Portia's dad wants to make sure Portia marries an okay guy instead of some dumb tool, so he puts it in his will that any guy who wants to marry her has to choose one of the three caskets. It's supposed to be a test that only a guy who will love Portia as she deserves and for who she is can pass.
Portia's suitors must choose between three caskets in order to win her hand in marriage because it was a part of her late father's will. The caskets are inscribed with different mottoes, and the suitor who selects the casket with Portia's picture inside is deemed worthy of marrying her. It is a test of the suitor's wit, intuition, and ability to see beyond outward appearances.
The two main head suitors in the Odyssey are Antinous and Eurymachus. They are the most aggressive and prominent among the suitors competing for Penelope's hand in marriage.
they are trying to win his Odysseus's wife's hand in marriage
The two main suitors in Odysseus' house are Antinous and Eurymachus. They are both prominent members of the group of suitors vying for Penelope's hand in marriage during Odysseus' absence.
Telemachus blames the suitors who are out to get his mother's hand in marriage.
Andromeda's mother, Queen Cassiopeia, is the one who gives her the riddles that her suitors must answer in order to win her hand in marriage.
"Three Suitors, One Husband" is a play by playwright Alexander Ostrovsky. The characters in the play include the protagonist Liza, her three suitors— Porphyry, Yaroslav, and Karandyshev— and her obnoxious guardian Efremov. The plot revolves around Liza's attempts to navigate the suitors and secure a happy marriage.
Helen's suitors agreed to make an oath to support the man Helen chose as her husband and to defend their marriage against any who might seek to harm it.
Penelope promised to marry one of the suitors when she finished weaving a shroud for her father-in-law, Laertes. However, she unraveled it every night to delay the marriage.
Elizabeth I had several suitors throughout her reign, but the four most prominent ones were Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester, Francis, Duke of Anjou, King Philip II of Spain, and Robert Devereux, Earl of Essex. None of these suitors resulted in marriage for Elizabeth.
She delayed her marriage telling her suitors that when she was done weaving she would marry. Every night though, she undid her weaving that she had completed that day. This delayed her marriage a very long time, until a maid walked in when she was undoing her weaving. the maid told the suitors and yada yada yada...
Penelope told the suitors that she would weave a tapestry, and once she was finished, she would marry one of the suitors. Penelope weaved during the day, but secretly undid her work at night.
By stringing the bow of Odysseus and shooting the bow through the 12 handles of axes.