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  • The Classics Pages - Antigone

    On this page: summary of the play and general notes On other pages : discussions - How old was Antigone? The Character of Creon - persuasion and getting ...

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  • Antigone - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Antigone (pronounced /ænˈtɪɡəni/; Greek Αντιγόνη) is the name of two different women in Greek mythology. The name may be taken to mean "unbending", coming from "anti ...

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Antigone

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Antigone, in Greek mythology, daughter of Oedipus, king of Thebes, and Queen Jocasta. Antigone accompanied her father into exile but returned to Thebes after his death. In a dispute over the throne her brothers, Eteocles and Polynices, killed each other. The new king, Creon, gave Eteocles an honourable burial but ordered that the body of Polynices, whom he regarded as a traitor, remain where it had fallen. Antigone, believing divine law must take precedence over earthly decrees, buried her brother. Creon condemned her to be buried alive. She hanged herself in the tomb, and her grief-stricken lover, Haemon, Creon's son, killed himself. Antigone was the subject of plays by the ancient Greek playwright Sophocles and the 20th-century French playwright Jean Anouilh.

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