"Medea" is considered a masterpiece of Euripides because of its powerful portrayal of themes such as betrayal, revenge, and the position of women in society. The character of Medea is complex and multi-dimensional, challenging traditional gender roles and societal norms. The play's exploration of human emotions and moral dilemmas continues to resonate with audiences today.
Euripides. :)
Medea, written by Euripides, is the story of Medea's revenge for the infidelity of Jason, the hero of the Argonauts. This ancient tragedy is one Euripides' earliest works.
Medea is an ancient Greek tragedy play written by Euripides.
In the play by Euripides, Medea does not die. She rides off on a dragon-pulled chariot as Jason curses her.
It's difficult to pinpoint exactly when Medea was published, but it was written by Euripides, who produced it in 431 BCE.
The three great Athenian tragedies are "Oedipus Rex" by Sophocles, "Medea" by Euripides, and "The Bacchae" by Euripides. These plays are considered classics of Greek drama and are still widely studied and performed today.
In Corinth, Jason abandoned Medea for the king's daughter, Glauce.According to the tragic poet Euripides, Medea murdered her two children by Jason.Before the fifth century BC there seems to have been two variants of the myth's conclusion. According to the 7th-century BC poet Eumelus, Medea killed her children by accident.The poet Creophylus, however, blamed their murders on the citizens of Corinth. Medea's deliberate murder of her children, is Euripides' invention which later writers copied.
I'm pretty sure it came from Medea.
At the end of Medea, Euripides ends it with a scene of contradictions and conundrums. Unlike most tragedies, Medea actually gets away with all the murders she has committed. It is questionable whether or not Medea took it too far by killing her children, but there is also the hint that it could've been just that she do so. Medea escapes in a chariot drawn by dragons with the corpes of her two sons. By taking their lives and not giving Jason the priveledge to give them a proper burial, she leaves Jason without love and accomplishes her revenge.
Eckhard Christmann has written: 'Bemerkungen zum Text der Medea des Euripides'
Athens and Corinth are the cities where the play "Medea" by Euripides (480 B.C.E.? - 406 B.C.E.?) takes place. The action begins in Corinth, the place to which Princess Medea comes after helping Jason in his quest for the golden fleece in the coastal southern Caucasus region of Colchis. It continues back and forth between that city and Athens, to which Medea is exiled when Corinthian King Creon decides that his daughter Glauce needs to marry Jason.
In the play "Medea" by Euripides, the exposition establishes the background information essential for understanding the plot. This includes Medea's betrayal by her husband Jason, her status as a foreigner in Corinth, and her fierce emotions following the discovery of Jason's infidelity. It sets the stage for the unfolding of Medea's revenge and the tragic events that follow.