Aeschylus was born in Greek town Eleusis near Athens in 525 BC. Before Sophocles and Euripides he was the first person of the great Greek tragedy and was thought to have often invented a tragic drama. Prior to Aeschylus, the play was ingenious, consisting of actors and choruses that provided comments. To his work, he added a "second actor" (usually one or more) and created an endless and dramatic possibility. He stayed until 456 BC, fought in the fight against Persia, and received great praise in the world of Athens theater.
All tragedies of Greek that survived completely are caused by Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides. Prometheus Bound has traditionally been attributed to Aeschylus, and rhesus monkeys have traditionally been attributed to Euripides, but are still dubious. There are seven surviving tragedies caused by Aeschylus. Three dramas, "Agamemnon", "Liberator", and "Euluman" formed a trilogy called Orestair. But one of the play, Prometheus, may actually be the work of Aeschylus's son Euphorion.
In addition to Hesiod's remarks, Aeschylus's play Prometheus Bound is the basis for understanding the prototype Prometheus. Aeschylus has strongly established Prometheus as our painful champion, enhancing humanity through his flames from barbarous to civilization. In addition, Prometheus gave us hope for Zeus Zeus made it possible for us to overcome its terrible sacrifice, no matter how blind. Prometheus is widely portrayed as a typical liar and culture god, creator of all inventions, and progress in art and science. At the end of the script, Prometheus was still provocative, trapped on his rocks and refused to reveal the secret of Thetis marriage yet. The conflict between painful hero and tyranny God was resolved in the lost play of Aeschylus' s Prometheus trilogy (ie three consecutive episodes).