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ANTIGONE

ANTIGONE. by Sophocles The best lecture ever! 85 slides of non-stop fun!. Vocabulary Words. Write the following words on separate paper. Make sure you spell them correctly. Define and learn the meanings of the words.

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ANTIGONE

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  1. ANTIGONE by Sophocles The best lecture ever! 85 slides ofnon-stop fun!

  2. Vocabulary Words • Write the following words on separate paper. Make sure you spell them correctly. • Define and learn the meanings of the words. • Some of the words will be defined during the lecture and during discussion, so pay attention.

  3. What is the difference between religion and mythology? • Why study the mythology of Ancient Greece? Consider the cultural and historical values of the mythology. • deity • polytheism • monotheism

  4. Zeus • Ares • Athena • Dionysus • circa • oracle • prophet / prophecy • plague • famine • Hubris / pride • heir

  5. regent (163) • Ignominious (163) • edict (163) • Argive (165) (someone from Argos; in the play, specifically a soldier from Argos who attacked the city of Thebes) • interdict (166) • desecrate (166) • sepulcher (166) • degeneracy (166) • sovereign (167) (reign) • martyr (168)

  6. revel (170) • sabotage (171) • exile (171) • mourn (171) • sentry (172) • pious (173) • obsequies (173) • misgivings (174) • libations (179) • flagrant (179)

  7. nullify (179) (null) • submission (180) (submit) • complicity • deity (184) • deference (186) • sanctity (186) • anarchy (187) • judicious (188) • insolent (189) • homage (191)

  8. dirge (194) • sacrilege (195) • retribution (195) • portent (198) • repent (199) • desecrate (199) • vanity (204)

  9. The Tragedy of the Royal House of ThebesOutline Notes • Sophocles: Greek Playwright • Circa 495 – 406 BCE

  10. The Three Plays of the Oedipus Cycle Oedipus the King Oedipus at Colonus Antigone Written circa 411 BC Antigone is the third play in the trilogy, but Sophocles wrote it before he wrote the other two plays.

  11. Important Cities • Pay attention to the next two maps. • Look for the following cities: Thebes Delphi Corinth Argos Region of Boeotia

  12. The Origin of The Royal House of Thebes • The Oracle of Apollo at Delphi • Apollo was the god of Truth, Prophecy and Light • The Oracle was the Priestess Pythia. • She could communicate with Apollo and provide humans with a prediction of their fates. • Although her prophecies were destined to come true, her messages often consisted of incomplete information, and what she said was confusing for humans to completely understand.

  13. Apollo and The Temple at Delphi

  14. Temple of Apollo at Didyma

  15. Treasury of the Athenians at Delphi An Example of Greek Architecture

  16. CadmusThe First King of Thebes • Cadmus and his sister Europa were the children of Agenor I, the king of Phoenicia. • Cadmus and Europa were descendants of the god Zeus (his great-great grandchildren).

  17. Zeus and Zeus Fighting a Titan

  18. Background: The Founding of Thebes • Princess Europa disappeared from the coasts of Phoenicia on the back of a bull (Zeus in disguise had kidnapped her). • Agenor I, sent Cadmus in search of Europa, telling him not to return until he had found his sister. • However, nothing was ever found of her, except for the name of the land called Europa. (She had been left by Zeus (the bull) upon the shore by Mount Dicte in Crete.)

  19. The Abduction of Europa

  20. What Cadmus Did: • Cadmus searched for Europa but could not find her. • Cadmus in his wanderings came to Delphi. There the oracle told him to buy an ox which had a moon-shaped mark on its side, and to drive it before him. Where it lay down, it was fated that Cadmus would found a city and rule as its king. • He settled in Boeotia (named for the ox), and founded in this new land the city of Cadmea, later called Thebes. • These events took place approximately 200 years before the Trojan War.

  21. Ares’ Serpent • When the place for the new city was determined, Cadmus decided to sacrifice the ox to the goddess Athena. • He sent some of his men to draw water from a spring (later called Dirce) belonging to Ares (the god of war). • The spring was guarded by a serpent or dragon which was the sacred offspring of Ares. • Ares’ dragon had a golden crest, flashed fire from its eyes, had a triple tongue, teeth ranged in triple rows, and its body was swollen with poison. • It devoured Cadmus' men. • Cadmus confronted the dragon and killed it. • Athena told him to plant the dragon’s teeth in the earth.

  22. Cadmus and the Serpent

  23. AthenaGoddess of wisdom, war strategies, the defense of cities, heroic endeavor, weaving, pottery and other crafts, domestic arts, agriculture, the olive tree, and Athens. She was depicted as crowned with a crested helm, armed with shield and spear, and wearing the snake-trimmed Aegis cloak wrapped around her breast and arm, adorned with the head of the Gorgon. She was born fully grown from the head of Zeus.

  24. The Sparti • From the sown teeth sprang forth armed men (Sparti) who began fighting and killing each other. • Five of them survived the massacre. • The five Sparti had supernatural powers with which they helped Cadmus build the new city. • The Sparti were the progenitors of the following generations of citizens of Thebes. • Cadmus married Harmonia. Together they ruled Thebes as its first King and Queen The Fate of Cadmus and Harmonia • Cadmus and Harmonia were turned into serpents because he had killed the dragon of Ares.

  25. Cadmus and Harmonia are turned into Snakes

  26. Time to skip a few generations to focus on the important part of the story. • Cadmus founded the city of Thebes • The throne of a city was passed on the eldest male heir. • Women could not be rulers in Greek society. • Cadmus’ son was Polydorus. • Polydorus’ son was Labdacus. • Labdacus’ son was Laius.

  27. House of Thebes Family Tree(edited) Yes, write this in your notes. Zeus = Io Epaphus Poseidon = Lybia Agenor Cadmus = Harmonia Europa (= Zeus) Polydorus (son of Cadmus) Labdacus (son of Polydorus) Laius (son of Labdacus)

  28. House of Thebes Family Tree(continued) Labdacus Menoeceus I (Great-Grandchild of Cadmus) Laius = Jocasta Creon = Eurydice Oedipus Haemon Menoeceus II

  29. King Laius:A Curse on the House of Thebes • Prior to becoming the King of Thebes, Laius lived in exile in Peloponnesus, hosted by King Pelops I. • Laius fell in love with Pelops' illegitimate son Chryssipus II. • Laius abducted Chryssipus and was eventually arrested by Chryssipus’ half brothers. • However, Pelops did not wish to punish a man on account of his love. • The gods took exception to the abduction (not to Laius’ love for Chryssipus) and set a curse on Laius that would last for three generations. • Chryssipus was eventually murdered by the queen, who wanted her own sons to inherit the throne.

  30. Laius’ Abduction of Chryssipus

  31. Laius’ Return to Thebes • Laius returned to Thebes as its rightful king with Jocasta (a distant cousin), daughter of Menoeceus I as his queen. • Laius wanted to know if he would have an heir to the throne. • The Oracle of Apollo at Delphi warned him not to have a son because that son was fated to kill his own father. • But Laius disregarded the oracle (further grounds for him to be punished by the gods) and eventually he and Jocasta conceived a son.

  32. Laius Attempts to Change his Fate • In his fear that the Oracle’s prophecy would come true, Laius plotted to kill his son. • Laius ordered a shepherd to take the baby and bind (or bolt) the baby’s feet so he could not walk, and then take the child to the mountains and abandon it. • In this plot, Laius thought that he could not be accused of killing the child because he did not directly do it himself. • The shepherd did as he was told, except . . .

  33. Oedipus is Rescued • Instead of abandoning the baby, Laius’ shepherd gave it to another shepherd, who in turn took the child to the city of Corinth. • There, King Polybus adopted the child as his own son. • The child was named Oedipus. • Oedipus means “swollen foot.” His feet had swollen because they had been so tightly bound together. (Another version of the story indicates that his ankles had been riveted together with a bolt.)

  34. Oedipus Becomes an Adult • He encountered a drunkard on the street who told him that Oedipus was not the true son of the king, and that he could not inherit the throne of Corinth. • Oedipus went to the Oracle of Apollo at Delphi and learned bad news and worse news: 1. You are going to kill your father. 2. You are going to marry your mother.

  35. Banished from Corinth • Continuing to believe that Polybus was his real father, Oedipus attempted to change his fate by vowing to banish himself from Corinth, never to return, so that he could not harm his father or mother. • He was man without a homeland. He wandered Greece as he tried to determine what he should do. • But as fate would have it . . .

  36. Battle at the Crossroad • He came to a crossroad where he encountered an old man in a chariot and his five guards. • A conflict ensued between Oedipus and the old man regarding who had the right to pass. • Neither would relinquish, swords were drawn, and a battle ensued. • Oedipus killed the old man and four of his guards. • The fifth guard escaped and fled.

  37. Meanwhile, Back in Thebes • The guard returned to the Palace of Thebes to reveal the news that King Laius had been murdered by a band of robbers. • As Laius had no heir to the throne because he had disposed of his only son, Creon, the brother of Jocasta, the Queen, became the acting regent. (Women were not allowed to be in positions of power.) • The first part of Oedipus’ fate had been fulfilled. He has unknowingly killed his father.

  38. The Sphinx Asks a Riddle • As if the death of the king were not bad enough, Thebes had another problem to deal with. A Sphinx had begun to terrorize the city. • The Sphinx is creature that has the body of a lion, the upper torso of a woman, and it has wings. • The Sphinx asked all passersby a riddle. If the person could not answer the riddle, the Sphinx strangled the victim, and then ate the body. • Sphinx means “the strangler.”

  39. Oedipus and the Sphinx

  40. Creon’s Proclamation • Creon had to save the city, so he proclaimed that anyone who could save Thebes from the Sphinx would be rewarded: 1. The hero would become the king of Thebes. 2. He would marry Queen Jocasta. • Along came Oedipus, who had heard of the offer. Being a man without a country, he had nothing to lose, so he accepted the challenge and approached the Sphinx.

  41. The Riddle and the Prize • What goes on four feet in the morning, on two at noon, and on three in the evening? • Oedipus answered the question: • The answer is man: At birth, he crawls, as an adult he walks upright on two feet, and as an old man he walks with a cane. • The Sphinx threw itself from a cliff and died. • Oedipus became the King of Thebes. • Oedipus married his mother, Jocasta, and unknowingly fulfilled the second part of his fate.

  42. Happy Family • Oedipus and Jocasta successfully ruled Thebes for many years. • They had four children Twin sons, Eteocles and Polyneices and Two daughters, Antigone and Ismene

  43. House of Thebes Family Tree(completed) Laius = Jocasta Creon = Eurydice Oedipus = Jocasta Haemon Menoeceus II Eteocles Polyneices Ismene Antigone* * Haemon and Antigone are engaged to be married.

  44. More Bad News • Thebes began to suffer from a Plague and a Famine • Oedipus had to save the city, so he sent Creon to the Oracle of Apollo at Delphi to find out what had to be done. • The Oracle told Creon that Thebes could only be saved by revealing the killer of King Laius. • Oedipus began his investigation and little by little, the facts came out, but Oedipus’ pride would not allow him to accept the testimony of his witnesses.

  45. The Truth and its Consequences • Ultimately, the two shepherds who had been involved in Laius’ plot to kill his son came forth and revealed their roles, and the truth that Oedipus was, in fact, the son of Laius, and that Jocasta was his mother. • Jocasta, in her shame, hanged herself. • Oedipus, in his shame, took the two brooches from Jocasta’s gown and plunged the pins into his eyes, thus blinding himself from the vision of what he had done.

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