The Mythology Book

(Chris Devlin) #1

62


LIFE AND DEATH ARE


BALANCED ON THE


EDGE OF A RAZOR


THE TROJAN WAR


T


he Trojan War inspired
some of the greatest
ancient Greek poetry,
particularly Homer’s Iliad and
Odyssey. Although the story has
mythical aspects, it may have been
based on a conflict between the
Mycenaeans and the Hittites that
took place in the 12th century bce.
The chain of events that led to
the war began when the goddess
Aphrodite offered Paris, a Trojan
prince, the love of Helen, the world’s
most beautiful woman. Helen was
already married to King Menelaus
of Sparta, but Paris did not consider
this an obstacle and abducted her.
Her husband was furious. Menelaus
persuaded his brother Agamemnon,

King of Mycenae, to lead a Greek
alliance to Troy and recapture her.
The Greek army included the semi-
divine warrior Achilles, son of the
sea nymph Thetis, and Odysseus,
the cunning king of Ithaca. They
crossed the sea to Troy but were
unable to breach the city’s walls.
After nine years away from
home, the Greek alliance was
fracturing. The men were on the
verge of mutiny, and a plague
diminished their ranks. Achilles

Helen was abducted by Paris and
taken away on his ship, but smitten by
his beauty, she may have left willingly.
This alabaster carving decorates an
Etrurian funerary urn, 2nd century bce.

IN BRIEF


THEME
Epic war

SOURCE
Iliad and Odyssey, Homer, 8th
century bce.

SETTING
The city of Troy, Asia Minor
(western Turkey), and Greece,
ca. 12th century bce.

KEY FIGURES
Aphrodite Daughter of
Ouranos, goddess of love.

Paris A Trojan prince.

Helen Queen of Sparta.

Menelaus King of Sparta.

Agamemnon King of
Mycenae in southern Greece.

Achilles Semi-divine; the
greatest Greek warrior.

Patroclus Achilles’ comrade.

Hector Brother of Paris.

Odysseus King of Ithaca.

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63


The giant wooden horse, filled with
Greek warriors, is brought inside the
walls of the city in The Procession of
the Trojan Horse into Troy by Giovanni
Battista Tiepolo (ca. 176 0).

See also: The quest of Odysseus 66–71 ■ Aeneas, founder of Rome 96–101 ■ The cattle raid of Cooley 166–67

ANCIENT GREECE


refused to fight after Agamemnon
took one of his concubines. Despite
the great warrior’s absence, the
Greeks rallied and fought a pitched
battle with the Trojans. Menelaus
was close to killing Paris when
Aphrodite intervened to save him.

Attacking the city walls
The Trojans regathered and drove
back the Greeks. Achilles refused
to fight but allowed his close
companion Patroclus to borrow his
armor. Patroclus inspired a Greek
counterattack and forced the
Trojans back to the city walls. He
was slain by Hector, the greatest of
the Trojan warriors, who stripped
him of his borrowed armor.
Devastated, Achilles built a
towering funeral pyre for his
beloved Patroclus, held funeral
games in his honor, and returned to
the fray with a vengeance. Killing
Hector in single combat, he refused
to return his body for a royal burial;
instead, he dragged Hector’s corpse

behind his chariot around Troy’s
walls. Soon after, Achilles was
mortally wounded when Paris fired
an arrow at his heel—the only part
of his body that was not immortal.
Now in its tenth year, the war
was won not by force but trickery.
Odysseus had the Greeks build a
giant hollow wooden horse, secretly
fill it with Greek soldiers, and leave
it outside the gates of Troy. The rest
of the Greeks sailed out of sight, so
that the Trojans believed they had
left. Thinking the war was over, the
Trojans dragged the horse inside
the city walls. As the inhabitants

Achilles


The warrior Achilles was the son
of the sea nymph Thetis and King
Peleus of Pithia. When he was
born, his mother wanted to make
him immortal, so she dipped him
into the River Styx, which ran
between Earth and Hades. She
held him by his left heel, which
left Achilles with one vulnerable
spot. Growing up, Achilles was
taught by the wise centaur Chiron
to become a warrior. When the

Trojan War began, Chiron gave
Achilles a mighty shield, but
Thetis intervened before her son
could join the fray. Calchas had
prophesied that Achilles would
help the Greeks take Troy and,
fearing for his life, Thetis
disguised Achilles as a girl in
the home of the king of Scyros.
Odysseus, however, soon found
Achilles and revealed his true
identity. After marrying the
king’s daughter, Achilles left
Scyros to lead Odysseus’s army.

slept, oblivious to their imminent
doom, the Greeks inside the horse
sneaked out and murdered Troy’s
guards. These soldiers let in the
rest of the Greek army, which had
secretly returned to Troy under
cover of night.
A savage massacre followed,
and Troy was burned to the ground.
Menelaus had regained Helen, but
both sides had lost some of their
most famous warriors and much of
their population. The Greeks, due to
their wanton destruction of temples
during the Sack of Troy, had also
lost the goodwill of the gods. ■

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