Iliad I INTRODUCTION The Abduction of Helen The Trojan War began with the abduction of Helen, the beautiful wife of the king of Sparta, by the Trojan prince Paris.
Publié le 12/05/2013
Extrait du document
«
Ajax Defends Greek ShipsThe Greek hero Ajax wields his spear in defense of Greek ships as Trojan warriors try to set the wooden vessels on firewith their torches.
This encounter, shown in a late-18th-century illustration, occurs in Book 15 of the Iliad, an epicattributed to Greek poet Homer that recounts events from the Trojan War.Corbis
Paris offers to fight a duel with Menelaus to settle the conflict.
After an exchange of blows, Paris’s protector, the goddess Aphrodite, intervenes to save him.Treacherously incited by their enemy Athena, the Trojans break the armistice made before the duel and thereby put themselves morally in the wrong.
A series of singlecombats ensue, skillfully interspersed with domestic incidents inside Troy.
Eventually, when the Greeks are hard-pressed by the Trojans, Agamemnon sends representatives to Achilles who offer rich gifts and the return of Briseis if he will jointhe fight again.
Achilles refuses because he knows reentry guarantees his death at Troy and he now believes no form of honor is worth his life.
Yet, after the Greekwarrior Ajax appeals to him as a friend, Achilles announces he will fight again if Hector reaches their ships.
D The Death of Patroclus
Death of PatroclusThis relief by 19th-century Danish sculptor Bertel Thorvaldsen depicts a crucial event in the epic poem the Iliad: the deathof Patroclus.
Protected by the armor of his friend Achilles, who has withdrawn from battle, Patroclus leads the forces of theMyrmidons and is killed by the Trojan warrior Hector.
Achilles rejoins the fighting as a result and eventually leads theGreeks to victory in the Trojan War.Corbis
Further duels and maneuvers follow.
The Trojans attack the Greek camp, and Hector seems unstoppable.
Hera, fearing a Trojan triumph, adorns and beautifies herselfvoluptuously and lures Zeus away from helping the Trojans.
He and she withdraw together to Mount Ida.
The Greeks regain the upper hand.
Zeus awakens, furiouslyrealizes Hera’s cunning, and gives help again to the Trojans.
The Greeks fall back in panic.
Pitying their plight, Patroclus, dearest friend of Achilles, puts on Achilles’armor and drives the enemy back.
But Hector meets Patroclus in single combat and kills him, and a bloody battle rages over his corpse.
E The Death of Hector and the Funeral of Patroclus.
»
↓↓↓ APERÇU DU DOCUMENT ↓↓↓
Liens utiles
- Iphicles Greek Halfbrother of the hero Heracles; son of Amphitryon, a prince of Tiryns, and his wife, Alcmene, who was a daughter of the king of Mycenae; husband to Automedusa, and later, to the youngest daughter of King Creon of Thebes.
- Iphigenia Greek Daughter of Clytemnestra and Agamemnon, king of Mycenae and leader of the Greek forces in the Trojan War; sister of Electra and Orestes.
- Leda Greek The daughter of King Thestius of Aetolia; wife of Tyndareus, king of Sparta.
- Nestor Greek King of Pylos (on the west coast of Messenia, in the Peloponnesus) and, at 60 years old, the oldest and most experienced of the chieftains who fought in the Trojan War.
- Pasiphaë Greek Daughter of Helios (the Sun); wife of Minos, king of Crete; mother with Minos of Ariadne, Androgeus, and Phaedra.