“Agamemnon” is the first of three plays that was performed in 458 BC. One of its characters, Tantalus, was an inhabitant of Tartarus, the deepest portion of the underworld where Odyesseus saw him. Tantalus was banished there because of his heinous crimes, such as sacrificing his son to a god and cannibalizing people.
Another figure from the play, Pelops, was venerated at Olympia, where his cult developed into the founding myth of the Olympic games. Pelops entered a chariot race against Oenomaus to try to get his daughter’s hand in marriage. With the help of the god Poseidon, Pelops defeated Oenomaus and his helper Myrtilus, with both dying in the race. Uttering his last breath, Myrtilus cursed Pelops’s family, causing three of Pelops’s sons to perish.
Agamemnon was Pelops’s grandson and the son of Atreus. Agamemnon had to placate the god Artemis, so he curried favor through human sacrifice. This angered the other gods, who placed negative sanctions on Agamemnon for his crime.
Explaining the moral of the play, the author Aeschylus says that there is no security for the rich, and that profane people will ignore the god’s standards and be punished. The chorus warned Agamemnon and pronounced that a good man will discern his true character. Agamemnon then blamed everyone but Odyesseus for his trouble and bragged that he would destroy Troy. Agamemnon’s wife also tricked and tempted him, eventually killing him.
The gods will be the end of the Greeks, Aeschylus stated, and that the god Apollo is a vengeful god and a seducer. The chorus proclaimed that wealth will only satisfy you temporarily and called on fate to bring Agamemnon’s son Orestes back. Even though they were sometimes influenced by each other, all of the gods were sovereign. The leader of the gods was Zeus, whose subordinates were Artemis and Apollo. Eventually fighting Troy, the Greek fleet was utterly destroyed in the battle. However, they also conquered Troy. As a result of their horrible crimes, the Greeks received negative sanctions from the gods.