Jason and the Golden Fleece By: Katie Suppa, Kayla Rutledge, Brinda Sarathy, Carly Woodley, Adam Watkins.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Jason and the Argonauts
Advertisements

The Quest of the Golden Fleece By Delaney, Alex, Joyce, and Leslie.
Jason, Medea, and the Argonauts.
Mythic Heroes – ‘cluster’ specifications Miraculous birth, early threats Disinheritance and/or powerful enemy Quest(s) – impossible tasks requiring strength.
King of the gods.  Despite being married to Hera Zeus had many lovers and fathered many children.  Many of the children from these affairs became heroes.
The Hero’s Path. The hero’s path involves three parts. Separation – How he leaves his parents and the land of his birth. Initiation – The journey and.
The Golden Goose by The Brothers Grimm E4C 蘇懋為 Zack
Schedule Myth and Metaphor paper due Friday, April 30 or Monday, May 3 For Wednesday: Read Perseus For Thursday: Read Theseus For Friday: read Hercules.
A Midsummer Night’s Dream Theseus and his Myth. Mysterious Origins Like many other heroes of myth and legend, Theseus was born and raised in unusual and.
Comes from 3 different writers: Apollonius of Rhodes, a Greek poet Pindar –wrote about Jason and Pelias Euripides Begins with the Greek King, Athamas.
+ Athamas, a king, got tired of his first wife, Nephele, and marries a second, Ino. Ino wants Nephele’s son, Phrixus, out of the way so her own son can.
Perseus. Theme: Fate  Theme: Recurring idea or insight found in the story. Also known as the “hidden message”.  Repeatedly we have seen the theme of.
Buddha’s Birth Buddha was a prince. He lived in India with his mother and father, the king and queen. The King and Queen were admired, loved and respected.
The 10 years of fighting before Odysseus made his journey home
Unit 2 The Olympic Games. Do you know any stories in ancient Greece ?
Euripides and Medea English IV AP. Background  Variety of retellings  Most famous is by Apollonius of Rhodes, The Voyage of the Argo, written in 3 rd.
Ruth: The Harvest Girl Using this PowerPoint you will:
Perseus A Fairy Tale Hero. Perseus’ Birth Danae’s father locked her in an underground tomb to keep her from having children, since a prophecy had said.
Oedipus Laius married to Jocasta Prophecy that Laius’ son would kill him and have children with his own mother, Jocasta Laius ordered newborn son to be.
Argonautica. –Important Characters Cretheus, king of Iolcus Pelias (stepson) Æson (son) Philyra Jason Cheiron Argo The 50 heroes Heracles Orpheus Æetes,
THE TROJAN WAR BY STATHIS, PHOTIS, JOHN & KOSTAS (2 ND GROUP, f2)
By: Jessica, Katie, Tyler and Jackson. HEROIC QUALITIESFLAWS  Strong  Forgiving  Wise  Loyal friend  Leader  Protector of the defenseless  Bravery.
Greek Mythology Theseus & Minotaur
Eros Allison Field AP English September 12 th, 2012.
Kirk, Chris, Gabriel, Laura. Adventurous Strong Fair leader Kind Model Citizen Brave Trust issues Too much pride Dose not keep promises.
Jason “The Quest for the Golden Fleece” Part II Hera seeks help from Aphrodite Cupid is sent to make Medea fall for Jason King Aetes sets a challenge:
The Quest of the Golden Fleece
Epic Greek Heroes By: Chris Robertson. Odysseus Odysseus was a hero from the epic book series The Odyssey. He spent ten years away from home fighting.
Sight Words.
Sharnali G., Deeksha M., Julia S., Sophie S., Jaclyn R., and Lindsay L. Due: 2/17/14 Mrs. Garrison, Block 3 (Honors English II)
The Quest of the Golden Fleece Max, Nate, and Andrew.
Greek Drama Background Notes. Out of Ritual Church services or rituals are forms of drama Church services or rituals are forms of drama Greek drama came.
The Trojan War English II. Judgment of Paris An important feast was taking place at the home of the gods and goddesses, Mount Olympus. The evil goddess.
ATALANTA Jina Suh Lily Jordan Andrew Watts Nicole Boccia.
Christian Bethany Ryan Jake A. John. Major Events King named Athamas got tired of his wife and married another princess New princess was planning to kill.
By: Homer Information by: Hilary Johannas Illustrations by: Kat McIntosh.
The Trojan War / Odysseus
Theseus Pranatha Parikosh, Chloe Fang, Coleman Thompson, Joshua Wayne and Rachael Morrell.
Greek Mythology Jason & The Golden Fleece
Emily McComiskey, Grayson Haines, Scott Price, and Rebecca Dearaujo-Jorge.
Sight Words.
Annalise Heyward Hazim Mukhtar Jibryll Brinkley Matheus Cavalcanti.
High Frequency Words.
The Story of Perseus BY: Emma M., Abbinav M, Adam K, Brandon S, Athan J, Jared Group 2 1st block.
The Golden Fleece Gaby Jenkins, Haley Stone, Abbi Valiquette, Chloe Richardson, Andrew Prevatte.
Medea.  Jason (Medea’s husband)  Pelias, his uncle, tells him he can inherit throne  If he retrieves Golden Fleece (magical ram) located at Colchis.
The Quest for the Golden Fleece. The Golden Fleece Dream by William Prosser.
Sophocles’ Medea (331 BC): An Introduction. Phrixus and Helle The children of King Athamas, Phrixus and Helle were hated by their stop-mother Ino. They.
Jason and the Quest of the Golden Fleece Erin, Ali, Parker.
Cupid and Psyche Retold by: Genesis, Samantha, Anna, and Hannah.
Perseus A Fairy Tale Hero. The Prophecy King Acrisius of Argos, had a daughter named Danae. Told he would never have a son. Oracle foretold that Danae’s.
Jason and the Golden Fleece Retold By: Tyler, Zane, Carson, & Brenden.
Tommy Bohannon, Natasha Shah, Gregger Kirby, Landon Maerschalk, Hannah Puckett.
Jason and the Golden Fleece By: Melanie, Shelby, Sidney, & Kennedy.
Jackasscapade Productions presents Jason was the son of a king, but his big mean bastard of an uncle, Pelias, usurped the throne. He might’ve killed.
 Perseus and his mother Danae, landed on the island of Seriphos and were looked after by king Polydictes.
Created By Sherri Desseau Click to begin TACOMA SCREENING INSTRUMENT FIRST GRADE.
The Trojan War How it Started.
Jason, Medea, and the Argonauts.
Before, During, and After Euripides’ Medea
The Adventures of Jason
MYTHOLOGY: TIMELESS TALES OF GODS & HEROES
Jason, Medea, and the Argonauts.
Before, During, and After Euripides’ Medea
Jason and the Golden Fleece
Jason And The Golden Fleece
JASON AND THE ARGONAUTS
Medea Background Info. Medea Background Info Jason and the Golden Fleece “Golden Fleece” – A gold colored ram. Sent from the gods. Very long story.
The Quest for the Golden Fleece
Presentation transcript:

Jason and the Golden Fleece By: Katie Suppa, Kayla Rutledge, Brinda Sarathy, Carly Woodley, Adam Watkins

Jason Heroic Qualities First Hero Brave Handsome Resourceful Persevering Flaws Selfish Never takes blame Fickle A bit of a jerk Greedy

The Golden Fleece A king married a second wife, but he already had two kids. The new queen wanted to kill them. She created a fake famine, tricking the king into sacrificing his heir. Before the king could kill the boy, a golden ram came and saved the boy and his sister. His sister fell into the sea and died, but the boy lived. The boy sacrificed the ram to Zeus when he was safe, and gave the skin to the king of Colchis.

The Quest for the Golden Fleece Jason, a distant relative of the young boy, was the heir of a kingdom. However, Jason's father lost the throne that belonged to Jason to his cousin, Pelias, and Jason fled. Many years later, Jason came back. Now the king, Pelias was scared of him (he thought Jason would kill him, since he usurped the throne) and made Jason get the Golden Fleece in order to regain his throne, thinking Jason would die trying. However, Jason will return with the fleece and take his rightful throne back, by force Jason gathered a group of people, called Argonauts, and they sailed off in the ship Argo.

The Quest for the Golden Fleece They landed at Lemnos, an Island of all women. The women gave them food and wine, and then the Argonauts left. They saved Phineus, an oracle, from the harpies. In thanks, Phineus helped them get through the Clashing Rocks, which would have crushed them. They passed the Amazons (warrior women) and managed to sneak by unharmed.

Colchis They landed in the kingdom of Colchis, where the fleece was. King tes greeted them with food, baths, and a warm place to sleep before he asked them any questions. The goddess Hera convinced Cupid to make Medea, the princess of Colchis, fall in love with Jason because she was smart and had magical powers. The king of Colchis didn’t like Jason because he had heard a prophecy about the theft of the Golden Fleece and an eventual betrayal by his own family member, so he gave Jason an impossible task. The task was to plow a field with fiery bulls and then defeat many dragon-teethed men. Jason completed it with the help of Medea, who gave him a cream that made him invincible, showing that Jason could not be successful unless he had the aid of Medea. The king didn't give him the fleece, so Jason and Medea stole it and fled. Jason also promised to marry Medea.

The Return Home Jason, Medea, and the Argonauts escaped, but Medea's brother pursued them. Medea killed her own brother and chopped him up into pieces to stop the King from coming after them. They got to Greece and found out Jason's father was dead. Jason's cousin, King Pelias, had told him that Jason was dead and he had killed himself from grief.

Jason's Revenge Medea, using her sorcery, claimed to Pelias' daughters that she could make their father look young by chopping him up into pieces and boiling the pieces in a cauldron of water and magical herbs. She demonstrated this with an old ram that she turned into a lamb. The girls, sliced and diced their father and put him in the cauldron. Medea did not add magical herbs, and Pelias died. Jason became the King, taking back his throne.

The End Jason and Medea got married and had 2 kids. Years later, Jason decided he didn’t love Medea anymore, and planned to marry the Princess of Corinth and exile Medea. Medea went crazy with anger and jealousy. She killed the Princess of Corinth, then she killed her own sons so that they would not be imprisoned as a result of their mother's actions.. Medea then flew away in a chariot, never to be seen again. Jason blamed all his problems on Medea

Motifs and Themes Rags to Riches:Jason started out as the poor man but then became the king. Forbidden Love: The Kind of Colchis did not want Jason and Medea to be together and he didn’t want Medea to run away with Jason. Love conquers all: Although it did not end favorably, Medea's love for Jason won out, as she decided to ruin his future in redemption. Pride goes before a fall: Jason begins to take Medea for granted, and displays excessive hubris. As a result, anyone he loves or values is killed by Medea, and while we don't see him go through a change in personality, he is left with nothing, and has learned the lesson of not being too prideful.

Major Archetypes The Hero Jason The Wise Old Man Phineus, the oracle the Argonauts saved Scapegoat The young boy (Phrixus) was going to be sacrificed to save the harvest The Island Colchis was isolated from everything and was a haven to Phrixus The Sea To the Argonauts it was an endless, open area filled with unknown dangers Divine Intervention Hera and Cupid made Medea fall in love with Jason The Quest Jason had to get the Golden Fleece

Story Summation Jason was narcissistic and didn't really learn anything. He was very noble in the beginning, but as the story progressed, he became selfish and greedy. He also tended to blame other people for his problems. Medea was originally helpful and kind but later turned jealous and cruel. She originally helped Jason without him asking due to her love, but then he became more selfish and kept asking her for things. Jason did not realize how dependent he was on Medea's powers and took her for granted, and she used her power for evil in the end. They were both stubborn and unwilling to gain new insights on anything, however, it was not entirely Medea's fault, as she had been struck by Cupid's arrows and forced to love Jason.

Lessons or Cultural Values in the Story Don't let your greed overtake your original values and motives. Don’t take the people who help and love you for granted. The Greeks valued smart, attractive, and brave people.