Laius, king of
Thebes, got a wife Jocasta,[1] who bore him a son
Oedipus. After he was born, the father received an oracle saying that the son would sleep with his own mother; and he ordered him to be thrown out onto the mountain[side] and his feet enclosed in wood. A farmer named Meliboeus found him and raised him[2] and named him Oidipous [Swell-foot] due to the way he had his feet [
podes] swollen by the wood, the so-called
kouspos.[3] Once he grew to manhood he became a robber. At this point the so-called
Sphinx[4] appeared, a woman hideous and beastly in form, for having got rid of her(?) man and having clenched her hand and having seized some difficult terrain, she would murder those who passed by. So
Oedipus, after hatching a clever scheme, joined himself in piracy with her. Then biding his time as he planned, he took her in an ambush, and those with her. The dumbstruck Thebans acclaimed him as their king. Laios got mad at them and made war against them but after being hit in the head by a rock he died. Jocasta was then afraid she would depart her monarchy so she led
Oedipus in and stretched out her hand to him as king. She became his wife, ignorant that she was also his mom. She bore him two sons, Eteocles and Polyneices; but later on when she learned that he was her son, she told this to her boy. When he heard that he took some nails and after fixing them in his eyes he died, leaving the kingdom to this two sons, who ruled for one year. But once they conceived a hatred of each other, they made war against each other, and Polyneices, pursued by Eteocles, went to Argos [
Myth,
Place] and married the daughter of king
Adrastus. Then he went on a campaign against
Thebes and in single combat with Eteocles he slew him dead and he was himself slain by him; their allies then retired home.
No. of records found: 1
Page 1