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Antigoni
In ancient Greek legend, Antigone was the daughter—and the sister—of Oedipus, the mythical king of Thebes who tore out his eyes after discovering that he had unwittingly killed his father and married his own mother, Jocasta. The most famous account of Antigone's story is in Sophocles' Theban trilogy: King Oedipus (performed c. 427 BCE), Oedipus at Colonus (performed posthumously in 405 BCE), and Antigone (performed before its thematic prequels in 441 BCE). Aeschylus also touches on the Theban legend in Seven Against Thebes.
Aeschylus' tragedy tells the story of the mortal conflict between Antigone's brothers, Polyneices and Eteocles, which forms the prologue to the events detailed in Antigone. In Sophocles' play, Antigone comes into conflict with the new king of Thebes, Creon, the brother of Jocasta, when she insists on burying Polyneices against Creon's direct order. Antigone's significance has been seen as lying in her advocacy of the importance of family loyalties, in positing a conflict between human and divine law, in representing an early account of the demands of conscience against socially imposed obligations, and in raising the question of the role of women in public life.
Following the death of Jocasta and the expulsion of the now-blind Oedipus from Thebes, which occur at the end of King Oedipus, Antigone, despite being the younger of the sisters, accepts responsibility for the care of her father and accompanies him on his wanderings. By the time of Oedipus at Colonus, Oedipus is a very old man. During that play, Ismene seeks her father out in Athens to tell him of the impending battle between her brothers for control of Thebes. Unable to prevent this, Oedipus dies, and the play ends with Antigone resolving to return to Thebes to try to stop her brothers from destroying each other.
In Antigone, we learn that both brothers were killed in the battle and that Creon, while granting Eteocles full burial rights, has deemed Polyneices a traitor and demanded that his body be left where he died, as carrion meat. Antigone tries to persuade Ismene to help her bury Polyneices; Ismene refuses, claiming that as a woman she is not strong enough to oppose male decrees, and Antigone disowns her for failing to carry out her familial duties.
Once Antigone has buried Polyneices, she is brought before Creon, who orders her to be imprisoned, despite the pleading of Haemon, Creon's son and Antigone's lover, in a cave from which she cannot escape. Ismene now wishes to take the blame for the burial too, but Antigone refuses to allow her to share the credit for this act of sisterly devotion and explains that, as both her parents were dead, her brother was irreplaceable and her duty to him therefore exceeded even that owed to a husband or a child. Entombed in her cave, Antigone kills herself. When he discovers this, Haemon kills himself too, as does his mother, Eurydice. Too late, Creon is left to despair of his stubbornness.
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