Home1860 Edition

OEDENBURG

Volume 16 · 811 words · 1860 Edition

(Hung. Sopron or Soprony; anc. Sempronium or Sopronium), a town of Hungary, capital of a county of the same name, stands on the Ilkva, not far from the Neusiedlersee, 36 miles S.S.E. of Vienna. It is well built, and has the appearance of a quiet Austrian country town, with little of the Hungarian character about it. The watch-tower, which is all that remains of the old fortifications, is said to be the loftiest in Hungary. Some of the Roman Catholic churches are fine Gothic edifices; and there are also a Protestant church, a Dominican convent, a Ursuline nunnery, Roman Catholic and Protestant schools, orphan hospital, and theatre. Manufactures of woollen, linen, and cotton fabrics, potash, hardware, &c., are carried on; and the town has also sugar refineries and potteries. Some trade is carried on in these articles, as well as in the produce of the country; and large markets for cattle are held here, at which about 40,000 oxen and 160,000 pigs are sold annually. Many Roman antiquities have been found in the town. The inhabitants are mostly Germans, and about half of them are Protestants. Pop. (1851) 16,274.

The county of Oedenburg, which is bounded N.E. by Wieselburg, E. by Raab, S. by Eisenburg, W. and N. by the archduchy of Austria, has an area of 1272 square miles. It is occupied on the W. by low branches of the Styrian Alps, while towards the E. it is quite flat. Nearly the whole of Neusiedlersee is in this county, and it receives the most of the rivers. The soil is generally fertile, though swampy in some parts, and yields large crops of corn, flax, wine, and fruits. Live stock are reared to a considerable extent, and abundance of fish is obtained from the lake. Pop. 207,800.

ŒDIPUS, an ancient Grecian king, whose tragic sorrows were a favourite subject of the classical poets, was the son of Laius and Jocasta, the King and Queen of Thebes. The following is the ordinary account of the cruel destiny of his life. King Laius had been warned beforehand by an oracle that he should be slain by his son. Accordingly, no sooner was the infant born, than with his feet bored and bound together, he was carried away and exposed on Mount Cithaeron. A shepherd chanceing to pass that way, took him up and conveyed him to Polybus, the tyrant of Corinth. This king, being childless, adopted the infant, and seeing his little feet swollen, called him Œdipus. Years passed by; and the foundling was growing up at the Corinthian court a young man, and the reputed son of Polybus, when one day he heard his supposed parentage tauntingly questioned. This threw him into the torture of uncertainty, and hurried him away to consult the oracle of Delphi. The oracle would give no other response than the prediction that he should slay his father and marry his mother. Shuddering under the prophecy, Œdipus resolved to return no more to Corinth, and, led blindly on by Destiny, he bent his steps towards Thebes. On a narrow part of the road between Delphi and Daulis, a menial driving an elderly personage in a chariot called to him saucily to get out of the way. The insult was resented; a scuffle ensued; and the young traveller slew his two opponents. The elderly personage was Laius; and thus part of the horrible prediction had been fulfilled. Unconscious of what he had done, Œdipus held on his way; and arriving at Thebes, found the neighbourhood in a terrible dilemma. The Sphinx, settled upon a rock, was exacting, on pain of death, from all who passed by an answer to a riddle; every one in turn was failing in the attempt to give a solution; and the population was fast wasting away before the clutches of the monster. At this juncture Œdipus solved the fatal enigma, and the Sphinx fell lifeless from her lofty seat. The hand of Queen Jocasta was bestowed as a reward upon the deliverer of the people; and thus the fulfilment of the predicted destiny was completed. Several years, however, passed before it was known. At length a plague fell upon the Thebans; the oracle declared that the calamity could only be stopped by the discovery of the murderer of Laius; the seer Tiresias made this discovery; and the revolting secret burst disastrously upon the royal family. Jocasta hung herself; Œdipus tore out his eyes. In course of time he wandered forth, led by his daughter Antigone, and after much travel, found himself near Colonos in Attica. Entering the unapproachable grove of the Furies, he remained there under the protection of these dread goddesses till his death. The history of Œdipus furnished the subject of several ancient tragic poems. The Œdipus Tyrannus and the Œdipus Colonus by Sophocles, and the Œdipus by Seneca, are still extant.