding Fathers
surface form: American Founding Fathers

American Revolutionary rhetoric
George Washington
John Adams
Patrick Henry
language English
literaryMovement Neoclassicism
mainCharacter Cato the Younger
politicalAllegoryOf contemporary Whig–Tory conflicts
popularIn 18th-century American colonies
18th-century Britain
publicationDate 1713
quotedBy George Washington
Patrick Henry
setInPeriod late Roman Republic
setInPlace Utica
structure five-act play
theme Stoicism
honor
liberty
patriotism
republican virtue
suicide
tyranny versus freedom
timePeriodOfWork early 18th century
title Cato, a Tragedy

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Cato the Younger portrayedInWork Addison’s play "Cato"