Transcript The Odyssey

The Odyssey
Homer & The Trojan War
Homer….the earliest Greek poet?
Credited with creating two epic poems:
• The Iliad (750 B.C.E.) and
• The Odyssey (720 B.C.E.)
How do we know this is true?
•We know very little about Homer’s
Greece.
• Scholars believe it wasn’t put into
writing until centuries later.
Did Homer even exist???
• Some scholars think that
Homer was actually an
embodiment of several
different men, all of whom
collaborated on both The
Iliad and The Odyssey.
If he did exist, he was
most likely:
•Blind
•From Chios
• Ancient Greek playwrights referred to him as a “gifted blind poet.”
• “If anyone should ask you whose song is sweetest, say: blind is the man
•
and he lives in rocky Chios."
The dialect used in The Odyssey was common in the area of Chios at the
time this epic was composed.
http://www.mitchellteachers.net/WorldHistory/AncientGreece/TheOdysseyAssignment.htm
The Transmission of The Odyssey
bard
[bahrd]
–noun
1.(formerly) a person who
composed and recited epic or
heroic poems, often while playing
the harp, lyre, or the like.
• Many think that Homer was a bard who wandered from town to town chanting
•
his poetry to the accompaniment of a lyre.
During Homer’s time, very few people could read and write, and so stories were
passed down orally. The Greeks of Asia Minor, known as the Ionians, developed a
tradition of heroic poetry. The Homeric epics were regularly performed and were
known to their audiences through performance.
The Transmission of The
Odyssey
• 5-4th century B.C.E- The Greeks learned an alphabet from the Phoenicians.
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Scholars believe that The Odyssey was written down at this time.
3rd century B.C.E.- Ancient scholars working in Alexandria were responsible for
the division of The Odyssey into twenty-four books. They were written on
papyrus rolls.
2nd-5th century C.E.- Our book form replaced the roll.
1488- First printed edition of Homer issued in Florence. Before that, it existed
only as a handwritten book.
So when does The Odyssey take place?
• The Odyssey chronicles the adventures of the
Greek hero Odysseus during his 10-year voyage
home to Ithaca after the end of the Trojan War
(1184 B.C.E.) in the twelfth century B.C.E.
12 years before The Odyssey…
• Odysseus, wise and noble King of Ithaca,
reluctantly sails with his army to take
part in the rescue of Helen after she is
kidnapped by Prince Paris.
Why was she
kidnapped???
The Trojan War :
it all started with an apple.
•The Trojan War has its roots in the marriage between Peleus and Thetis, a sea-goddess.
Peleus and Thetis had not invited Eris, the goddess of discord, to their marriage and the
outraged goddess stormed into the wedding banquet and threw a golden apple onto the table.
The apple belonged to, Eris said, whomever was the fairest.
•Hera, Athena, and Aphrodite all claimed the apple belonged to them. Zeus proclaimed that
Paris, a Trojan prince, would act as the judge.
The Apple of Discord
• All three goddesses bribed Paris. Hera promised him power,
Athena promised him wealth, and Aphrodite promised the
most beautiful woman in the world.
The Apple of Discord
• Paris chose Aphrodite, and in return, she
helped him kidnap Helen, wife of King
Menelaus of Sparta. Stories conflict as to
whether Helen fell in love with Paris (with
the help of Aphrodite) and left willingly, or
if she was forcefully abducted by Paris. In
either case, Paris carried off much of
Menelaus’ wealth.
•In Troy, Helen and Paris were married. This event set into motion the Trojan War
(1194-1184 B.C.E.) for the next ten years.
The Trojan War
• Odysseus was forced to fight because he was
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an old suitor of Helen’s. All of the old suitors
made an oath that they would back Helen’s
husband to defend her honor.
Since it was their duty to help Menelaus
recover Helen, the Greeks sent one thousand
ships to Troy to recover Helen; hence the
saying, “A face that could launch a thousand
ships”.
The Fall of Troy
• In the tenth year of the war, Achilles was killed by Paris’s arrow that was guided
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by Apollo.
The war was not going well for the Greeks.
Still seeking to gain entrance into Troy, clever Odysseus (some say with the aid of
Athena) ordered a large wooden horse to be built. Its insides were to be hollow so
that soldiers could hide within it.
Once the statue had been built, a number of the Greek warriors, along with
Odysseus, climbed inside. The rest of the Greek fleet sailed away, so as to deceive
the Trojans.
The Fall of Troy
• One man, Sinon, was left behind. When the Trojans came to marvel at the huge creation,
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Sinon pretended to be angry with the Greeks, stating that they had deserted him. He assured
the Trojans that the wooden horse was safe and would bring luck to the Trojans.
The Trojans celebrated what they thought was their victory, and dragged the wooden horse
into Troy.
That night, after most of Troy was asleep or in a drunken stupor, Sinon let the Greek
warriors out from the horse, and they slaughtered the Trojans.