When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. The Burial at Thebes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Burial_at_Thebes

    Antigone is caught defying her uncle's orders, and is punished severely despite being engaged to Creon's son Haemon. She is sealed within a tomb and left to die. After a visit from the oracle Tiresias warning of the consequences, Creon eventually repents, but by then she has killed herself and is followed in death by Creon's own son and wife ...

  3. Antigona (Traetta) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antigona_(Traetta)

    Antigone by Frederic Leighton, 1882. Antigone cremates Polynices by night. Haemon comes to warn her just before Adrastus and his guards arrive. Adrastus realises Creon's orders have been disobeyed. He believes Haemon is the culprit and arrests him. Creon sentences him to death, but Antigone arrives to explain that the cremation is all her own work.

  4. Haemon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haemon

    In Euripides' Antigone, Haemon marries Antigone and they have a son, Maeon; in his Phoenician Women Antigone declares that she will kill Haemon and the engagement is broken. In a version of the myth recorded by Hyginus, Haemon and Antigone have a son but he is murdered by Creon, following which Haemon kills both Antigone and himself. [1]

  5. Antigone (Sophocles play) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antigone_(Sophocles_play)

    Antigone (/ æ n ˈ t ɪ ɡ ə n i / ann-TIG-ə-nee; Ancient Greek: Ἀντιγόνη) is an Athenian tragedy written by Sophocles in (or before) 441 BC and first performed at the Festival of Dionysus of the same year. It is thought to be the second-oldest surviving play of Sophocles, preceded by Ajax, which was written

  6. Antigone (Euripides play) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antigone_(Euripides_play)

    Antigone (/ æ n ˈ t ɪ ɡ ə n i / ann-TIG-ə-nee; Ἀντιγόνη) is a play by the Attic dramatist Euripides, which is now lost except for a number of fragments. According to Aristophanes of Byzantium , the plot was similar to that of Sophocles ' play Antigone , with three differences.

  7. Eurydice (wife of Creon) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eurydice_(wife_of_Creon)

    She appears briefly in Sophocles' Antigone (as an "archetypal grieving, saddened mother" and an older counterpart to Antigone [2]), to kill herself after learning, from a messenger, that her son Haemon and his betrothed, Antigone, have both died by suicide.

  8. The Phoenician Women - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Phoenician_Women

    Antigone enters, lamenting the fate of her brothers; Oedipus emerges from the palace and she tells him what has happened. After he has a little while to mourn, Creon banishes him from the country and orders Eteocles but not Polynices to be buried in the city. Antigone fights him over the order and breaks off her engagement with his son Haemon ...

  9. Antigone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antigone

    Antigone in Front of the Dead Polynices by Nikiforos Lytras, National Gallery, Athens, Greece (1865) In her own namesake play, Antigone attempts to secure a respectable burial for her brother Polynices. Oedipus's sons, Eteocles and Polynices, had shared rule jointly until they quarreled, and Eteocles expelled his brother. In Sophocles' account ...