It turns out Phaedre is Hector's illegitimate and secret daughter. However, Jocasta knows all about her true paternity, so rather than treating her like a usual slave, Phaedre is kept at the house. This isn't a benefit for Phaedre, but more of a way for Hector to consistently remember about his affair.
Jocasta bore her son's four children: two girls, Antigone and Ismene, and two boys, Eteocles and Polynices.
Jocasta's first marriage was to John Cameron and together they had one daughter, Clementina Cameron, in 1718, before John died of the flux.
Hector, his wife Jocasta, and their daughter, Morna, fled to the coast after Jocasta could not convince him to go and help her two older children and their families. On the way to the coast, they were stopped by the English and during the attack Hector accidentally shot Morna; Jocasta never forgave him for her death.
Oedipus is received at Thebes as a national hero, and invited to marry the recently widowed queen Jocasta. Oedipus and Jocasta have four children: Eteocles and Polyneices, Antigone and Ismene.
In the opening scene of the play Antigone tells Ismene of her plans to bury their brother Polynices, and asks her to join her. While Ismene laments the fate of Polynices' corpse, she refuses to defy the laws of the city.
They kiss, but she pushes him away. She tells him the story of how she lost her daughters – how after Culloden her youngest was murdered in a fight with dragoons for French gold. Her two eldest daughters died in fires set by the Brits after Culloden.
Book fans will remember that Jocasta ultimately ends up marrying Duncan Innes, in order to protect her estate, and she hints at this in bed with Murtagh in the moments after their reunion.
Claire surmises that glaucoma, a degenerative condition that damages the optic nerve, is the likeliest culprit. It takes about a decade to lose one's sight completely, though in modern times there are treatments that can prevent serious vision loss.
Jocasta realizes the truth—that Oedipus is her son as well as her husband—and tells Oedipus to stop the interrogations. He doesn't listen, and an eyewitness, the Herdsman who rescued him when he was an infant, confirms that he was Laius and Jocasta's child, and that Oedipus killed Laius.
Later, after Claire has returned to the Ridge, she is confessor to Allan Christie, who explains that he was the one that fathered Malva's child, and then murdered her.
See, before her wedding, Jocasta signed over ownership of River Run to baby Jemmy so that Duncan Innes wouldn't have any claim to it; Jocasta was the estate's guardian until Jemmy came of age.
You may be looking for the Season Two episode. Faith Fraser was Claire and Jamie's stillborn first child. She was born in Paris, France, following a dangerous pregnancy. Mother Hildegarde had her buried in the cemetery at L'Hôpital des Anges.
Her tragic flaw is hubris, the arrogance that often accompanies greatness. She routinely dismisses the gods and believes that she knows all: "Apollo brought neither thing to pass... brush them from your mind.
Jocasta hangs herself after finding out the truth. Oedipus finds Jocasta dead, and he gouges out his eyes using Jocasta's pins. This action of using his mother-wife's pins symbolizes his new knowledge of the truth. Once blind, Oedipus begins to gain new knowledge about his life and circumstances.
Jocasta is dead, by suicide. She locked herself in her bedroom, crying for Laius and weeping for her monstrous fate. Oedipus came to the door in a fury, asking for a sword and cursing Jocasta. He finally hurled himself at the bedroom door and burst through it, where he saw Jocasta hanging from a noose.
But Jocasta cannot avoid her fate: Oedipus comes back to Thebes and marries her. The moment Jocasta realizes that she has married her son, she rushes into the palace and closes her door, after which she hangs herself with a noose made from her dress.
Jocasta acts as a hero, but is also a character in a tragedy, and in tragedies heroes do not triumph. She is a tragic hero because she fits the definition of a person doomed by fate, whose misfortune is brought about by error or ignorance, not by vice or depravity. Jocasta's essential quality is her rationality.
As if things weren't bad enough, Oedipus finds that Jocasta has hung herself. This makes him really go off the deep end, and he yanks a pin from her robe and stabs out his eyes. After this, Creon exiles Oedipus and the blind man wanders the wilderness with only his dedicated daughter, Antigone, to guide him.
Murtagh is often mistaken for Jamie's father, but he is actually his kindly godfather. He is not married and hasn't fathered any children.
While he did help Jocasta and Murtagh meet in secret earlier in Outlander Season 5, Ulysses will always put Jocasta first. He loves Jocasta, as we later learn in the season, and he will do anything to make her happy.
The simple answer is no. Claire and Jamie don't have any more children after Brianna. Claire heads through the stones while pregnant with Brianna at the end of the second season/book. She spends 20 years in the 20th century, and she and Frank don't have any children together.
In season 5, Jacosta marries Duncan Innes, and the entire family joins in the wedding celebration at River Run. While they are there, Jacosta names Brianna and Roger's baby Jemmy as the heir to her land. So at this point, River Run is like a second home for the Fraser family.
She was goading Roger into the argument. She wanted him to stake a claim on his family, make it clear that Jemmy is his son. Roger walked straight into this little trap. While we're proud of him for doing this, it's clear that Jocasta wanted to push Roger in this moment.
See, before her wedding, Jocasta signed over ownership of River Run to baby Jemmy so that Duncan Innes wouldn't have any claim to it; Jocasta was the estate's guardian until Jemmy came of age. Mr. Arbuckle was privy to this information, and he informed Bonnet that his son was now the owner of River Run.