Pentheus
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In the Macedonian playwright Euripides' play The Bacchae, Theban Maenads murdered King Pentheus after he banned the worship of Dionysus (Roman equivalent Bacchus) because the Maenads denied Pentheus' divinity. Dionysus, Pentheus' cousin, lured Pentheus into the woods, where the Maenads tore him apart and his corpse was mutilated by his own mother, Agave who tore off his head, believing it to be that of a lion in her Bacchic fevour.
Pentheus, as Dionysus points out, means 'Man of Sorrows'; even his name destines him for tragedy.