answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

The battlefield deaths of his nephews and the suicides of his wife, son and niece are the family tragedies that Theban King Creon suffers in 'Antigone'. From the previous 'Oedipus Rex', we know that Creon carries the weight of previous family tragedies. Specifically, there's the murder of his first brother-in-law, Theban King Laius. There's the suicideof his only sister, Theban Queen Jocasta. There's the self-blinding and exile of his second brother-in-law, Theban King Oedipus. There's the constant reminder of the previous tragedies in Creon's being responsible for Oedipus' and Jocasta's two daughters, Antigone and Ismene, the children of an incestuous mother-son marriage.

User Avatar

Wiki User

13y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: What family tragedies does Creon suffer?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Continue Learning about Performing Arts

How does Teiresias persuade Creon to change his mind in 'Antigone'?

Teiresias does not persuade Creon to change his mind in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, Teiresias the blind prophet warns Theban King Creon that the royal household will suffer the same death and sorrow as Creon inflicts hardheartedly upon Thebes. But Creon continues to insult and threaten his sightless seer and royal councillor. It is after Teiresias leaves and the chorus leader says that Creon needs to bury Polyneices and release Antigone that Creon changes his mind.


Whom does Creon blame for the tragic deaths of his family members?

himself


Who convinces Creon to free Antigone in 'Antigone'?

The chorus leader convinces Creon to free Antigone in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, Theban King Creon receives the warning from Teiresias the blind prophet that the royal household will suffer if Creon does not bury Polyneices and free Antigone. Creon keeps up the insults and threats all the way until Teiresias leaves. But he then asks and acts upon the chorus leader's advice.


Why is Antigone more of a hero than Creon?

Creon is not respecting family ties or the dead. He is leaving his nephew to root while giving a huge ceremony to his other nephew. Creon also makes it a law that no one can burry the nephew. Antigone's brother is the nephew and she respects the dead and family ties by burring her brother.


What does Creon tell the guard?

Creon tells the guard to go find who is responsible for burying Polynises. If the guard does not find who is responsible with in a certain amount of time, the guard will suffer the consequences of a slow, painful death in place of the person who buried Polynises.

Related questions

What tragedies fall upon Creon in 'Antigone'?

The suicides of his son and wife, joblessness, homelessness and friendlessness are the tragedies that fall upon Creon in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, Theban King Creon issues an edict that contradicts divine guarantees of below-ground burials and proper funeral rites to all Thebans. The entire city suffers from seeing the flesh and the blood of the unburied dead consumed by birds and dogs. It is only when Creon is warned of death and sorrow in his own household that he backs down. It is just in time to give Polyneices and the disloyal dead Theban-style burials. But it is too late to save Creon's family, home, job and reputation.


What is creon's view of family relationships?

Creon believed family relationships were not as important as the well-being of the state (government and people). In his decree, he informed his people that he had no use for those who value personal relationships (family relationships) above the state's.


How does Teiresias persuade Creon to change his mind in 'Antigone'?

Teiresias does not persuade Creon to change his mind in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, Teiresias the blind prophet warns Theban King Creon that the royal household will suffer the same death and sorrow as Creon inflicts hardheartedly upon Thebes. But Creon continues to insult and threaten his sightless seer and royal councillor. It is after Teiresias leaves and the chorus leader says that Creon needs to bury Polyneices and release Antigone that Creon changes his mind.


Whom does Creon blame for the tragic deaths of his family members?

himself


Who convinces Creon to free Antigone in 'Antigone'?

The chorus leader convinces Creon to free Antigone in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, Theban King Creon receives the warning from Teiresias the blind prophet that the royal household will suffer if Creon does not bury Polyneices and free Antigone. Creon keeps up the insults and threats all the way until Teiresias leaves. But he then asks and acts upon the chorus leader's advice.


Why is Antigone more of a hero than Creon?

Creon is not respecting family ties or the dead. He is leaving his nephew to root while giving a huge ceremony to his other nephew. Creon also makes it a law that no one can burry the nephew. Antigone's brother is the nephew and she respects the dead and family ties by burring her brother.


What does Creon tell the guard?

Creon tells the guard to go find who is responsible for burying Polynises. If the guard does not find who is responsible with in a certain amount of time, the guard will suffer the consequences of a slow, painful death in place of the person who buried Polynises.


Why does the messenger say that Creon has become a Walking Dead man?

According to the messenger, Theban King Creon has become a walking dead man. The King once had a brilliant military record that brought defeat to the forces from Argos and their Theban collaborators. Creon once had the love and respect of his people, friends and family. But the loss of the respect of his people, and of the love of his family and friends, make King Creon a 'breathing corpse'.


Why does Creon want the guards to hurry Antigone to her tomb?

Creon wants the guards to hurry to Antigone in the cave because Teiresias (the blind prophet) told him that two family members would die is Antigone did. So at that, Creon needed to save her.


Does Antigone or Creon suffer more in 'Antigone'?

Antigone suffers more than Creon in the short term, but Creon suffers more in the long term in "Oedipus Rex" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. -- 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, Theban Princess Antigone suffers immediately, in this world, because she receives the death penalty and commits suicide. But she will be receive a hero's welcome in the Underworld of the afterlife. In contrast, King Creon loses not his life, but everyone and everything that gives that life meaning: family, home, job, and reputation. The suffering will not end with his earthly life, because he then will be accountable for his misdeeds for all eternity in the Underworld of the afterlife.


What happens to Creon's family at the end of 'Antigone'?

That everyone else dies is what happens to Theban King Creon's family by the time that the play "Antigone" ends.Specifically, there are only three members left in Creon's family when the play begins: his wife Theban Queen Eurydice, his son and heir apparent Haemon, and himself. But Haemon kills himself because Creon sentences Antigone, his own niece and future daughter-in-law, to death. Then the Queen kills herself once she learns that the last of her four children is now dead. So Creon ends the play all alone since his family would rather commit suicide than spend one more minute in his presence.


Does Creon live in 'Antigone'?

Yes, Creon still lives at the end of "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, all that the audience knows is that Theban King Creon loses everything that gives meaning to his life: reputation, job, home, and family. He therefore welcomes death, but does not find it during the confines of the play. There are subsequent variant versions such as Creon being murdered, but Sophocles does not include any final information about Creon in any of his three surviving plays about King Oedipus and his family.