Transcript “The Iliad”
“The Iliad”
(In Short)
Characters
Achilles:
Very powerful Achaean warrior
Flaw: cocky and prideful
In later myths, we find out he had a weak heel
Has two fates:
Live a long life with a family
Die young but in victorious battle
Characters
The Story of Thetis & Zeus:
Zeus, the god of all gods, loved thetis, the goddess of the sea
The prophets said if they had a son, he would be stronger than
zeus
Zeus said “Heck no!”
Zeus pawns thetis off on a mortal, peleus
Together they have Achilles, a demi-god
Characters
Agamemnon:
King of Mycenae
Brother of Melelaus, king of Sparta
Bully Toward Achilles
Patroclus:
Achilles’ Best friend
Dies in battle fighting Hector
Characters
Odysseus:
King of Ithaca (Greek Island)
Strong like Achilles, but has more Brains
Builds the Trojan Horse and leads the Achaeans to
destroy Troy
Convinces Achilles to fight in the war against Troy
Characters
Priam:
Paris & Hector’s father
The king of Troy
A pushover for Paris; he does whatever Paris wants him
to do
Characters
Paris:
Prince of Troy
“Kidnaps” Helen, queen of Sparta, because he loves her
Everyone dislikes him because he puts Troy in Harms way
He brings Helen to Troy and causes the war between the Trojans
and Achaeans
When Aphrodite, the goddess of love, and Athena, the goddess of
wisdom and war, ask him who is prettier, he says Aphrodite, which
makes Athena very angry
Characters
Menelaus:
King of Sparta
Wife, Helen, is kidnapped by the Trojan Prince, Paris
Hector:
Paris’ brother
Other prince of Troy
Very prideful and loyal to his family
Fights Achilles in a one-on-one battle
Characters
Helen:
The “Most beautiful woman in the world”
Leaves her husband, Menelaus, king of Sparta, for Paris,
Prince of Troy
Means trouble for the Trojans – the war is partially her
fault because she left her country
Characters
Homer’s Gods & Goddesses:
Not bound by fate like mortals are
Have close bonds with mortals
EX: Aphrodite & Paris, Athena & Odysseus
Immortal
Their veins are full of ichor instead of blood
Eat ambrosia and drink nectar
Also “eat” smoke from animal sacrifices and spilled wine as
offerings from mortals
Repay mortals by helping in battle, guiding them on quests,
etc.
Characters
Athena:
Goddess of wisdom and war
Angry at Paris because he said Aphrodite was prettier
than her
She allies with the Achaeans because of this
Ares:
The god of war
Allies with Trojans
Characters
Aphrodite:
The goddess of love
Allies with Trojans
Apollo:
The god of Poetry
Allies with Trojans
Characters
Thetis:
The goddess of the sea
Achilles’ mother
Allies with the Trojans
Poseidon:
God of the sea
Allies with the Achaeans
Characters
Zeus:
God of all gods
Neutral party
Hephaestus:
God of fire and metal-working
Neutral Party
Hades:
God of the underworld
Neutral party
Timeline of Events
1.
Paris insults Athe4na by saying Aphrodite is prettier.
2.
Menelaus doesn’t want to go to war; Agamemnon is
trying to get Thessaly (Formerly known as Aeolus) to
join their alliance.
3.
Paris “Steals” Helen.
Timeline of Events
4.
Agamemnon and Menelaus declare war on Troy;
Thessaly joins.
5.
The Achaeans and Trojans fight for nine years.
6.
Agamemnon captures two maidens, Chryseis and
Briseis; he gives Briseis to Achilles and keeps Chryseis for
himself.
Timeline of Events
7.
Chryses, Chryseis’ father and a priest, asks Agamemnon to let
his daughter go; Agamemnon says no.
8.
Chryses prays to Apollo to put a plague on the Achaeans;
plague lasts for nine days.
9.
The Achaeans get angry about the plague and make
Agamemnon give Chryseis back; Agamemnon does, but takes
Briseis
Timeline of Events
10.
Achilles lets Briseis go, but gets angry and refuses to fight in the
battle anymore.
11.
Achilles prays to his mother, Thetis, to “pull some strings” in
battle and sabotage the Achaeans to teach Agamemnon a
lesson.
12.
Thetis gets Zeus to make the Achaeans weak and lose the battle
led by Hector, Prince of Troy and Paris’ brother.
Timeline of Events
13.
Patroclus asks to fight in Hector’s battle, disguised as Achilles,
in order to trick and scare the Trojans.
14.
The Trojans are scared and retreat; Hector does not and he kills
Patroclus.
15.
Achilles finds out Patroclus has dies and swears revenge on
Hector; Thetis asks Hephaestus to make Achilles a new suit of
armor to fight in.
Timeline of Events
16.
Achilles fights Hector and kills him.
17.
Achilles ties Hector’s body to the back of his Chariot and drags
it across the battlefield for nine days; he is trying to make a
point as he is very upset over Patroclus’ death at Hector’s
Hands.
18.
Achilles angers the Gods with his vengeful actions and they
demand he cease.
Timeline of Events
19.
Priam visits Achilles and Begs for Hector’s body
back so the Trojans can give him a proper burial;
Achilles agrees.
20.
“The Iliad” ends with Hector’s funeral.
What Happens Between…?
Paris dies in an attack; he is struck by a poisoned arrow of
Philoctetes, the Prince of Thessaly.
Paris goes to his first wife, Oenoe, who has promised to heal his
would after he left her for Helen.
Oenoe refuses to heal his wounds because he hasn’t been back
for her for ten years; he’s been too focused on Helen.
What Happens Between…?
Paris returns to Troy to die; Oenoe regrets her decision and tries
to save Paris but it’s too late.
Helen is forced to remarry – she marries Deiphobus, Paris’
brother-in-law.
Odysseus, at the advice of Athena and with the help of Epeius, a
Greek artist, leads the Achaeans in a build of a giant hollow
wooden horse, known as the Trojan horse.
What Happens Between…?
Some Achaeans hid inside and the rest sailed away in
the ships to trick the Trojans into thinking they
surrendered.
Sinon, a Greek, was left behind to convince the Trojans
that the Greeks deserted him and that the horse was a
sign of good luck.
The majority of the Trojans believed Sinon and partied
all night.
What Happens Between…?
While they slept in a drunken stupor, the Achaeans
broke out of the horse and killed everyone, destroying
Troy.
Deiphobus, Helen’s new husband, is killed in the fall of
Troy by King Menelaus.
Helen returns to Sparta to live with Menelaus again.
What Happened to Achilles?
When he was an infant, Thetis attempted to make Achilles
immortal by dipping him into the River Styx.
She held him by his left ankle, which made his heel the only
body part to not be dipped in the magical waters; this was the
only are4a capable of a mortal wound.
In a battle, Achilles is shot in the hell by a stray arrow shot by
Paris; Achilles dies.