The Theban shepherd gives the baby Oedipus to Polybus' messenger in "Oedipus Rex" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).
Specifically, the Theban shepherd is Theban Queen Jocasta's most trusted servant. She hands her three-day-old son, Oedipus, over to the shepherd to kill and thereby prevent Oedipus from growing up to his prophesied fate of killing his father. The shepherd then gives Oedipus to a Corinthian shepherd who fosters the infant into the childless Corinthian royal house and who later becomes Corinthian King Polybus' messenger.
The messenger from Corinth arrives to Thebes to tell Oedipus that Oedipus' father Polybus is dead. And the people of Corinth wish Oedipus to be their new king. The messenger reveals to Oedipus that Polybus and Merope are not his real parents. He also reveals that the Shepherd gave him a baby as a gift to the King and Queen of Corinth.
Oedipus was given to the messenger by a shepherd. The shepherd had found the baby on Mount Cithaeron, where he was abandoned by his biological parents, King Laius and Queen Jocasta of Thebes, due to a prophecy that he would kill his father and marry his mother. The messenger then took Oedipus to the royal family in Corinth, where he was raised by King Polybus and Queen Merope.
Knowing Oedipus in Thebes and in Corinth is how the messenger knows what he does about the Theban King. Long ago, the messenger works as a shepherd in Thebes. Heis entrusted with Oedipus' care by a fellow shepherd who's supposed to leave the three day old baby to die. The messenger takes Oedipus back to Corinth with him. He gives the baby to the childless Corinthian monarchs, King Polybus and Queen Merope.That's why the messenger knows that Oedipus is the adopted son of the Corinthian monarchs. That also is why he knows that a man who's fated to kill his father and marry his mother safely can go back to Corinth. And that's why he knows that Oedipus' real hometown is Thebes.
kind Laius fearing the prophecies that the oracle gave him, he took the infant baby (Oedipus) to the mountain and felt him for dead, and then a shepherd found the baby and took him to his king Polybus in Corinth that how polybus ended up raising Oedipus.
If you mean the shepherd from Corinth, the man who brings the news the Oedipus' supposed father, Polybus, is dead, he tells Oedipus that Polybus was actually no relation to him. The shepherd was given Oedipus as a tiny baby by another shepherd, from there in Thebes. Because the KIng and Queen of Corinth had no children, the shepherd from their country had given them the baby, who had its feet pinned together, to raise as theirs.
The messenger from Corinth arrives to Thebes to tell Oedipus that Oedipus' father Polybus is dead. And the people of Corinth wish Oedipus to be their new king. The messenger reveals to Oedipus that Polybus and Merope are not his real parents. He also reveals that the Shepherd gave him a baby as a gift to the King and Queen of Corinth.
Oedipus was given to the messenger by a shepherd. The shepherd had found the baby on Mount Cithaeron, where he was abandoned by his biological parents, King Laius and Queen Jocasta of Thebes, due to a prophecy that he would kill his father and marry his mother. The messenger then took Oedipus to the royal family in Corinth, where he was raised by King Polybus and Queen Merope.
The messenger of Corinth brings news to Oedipus that the man he believes to be his father, Polybius, has died. He also tells Oedipus that he was given to Corinthian monarchs as a baby and was not their birth child.
Knowing Oedipus in Thebes and in Corinth is how the messenger knows what he does about the Theban King. Long ago, the messenger works as a shepherd in Thebes. Heis entrusted with Oedipus' care by a fellow shepherd who's supposed to leave the three day old baby to die. The messenger takes Oedipus back to Corinth with him. He gives the baby to the childless Corinthian monarchs, King Polybus and Queen Merope.That's why the messenger knows that Oedipus is the adopted son of the Corinthian monarchs. That also is why he knows that a man who's fated to kill his father and marry his mother safely can go back to Corinth. And that's why he knows that Oedipus' real hometown is Thebes.
kind Laius fearing the prophecies that the oracle gave him, he took the infant baby (Oedipus) to the mountain and felt him for dead, and then a shepherd found the baby and took him to his king Polybus in Corinth that how polybus ended up raising Oedipus.
The messenger from Corinth reveals to Oedipus that he is not the biological son of King Polybus and Queen Merope, as he had believed. Instead, he explains that he was found as a baby by the messenger and given to the royal couple, who adopted him. This revelation ultimately leads Oedipus to discover his true origins and the tragic fulfillment of the prophecy he sought to avoid.
If you mean the shepherd from Corinth, the man who brings the news the Oedipus' supposed father, Polybus, is dead, he tells Oedipus that Polybus was actually no relation to him. The shepherd was given Oedipus as a tiny baby by another shepherd, from there in Thebes. Because the KIng and Queen of Corinth had no children, the shepherd from their country had given them the baby, who had its feet pinned together, to raise as theirs.
The servant who spares the child in 'Oedipus Rex' is the first shepherd. He also is the sole survivor of the street brawl that kills every other member in the royal party of his sovereign, Theban King Laius. The child is the three-day-old infant, the subsequent Theban King Oedipus.The servant ends up giving the baby to a second shepherd who's a native of Corinth. That second shepherd later becomes a messenger. In that capacity, he travels to Thebes to tell Oedipus of the death of Corinthian King Polybus. Polybus and his wife, Corinthian Queen Merope, raised Oedipus as their own and as their heir apparent. Upon Polybus' death, the messenger lets Oedipus know that Queen Merope survives and that the people of Corinth want him as their king.
Oedipus discovers he is adopted through a series of revelations triggered by a prophecy and the investigation into King Laius's murder. A messenger from Corinth informs him that his supposed parents, King Polybus and Queen Merope, are not his biological parents. Additionally, a shepherd reveals that he was given Oedipus as a baby by Laius and that the king and queen of Thebes are his true parents. This shocking truth ultimately leads to Oedipus's tragic realization of his fate.
When Oedipus was exposed on the mountain as a baby in an effort to thwart the prophecy that he would one day kill his father and marry his mother, the shepherd gave him to the messenger who then brought him back to the people Oedipus believed to be his parents.
Yes, the future Theban King Oedipus was adopted. He was fosterd by a shepherd to the childless royal couple of Corinth, King Polybus and Merope. The shepherd was given the abandoned baby while visiting a fellow shepherd in Thebes. The Corinthian monarchs were so pleased with Oedipus that they raised him as their heir apparent.
Oedipus grew up in Corinth, where he was raised by King Polybus and Queen Merope, who were unaware of his true parentage. He was adopted after being abandoned as a baby by his biological parents, King Laius and Queen Jocasta of Thebes. Oedipus's upbringing in Corinth plays a crucial role in his eventual fate and the tragic events that unfold in his life.