Abstract This article examines the reception of Seneca's Troades in the Nemean episode of Statius's Thebaid. After exploring the political implications of Opheltes's death in his role as imperial heir through Astyanax's execution by the Greeks, it focuses on Hypsipyle's grief as surrogate mother in light of Andromache and Hecuba as a means to increase her tragic appeal. By investigating infant death and female bereavement, this paper argues that the Trojan aftermath in Seneca's Troades plays a crucial role in Statius's rewriting of the tragedy of Opheltes and Hypsipyle into his epic poem as a prelude to the Theban War.
Francesca Econimo (Wed,) studied this question.