Chapter Fifteen, Lecture Two

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Chapter Fifteen, Lecture Two Theseus

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Chapter Fifteen, Lecture Two. Theseus. The Begetting of Theseus. The Begetting of Theseus. Aegeus, a king of Athens, had no sons Delphi: do not open the wine skins until you return home At Troezen, Pittheus understands the prophecy Sends his daughter Aethra Poseidon also gets involved. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Chapter Fifteen, Lecture Two

Page 1: Chapter Fifteen, Lecture Two

Chapter Fifteen, Lecture Two

Theseus

Page 2: Chapter Fifteen, Lecture Two

The Begetting of Theseus

Page 3: Chapter Fifteen, Lecture Two

The Begetting of Theseus

• Aegeus, a king of Athens, had no sons• Delphi: do not open the wine skins until

you return home• At Troezen, Pittheus understands the

prophecy• Sends his daughter Aethra• Poseidon also gets involved

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The Begetting of Theseus

• The sword and the sandal

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The Labors of Theseus

1. Periphetes, the Clubber2. Sinis, the Pinebender3. Cormmyonian sow4. Sciron5. Circyon6. Procrustes

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Arrival at Athens

• Under a spell cast by Medea, Aegeus doesn’t realize that this is his son

• Aegeus sends him out to kill a bull on the plains of Marathon

• Then she tries to poison him, but Aegeus recognizes his own sword in time – Medea flees

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Theseus and Antiopê

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Theseus and Antiopê

• On his way back from his adventure in Crete with the Minotaur (Chapter 16), Theseus forgets to change the ship’s flag to white

• Aegeus drowns himself in the sea (Aegean Sea)

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Theseus and Antiopê

• Athens is “founded” again with Theseus’s wise reforms– Synoicism– Festival: Panathenaia– social reforms: classes– assembly

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Theseus and Antiopê

• Goes off in search of more adventure– Abducts the Queen of the Amazons: Hippolyta

or Antiopê• Leads to an Amazonomachy in Athens

– The Areopagus

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The Amazons

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The Amazons

• Mythic homeland is north of the Black Sea (southern modern-day Russia)– a mazos ?– constructed the temple to Artemis at

Ephesus?• A purely myth invention

– the world turned upside down

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The Amazons

• Contrary to the ideal for the Athenian woman– Always defeated by Greek heroes

• Given political significance after the Battle of Marathon– The Amazonomachy identified with the

Athenian victory over the Persians

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Theseus and Hippolytus

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Theseus and Hippolytus

• Remarries to Phaedra, a daughter of Minos

• Their son is Hippolytus• Story told by Euripides in his Hippolytus• Hippolytus worships only Artemis and

neglects Aphrodite• Aphrodite makes Phaedra, his mother-in-

law, lust after him

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Theseus and Hippolytus

• The slave intermediary• Hippolytus curses women, but vows not to

tell anyone• Phaedra kills herself, but leaves behind a

note for Theseus• Theseus orders Poseidon to kill Hippolytus

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The Folktale of “Potiphar’s Wife”

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Folktale of “Potiphar’s Wife

• Story of the Two Brothers– Anubis (not the god)– Bata

• Joseph and Potiphar’s wife• Bellerophon and the wife of King Proteus

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Exploits of Theseus and Pirithoüs

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Exploits of Theseus and Pirithoüs

• The Battle of the Centaurs and the Lapiths (at Perithoüs’s wedding to a Hippodamia)

• Caeneus (formerly Caenis)• The two now seek appropriate wives

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Exploits of Theseus and Pirithoüs

• Theseus tries for Helen, but she is too young and is sent away for safekeeping

• The two visit the underworld for Pirithoüs’s choice: Persephonê

• They are trapped but Theseus is eventually rescued by Heracles

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Death of Theseus

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Death of Theseus

• Lost favor of the people of Athens and expelled by Menestheus of Athens

• Fled to Scyros, King Lycomedes• Killed by the king

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Myth and Propaganda

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Myth and Propaganda

• Theseus originally a minor figure• Becomes more important with the rise of

Athens beginning in the 6th century– Theseïs

• Expansion and popularization begins with Pisistratus– Uses Theseus to glorify his own

accomplishments for the city

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Myth and Propaganda

• After the Pisistratid dynasty fell from popularity, Theseus remade again– To a hero of democracy and the defender of

freedom• Cimon (son of Miltiades)

– Modeled some of his career leading the Athenian rise to empire after Theseus

– The “bones” of Theseus; new festivals to Theseus; leader of Ionian Greeks against Sparta

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End