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Wednesday, May 29, 2019

Religious Beliefs in Aeschylus Oresteia, Homer’s Iliad, and Sophocles’

Religious Beliefs in Aeschylus Oresteia, Homers Iliad, and Sophocles ElectraThe final and definitive defeat of the Persian array at the battle of Plataea represented the end of an age-long threat to Athens. But the victory was also a miracle, as altogether the odds were against the Athenians at the blast of the war. While Pericles took charge of Athens after the war and started the advance of democracy, trust also thrived. The rebuilding of the Acropolis and the construction of the Parthenon and its great statue of Athene under Pericles rule intend the height of religious belief among Athenians. However, the shift in power from the aristocrats to the common men in the new democracy, and the Peloponnesian War and Great Plague that followed the shift, all contributed to a general decline in religious belief. Only a few decades after reaching its peak, it reached an all-time low. This change in attitude among Athenians bed be observed by comparing the works of two tragedians, Aesc hylus and Sophocles, whose plays were performed in each of these two periods. But even with this dramatic shift, it is clear that Athenians remained believers throughout these periods, because religion was, and always has been, a huge part of their culture.The religious view of Athenians before the Peloponnesian War can be best demonstrated by the word picture of interaction between men and Gods in Aeschylus work, The Eumenides. From the first scene, when The doors of the temple open and show Orestes surrounded by the sleeping Furies, Apollo and Hermes beside him (Aeschylus, 137), one can see that in Aeschylus eyes, Gods and Goddesses are not something distant and unreachable, but instead, they are real figures who will at times stand by our s... ...ardless of how good or bad they were, and condescension constant worship the Gods did not intervene. Having witnessed such horrors, it is understandable that people of those times, such as Sophocles, would have taken a step back and w ondered if the Gods were actually there. Having gone(p) through a period as such, it is only natural for even the most faithful to doubt a little, which was evident from the absence of interaction between Gods and men in Sophocles work, Electra. However, it is clear as had been previously pointed out, that while belief in the literal truth of the myths was suppressed, the Gods did live on in the hearts of the Athenians. kit and boodle CitedAeschylus. Aeschylus I / Oresteia. The University of Chicago Press, 1983 131 171.Homer. The Iliad. Penguin Books, 1998 128 - 143Sophocles. Electra. Oxford University Press, 2001 50 111

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