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Antigone - Wikipedia Antigone appears in three 5th century BC tragic plays written by Sophocles, known collectively as the three Theban plays, with her being the protagonist of the eponymous tragedy Antigone
Antigone | Summary Facts | Britannica Antigone, in Greek legend, the daughter born of the unwittingly incestuous union of Oedipus and his mother, Jocasta
Antigone by Sophocles Plot Summary | LitCharts Oedipus's daughters, Antigone and Ismene, are grieving for the loss of their two brothers, but Antigone is also defiant She declares that the burial traditions are the unwritten laws of the gods, and are more important than the decrees of one man
Antigone by Sophocles - Greek Mythology One of Sophocles’ earliest surviving plays, Antigone is often thought of a perfect specimen of Ancient Greek tragedy
ANTIGONE - SOPHOCLES PLAY - ANALYSIS SUMMARY - GREEK MYTHOLOGY The action of “Antigone” follows on from the Theban civil war, in which the two brothers, Eteocles and Polynices, died fighting each other for the throne of Thebes after Eteocles had refused to give up the crown to his brother as their father Oedipus had prescribed
Antigone: The Woman Who Defied the Theban King in Greek Mythology Antigone is a key figure in Greek mythology and literature, particularly in the tragic plays of the Athenian playwright Sophocles Her story interweaves elements of family loyalty, moral choices, and the tragic consequences of defiance against autocratic rule
The Internet Classics Archive | Antigone by Sophocles No word of friends, Antigone, gladsome or painful, hath come to me, since we two sisters were bereft of brothers twain, killed in one day by twofold blow; and since in this last night the Argive host hath fled, know no more, whether my fortune be brighter, or more grievous
Antigone - CliffsNotes Antigone makes an impassioned argument, declaring Creon's order to be against the laws of the gods themselves Enraged by Antigone's refusal to submit to his authority, Creon declares that she and her sister will be put to death