The Sentry told Theban King Creon that Antigone had buried her brother, Polyneices. He had two conversations with the King. In the first conversation, he didn't know the identity of the burier. He just knew that Polyneices' corpse had been covered with a fine layer of dust and sprinkled with oil. In the second conversation, he identified Antigone, whom he had arrested for a second burial attempt and brought with him.
Because the guards saw her burying the body and Creon told the sentry to figure out who had buried the body and defied his orders or the sentry would be the one serving the death penalty.
Creon wants the guards to hurry to Antigone in the cave because Teiresias (the blind prophet) told him that two family members would die is Antigone did. So at that, Creon needed to save her.
creon was mad when the messenger told him that somone had tried to bury polynecies.
No, Creon does not die in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, the play ends with Theban King Creon being led away from his people and into the Theban royal palace recesses. Creon is sputtering about his punishment. He is told that there are more pressing matters to attend to at this moment than that.
Antigone never married. She was planned to wed Haemon but Creon sent her to be locked away as punishment. After Antigone died in Haemon's arms he committed suicide as he told his father he would do because he was so in love with her.
Because the guards saw her burying the body and Creon told the sentry to figure out who had buried the body and defied his orders or the sentry would be the one serving the death penalty.
Creon wants the guards to hurry to Antigone in the cave because Teiresias (the blind prophet) told him that two family members would die is Antigone did. So at that, Creon needed to save her.
creon was mad when the messenger told him that somone had tried to bury polynecies.
No, Creon does not die in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, the play ends with Theban King Creon being led away from his people and into the Theban royal palace recesses. Creon is sputtering about his punishment. He is told that there are more pressing matters to attend to at this moment than that.
Antigone never married. She was planned to wed Haemon but Creon sent her to be locked away as punishment. After Antigone died in Haemon's arms he committed suicide as he told his father he would do because he was so in love with her.
The father of Antigone is Oedipus. The man that blinded himself after knowing that he had killed his father and married his mother, whom he had 4 kids with. Antigone, Ismene, and the two brothers that killed each other.
That she is brave, compassionate and determined is what can be told of Antigone's character from the strong contrast with her sister in the prologue to "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, Theban Princess Antigone demonstrates bravery in heading on a collision path with her formidable uncle, King Creon. She exhibits compassion in not wanting to leave her brother Polyneices' body above ground and exposed to disfigurement and dismemberment by ravaging weather and scrounging wildlife. She manifests determination in holding to her decision despite her sister Ismene's persuasive reasons to abandon the task.
Oedipus, who is also her brother. Oedipus, the king of Thebes. His story is told in the play "Oedipus Rex".
Oedipus, who is also her brother. Oedipus, the king of Thebes. His story is told in the play "Oedipus Rex".
He was a son of King Creon and Queen Eurydice of Thebes. In the Seven Against Thebes, Creon was told by Tiresias that Thebes would be victorious only if Megareus was sacrificed. Megareus willingly sacrificed himself, and Thebes won against the Seven.
That what goes around Thebes will come back to destroy the royal household is the prophecy told by Teiresias in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, Teiresias the blind prophet advises his sovereign, Theban King Creon, to bury Polyneices and to release Princess Antigone. Creon objects since he considers his nephew a traitor undeserving of below ground burial and his niece a foolish lawbreaker. Teiresias warns that the mourning that grieves all Thebes over the dead whom Creon denies of god-given burial rights will strike and destroy Creon's own household.
As a result of his stubborn attitude and refusing to listen to Antigone, Haemon, and the citizens of Thebes, Creon blinds himself to the true situation. In the end, what results from this is that his son Haemon commits suicide to die along with his lover, Antigone, and his wife, Eurydice, also commits suicide. Another of his sons, Megareus, had died earlier after Creon sacrificed him to save Thebes (Tiresias the seer had told him that Thebes would guaranteed a victory against the Seven Against Thebes if Megareus was sacrificed). Cursing Creon for his stubbornness and blaming him for the death of their two sons, Eurydice stabs herself with a sword. Thus, because of Creon's own selfishness and short-sightedness, he met his fate: his entire family was killed, and a descendant of an earlier Theban king, named Lycus, kills Creon and takes the crown. In the end, Creon lost everything.