Pentheus

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Pentheus torn apart by Ino and Agave, lekanis lid, ca. 450-450 BC, Louvre
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Pentheus torn apart by Ino and Agave, lekanis lid, ca. 450-450 BC, Louvre

In Greek mythology, Pentheus was a king of Thebes, son of the strongest of the Spartes, Echion, and Agave, daughter of Cadmus, the founder of Thebes, and the goddess Harmonia.

Cadmus abdicated in favour of Pentheus because of old age. Pentheus banned the worship of Dionysus, the son of his aunt Semele, and did not allow the women of Cadmeia to join in his rites. Dionysus caused Pentheus' mother and his aunts, Ino and Agave, to rush to Mount Cithaeron in a bacchic frenzy. Because of this, Pentheus imprisoned them, but their chains fell off and the jail doors opened for them.

Dionysus then lured Pentheus out to spy on the bacchic rites. The daughters of Cadmus saw him in a tree and thought him to be a wild animal. Pentheus was pulled down and torn limb from limb by them (sparagmos), causing them to be exiled from Thebes. The name 'Pentheus', as Dionysus points out, means "'Man of Sorrows'; even his name destines him for tragedy.

Pentheus was succeeded by his uncle Polydorus

[edit] References

Euripides. The Bacchae.

[edit] See also

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