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  1. The Crossword Solver found 30 answers to "sophocles tragedy", 4 letters crossword clue. The Crossword Solver finds answers to classic crosswords and cryptic crossword puzzles. Enter the length or pattern for better results. Click the answer to find similar crossword clues.

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  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › SophoclesSophocles - Wikipedia

    Learn about the life and works of Sophocles, one of the three surviving Greek tragedians from the classical period. He wrote over 120 plays, including famous ones such as Oedipus Rex and Antigone, and won many awards in the Athenian festivals.

    • Overview
    • The plays of Sophocles
    • Ajax
    • Antigone
    • Trachinian Women
    • Oedipus the King
    • Electra
    • Philoctetes
    • Oedipus at Colonus
    • Trackers
    • GeneratedCaptionsTabForHeroSec

    Only seven of Sophocles’ tragedies survive in their entirety, along with 400 lines of a satyr play, numerous fragments of plays now lost, and 90 titles. All seven of the complete plays are works of Sophocles’ maturity, but only two of them, Philoctetes and Oedipus at Colonus, have fairly certain dates. Ajax is generally regarded as the earliest of ...

    Only seven of Sophocles’ tragedies survive in their entirety, along with 400 lines of a satyr play, numerous fragments of plays now lost, and 90 titles. All seven of the complete plays are works of Sophocles’ maturity, but only two of them, Philoctetes and Oedipus at Colonus, have fairly certain dates. Ajax is generally regarded as the earliest of ...

    The entire plot of Ajax (Greek: Aias mastigophoros) is constructed around Ajax, the mighty hero of the Trojan War whose pride drives him to treachery and finally to his own ruin and suicide some two-thirds of the way through the play. Ajax is deeply offended at the award of the prize of valour (the dead Achilles’ armour) not to himself but to Odyss...

    Antigone is the daughter of Oedipus, the former king of Thebes. She is willing to face the capital punishment that has been decreed by her uncle Creon, the new king, as the penalty for anyone burying her brother Polyneices. (Polyneices has just been killed attacking Thebes, and it is as posthumous punishment for this attack that Creon has forbidden...

    This play centres on the efforts of Deianeira to win back the wandering affections of her husband, Heracles, who is away on one of his heroic missions and who has sent back his latest concubine, Iole, to live with his wife at their home in Trachis. The love charm Deianeira uses on Heracles turns out to be poisonous, and she kills herself upon learn...

    The plot of Oedipus the King (Greek: Oidipous Tyrannos; Latin: Oedipus Rex) is a structural marvel that marks the summit of classical Greek drama’s formal achievements. The play’s main character, Oedipus, is the wise, happy, and beloved ruler of Thebes. Though hot-tempered, impatient, and arrogant at times of crisis, he otherwise seems to enjoy every good fortune. But Oedipus mistakenly believes that he is the son of King Polybus of Corinth and his queen. He became the ruler of Thebes because he rescued the city from the Sphinx by answering its riddle correctly, and so was awarded the city’s widowed queen, Jocasta. Before overcoming the Sphinx, Oedipus left Corinth forever because the Delphic oracle had prophesied to him that he would kill his father and marry his mother. While journeying to Thebes from Corinth, Oedipus encountered at a crossroads an old man accompanied by five servants. Oedipus got into an argument with him and in a fit of arrogance and bad temper killed the old man and four of his servants.

    The play opens with the city of Thebes stricken by a plague and its citizens begging Oedipus to find a remedy. He consults the Delphic oracle, which declares that the plague will cease only when the murderer of Jocasta’s first husband, King Laius, has been found and punished for his deed. Oedipus resolves to find Laius’s killer, and much of the rest of the play centres upon the investigation he conducts in this regard. In a series of tense, gripping, and ominous scenes, Oedipus’s investigation turns into an obsessive reconstruction of his own hidden past as he begins to suspect that the old man he killed at the crossroads was none other than Laius. Finally, Oedipus learns that he himself was abandoned to die as a baby by Laius and Jocasta because they feared a prophecy that their infant son would kill his father; that he survived and was adopted by the ruler of Corinth (see video), but in his maturity he has unwittingly fulfilled the Delphic oracle’s prophecy of him; that he has indeed killed his true father, married his own mother, and begot children who are also his own siblings.

    As in Aeschylus’s Libation Bearers, the action in Electra (Greek: Ēlektra) follows the return of Orestes to kill his mother, Clytemnestra, and her lover Aegisthus in retribution for their murder of Orestes’ father, Agamemnon. In this play, however, the main focus is on Orestes’ sister Electra and her anguished participation in her brother’s plans. ...

    In Philoctetes (Greek: Philoktētēs) the Greeks on their way to Troy have cast away the play’s main character, Philoctetes, on the desert island of Lemnos because he has a loathsome and incurable ulcer on his foot. But the Greeks have discovered that they cannot win victory over Troy without Philoctetes and his wonderful bow, which formerly belonged...

    In Oedipus at Colonus (Greek: Oidipous epi Kolōnō) the old, blind Oedipus has spent many years wandering in exile after being rejected by his sons and the city of Thebes. Oedipus has been cared for only by his daughters Antigone and Ismene. He arrives at a sacred grove at Colonus, a village close by Athens (and the home of Sophocles himself). There...

    Four hundred lines of this satyr play survive. The plot of Trackers (Greek: Ichneutai) is based on two stories about the miraculous early deeds of the god Hermes: that the infant, growing to maturity in a few days, stole cattle from Apollo, baffling discovery by reversing the animals’ hoof marks, and that he invented the lyre by fitting strings to ...

    Learn about the life and works of Sophocles, one of the three great tragedians of ancient Greece. Explore his seven surviving plays, such as Oedipus the King, Antigone, and Philoctetes, and their themes of fate, hubris, and human suffering.

  4. Aug 8, 2024 · Learn about Sophocles, the purest artist in tragedy, who wrote 125 plays and won 20 prizes. Explore his masterpiece Oedipus the King and its sequel Oedipus at Colonus, which show the tragic hero's freedom and nobility in the face of fate.

  5. Sep 29, 2013 · Learn about Sophocles, one of the three great Greek tragedians, who wrote plays such as Oedipus Rex, Antigone, and Women of Trachis. Discover his life, achievements, innovations, and legacy in ancient Greek theatre and culture.

  6. Antigone is a play by Sophocles that depicts the conflict between the heroine and her uncle Creon over the burial of Polynices, the dead brother of Antigone. The play explores the themes of family, duty, law, and fate in the context of the Theban mythology and the Oedipus cycle.

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