A furious prophecy: Cassandra’s rites (Lycophron, Alexandra 1126–73) and Aeschylus’ Eumenides

Lycophron’s extensive debt to Aeschylus is exemplified by his engagement with the Agamemnon and the Choephori in Cassandra’s prediction of her own death and that of Agamemnon and in the brief ensuing synopsis of Orestes’ vengeance on Clytemnestra. This paper argues that the next stage of Cassandra’s...

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Main Author: Alexander Sens
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: ENS Éditions 2024-10-01
Series:Aitia
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Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/aitia/12303
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author Alexander Sens
author_facet Alexander Sens
author_sort Alexander Sens
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description Lycophron’s extensive debt to Aeschylus is exemplified by his engagement with the Agamemnon and the Choephori in Cassandra’s prediction of her own death and that of Agamemnon and in the brief ensuing synopsis of Orestes’ vengeance on Clytemnestra. This paper argues that the next stage of Cassandra’s prophecy, in which she discusses two rites instituted in the aftermath of her death, continues the reworking of the Oresteia by exploiting themes prominent in the Eumenides, including supplication, retributive violence, the enactment of democratic law. The paired accounts of Daunian and Locrian cults are examples of the poet’s use of mythological substitution, by which avoids explicit reference to an event where it would naturally occur in the chronology of Cassandra’s prophecy and replaces it with a different, thematically connected narrative. Lycophron’s engagement with the Eumenides is triggered by a reference to the Erinyes in the story of the Daunian maidens and is more extensively exploited in the story of the Locrian maidens, in which Lycophron represents a melding of personal vengeance and the democratic legal system. The fusion of personal vengeance and the law resonates meaningfully against the new civic legal system described in the Eumenides, where the new homicide courts at Athens are meant to replace the process of retribution that plays out earlier in the trilogy.
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spelling doaj-art-6702fd7114d34f698d754e4a953ec43a2024-12-09T10:48:19ZengENS ÉditionsAitia1775-42752024-10-0113210.4000/12t4eA furious prophecy: Cassandra’s rites (Lycophron, Alexandra 1126–73) and Aeschylus’ EumenidesAlexander SensLycophron’s extensive debt to Aeschylus is exemplified by his engagement with the Agamemnon and the Choephori in Cassandra’s prediction of her own death and that of Agamemnon and in the brief ensuing synopsis of Orestes’ vengeance on Clytemnestra. This paper argues that the next stage of Cassandra’s prophecy, in which she discusses two rites instituted in the aftermath of her death, continues the reworking of the Oresteia by exploiting themes prominent in the Eumenides, including supplication, retributive violence, the enactment of democratic law. The paired accounts of Daunian and Locrian cults are examples of the poet’s use of mythological substitution, by which avoids explicit reference to an event where it would naturally occur in the chronology of Cassandra’s prophecy and replaces it with a different, thematically connected narrative. Lycophron’s engagement with the Eumenides is triggered by a reference to the Erinyes in the story of the Daunian maidens and is more extensively exploited in the story of the Locrian maidens, in which Lycophron represents a melding of personal vengeance and the democratic legal system. The fusion of personal vengeance and the law resonates meaningfully against the new civic legal system described in the Eumenides, where the new homicide courts at Athens are meant to replace the process of retribution that plays out earlier in the trilogy.https://journals.openedition.org/aitia/12303LycophronCassandraDaunian maidensErinyesLocrian maidensretribution
spellingShingle Alexander Sens
A furious prophecy: Cassandra’s rites (Lycophron, Alexandra 1126–73) and Aeschylus’ Eumenides
Aitia
Lycophron
Cassandra
Daunian maidens
Erinyes
Locrian maidens
retribution
title A furious prophecy: Cassandra’s rites (Lycophron, Alexandra 1126–73) and Aeschylus’ Eumenides
title_full A furious prophecy: Cassandra’s rites (Lycophron, Alexandra 1126–73) and Aeschylus’ Eumenides
title_fullStr A furious prophecy: Cassandra’s rites (Lycophron, Alexandra 1126–73) and Aeschylus’ Eumenides
title_full_unstemmed A furious prophecy: Cassandra’s rites (Lycophron, Alexandra 1126–73) and Aeschylus’ Eumenides
title_short A furious prophecy: Cassandra’s rites (Lycophron, Alexandra 1126–73) and Aeschylus’ Eumenides
title_sort furious prophecy cassandra s rites lycophron alexandra 1126 73 and aeschylus eumenides
topic Lycophron
Cassandra
Daunian maidens
Erinyes
Locrian maidens
retribution
url https://journals.openedition.org/aitia/12303
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