| Clytemnestra |
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| greek mythology | |
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Agamemnon followed his brother Menelaus after Menelaus' wife Helen was stolen by Paris , thus igniting the Trojan War . While Agamemnon was away, Clytemnestra weakened her resolve and began a torrid love affair with ). She was bitter towards her absent husband for having sacrificed their daughter, Iphigeneia , to Artemis . At the end of the ten year war, Agamemnon returned to Mycenae where his kinsman, Aegisthus (who had previously murdered Agamemnon's father) invited him to a banquet where Agamemnon was treacherously slain. Princess Cassandra of Troy, who had been brought back by Agamemnon as a war trophy, was also put to death by Clytemnestra. According to the account given by Pindar and the tragedians, Agamemnon was slain by his wife alone in a bath, a piece of cloth or a net having first been thrown over him to prevent resistance. According to Aeschylus , Clytemnestra placed a piece of purple cloth and asked the returning Agamemnon to step over it. He refused at first but then gave in, while Cassandra, who had been endowed with the gift of prophecy but with the curse of no one believing her, waited outside, knowing doom awaited. She stayed outside until she heard Agamemnon scream as he died, then ran inside and was killed by Clytemnestra. Clytemnestra's wrath at the sacrifice of their daughter Iphigeneia , and her jealousy of Cassandra, are said to have been the motives of her crime. The murder of Agamemnon was avenged by his son Orestes . According to some sources, Cassandra was not murdered along with Agamemnon. Some sources see her leaving Mycenae unharmed. We even have historical reason to believe that she survived: in an Athenian museum, we have a plate with an inscripted text, which speaks of the Zakynthian family, descendants since 30 generations of Cassandra of Troy. The story of Orestes is told in Aeschylus' famous trilogy, the '' Oresteia '', in Sophocles' play '' Electra '', and in Euripides' plays Orestes and '' Electra .'' |
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