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That Polyneices is an enemy of the state is the way in which Creon justifies his order not to bury Polyneices in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).

Specifically, Theban King Creon differentiates between disloyal and loyal Thebans. He does not want a repeat of the recently ended first civil war over the Theban royal succession. He thinks rebels will be discouraged if they see how miserable it is to be denied their cherished, god-given rights to below ground burials.

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Q: How does Creon justify his order not to bury Polyneices in 'Antigone'?
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What does Creon order the Sentry to do?

He orders the sentry to find out who is burying polyneices because he had strict orders to not bury him. Then the sentry brings Creon's niece Antigone in and sentences her to death.


What does Creon ask Antigone in 'Antigone'?

If she is the doer of the deed and if she knws about his non-burial edict are what Creon asks Antigone in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, a guard brings Theban Princess Antigone before King Creon and says that she is caught burying her brother Polyneices. Creon is not impressed with his niece but still is unprepared for her civil disobedience. He needs to have a confession of motive and intent in order to sentence Antigone to death.


What is the order of events in 'Antigone'?

Following is the order of events in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.): 1. Antigone resolves to bury Polyneices' body despite Theban King Creon's order to the contrary. 2. The guards come, find the body buried, and unbury it. 3. Antigone finds the body exposed, tries to rebury it, and is caught by the guards. 4. Creon sentences Antigone to be walled up alive. 5. Teiresias the blind prophet says Polyneices' body must be buried to stop a plague from infecting all of Thebes. He warns that Creon's own house is doomed if the body isn't buried. 6. Creon resolves to bury Polyneices and free Antigone. 7. Antigone hangs herself in her prison. 8. Haemon, Antigone's fiance and Creon's son, kills himself with his own sword upon seeing Antigone dead. 9. Theban Queen Eurydice kills herself rather than live life with her husband and without her son. 10. Creon is led into exile.


How do you explain how Creon is conflict with Antigone?

Since King Creon stated the 'unbreakable' decree, this presents a conflict for Antigone. Originally, Antigone was going to bury her brother, Polyneices without consent from her uncle. King Creon now presents a new problem for her, since she now has to break the law in order to save her brother from everlasting damnation (his soul would walk the earth forever).


What was Creon's order in the play 'Antigone'?

That the disloyal Theban dead remain unburied, that Antigone be buried alive and that Ismene be released are Creon's orders in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, Theban King Creon orders that the disloyal Theban dead be denied the god-given rights of all Thebans to below-ground burials. He orders that Antigone be sentenced to death once he finds that she deliberately buries the body of Polyneices, her brother and Creon's nephew. He orders that Ismene be spared from punishment since he does not believe her story of co-participation in Antigone's crime.

Related questions

What does Creon order the Sentry to do?

He orders the sentry to find out who is burying polyneices because he had strict orders to not bury him. Then the sentry brings Creon's niece Antigone in and sentences her to death.


What does Creon ask Antigone in 'Antigone'?

If she is the doer of the deed and if she knws about his non-burial edict are what Creon asks Antigone in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, a guard brings Theban Princess Antigone before King Creon and says that she is caught burying her brother Polyneices. Creon is not impressed with his niece but still is unprepared for her civil disobedience. He needs to have a confession of motive and intent in order to sentence Antigone to death.


What is the order of events in 'Antigone'?

Following is the order of events in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.): 1. Antigone resolves to bury Polyneices' body despite Theban King Creon's order to the contrary. 2. The guards come, find the body buried, and unbury it. 3. Antigone finds the body exposed, tries to rebury it, and is caught by the guards. 4. Creon sentences Antigone to be walled up alive. 5. Teiresias the blind prophet says Polyneices' body must be buried to stop a plague from infecting all of Thebes. He warns that Creon's own house is doomed if the body isn't buried. 6. Creon resolves to bury Polyneices and free Antigone. 7. Antigone hangs herself in her prison. 8. Haemon, Antigone's fiance and Creon's son, kills himself with his own sword upon seeing Antigone dead. 9. Theban Queen Eurydice kills herself rather than live life with her husband and without her son. 10. Creon is led into exile.


How do you explain how Creon is conflict with Antigone?

Since King Creon stated the 'unbreakable' decree, this presents a conflict for Antigone. Originally, Antigone was going to bury her brother, Polyneices without consent from her uncle. King Creon now presents a new problem for her, since she now has to break the law in order to save her brother from everlasting damnation (his soul would walk the earth forever).


What was Creon's order in the play 'Antigone'?

That the disloyal Theban dead remain unburied, that Antigone be buried alive and that Ismene be released are Creon's orders in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, Theban King Creon orders that the disloyal Theban dead be denied the god-given rights of all Thebans to below-ground burials. He orders that Antigone be sentenced to death once he finds that she deliberately buries the body of Polyneices, her brother and Creon's nephew. He orders that Ismene be spared from punishment since he does not believe her story of co-participation in Antigone's crime.


Does Creon let Antigone go free in 'Antigone'?

No, Creon does not let Antigone go free because she dies before he can do so in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, Theban King Creon has his niece, Princess Antigone, buried alive in a remote cave for burying her brother Polyneices despite a royal edict forbidding burial of the disloyal Theban dead. Creon remains firm on the non-burial and the death sentence until he is warned that the royal household will suffer. He therefore reverses the non-burial order and, too late, approves Antigone's release.


What does Creon order about Polyneices' body in 'Antigone'?

That Polyneices' body is to be left above ground, exposed to the weather and wildlife, and denied its god given right to proper below ground burial and funeral services is what Theban King Creon orders. It doesn't matter to Creon that Polyneices was correct in trying to right a wrong. Neither does it matter that Polyneices was Creon's nephew.What matters instead is Creon's decision to keep going in death the hatreds of a life. What matters instead is the conclusion that a disloyal Theban needs to be remembered as a traitor and not a hometown boy. So what matters essentially is the adage that what you bind on earth you bind in heaven. Specifically, it's that last act of righteous defiance by which Creon judges and condemns Polyneices, and not an otherwise apparently circumspect life.


Why does Creon order Eteocles to be buried with great honors but Polyneices' body to be left to rot on the battlefield in 'Antigone'?

That he perceives one as a loyalist and the other as an enemy is the reason why Creon orders Eteocles to be buried with great honors but Polyneices' body be left to rot on the battlefield in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, Theban King Creon believes in carrying the hatreds of life into death. He considers an enemy an enemy for all time. He feels that enemies need to be really punished in such a way as to ruin their entry into the Underworld of the afterlife and to discourage future opposition from arising to him and his rule.


Why does Creon order Antigone to be locked in a vault in 'Antigone'?

Creon does not order Antigone to be locked in a vault in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, Theban King Creon issues an edict that his niece, Princess Antigone, violates. The sentence is death from being pelted with stones thrown by her fellow Thebans. He commutes the sentence to life imprisonment by being walled up in a remote cave. It is Creon's hope that once out of the public sight, Antigone will not serve as a rebellious example to others and will cease to pollute the environment with her contrary behavior and insubordinate ways.


Why does Creon forbid Polyneices' burial in 'Antigone'?

For the security of his city, people and rule Theban King Creon forbids the burial of his nephew and Polyneices in the play "Antigone" by ancient Greek playwright Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, the King is a law-and-order ruler who brooks no opposition. He tolerates only devoted obedience to him and his decrees. Additionally, Creon considers a dead enemy still an enemy, be that enemy one of his own people or even one of his own family. According to the King, the enmities and hatreds of a lifetime do not end with death. In fact, they carry over and demand continued differential treatment and continued severe punishment.


What final warning or prediction does Tiresias give Creon?

Basically he tells Creon, that by punishing Antigone for burying her brother against his (Creon's) order, but in accordance with divine law, that Creon is really upsetting the gods and they are going to punish him.


Why does Creon permit no one to bury Polyneices?

Because Polyneices attacked Thebes in order to retrieve the crown from his brother Eteocles, but in the midst of it the war it caused to be waged wreaked havoc and destruction upon Thebes. Creon who saw this as treason, since Polyneices was originally from Thebes and he waged war upon his own people. In return for such a violation King Creon declares Polyneices a tyrant who does not deserve burial rites since he sunk so low enough to destroy his home nation.