Because they were supposed to, everyone gets married. So there's your answer. :P
There are three weddings in William Shakespeare's "A Midsummer Night's Dream." The play surrounds the festival that Theseus, the Duke of Athens, plans to celebrate his marriage to Hippolyta. His daughter, Hermia, marries her love, Lysander at the end of the place, while her former suitor, Demetrius, marries his new love, Helena.
Two women married Theseus. These were Hippolyta and Phaedra. Theseus did not have both as wives simultaneously.
Theseus married Hippolyta in the context of William Shakespeare's play "A Midsummer Night's Dream," which is set in ancient Athens. While the play does not specify an exact year for this marriage, it is typically associated with the mythological timeline of Theseus, who is said to have married Hippolyta after defeating her in battle. In myth, their union symbolizes the merging of the Athenian order with the wildness of the Amazons.
When Thesues can move the shoes and sord underneath a heavy stone.
Thesues
In the Shakespeare play, a Midsummer Night's Dream, when we first see Theseus the first words out of his mouth are "our nuptual hour draws on apace". Now when a man walks on stage and the first thing he says is, "Hippolyta, we're getting married soon." how can this possibly be a surprise? We don't know who this man is or anything about him beforehand, and it is not inherently surprising that someone should be getting married. If he said it in Act three, after we find out that he's already married, or he's a monk, or he's gay or something, then we might be surprised by this announcement. Likewise, if he said "Hippolyta, I have three legs", or, "Hippolyta, I was born on the moon" a little surprise might be expected. But this is not surprising. It's not even surprising if you know the Greek myth, since it is part of the mythology that Theseus does marry Hippolyta.
He killed them.
Hippolyta - DC Comics - was created in 1942.
Aegues, the king of Athens.
Hermia
She never was Hippolyta or Antiope depending on which Greek myth you read was a queen of the Amazons and in Greek myth was either abducted or wooed in to becoming Theseus wife or concubine.
No - Queen Hippolyta and the Amazons had to fight him to get it.