In antiquity, the story of the failed assault of the Seven
against Thebes ranked second only to the Trojan War. But whereas
the latter was immortalized by Homer s Iliad," the account of the
former in the epic Thebais" survives only in fragments preserved in
later authors. The same is true of the Oedipodeia" and Epigoni,"
which dealt respectively with events leading up to the Seven s
campaign and with the successful assault on the city in the next
generation. The Thebais" was probably the most important of the
three certainly more and longer fragments of it have survived and
it has been alleged that its recovery would tell us more about
Homer than any comparable discovery.
Paradoxically, these fragments suggest very un-Homeric content
and style (in particular its detail of the hero Tydeus forfeiting
immortality by gnawing on the head of a dying enemy). The same is
true of the epic Alcmaeonis," named after one of the Epigoni, whose
few surviving fragments pullulate with un-Homeric features. Malcolm
Davies provides the first full commentary on all four epics
fragments. He attempts to set them in context and examines whether
artistic depictions of the relevant myths can help reconstruct the
lost epics contents."
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