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  2. Eurydice (wife of Creon) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eurydice_(wife_of_Creon)

    Sophocles, The Antigone of Sophocles edited with introduction and notes by Sir Richard Jebb. Cambridge. Cambridge University Press. 1893. Online version at the Perseus Digital Library. Sophocles, Sophocles. Vol 1: Oedipus the king. Oedipus at Colonus. Antigone. With an English translation by F. Storr. The Loeb classical library, 20. Francis Storr.

  3. Creon (king of Thebes) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creon_(king_of_Thebes)

    Creon is portrayed as a tyrant in Geoffrey Chaucer's The Knight's Tale, and in a later adaptation of the same story, William Shakespeare's and John Fletcher's play The Two Noble Kinsmen. As in Antigone , he refuses to allow the burial of defeated enemies.

  4. Eurydice (Greek myth) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eurydice_(Greek_myth)

    Eurydice, wife of Neleus, mother of Thrasymedes. [9] Eurydice, an Elean princess as the daughter of King Pelops of Pisa. She was the wife of Electryon, and grandmother of Heracles. [10] Eurydice, wife of Orpheus who attempted to bring her back from the Underworld. [11] Eurydice, wife of King Creon of Thebes and mother of Haemon, Menoeceus and ...

  5. Antigone (Sophocles play) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antigone_(Sophocles_play)

    Eurydice of Thebes is the Queen of Thebes and Creon's wife. She appears towards the end and only to hear confirmation of her son Haemon's death. In her grief, she dies by suicide, cursing Creon, whom she blames for her son's death. Haemon is the son of Creon and Eurydice, betrothed to Antigone. Proved to be more reasonable than Creon, he ...

  6. Antigone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antigone

    Antigone appears in the three 5th century BC tragic plays written by Sophocles, known collectively as the three Theban plays, being the protagonist of the eponymous tragedy Antigone. She makes a brief appearance at the end of Aeschylus' Seven against Thebes, while her story was also the subject of Euripides' now lost play with the same name.

  7. Seven against Thebes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seven_against_Thebes

    Creon forbids burial of the Seven, including Polynices, but Antigone, and Argia, Polynices wife, burn his corpse on Eteocles' funeral-pyre. They are caught, Argia escapes, and although Antigone is initially saved by Creon's son Haemon, she is eventually killed (72). [146]

  8. Antigona (Traetta) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antigona_(Traetta)

    Antigone by Frederic Leighton, 1882. Antigone cremates Polynices by night. Haemon comes to warn her just before Adrastus and his guards arrive. Adrastus realises Creon's orders have been disobeyed. He believes Haemon is the culprit and arrests him. Creon sentences him to death, but Antigone arrives to explain that the cremation is all her own work.

  9. Haemon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haemon

    Αἵμωνος) was the son of Creon and Eurydice, and thus brother of Menoeceus , Lycomedes, Megara, Pyrrha and Henioche. The various sources of his myth present differing and contradictory versions of his story. In the version of the myth recorded by Apollodorus and in the Oedipodea, Haemon was killed by the Sphinx.