Medea indirectly killed King Creon. He died of poison as he desperately attempts to save his daughter from Medea's burning poison.
Medea's assists Jason in his quest for the Golden Fleece. In order to wrest his throne from his uncle, he was compelled to attempt the quest. In exchange for Medea's assistance, Jason promises to marry her. Although Jason has two sons with Medea, he abandons her for King Creon's daughter.
Yes, he had two sons with his first wife the witch Medea, but when he betrayed her she murdered them to get revenge.
Jason was hubristic and manipulative. He used Medea to get the Fleece, but then abandoned her at her great expense. Unfortuntely, the gods were on Medea's side, even though they had been on Jason's originally, and he paid the price for this--his sons were killed (in some accounts by Medea, in others by angry townspeople) and he died an old man alone.
When Medea killed Jason's (of the Argonauts) wife, she sent her sons to give her the cursed robe that killed the young bride. She saw that there was no safety for her sons, so she killed them and then escaped. (Edith Hamilton's Mythology Part 2 Chapter 3) It does not say that she boiled them.
No, Medea did not kill her father, King Aeëtes. In fact, when her uncle took the throne from him, Medea killed her uncle.
In the play Medea rushes offstage with a knife to kill her children and also in Eugène Delacroix's painting "Medea about to Kill Her Children painting" she is also holding a knife
Medea indirectly killed King Creon. He died of poison as he desperately attempts to save his daughter from Medea's burning poison.
Medea's assists Jason in his quest for the Golden Fleece. In order to wrest his throne from his uncle, he was compelled to attempt the quest. In exchange for Medea's assistance, Jason promises to marry her. Although Jason has two sons with Medea, he abandons her for King Creon's daughter.
Medea kills her children in order to deny Jason his legacy. Jason sought immortality; the continuity of his memory and deeds by means of his sons.
Medea killed her children to 'protect' them from being killed out of revenge for what she did to the princess.Answer 2:Or rather to get her revenge on Jason.
Jason leaves Medea for the princess, so Medea takes revenge on Jason by poisoning his bride-to-be, and the King who tries to save his dying daughter. Medea then proceeds to slaughtering the children that she and Jason given birth to, and rides off in a dragon-pulled chariot with the corpses of her sons.
Yes, he had two sons with his first wife the witch Medea, but when he betrayed her she murdered them to get revenge.
Jason was hubristic and manipulative. He used Medea to get the Fleece, but then abandoned her at her great expense. Unfortuntely, the gods were on Medea's side, even though they had been on Jason's originally, and he paid the price for this--his sons were killed (in some accounts by Medea, in others by angry townspeople) and he died an old man alone.
When Medea killed Jason's (of the Argonauts) wife, she sent her sons to give her the cursed robe that killed the young bride. She saw that there was no safety for her sons, so she killed them and then escaped. (Edith Hamilton's Mythology Part 2 Chapter 3) It does not say that she boiled them.
No, Jason was killed when the stern of the rotting Argo (his ship) fell on him. Medea did, however, kill her and Jason's two young sons out of revenge for his becoming engaged to Creusa (or Glauke), a Corinthian princess, who was also killed by her.
In Corinth, Jason abandoned Medea for the king's daughter, Glauce.According to the tragic poet Euripides, Medea murdered her two children by Jason.Before the fifth century BC there seems to have been two variants of the myth's conclusion. According to the 7th-century BC poet Eumelus, Medea killed her children by accident.The poet Creophylus, however, blamed their murders on the citizens of Corinth. Medea's deliberate murder of her children, is Euripides' invention which later writers copied.