Euripides

Writer 480 BCE – 406 BCE
Steady
#517
Historical Importance
319K
2025 Wikipedia Views
-1.9%
Year-over-Year
-3%
2025 Momentum

📈 2025 Monthly Wikipedia Views

About Euripides

Euripides, an Athenian writer active in the late 5th century BCE, is a foundational figure in Western drama, ranking #517 in historical importance according to the Pantheon project. As one of the three great tragic playwrights of ancient Greece—alongside Aeschylus and Sophocles—his work profoundly shaped subsequent theater, literature, and philosophical inquiry. He is credited with introducing more realistic characters and exploring themes of skepticism, challenging traditional myths, and focusing on human psychology, with surviving works like *Medea* and *The Bacchae* remaining staples of classical study.

Despite this deep historical significance, Euripides' modern internet presence is relatively modest. In 2025, his Wikipedia page accrued approximately 319K annualized views, resulting in an Attention Gap score of only ~1x, meaning his online attention roughly matches his established, though distant, historical ranking. This lack of major online engagement becomes clearer when contrasted with other writers; for instance, he receives fewer than a quarter of the views of Mark Twain (#543 importance) and significantly less than Lord Byron (#716 importance), despite being ranked considerably higher in cultural impact.

His current momentum suggests a slight, though stable, trajectory, with a -1.9% year-over-year change and a minor -3% dip in attention between Q1 and Q3 of 2025, indicating that his classical relevance is not currently surging or collapsing dramatically in the modern digital landscape.