EUBULUS, a distinguished comic poet of the middle comedy, was a native of Athens, where he flourished about B.C. 370-80. He is said to have written no fewer than 104 plays, of fifty of which the titles have been preserved by Suidas. The fragments of Eubulus that survive have been edited by Meinecke, and serve to show, if nothing else, at least that his diction was remarkably pure and tasteful.
EUCHARIST (εὐχαριστία, thanksgiving; from εὖ, well, and χάρη, favour), the sacrament of the Lord's Supper; the solemn act of commemorating the death of our Redeemer, in the use of bread and wine as emblems of his flesh and blood. See SUPPER OF THE LORD.
EUCHOLOGIUM (εὐχὴ, prayer; λόγος, a discourse), literally a discourse on prayer; applied to the Greek ritual, in which are prescribed the order of ceremonies, sacraments, and ordinances. Gore has given an edition of the Greek euchologium in Greek and Latin, with notes.