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Guided by his mother Theseus finds the sword and the sandals
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Theseus, king of Athens, punished the bandits that infested the road between this city and Troezen; he slew the Minotaur in Crete, and thanklessly abandoned the woman who had helped him. He also cursed his son, carried off another woman, and having descended to the Underworld, sat there on the Chair of Oblivion. He died in exile, but when he still was a ruler, he piously aided the Argives in recovering for burial the bodies of those who had fallen during the war of the SEVEN AGAINST THEBES.
Birth &Tokens
When King Aegeus 1 of Athens came to Troezen, King Pittheus (son of Pelops 1) made him drunk and caused him to lie with his daughter Aethra 2. A child was then conceived, but of uncertain father, since on the same night also Poseidon loved her. On leaving for Athens, Aegeus 1, who ignored that the god had been with the woman, told Aethra 2 that if she gave birth to a male child, she should rear him without telling who his father was. He then left a sword and sandals under a rock, saying that when his son could roll away the rock and take them up, she would send him to Athens. Aethra 2, not knowing herself who the father of her child was, did as instructed, and when Theseus was grown up, she showed him the rock, and he, pushing it away, took the sandals and the sword, and left for Athens.
Cleaning the way while travelling
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"O futile humans! Why does your folly teach skills innumerable, and search out manifold inventions still? But there is one knowledge you do not gain and have never sought it: to implant a right mind where no wisdom dwells." (Theseus. Euripides, Hippolytus 919).
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On his way to Athens, Theseus cleansed the way of malefactors, making them suffer the same death that they inflicted on others. First he slew Periphetes 2, an evildoer who carried a club with which he dispatched the passers-by. Then he met Sinis, the man who used to force the passers-by to keep bending pine-trees until they were tossed up by them and perished. Employing this same method, Theseus sent Sinis to the next world, and when the criminal was dead, he ravished his daughter Perigune.
Beasts too
Thereafter Theseus met the Crommyonian Sow, offspring of Typhon, a fierce and hard to master beast that had killed many humans. This Sow, which had been bred by Phaea, gave birth to the notorious boar that was later killed by the CALYDONIAN HUNTERS, as some say. But others assert that Phaea was a female robber and murderer dwelling in Crommyon (a city between Megara and Corinth), who was called Sow because of her life and manners.
More bandits
Sciron was yet another bandit, whom Theseus met on his way to Athens. His inclination was to compel passers-by to wash his feet, and while they washed, he kicked them into the sea to be the prey of a huge turtle beneath. Him Theseus seized by the feet and threw into the sea.
Then he met Cercyon 1, who compelled passers-by to wrestle, and in wrestling Theseus lifted him up and dashed him to the ground. Having him out of the way, Theseus ravished his daughter, like he had previously done with Perigune.
Strange ways to make adjustments
Then Theseus met Procrustes (also called Damastes and Polypemon), who offered hospitality to the passers-by, and laid the short men on a big bed and hammered them, to make them fit in the bed, but the tall men he laid on a little bed and sawed off the portions of their bodies that projected beyond it. Theseus felt that he had to punish this folly, and he killed Procrustes.
Meeting with Medea
When after these encounters Theseus finally arrived to Athens, he found his alleged father Aegeus 1 wedded to Medea, the woman who committed several crimes in Hellas, having come from Colchis with Jason and the ARGONAUTS. And if this were so, then they are mistaken who affirm that Theseus is to be counted among the ARGONAUTS, since in that case the Colchian witch and Theseus would have known one another already. But as others say, Theseus had never met her before coming to Athens.
Plot in Athens
Medea, who had a child with Aegeus 1, disliked the newcomer, and sensing that he posed a threat, she accused Theseus of being a traitor, and her husband, still not knowing that Theseus was his son, sent him to tame the Marathonian Bull. When Theseus had killed, or at least mastered the beast, Medea, who by then had reached great achievements in the field of criminality (having killed her brother, the king of Iolcus, and her own children by Jason) decided to get rid of the young man as well by means of poison. But when Theseus was about to drink the potion that Medea had prepared, Aegeus 1 recognised the sword, and dashed the cup from his hands in the last moment. This is how father and son knew who they were, and having learned the truth, the king sent Medea into exile, a circumstance not at all unknown to her.
The Minotaur
At this time, the Athenians, who had been at war with King Minos 2 of Crete, were forced by him to send every year seven youths and seven young women as a tribute to the Minotaur. Theseus was numbered among those who were to be sent as the third tribute to the beast. But when he came to Crete, Minos 2's daughter Ariadne fell in love with him, and having obtained the secret to the Labyrinth from its constructor Daedalus, she disclosed the way out to Theseus. In the last part of the Labyrinth, Theseus found the Minotaur and killed him, and since he had been instructed by Ariadne, who had offered to help him if he would agree to carry her away to Athens and have her to wife, he found his way out. They both fled from Crete, but on arriving to Naxos (one of the Cyclades islands) Theseus deserted her.
Forgets the sails
Theseus had agreed with his father that he, when approaching Athens on his return from Crete, would spread white sails on his ship. But this detail he forgot, and Aegeus 1, seeing from the Acropolis the ship with a black sail, thought that his son had died, and in despair cast himself down and perished.
Consolidates power
On his father's death, Theseus was declared successor to the throne of Athens. But the fifty sons of Pallas 5 (the Pallantides), nobles of Attica, would not accept it, and they went to war. It was a certain Leos, who reported to Theseus the designs of the Pallantides and the ambush they had prepared against him. Theseus then fell suddenly upon the party lying in ambush, and slew them all.
Troezen
After the violent repression of the revolting faction, Theseus married Phaedra (also daughter of Minos 2) with whom he retired to Troezen in voluntary exile.
AMAZONS
It was about this time that Theseus made his his expedition against the AMAZONS, having a son Hippolytus 4 with one of the captives. But after his expedition the AMAZONS attacked Athens, and having organised their forces about the Areopagus, were vanquished by Theseus. Others say that when Theseus was celebrating his marriage to Phaedra, the Amazon that had before been married to him, mother of his son, appeared in arms with other AMAZONS, and threatened to kill the wedding guests who, having quickly closed the doors, killed her.
Phaedra and Hippolytus 4
Phaedra bore two children to Theseus, but she also fell in love with the son that Theseus had by the Amazon. However, Hippolytus 4, hating all women, fled from her, and Phaedra, fearing that he might accuse her to his father, falsely charged her stepson with an assault. Theseus believed her, and in anger prayed to Poseidon that Hippolytus 4 might perish; and so, when the young man was driving his chariot beside the sea, the god, listening to Theseus' curse, sent up a bull from the surf that frightened the horses and dashed the chariot to pieces, and Hippolytus 4, entangled in the reins, was dragged to death. To this some have added that Hippolytus 4, after having being raised from the dead by Asclepius, became king in Italy under the name of Virbius 1. In any case, when Phaedra's passion was made public, she hanged herself.
CENTAURS
After this domestic tragedy, Theseus and Pirithous, friends and brothers in arms (for they had fought together in the battle between the CENTAURS and the LAPITHS), decided that it would suit them perfectly to marry daughters of Zeus.
Brilliant ideas
This is why Theseus, with Pirithous' help, carried off Helen from Sparta for himself, when she was twelve years old. For this outrage, the DIOSCURI (brothers of Helen) ravaged Attica, and Theseus' mother was taken as a prisoner, and ended up in Troy as Helen's maid until her grandsons rescued her after the Trojan War.
Pirithous had his own choice: he thought that Persephone would suit him as wife. So both friends descended to Hades in order to fetch her. But having been caught in the Underworld, they sat in the Chair of Oblivion until Heracles 1 came to Hades and rescued both, or perhaps only Theseus.
Other rumours on the abduction of Helen
Some have said that Theseus was fifty years old when he abducted Helen, who was not, they say, of marriageable age. But those who care about Theseus' reputation have said that the girl was carried off by the Messenian brothers Idas 2 and Lynceus 1, the enemies of the DIOSCURI, and that Theseus just watched over her on their account and refused to surrender her to her brothers, the DIOSCURI.
Others affirm that Theseus did not carry off Helen, but that her father Tyndareus entrusted her to him, for fear of Enarophorus, son of Hippocoon 2, who sought to take Helen by force while she still was a child.
Yet Theseus and his accomplice Pirithous are still believed to have gone to Sparta, seizing Helen as she was dancing in a temple of Artemis. When they came out of Peloponnesus and felt out of danger, they cast lots for the girl and Theseus won. But as she was still too young, he conveyed her to Aphidnae and kept her there in complete secrecy.
Coup d'état, Exile and Death
When the DIOSCURI came from Sparta to get Helen back, they obtained a military vitory and gave the sovereignty of Athens to Menestheus 1, a member of the Athenian Royal House. Theseus then, forced to go into exile, came to Scyros (the island in the Aegean Sea northeast of Euboea), which was under the rule of King Lycomedes 1. It was in this island that Theseus died, perhaps killed by the king, said to have thrown his guest down an abyss, or for having simply slipped by himself and fallen down while walking in high places after supper, as was his custom.
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