Women of Colchis


The Women of Colchis or Colchides is an ancient Greek lost tragedy by the Athenian dramatist Sophocles, written some time during the fifth century BC. The play is lost but for few fragments that do not give a definite view of the drama's contents and plot. It is known that it featured Medea, Jason and their efforts to obtain the legendary Golden Fleece from Medea's father, the king Aeëtes, keeper of the fleece.
It is not known what year it was produced in, what festival it competed in, which plays accompanied and what position it took.

Mythological background

The hero Jason was tasked with obtaining the legendary Golden Fleece, kept by king Aeëtes in his kingdom Aea. Jason gathered a number of heroes, collectively known as the Argonauts, and sailed to faraway Aea in the land of Colchis where Aeëtes ordered him to accomplish impossible tasks in order to get the fleece. Aeëtes' young daughter Medea fell in love with Jason, so she helped him get the fleece and fled together with him.
Although much about the journey of Jason and the Argonauts and their adventures in Colchis is based on their portrayal in the Hellenistic epic poem Argonautica by Apollonius Rhodius, the Women of Colchis predates that work. Judging from the number of times scholiasts on the Argonautica reference this play, it can be concluded that it was a major source for Apollonius. Seven fragments survive from this play. It is one of the three or four Sophoclean and twenty in total confirmed tragedies where Medea appeared as a character.

Plot

Due to the small number of fragments that can be assigned to this drama, the plot and structure of the tragedy cannot be satisfyingly reconstructed. It is known that it dramatised the events of Jason's arrival at Colchis in search of the Golden Fleece, culminating to the capture of the treasure and the Argonauts' flight. The tragedy's title shows that the chorus was made up of Colchian women. A scholiast on Apollonius Rhodius says that in the play Medea met with Jason and gave him advice on how to succeed in the trials that he would be put through. Fragment 339 must surely have come from their dialogue; Medea asks him if he swears to return the favour with another. The fragment does not make clear if Medea's motive is love for Jason, but no other motive has ever been put forward by ancient sources; it is also unclear whether Medea informs him exactly what sort of favour she will ask in return. Sophocles fr. 941, not attributed to any of his plays, features a woman talking to a female chorus about the devastating power of Aphrodite who rules over mortals and immortals both; Ahrens and Sommerstein believe this is Medea from the Women of Colchis talking.
It is not known how Medea's witchcraft and spells were presented in Women of Colchis, if at all; Fragment 340 seems to be a reference to the prometheum, the protective herb she gives to Jason in the later epic Argonautica. Fragment 341 features a dialogue between Aeëtes and a messenger asking whether the Spartoi, the teeth-sown warriors, sprouted or not and the messenger confirming that indeed they did, with plumed helmets and arms of bronze.
A different scholium on Apollonius confirms the murder of Medea's brother Absyrtus, presented as a small child in this play. Unlike in the Argonautica and other later versions, in Sophocles the boy was killed inside the palace, perhaps as the tragedy's dramatic climax. The scene of the murder being the palace points to Medea being the sole perpetrator of the crime, although she could still be acting on Jason's instructions. In Apollonius this was done to delay Aeëtes, and was probably the case as well for the Women of Colchis. The choice was likely made to reinforce Medea's image as a child-killer.