Etiocles will receive the funeral while Polynices's corpse is left to rot.
Theban King Creon issued a decree for Eteocles and Polyneices, who were his nephews and Antigone's brothers. The decree allowed Eteocles to receive proper funerary procedures since he was loyal to Thebes in the battle against Argos. At the same time, the decree denied those same god-given rights to Polyneices, who was disloyal to Thebes in the conflict.
It is by burying her brother that Antigone plans to break the law in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, the gods command that upon their deaths all Thebans will receive below-ground burials and proper funeral rights. But Theban King Creon decides to withhold those rights in the case of the disloyal Theban dead in the recent civil war over the Theban royal succession. His niece, Princess Antigone, therefore plans to break her uncle's law and to respect divine law by burying her brother Polyneices, whose body numbers among the exposed corpses of the enemy Argive and Theban dead.
That it hurts Polyneices and that it violates divine will and Theban traditions are reasons why Antigone opposes the decree in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, Theban Princess Antigone opposes the royal edict on non-burial of the disloyal Theban dead. According to divine will and in line with Theban tradition, Thebans expect to receive below ground burials and Theban style funeral rites. But the edict illegally denies these rights to those who attack Thebes in the recent civil war over the royal succession. Antigone therefore decides that she must respect divine will, disrespect royal law and bury her brother Polyneices. Otherwise, Polyneices accesses the Underworld of the afterlife in a desecrated, dismembered form.
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Yes, particularly if the will states that the funeral expenses are to be paid by the estate, a very common clause.
she gets sentenced to death and gets put into a dungeon and is left there to die.
If you commit suicide at any age, your parents will receive a bill for your funeral, and that is about it.
a sister
That Eteocles will receive a Theban-style burial and funeral rites but Polyneices will not is the decision made by Creon concerning Oedipus' sons in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, the gods guarantee all Thebans, regardless of how they lead their lives, below-ground burials and funeral rites to send them properly off to the Underworld of the afterlife. But Theban King Creon decides that divine guarantees can be changed to privileges, instead of rights. Likewise, he chooses to respect the guarantees for those he considers friendly to him and to Thebes and to deny them to those whom he concludes are unfriendly to his rule and to his city.
That she expects two brothers who fight each other to the death from opposing sides to receive equal treatment is the reason why Creon says that Antigone insults Eteocles in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, Theban King Creon decides to deny to the disloyal Theban dead their god-given rights as Thebans to below-ground burials. He decides to leave their bodies above ground and exposed to the desecration and dismemberment of ravaging weather and scrounging wildlife. A consequence of the royal decision is the disparate treatment of the bodies of Eteocles and Polyneices, Creon's nephews and Princess Antigone's twin brothers. Eteocles receives full Theban burial honors whereas Polyneices does not. Creon says that disloyal Theban dead need to be treated as disrespectfully as non-Theban enemy dead and that the hatreds of a civil war over the royal succession carry over from life into death.
In ancient Greece funeral rites were incredibly important. If someone did not receive proper burial, they would not be able to cross into Hades. Funeral rites involved offerings, libations and prayer.
Above ground and under a layer of dust and then below ground are the ways in which Polyneices is buried in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, Polyneices' body is supposed to receive a below-ground burial and proper, Theban-style funeral rites. But his uncle, Theban King Creon, issues a royal edict by which Thebans who die attacking their hometown are denied their god-given rights to below-ground burials and funeral rites. Princess Antigone, Polyneices' sister, therefore decides to break the law and bury her brother. But she can only give her brother a partial burial, by which the body is covered with a layer of dust and anointed with sacred liquid from a special ewer. Ultimately, Creon approves a below-ground burial for Polyneices once he realizes that the suffering that he so heartlessly inflicts on Thebans is coming back to him.