The play begins with the god Poseidon lamenting the fall of Troy. He is joined by the goddess Athena, who is incensed by the Greek’s exoneration of Ajax the Lesser’s actions in dragging away the Trojan princess Cassandra from Athena's temple (and possibly raping her). Together, the two gods discuss ways to punish the Greeks, and conspire to destroy the home-going Greek ships in revenge.
Heracles
Euripides
bookMedea
Euripides
audiobookbookMedeia
Euripides
bookGreek and Roman Mythology - World's Best Collection
Homer, Ovid, Hesiod, Aesop, Euripides, Aeschylus, Aristophanes, Apollonius, Apulieus, Virgil, Sophocles
bookOrestes
Euripides
bookRhesus
Euripides
bookAndromache
Euripides
bookIon
Euripides
bookThe Euripides Collection
Euripides
bookHecuba
Euripides
bookThe Phoenissae
Euripides
bookHelen
Euripides
book
The Force
Don Winslow
audiobookRecorridos por la religión
Juan Luis Pintos de Cea-Naharro
bookMedea
Euripides Euripides
bookCello Concerto A minor : Op. 129
Robert Schumann
bookBioética y tecnologías disruptivas
Manuel Jesús López Baroni
bookHistoria de la Iglesia : Veinte siglos caminando en comunidad
Gabriela Alejandra Peña
bookConsciousness and the Brain
Stanislas Dehaene
audiobookEl apocalipsis descifrado
Jairo Eutimio Parra E
book¿Es posible un mundo sin violencia?
Chantal Maillard
bookHistoria de la iglesia primitiva : Desde el siglo I hasta la muerte de Constantino
E. Backhouse, C. Tyler
bookDos tragedias griegas : Electra - Medea
Vicente Molina Foix
bookDios en el banquillo
Clive Staples Lewis
book