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Oresteia

The Oresteia (Ancient Greek: Ὀρέστεια) is a trilogy of Greek tragedies written by Aeschylus in the 5th century BCE, concerning the murder of Agamemnon by Clytemnestra, the murder of Clytemnestra by Orestes, the trial of Orestes, the end of the curse on the House of Atreus and the pacification of the Furies (also called Erinyes or Eumenides).

Oresteia
SNG Drama Ljubljana performs an adaptation of The Oresteia, in 1968
Written byAeschylus
Original languageGreek
Genretragedy

The trilogy—consisting of Agamemnon (Ἀγαμέμνων), The Libation Bearers (Χοηφόροι), and The Eumenides (Εὐμενίδες)—also shows how the Greek gods interacted with the characters and influenced their decisions pertaining to events and disputes.[1] The only extant example of an ancient Greek theatre trilogy, the Oresteia won first prize at the Dionysia festival in 458 BCE. The principal themes of the trilogy include the contrast between revenge and justice, as well as the transition from personal vendetta to organized litigation.[2] Oresteia originally included a satyr play, Proteus (Πρωτεύς), following the tragic trilogy, but all except a single line of Proteus has been lost.[citation needed]

Agamemnon

Agamemnon
 
The murder of Agamemnon, from an 1879 illustration from Stories from the Greek Tragedians by Alfred Church
Written byAeschylus
ChorusElders of Argos
CharactersWatchman
Clytemnestra
Herald
Agamemnon
Messenger
Cassandra
Aegisthus
MuteSoldiers
Servants
SettingArgos, before the royal palace

Agamemnon (Ἀγαμέμνων, Agamémnōn) is the first of the three plays within the Oresteia trilogy. It details the homecoming of Agamemnon, King of Mycenae, from the Trojan War. After ten years of warfare, Troy had fallen and all of Greece could lay claim to victory. Waiting at home for Agamemnon is his wife, Queen Clytemnestra, who has been planning his murder. She desires his death to avenge the sacrifice of her daughter Iphigenia, to exterminate the only thing hindering her from commandeering the crown, and to finally be able to publicly embrace her long-time lover Aegisthus.[3]

The play opens to a watchman looking down and over the sea, reporting that he has been lying restless "like a dog" for a year, waiting to see some sort of signal confirming a Greek victory in Troy. He laments the fortunes of the house, but promises to keep silent: "A huge ox has stepped onto my tongue." The watchman sees a light far off in the distance—a bonfire signaling Troy's fall—and is overjoyed at the victory and hopes for the hasty return of his King, as the house has "wallowed" in his absence. Clytemnestra is introduced to the audience and she declares that there will be celebrations and sacrifices throughout the city as Agamemnon and his army return.[citation needed]

Upon the return of Agamemnon, his wife laments in full view of Argos how horrible the wait for her husband, and King, has been. After her soliloquy, Clytemnestra pleads with and persuades Agamemnon to walk on the robes laid out for him. This is a very ominous moment in the play as loyalties and motives are questioned. The King's new concubine, Cassandra, is now introduced and this immediately spawns hatred from the queen, Clytemnestra. Cassandra is ordered out of her chariot and to the altar where, once she is alone, she is heard crying out insane prophecies to Apollo about the death of Agamemnon and her own shared fate.

 
Agamemnon walks on sacred peplos garments

Inside the house a cry is heard; Agamemnon has been stabbed in the bathtub. The chorus separate from one another and ramble to themselves, proving their cowardice, when another final cry is heard. When the doors are finally opened, Clytemnestra is seen standing over the dead bodies of Agamemnon and Cassandra. Clytemnestra describes the murder in detail to the chorus, showing no sign of remorse or regret. Suddenly the exiled lover of Clytemnestra, Aegisthus, bursts into the palace to take his place next to her. Aegisthus proudly states that he devised the plan to murder Agamemnon and claim revenge for his father (the father of Aegisthus, Thyestes, was tricked into eating two of his sons by his brother Atreus, the father of Agamemnon). Clytemnestra claims that she and Aegisthus now have all the power and they re-enter the palace with the doors closing behind them.[4]

Aeschylus’ Agamemnon differs from many other Greek tragedies in the way that it does not have a clear hero. When first reading the play, one might assume that Agamemnon is a noble hero returning from war who is murdered by his wife. Upon first examination, Agamemnon is the hero of the tragedy and Clytemnestra is the villain. However, Aeschylus’ version of Agamemnon does not highlight either Agamemnon or Clytemnestra as the hero or villain. Instead, he makes the couple complex and complicated because both have honorable and evil qualities. Agamemnon is an esteemed veteran of the Trojan War and is admired by many. However, it is made clear that many do not approve of the way he sacrificed his daughter, Iphigenia, to start the Trojan War. It is also clear that many citizens resent Agamemnon because they lost their sons and husbands in the war he began. Additionally, Clytemnestra is seen as evil for murdering her husband as soon as he returns from war, but in one way she is just trying to avenge her daughter, who Agamemnon murdered. Both Agamemnon and Clytemnestra exhibit qualities that make them much more complex, realistic, and complicated than one-dimensional heroes and villains. Therefore, Aeschylus’ Agamemnon is compelling because it does not exhibit simple characters with one trait, but instead gives us a complicated set of characters that cannot be forced into one category of heroic or villainous characteristics.[5]

The Libation Bearers

The Libation Bearers
 
Orestes, Electra and Hermes in front of Agamemnon's tomb by Choephoroi Painter
Written byAeschylus
ChorusSlave women
Characters
Setting

In The Libation Bearers (Χοηφόροι, Choēphóroi)—the second play of Aeschylus' Oresteia trilogy—many years after the murder of Agamemnon, his son Orestes returns to Argos with his cousin Pylades to exact vengeance on Clytemnestra, as an order from Apollo, for killing Agamemnon.[6] Upon arriving, Orestes reunites with his sister Electra at Agamemnon's grave, while she was there bringing libations to Agamemnon in an attempt to stop Clytemnestra's bad dreams.[7] Shortly after the reunion, both Orestes and Electra, influenced by the Chorus, come up with a plan to kill both Clytemnestra and Aegisthus.[8]

Orestes then heads to the palace door where he is greeted by Clytemnestra. He pretends he is a stranger and tells Clytemnestra that he (Orestes) is dead, causing her to send for Aegisthus. Unrecognized, Orestes is then able to enter the palace where he then kills Aegisthus, who was without a guard due to the intervention of the Chorus in relaying Clytemnestra's message.[9] Clytemnestra then enters the room. Orestes hesitates to kill her, but Pylades reminds him of Apollo's orders, and he eventually follows through.[7] Consequently, after committing the matricide, Orestes is now the target of the Furies' merciless wrath and has no choice but to flee from the palace.[9]

 
Genealogy of Orestes

The Eumenides

The Eumenides
 
Written byAeschylus
ChorusThe Furies
Characters
Settingbefore the temple of Apollo at Delphi and in Athens

The final play of the Oresteia, called The Eumenides (Εὐμενίδες, Eumenídes), illustrates how the sequence of events in the trilogy ends up in the development of social order or a proper judicial system in Athenian society.[1] In this play, Orestes is hunted and tormented by the Furies, a trio of goddesses known to be the instruments of justice, who are also referred to as the "Gracious Ones" (Eumenides). They relentlessly pursue Orestes for the killing of his mother.[10] Through the intervention of Apollo, Orestes is able to escape them for a brief moment while they are asleep and head to Athens under the protection of Hermes. Seeing the Furies asleep, Clytemnestra's ghost comes to wake them up to obtain justice on her son Orestes for killing her.[11]

After waking up, the Furies hunt Orestes again and when they find him, Orestes pleads to the goddess Athena for help. She responds by setting up a trial for him in Athens on the Areopagus. This trial is made up of a group of twelve Athenian citizens and is supervised by Athena. Here Orestes is used as a trial dummy by Athena to set-up the first courtroom trial. He is also the object of the Furies, Apollo, and Athena.[1] After the trial comes to an end, the votes are tied. Athena casts the deciding vote and determines that Orestes will not be killed.[12] This does not sit well with the Furies but Athena eventually persuades them to accept the decision; instead of violently retaliating against wrongdoers, become a constructive force of vigilance in Athens. She then changes their names from the Furies to "the Eumenides" which means "the Gracious Ones".[13] Athena then ultimately rules that all trials must henceforth be settled in court rather than being carried out personally.[13]

Proteus

Proteus (Πρωτεύς, Prōteus), the satyr play which originally followed the first three plays of The Oresteia, is lost except for a two-line fragment preserved by Athenaeus. It is widely believed to have been based on the story told in Book IV of Homer's Odyssey, where Menelaus, Agamemnon's brother, tries to return home from Troy and finds himself on an island off Egypt, "whither he seems to have been carried by the storm described in Agam.674".[14]

The title character, "the deathless Egyptian Proteus", the Old Man of the Sea, is described in Homer as having been visited by Menelaus seeking to learn his future. Proteus tells Menelaus of the death of Agamemnon at the hands of Aegisthus and the fates of Ajax the Lesser and Odysseus at sea. Proteus is compelled to tell Menelaus how to reach home from the island of Pharos:

"The satyrs who may have found themselves on the island as a result of shipwreck . . . perhaps gave assistance to Menelaus and escaped with him, though he may have had difficulty in ensuring that they keep their hands off Helen."[15]

The only extant fragment that has been definitively attributed to Proteus was translated by Herbert Weir Smyth:

"A wretched piteous dove, in quest of food, dashed amid the winnowing-fans, its breast broken in twain."[16]

In 2002, Theatre Kingston mounted a production of The Oresteia and included a new reconstruction of Proteus based on the episode in The Odyssey and loosely arranged according to the structure of extant satyr plays.[citation needed]

Themes

Justice through retaliation

Retaliation is seen in the Oresteia to cascade. In Agamemnon, it is mentioned that Agamemnon had to sacrifice his innocent daughter Iphigenia to shift the wind for his voyage to Troy.[17] This caused Clytemnestra to plot revenge on Agamemnon. She found a new lover Aegisthus and when Agamemnon returned to Argos from the Trojan War, Clytemnestra killed him by stabbing him in the bathtub and went on to inherit his throne.[2] The death of Agamemnon thus sparks anger in Orestes and Electra; they plot matricide (the death of their mother Clytemnestra) in the next play Libation Bearers. Through much pressure from Electra and his cousin Pylades, Orestes kills Clytemnestra and her lover Aegisthus.[17] Consequently, Orestes is hunted down by the Furies in the third play The Eumenides. Even after he escapes, Clytemnestra's spirit comes back to rally them again so that they can kill Orestes and obtain vengeance for her.[17] However this cycle of retaliation comes to a stop near the end of The Eumenides when Athena decides to introduce a new legal system for dealing out justice.[2]

Justice through the law

Justice through the law is achieved in The Eumenides. After Orestes begged Athena for deliverance from the Furies, she granted him his request in the form of a trial.[1] Rather than forgiving Orestes directly, Athena put him to trial to find a just answer to the question of his innocence. This is the first example of proper litigation in the trilogy and illuminates the change from emotional retaliation to civilized decisions regarding alleged crimes.[18] Instead of allowing the Furies to torture Orestes, she decided that she would have both the Furies and Orestes plead their case before she decided on the verdict. In addition, Athena set up how the verdict would be decided. By creating this blueprint, the future of revenge-killings and the merciless hunting of the Furies would be eliminated from Greece. The trial sets the foundation for future litigation.[12] Aeschylus, through his jury trial, was able to create and maintain a social commentary about the limitations of revenge crimes and reiterate the importance of trials.[19] The Oresteia, as a whole, stands as a representation of the evolution of justice in Ancient Greece.[20]

Revenge

Revenge is a principal motivator for most characters in Oresteia. The theme starts in Agamemnon with Clytemnestra, who murders her husband, Agamemnon, in order to obtain vengeance for his sacrificing of their daughter, Iphigenia. The death of Cassandra, the princess of Troy, taken captive by Agamemnon in order to fill a place as a concubine, can also be seen as an act of revenge for taking another woman as well as the life of Iphigenia. Later on, in The Libation Bearers, Orestes and Electra, siblings as well as the other children of Agamemnon and Clytemnestra, succeed in killing their mother to avenge their father's death. In The Eumenides, the Furies—goddesses of vengeance—seek to take revenge on Orestes for the murder of his mother. It is also discovered that the god Apollo played a part in the act of vengeance toward Clytemnestra through Orestes. The cycle of revenge seems to be broken when Orestes is not killed by the Furies, but is instead allowed to be set free and deemed innocent by the goddess Athena.[citation needed]

Mother-right and father-right

To the anthropologist Johann Jakob Bachofen (Das Mutterrecht, 1861), the Oresteia shows Ancient Greece's transition from "hetaerism" (polyamory) to monogamy; and from "mother-right" (matriarchal lineage) to "father-right" (patriarchal lineage). According to Bachofen, religious laws changed in this period: the Apollo and Athena of The Eumenides present the patriarchal view. The Furies contrast what they call "gods of new descent" with the view that matricide is more serious than the killing of men. With Athena acquitting Orestes, and the Furies working for the new gods, The Eumenides shows the newfound dominance of father-right over mother-right.[21]

Bachofen's interpretation was influential among Marxists and feminists. Feminist Simone de Beauvoir wrote in The Second Sex (1949) that the tribunal saw Orestes as son of Agamemnon before being son of Clytemnestra.[22] In The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State (1884), Marxist Friedrich Engels praises Bachofen's "correct interpretation". Nonetheless, he sees it as "pure mysticism" by Bachofen to see the change in divine perspectives as the cause of the change in Greek society.[21] Instead, Engels considers economic factors—the creation of private property—and the "natural sexual behaviour" of men and women. For the feminist Kate Millet, the latter factor is mistaken, and The Eumenides is important in documenting the state's arguments for repression of women.[22]

Relation to the Curse of the House of Atreus

The House of Atreus began with Tantalus, son of Zeus, who murdered his son, Pelops, and attempted to feed him to the gods. The gods, however, were not tricked and banished Tantalus to the Underworld and brought his son back to life. Later in life Pelops and his family line were cursed by Myrtilus, a son of Hermes, catalyzing the curse of the House of Atreus. Pelops had two children, Atreus and Thyestes, who are said to have killed their half-brother Chrysippus, and were therefore banished.[citation needed]

Thyestes and Aerope, Atreus’ wife, were found out to be having an affair, and in an act of vengeance, Atreus murdered his brother's sons, cooked them, and then fed them to Thyestes. Thyestes had a son with his daughter and named him Aegisthus, who went on to kill Atreus.[citation needed]

Atreus’ children were Agamemnon, Menelaus, and Anaxibia. Leading up to here, we can see that the curse of the House of Atreus was one forged from murder, incest and deceit, and continued in this way for generations through the family line. To put it simply, the curse demands blood for blood, a never ending cycle of murder within the family.[citation needed]

Those who join the family seem to play a part in the curse as well, as seen in Clytemnestra when she murders her husband Agamemnon, in revenge for sacrificing their daughter, Iphigenia.[23] Orestes, goaded by his sister Electra, murders Clytemnestra in order to exact revenge for her killing his father.[citation needed]

Orestes is said to be the end of the curse of the House of Atreus. The curse holds a major part in the Oresteia and is mentioned in it multiple times, showing that many of the characters are very aware of the curse's existence. Aeschylus was able to use the curse in his play as an ideal formulation of tragedy in his writing.[citation needed]

Contemporary background

Some scholars believe that the trilogy is influenced by contemporary political developments in Athens. A few years previously, legislation sponsored by the democratic reformer Ephialtes had stripped the court of the Areopagus, hitherto one of the most powerful vehicles of upper-class political power, of all of its functions except some minor religious duties and the authority to try homicide cases; by having his story being resolved by a judgement of the Areopagus, Aeschylus may be expressing his approval of this reform. It may also be significant that Aeschylus makes Agamemnon lord of Argos, where Homer puts his house, instead of his nearby capitol Mycenae, since about this time Athens had entered into an alliance with Argos.[24]

Adaptations

Key British productions

In 1981, Sir Peter Hall directed Tony Harrison's adaptation of the trilogy in masks in London's Royal National Theatre, with music by Harrison Birtwistle and stage design by Jocelyn Herbert.[25][26][27] In 1999, Katie Mitchell followed him at the same venue (though in the Cottesloe Theatre, where Hall had directed in the Olivier Theatre) with a production which used Ted Hughes' translation.[28] In 2015, Robert Icke's production of his own adaptation was a sold out hit at the Almeida Theatre and was transferred that same year to the West End's Trafalgar Studios.[29] Two other productions happened in the UK that year, in Manchester and at Shakespeare's Globe.[30] The following year, in 2016, playwright Zinnie Harris premiered her adaptation, This Restless House, at the Citizen's Theatre to five-star critical acclaim.[31]

Other adaptations

Translations

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d Porter, David (2005). "Aeschylus' "Eumenides": Some Contrapuntal Lines". The American Journal of Philology. 126 (3): 301–331. doi:10.1353/ajp.2005.0044. JSTOR 3804934. S2CID 170134271.
  2. ^ a b c Euben, J. Peter (March 1982). "Justice and the Oresteia". The American Political Science Review. 76 (1): 22–33. doi:10.2307/1960439. JSTOR 1960439. S2CID 145245951.
  3. ^ Burke, Kenneth (July–September 1952). "Form and Persecution in the Oresteia". The Sewanee Review. 60 (3): 377–396. JSTOR 27538150.
  4. ^ Aeschylus (1975). The Oresteia. New York, New York: Penguin Group. pp. 103–172. ISBN 978-0-14-044333-2.
  5. ^ For more on the complexity of Agamemnon and Clytemnestra, see Bednarowski, P. K. (2015). Surprise and Suspense in Aeschylus’ Agamemnon. American Journal of Philology, 136(2), 179–205. https://doi.org/10.1353/ajp.2015.0030
  6. ^ Vellacot, Philip (1984). "Aeschylus' Orestes". The Classical World. The Johns Hopkins University Press on behalf of the Classical Association of the Atlantic States. 77 (3): 145–157. doi:10.2307/4349540. JSTOR 4349540.
  7. ^ a b O'Neill, K. (1998). "Aeschylus, Homer, and the Serpent at the Breast". Phoenix. Classical Association of Canada. 52 (3/4): 216–229. doi:10.2307/1088668. JSTOR 1088668.
  8. ^ Kells, J. H. (1966). "More Notes on Euripides' Electra". The Classical Quarterly. Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Classical Association. 16 (1): 51–54. doi:10.1017/S0009838800003359. JSTOR 637530. S2CID 170813768.
  9. ^ a b H., R. (1928). "Orestes Sarcophagus and Greek Accessions". The Bulletin of the Cleveland Museum of Art. Cleveland Museum of Art. 15 (4): 90–87. JSTOR 25137120.
  10. ^ Henrichs, Albert (1994). "Anonymity and Polarity: Unknown Gods and Nameless Altars at the Areopagos". Illinois Classical Studies. University of Illinois Press. 19: 27–58. JSTOR 23065418.
  11. ^ Trousdell, Richard (2008). "Tragedy and Transformation: The Oresteia of Aeschylus". Jung Journal: Culture & Psyche. C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco. 2 (3): 5–38. doi:10.1525/jung.2008.2.3.5. JSTOR 10.1525/jung.2008.2.3.5. S2CID 170372385.
  12. ^ a b Hester, D. A. (1981). "The Casting Vote". The American Journal of Philology. The Johns Hopkins University Press. 102 (3): 265–274. doi:10.2307/294130. JSTOR 294130.
  13. ^ a b Mace, Sarah (2004). "Why the Oresteia's Sleeping Dead Won't Lie, Part II: "Choephoroi" and "Eumenides"". The Classical Journal. The Classical Association of the Middle West and South, Inc. (CAMWS). 100 (1): 39–60. JSTOR 4133005.
  14. ^ Smyth, H.W. (1930). Aeschylus: Agamemnon, Libation-Bearers, Eumenides, Fragments. Harvard University Press. p. 455. ISBN 0-674-99161-3.
  15. ^ Alan Sommerstein: Aeschylus Fragments, Loeb Classical Library, 2008
  16. ^ Smyth, H. W. (1930). Aeschylus: Agamemnon, Libation-Bearers, Eumenides, Fragments. Harvard University Press. p. 455. ISBN 0-674-99161-3.
  17. ^ a b c Scott, William (1966). "Wind Imagery in the Oresteia". Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association. The Johns Hopkins University Press. 97: 459–471. doi:10.2307/2936026. JSTOR 2936026.
  18. ^ Burke, Kenneth (1952). "Form and Persecution in the Oresteia". The Sewanee Review. 20: 377–396.
  19. ^ Raaflaub, Kurt (1974). "Conceptualizing and Theorizing Peace in Ancient Greece". Transactions of the American Philological Association. 129 (2): 225–250. JSTOR 40651971.
  20. ^ Trousdell, Richard (2008). "Tragedy and Transformation: The Oresteia of Aeschylus". Jung Journal: Culture and Psyche. 2: 5–38. doi:10.1525/jung.2008.2.3.5. S2CID 170372385.
  21. ^ a b Engels, Friedrich (1891). "Preface (4th ed.)". The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State (4th ed.).
  22. ^ a b Goldhill, Simon (1986). Reading Greek Tragedy. Cambridge University Press. pp. 52–54. ISBN 9780521315791.
  23. ^ Zeitlin, Froma I. (1966-01-01). "Postscript to Sacrificial Imagery in the Oresteia (Ag. 1235–37)". Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association. 97: 645–653. doi:10.2307/2936034. JSTOR 2936034.
  24. ^ Bury, J. B.; Meiggs, Russell (1956). A history of Greece to the death of Alexander the Great, 3rd edition. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 347–348, 352.
  25. ^ "Sir Peter Hall | National Theatre". www.nationaltheatre.org.uk. 12 April 2016. Retrieved 2018-08-13.
  26. ^ "About 'The Oresteia' Production". jocelynherbert.org. Retrieved 2021-02-28.
  27. ^ Nightingale, Benedict (1981-12-20). "'ORESTEIA'". New York Times.
  28. ^ . Daily Telegraph. 1999-12-03. ISSN 0307-1235. Archived from the original on 2016-02-26. Retrieved 2018-08-13.
  29. ^ Higgins, Charlotte (2015-07-30). "Ancient Greek tragedy Oresteia receives surprise West End transfer". The Guardian. Retrieved 2020-11-04.
  30. ^ Higgins, Charlotte (2015-07-30). "Ancient Greek tragedy Oresteia receives surprise West End transfer". The Guardian. Retrieved 2018-08-13.
  31. ^ "This Restless House five star review Zinnie Harris". The Guardian. 3 May 2016.
  32. ^ *Thérèse Radic. "Agamemnon", Grove Music Online ed. L. Macy (Accessed October 15, 2015), (subscription access)
  33. ^ Silvia Dionisio. "Terror Express".
  34. ^ "Fistful of Pasta: Texas Adios".
  35. ^ "The Forgotten Pistolero Review". The Spaghetti Western Database.
  36. ^ "The Forgotten Pistolero Review by Korano". The Spaghetti Western Database.
  37. ^ "SCENOGRAPHY". home. Retrieved 2020-10-09.
  38. ^ "Theatre review: The Oresteia at York Theatre Royal Studio". British Theatre Guide. Retrieved 2020-10-08.
  39. ^ "The Oresteia 18-19". Shakespeare Theatre Company. Retrieved 2020-10-09.
  40. ^ "THE ORESTEIA streaming free June 25–2". 9 June 2021.

Bibliography

  • Collard, Christopher (2002). Introduction to and translation of Oresteia. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-283281-6.
  • Goward, Barbara (2005). Aeschylus: Agamemnon. Duckworth Companions to Greek and Roman Tragedy. London: Duckworth. ISBN 978-0-7156-3385-4.
  • MacLeod, C. W. (1982). "Politics and the Oresteia". The Journal of Hellenic Studies, vol. 102. doi:10.2307/631132. JSTOR 631132. pp. 124–144.
  • Widzisz, Marcel (2012). Chronos on the Threshold: Time, Ritual, and Agency in the Oresteia. Lexington Press. ISBN 978-0-7391-7045-8.

External links

  •   Greek Wikisource has original text related to this article: Ἀγαμέμνων
  •   Greek Wikisource has original text related to this article: Χοηφόροι
  •   Greek Wikisource has original text related to this article: Εὐμενίδες
  • Oresteia at Theatricalia.com
  •   Oresteia public domain audiobook at LibriVox
  • See the triumphant ending of The Oresteia. MacMillan Films staging 2014. 5 minutes.
  • BBC audio file. The Oresteia discussion on the BBC Radio 4 programme In Our Time. 45 minutes.
  • La Tragedie d'Oreste et Electre: Album by British band Cranes which is a musical adaptation of Jean-Paul Sartre's The Flies.
  • (2011): an avant-garde work inspired by Aeschylus' trilogy, written and directed by Jonathan Vandenberg.

oresteia, ancient, greek, Ὀρέστεια, trilogy, greek, tragedies, written, aeschylus, century, concerning, murder, agamemnon, clytemnestra, murder, clytemnestra, orestes, trial, orestes, curse, house, atreus, pacification, furies, also, called, erinyes, eumenides. The Oresteia Ancient Greek Ὀresteia is a trilogy of Greek tragedies written by Aeschylus in the 5th century BCE concerning the murder of Agamemnon by Clytemnestra the murder of Clytemnestra by Orestes the trial of Orestes the end of the curse on the House of Atreus and the pacification of the Furies also called Erinyes or Eumenides OresteiaSNG Drama Ljubljana performs an adaptation of The Oresteia in 1968Written byAeschylusOriginal languageGreekGenretragedyThe trilogy consisting of Agamemnon Ἀgamemnwn The Libation Bearers Xohforoi and The Eumenides Eὐmenides also shows how the Greek gods interacted with the characters and influenced their decisions pertaining to events and disputes 1 The only extant example of an ancient Greek theatre trilogy the Oresteia won first prize at the Dionysia festival in 458 BCE The principal themes of the trilogy include the contrast between revenge and justice as well as the transition from personal vendetta to organized litigation 2 Oresteia originally included a satyr play Proteus Prwteys following the tragic trilogy but all except a single line of Proteus has been lost citation needed Contents 1 Agamemnon 2 The Libation Bearers 3 The Eumenides 4 Proteus 5 Themes 5 1 Justice through retaliation 5 2 Justice through the law 5 3 Revenge 5 4 Mother right and father right 6 Relation to the Curse of the House of Atreus 7 Contemporary background 8 Adaptations 8 1 Key British productions 8 2 Other adaptations 9 Translations 10 See also 11 References 12 Bibliography 13 External linksAgamemnon EditSee also Pathei mathos Agamemnon The murder of Agamemnon from an 1879 illustration from Stories from the Greek Tragedians by Alfred ChurchWritten byAeschylusChorusElders of ArgosCharactersWatchmanClytemnestraHeraldAgamemnonMessengerCassandraAegisthusMuteSoldiersServantsSettingArgos before the royal palaceAgamemnon Ἀgamemnwn Agamemnōn is the first of the three plays within the Oresteia trilogy It details the homecoming of Agamemnon King of Mycenae from the Trojan War After ten years of warfare Troy had fallen and all of Greece could lay claim to victory Waiting at home for Agamemnon is his wife Queen Clytemnestra who has been planning his murder She desires his death to avenge the sacrifice of her daughter Iphigenia to exterminate the only thing hindering her from commandeering the crown and to finally be able to publicly embrace her long time lover Aegisthus 3 The play opens to a watchman looking down and over the sea reporting that he has been lying restless like a dog for a year waiting to see some sort of signal confirming a Greek victory in Troy He laments the fortunes of the house but promises to keep silent A huge ox has stepped onto my tongue The watchman sees a light far off in the distance a bonfire signaling Troy s fall and is overjoyed at the victory and hopes for the hasty return of his King as the house has wallowed in his absence Clytemnestra is introduced to the audience and she declares that there will be celebrations and sacrifices throughout the city as Agamemnon and his army return citation needed Upon the return of Agamemnon his wife laments in full view of Argos how horrible the wait for her husband and King has been After her soliloquy Clytemnestra pleads with and persuades Agamemnon to walk on the robes laid out for him This is a very ominous moment in the play as loyalties and motives are questioned The King s new concubine Cassandra is now introduced and this immediately spawns hatred from the queen Clytemnestra Cassandra is ordered out of her chariot and to the altar where once she is alone she is heard crying out insane prophecies to Apollo about the death of Agamemnon and her own shared fate Agamemnon walks on sacred peplos garments Inside the house a cry is heard Agamemnon has been stabbed in the bathtub The chorus separate from one another and ramble to themselves proving their cowardice when another final cry is heard When the doors are finally opened Clytemnestra is seen standing over the dead bodies of Agamemnon and Cassandra Clytemnestra describes the murder in detail to the chorus showing no sign of remorse or regret Suddenly the exiled lover of Clytemnestra Aegisthus bursts into the palace to take his place next to her Aegisthus proudly states that he devised the plan to murder Agamemnon and claim revenge for his father the father of Aegisthus Thyestes was tricked into eating two of his sons by his brother Atreus the father of Agamemnon Clytemnestra claims that she and Aegisthus now have all the power and they re enter the palace with the doors closing behind them 4 Aeschylus Agamemnon differs from many other Greek tragedies in the way that it does not have a clear hero When first reading the play one might assume that Agamemnon is a noble hero returning from war who is murdered by his wife Upon first examination Agamemnon is the hero of the tragedy and Clytemnestra is the villain However Aeschylus version of Agamemnon does not highlight either Agamemnon or Clytemnestra as the hero or villain Instead he makes the couple complex and complicated because both have honorable and evil qualities Agamemnon is an esteemed veteran of the Trojan War and is admired by many However it is made clear that many do not approve of the way he sacrificed his daughter Iphigenia to start the Trojan War It is also clear that many citizens resent Agamemnon because they lost their sons and husbands in the war he began Additionally Clytemnestra is seen as evil for murdering her husband as soon as he returns from war but in one way she is just trying to avenge her daughter who Agamemnon murdered Both Agamemnon and Clytemnestra exhibit qualities that make them much more complex realistic and complicated than one dimensional heroes and villains Therefore Aeschylus Agamemnon is compelling because it does not exhibit simple characters with one trait but instead gives us a complicated set of characters that cannot be forced into one category of heroic or villainous characteristics 5 The Libation Bearers EditThe Libation Bearers Orestes Electra and Hermes in front of Agamemnon s tomb by Choephoroi PainterWritten byAeschylusChorusSlave womenCharactersOrestesElectraServantClytemnestraPyladesCilissaAegisthusAttendantsSetting1 Argos at the tomb of Agamemnon2 Argos before the royal palaceIn The Libation Bearers Xohforoi Choephoroi the second play of Aeschylus Oresteia trilogy many years after the murder of Agamemnon his son Orestes returns to Argos with his cousin Pylades to exact vengeance on Clytemnestra as an order from Apollo for killing Agamemnon 6 Upon arriving Orestes reunites with his sister Electra at Agamemnon s grave while she was there bringing libations to Agamemnon in an attempt to stop Clytemnestra s bad dreams 7 Shortly after the reunion both Orestes and Electra influenced by the Chorus come up with a plan to kill both Clytemnestra and Aegisthus 8 Orestes then heads to the palace door where he is greeted by Clytemnestra He pretends he is a stranger and tells Clytemnestra that he Orestes is dead causing her to send for Aegisthus Unrecognized Orestes is then able to enter the palace where he then kills Aegisthus who was without a guard due to the intervention of the Chorus in relaying Clytemnestra s message 9 Clytemnestra then enters the room Orestes hesitates to kill her but Pylades reminds him of Apollo s orders and he eventually follows through 7 Consequently after committing the matricide Orestes is now the target of the Furies merciless wrath and has no choice but to flee from the palace 9 Genealogy of OrestesThe Eumenides EditThe Eumenides Orestes Pursued by the Furies by William Adolphe BouguereauWritten byAeschylusChorusThe FuriesCharactersPriestessApolloOrestesGhost of ClytemnestraAthenaAthenian citizensSettingbefore the temple of Apollo at Delphi and in AthensThe final play of the Oresteia called The Eumenides Eὐmenides Eumenides illustrates how the sequence of events in the trilogy ends up in the development of social order or a proper judicial system in Athenian society 1 In this play Orestes is hunted and tormented by the Furies a trio of goddesses known to be the instruments of justice who are also referred to as the Gracious Ones Eumenides They relentlessly pursue Orestes for the killing of his mother 10 Through the intervention of Apollo Orestes is able to escape them for a brief moment while they are asleep and head to Athens under the protection of Hermes Seeing the Furies asleep Clytemnestra s ghost comes to wake them up to obtain justice on her son Orestes for killing her 11 After waking up the Furies hunt Orestes again and when they find him Orestes pleads to the goddess Athena for help She responds by setting up a trial for him in Athens on the Areopagus This trial is made up of a group of twelve Athenian citizens and is supervised by Athena Here Orestes is used as a trial dummy by Athena to set up the first courtroom trial He is also the object of the Furies Apollo and Athena 1 After the trial comes to an end the votes are tied Athena casts the deciding vote and determines that Orestes will not be killed 12 This does not sit well with the Furies but Athena eventually persuades them to accept the decision instead of violently retaliating against wrongdoers become a constructive force of vigilance in Athens She then changes their names from the Furies to the Eumenides which means the Gracious Ones 13 Athena then ultimately rules that all trials must henceforth be settled in court rather than being carried out personally 13 Proteus EditProteus Prwteys Prōteus the satyr play which originally followed the first three plays of The Oresteia is lost except for a two line fragment preserved by Athenaeus It is widely believed to have been based on the story told in Book IV of Homer s Odyssey where Menelaus Agamemnon s brother tries to return home from Troy and finds himself on an island off Egypt whither he seems to have been carried by the storm described in Agam 674 14 The title character the deathless Egyptian Proteus the Old Man of the Sea is described in Homer as having been visited by Menelaus seeking to learn his future Proteus tells Menelaus of the death of Agamemnon at the hands of Aegisthus and the fates of Ajax the Lesser and Odysseus at sea Proteus is compelled to tell Menelaus how to reach home from the island of Pharos The satyrs who may have found themselves on the island as a result of shipwreck perhaps gave assistance to Menelaus and escaped with him though he may have had difficulty in ensuring that they keep their hands off Helen 15 The only extant fragment that has been definitively attributed to Proteus was translated by Herbert Weir Smyth A wretched piteous dove in quest of food dashed amid the winnowing fans its breast broken in twain 16 In 2002 Theatre Kingston mounted a production of The Oresteia and included a new reconstruction of Proteus based on the episode in The Odyssey and loosely arranged according to the structure of extant satyr plays citation needed Themes EditJustice through retaliation Edit Retaliation is seen in the Oresteia to cascade In Agamemnon it is mentioned that Agamemnon had to sacrifice his innocent daughter Iphigenia to shift the wind for his voyage to Troy 17 This caused Clytemnestra to plot revenge on Agamemnon She found a new lover Aegisthus and when Agamemnon returned to Argos from the Trojan War Clytemnestra killed him by stabbing him in the bathtub and went on to inherit his throne 2 The death of Agamemnon thus sparks anger in Orestes and Electra they plot matricide the death of their mother Clytemnestra in the next play Libation Bearers Through much pressure from Electra and his cousin Pylades Orestes kills Clytemnestra and her lover Aegisthus 17 Consequently Orestes is hunted down by the Furies in the third play The Eumenides Even after he escapes Clytemnestra s spirit comes back to rally them again so that they can kill Orestes and obtain vengeance for her 17 However this cycle of retaliation comes to a stop near the end of The Eumenides when Athena decides to introduce a new legal system for dealing out justice 2 Justice through the law Edit Justice through the law is achieved in The Eumenides After Orestes begged Athena for deliverance from the Furies she granted him his request in the form of a trial 1 Rather than forgiving Orestes directly Athena put him to trial to find a just answer to the question of his innocence This is the first example of proper litigation in the trilogy and illuminates the change from emotional retaliation to civilized decisions regarding alleged crimes 18 Instead of allowing the Furies to torture Orestes she decided that she would have both the Furies and Orestes plead their case before she decided on the verdict In addition Athena set up how the verdict would be decided By creating this blueprint the future of revenge killings and the merciless hunting of the Furies would be eliminated from Greece The trial sets the foundation for future litigation 12 Aeschylus through his jury trial was able to create and maintain a social commentary about the limitations of revenge crimes and reiterate the importance of trials 19 The Oresteia as a whole stands as a representation of the evolution of justice in Ancient Greece 20 Revenge Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Revenge is a principal motivator for most characters in Oresteia The theme starts in Agamemnon with Clytemnestra who murders her husband Agamemnon in order to obtain vengeance for his sacrificing of their daughter Iphigenia The death of Cassandra the princess of Troy taken captive by Agamemnon in order to fill a place as a concubine can also be seen as an act of revenge for taking another woman as well as the life of Iphigenia Later on in The Libation Bearers Orestes and Electra siblings as well as the other children of Agamemnon and Clytemnestra succeed in killing their mother to avenge their father s death In The Eumenides the Furies goddesses of vengeance seek to take revenge on Orestes for the murder of his mother It is also discovered that the god Apollo played a part in the act of vengeance toward Clytemnestra through Orestes The cycle of revenge seems to be broken when Orestes is not killed by the Furies but is instead allowed to be set free and deemed innocent by the goddess Athena citation needed Mother right and father right Edit To the anthropologist Johann Jakob Bachofen Das Mutterrecht 1861 the Oresteia shows Ancient Greece s transition from hetaerism polyamory to monogamy and from mother right matriarchal lineage to father right patriarchal lineage According to Bachofen religious laws changed in this period the Apollo and Athena of The Eumenides present the patriarchal view The Furies contrast what they call gods of new descent with the view that matricide is more serious than the killing of men With Athena acquitting Orestes and the Furies working for the new gods The Eumenides shows the newfound dominance of father right over mother right 21 Bachofen s interpretation was influential among Marxists and feminists Feminist Simone de Beauvoir wrote in The Second Sex 1949 that the tribunal saw Orestes as son of Agamemnon before being son of Clytemnestra 22 In The Origin of the Family Private Property and the State 1884 Marxist Friedrich Engels praises Bachofen s correct interpretation Nonetheless he sees it as pure mysticism by Bachofen to see the change in divine perspectives as the cause of the change in Greek society 21 Instead Engels considers economic factors the creation of private property and the natural sexual behaviour of men and women For the feminist Kate Millet the latter factor is mistaken and The Eumenides is important in documenting the state s arguments for repression of women 22 Relation to the Curse of the House of Atreus EditThe House of Atreus began with Tantalus son of Zeus who murdered his son Pelops and attempted to feed him to the gods The gods however were not tricked and banished Tantalus to the Underworld and brought his son back to life Later in life Pelops and his family line were cursed by Myrtilus a son of Hermes catalyzing the curse of the House of Atreus Pelops had two children Atreus and Thyestes who are said to have killed their half brother Chrysippus and were therefore banished citation needed Thyestes and Aerope Atreus wife were found out to be having an affair and in an act of vengeance Atreus murdered his brother s sons cooked them and then fed them to Thyestes Thyestes had a son with his daughter and named him Aegisthus who went on to kill Atreus citation needed Atreus children were Agamemnon Menelaus and Anaxibia Leading up to here we can see that the curse of the House of Atreus was one forged from murder incest and deceit and continued in this way for generations through the family line To put it simply the curse demands blood for blood a never ending cycle of murder within the family citation needed Those who join the family seem to play a part in the curse as well as seen in Clytemnestra when she murders her husband Agamemnon in revenge for sacrificing their daughter Iphigenia 23 Orestes goaded by his sister Electra murders Clytemnestra in order to exact revenge for her killing his father citation needed Orestes is said to be the end of the curse of the House of Atreus The curse holds a major part in the Oresteia and is mentioned in it multiple times showing that many of the characters are very aware of the curse s existence Aeschylus was able to use the curse in his play as an ideal formulation of tragedy in his writing citation needed Contemporary background EditSome scholars believe that the trilogy is influenced by contemporary political developments in Athens A few years previously legislation sponsored by the democratic reformer Ephialtes had stripped the court of the Areopagus hitherto one of the most powerful vehicles of upper class political power of all of its functions except some minor religious duties and the authority to try homicide cases by having his story being resolved by a judgement of the Areopagus Aeschylus may be expressing his approval of this reform It may also be significant that Aeschylus makes Agamemnon lord of Argos where Homer puts his house instead of his nearby capitol Mycenae since about this time Athens had entered into an alliance with Argos 24 Adaptations EditKey British productions Edit In 1981 Sir Peter Hall directed Tony Harrison s adaptation of the trilogy in masks in London s Royal National Theatre with music by Harrison Birtwistle and stage design by Jocelyn Herbert 25 26 27 In 1999 Katie Mitchell followed him at the same venue though in the Cottesloe Theatre where Hall had directed in the Olivier Theatre with a production which used Ted Hughes translation 28 In 2015 Robert Icke s production of his own adaptation was a sold out hit at the Almeida Theatre and was transferred that same year to the West End s Trafalgar Studios 29 Two other productions happened in the UK that year in Manchester and at Shakespeare s Globe 30 The following year in 2016 playwright Zinnie Harris premiered her adaptation This Restless House at the Citizen s Theatre to five star critical acclaim 31 Other adaptations Edit 1895 Composer Sergei Taneyev adapted the trilogy into his own operatic trilogy of the same name which was premiered in 1895 1965 66 Composer Iannis Xenakis adapted vocal work for chorus and 12 instruments 1967 Composer Felix Werder adapted Agamemnon as an opera 32 1969 The Spaghetti Western The Forgotten Pistolero is based on the myth and set in Mexico following the Second Mexican Empire Ferdinando Baldi who directed the film was also a professor of classical literature who specialized in Greek tragedy 33 34 35 36 1974 Rush Rehm s translation of the trilogy was staged at The Pram Factory in Melbourne 2008 Theatre professor Ethan Sinnott directed an ASL adaptation of Agamemnon 37 2008 Dominic Allen and James Wilkes The Oresteia for Belt Up Theatre Company 38 2009 Anne Carson s An Oresteia an adaptation featuring episodes from the Oresteia from three different playwrights Aeschylus Agamemnon Sophocles Electra and Euripides Orestes 2009 Yael Farber s Molora a South African adaptation of the Oresteia 2019 Playwright Ellen McLaughlin and director Michael Khan s The Oresteia premiered on April 30 2019 at the Shakespeare Theatre Company Washington DC The adaptation was shown as a digital production by Theater for a New Audience in New York City during the COVID 19 Pandemic and was directed by Andrew Watkins 39 40 Translations EditThomas Medwin and Percy Bysshe Shelley 1832 1834 verse Pagan Press reprint 2011 Anna Swanwick 1886 verse full text Robert Browning 1889 verse Agamemnon Arthur S Way 1906 verse John Stuart Blackie 1906 verse Edmund Doidge Anderson Morshead 1909 verse full text Herbert Weir Smyth Aeschylus Loeb Classical Library 2 vols Greek text with facing translations 1922 prose Agamemnon Libation Bearers Eumenides Gilbert Murray 1925 verse Agamemnon Libation Bearers Louis MacNeice 1936 verse Agamemnon Edith Hamilton 1937 Three Greek Plays Prometheus Bound Agamemnon The Trojan Women Richmond Lattimore 1953 verse F L Lucas 1954 verse Agamemnon Robert A Johnston 1955 verse an acting version Philip Vellacott 1956 verse Paul Roche 1963 verse Peter Arnott 1964 verse George Thomson 1965 verse John Lewin 1966 University of Minnesota Press Howard Rubenstein 1965 verse Agamemnon Hugh Lloyd Jones 1970 verse Rush Rehm 1978 verse for the stage Robert Fagles 1975 verse Robert Lowell 1977 verse Tony Harrison 1981 verse David Grene and Wendy Doniger O Flaherty 1989 verse Peter Meineck 1998 verse Ted Hughes 1999 verse Ian C Johnston 2002 verse full text George Theodoridis Agamemnon Choephori Eumenides 2005 2007 prose Alan Sommerstein Aeschylus Loeb Classical Library 3 vols Greek text with facing translations 2008 Peter Arcese 2010 Agamemnon in syllabic verse Sarah Ruden 2016 verse David Mulroy 2018 verse Oliver Taplin 2018 verse Jeffrey Scott Bernstein and Tom Phillips illustrator 2020 verseSee also EditThe Oresteia in the arts and popular culture Mourning Becomes Electra a modernized version of the story by Eugene O Neill who shifts the action to the American Civil War The Flies an adaptation of the Libation Bearers by Jean Paul Sartre which focuses on human freedom Live by the sword die by the sword a line from the trilogyReferences Edit a b c d Porter David 2005 Aeschylus Eumenides Some Contrapuntal Lines The American Journal of Philology 126 3 301 331 doi 10 1353 ajp 2005 0044 JSTOR 3804934 S2CID 170134271 a b c Euben J Peter March 1982 Justice and the Oresteia The American Political Science Review 76 1 22 33 doi 10 2307 1960439 JSTOR 1960439 S2CID 145245951 Burke Kenneth July September 1952 Form and Persecution in the Oresteia The Sewanee Review 60 3 377 396 JSTOR 27538150 Aeschylus 1975 The Oresteia New York New York Penguin Group pp 103 172 ISBN 978 0 14 044333 2 For more on the complexity of Agamemnon and Clytemnestra see Bednarowski P K 2015 Surprise and Suspense in Aeschylus Agamemnon American Journal of Philology 136 2 179 205 https doi org 10 1353 ajp 2015 0030 Vellacot Philip 1984 Aeschylus Orestes The Classical World The Johns Hopkins University Press on behalf of the Classical Association of the Atlantic States 77 3 145 157 doi 10 2307 4349540 JSTOR 4349540 a b O Neill K 1998 Aeschylus Homer and the Serpent at the Breast Phoenix Classical Association of Canada 52 3 4 216 229 doi 10 2307 1088668 JSTOR 1088668 Kells J H 1966 More Notes on Euripides Electra The Classical Quarterly Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Classical Association 16 1 51 54 doi 10 1017 S0009838800003359 JSTOR 637530 S2CID 170813768 a b H R 1928 Orestes Sarcophagus and Greek Accessions The Bulletin of the Cleveland Museum of Art Cleveland Museum of Art 15 4 90 87 JSTOR 25137120 Henrichs Albert 1994 Anonymity and Polarity Unknown Gods and Nameless Altars at the Areopagos Illinois Classical Studies University of Illinois Press 19 27 58 JSTOR 23065418 Trousdell Richard 2008 Tragedy and Transformation The Oresteia of Aeschylus Jung Journal Culture amp Psyche C G Jung Institute of San Francisco 2 3 5 38 doi 10 1525 jung 2008 2 3 5 JSTOR 10 1525 jung 2008 2 3 5 S2CID 170372385 a b Hester D A 1981 The Casting Vote The American Journal of Philology The Johns Hopkins University Press 102 3 265 274 doi 10 2307 294130 JSTOR 294130 a b Mace Sarah 2004 Why the Oresteia s Sleeping Dead Won t Lie Part II Choephoroi and Eumenides The Classical Journal The Classical Association of the Middle West and South Inc CAMWS 100 1 39 60 JSTOR 4133005 Smyth H W 1930 Aeschylus Agamemnon Libation Bearers Eumenides Fragments Harvard University Press p 455 ISBN 0 674 99161 3 Alan Sommerstein Aeschylus Fragments Loeb Classical Library 2008 Smyth H W 1930 Aeschylus Agamemnon Libation Bearers Eumenides Fragments Harvard University Press p 455 ISBN 0 674 99161 3 a b c Scott William 1966 Wind Imagery in the Oresteia Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association The Johns Hopkins University Press 97 459 471 doi 10 2307 2936026 JSTOR 2936026 Burke Kenneth 1952 Form and Persecution in the Oresteia The Sewanee Review 20 377 396 Raaflaub Kurt 1974 Conceptualizing and Theorizing Peace in Ancient Greece Transactions of the American Philological Association 129 2 225 250 JSTOR 40651971 Trousdell Richard 2008 Tragedy and Transformation The Oresteia of Aeschylus Jung Journal Culture and Psyche 2 5 38 doi 10 1525 jung 2008 2 3 5 S2CID 170372385 a b Engels Friedrich 1891 Preface 4th ed The Origin of the Family Private Property and the State 4th ed a b Goldhill Simon 1986 Reading Greek Tragedy Cambridge University Press pp 52 54 ISBN 9780521315791 Zeitlin Froma I 1966 01 01 Postscript to Sacrificial Imagery in the Oresteia Ag 1235 37 Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 97 645 653 doi 10 2307 2936034 JSTOR 2936034 Bury J B Meiggs Russell 1956 A history of Greece to the death of Alexander the Great 3rd edition Oxford Oxford University Press pp 347 348 352 Sir Peter Hall National Theatre www nationaltheatre org uk 12 April 2016 Retrieved 2018 08 13 About The Oresteia Production jocelynherbert org Retrieved 2021 02 28 Nightingale Benedict 1981 12 20 ORESTEIA New York Times An inexhaustible masterpiece is transformed into a glib anti war morality play Daily Telegraph 1999 12 03 ISSN 0307 1235 Archived from the original on 2016 02 26 Retrieved 2018 08 13 Higgins Charlotte 2015 07 30 Ancient Greek tragedy Oresteia receives surprise West End transfer The Guardian Retrieved 2020 11 04 Higgins Charlotte 2015 07 30 Ancient Greek tragedy Oresteia receives surprise West End transfer The Guardian Retrieved 2018 08 13 This Restless House five star review Zinnie Harris The Guardian 3 May 2016 Therese Radic Agamemnon Grove Music Online ed L Macy Accessed October 15 2015 subscription access Silvia Dionisio Terror Express Fistful of Pasta Texas Adios The Forgotten Pistolero Review The Spaghetti Western Database The Forgotten Pistolero Review by Korano The Spaghetti Western Database SCENOGRAPHY home Retrieved 2020 10 09 Theatre review The Oresteia at York Theatre Royal Studio British Theatre Guide Retrieved 2020 10 08 The Oresteia 18 19 Shakespeare Theatre Company Retrieved 2020 10 09 THE ORESTEIA streaming free June 25 2 9 June 2021 Bibliography EditCollard Christopher 2002 Introduction to and translation ofOresteia Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 283281 6 Goward Barbara 2005 Aeschylus Agamemnon Duckworth Companions to Greek and Roman Tragedy London Duckworth ISBN 978 0 7156 3385 4 MacLeod C W 1982 Politics and the Oresteia The Journal of Hellenic Studies vol 102 doi 10 2307 631132 JSTOR 631132 pp 124 144 Widzisz Marcel 2012 Chronoson the Threshold Time Ritual and Agency in theOresteia Lexington Press ISBN 978 0 7391 7045 8 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Oresteia Wikisource has original text related to this article Oresteia Greek Wikisource has original text related to this article Ἀgamemnwn Greek Wikisource has original text related to this article Xohforoi Greek Wikisource has original text related to this article Eὐmenides Oresteia at Theatricalia com Oresteia public domain audiobook at LibriVox See the triumphant ending of The Oresteia MacMillan Films staging 2014 5 minutes BBC audio file The Oresteia discussion on the BBC Radio 4 programme In Our Time 45 minutes La Tragedie d Oreste et Electre Album by British band Cranes which is a musical adaptation of Jean Paul Sartre s The Flies Oresteia 2011 an avant garde work inspired by Aeschylus trilogy written and directed by Jonathan Vandenberg Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Oresteia amp oldid 1143218306, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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