Dates - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 113
About This Presentation
Title:

Dates

Description:

George Bernard Shaw, 'Saint Joan' 1923. 500 years. Heroes & Places. Agamemnon. Menelaos ... Joseph-Marie Vien. 1644. Odysseus Embarks Chryseis. Joseph-Marie ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:61
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 114
Provided by: marily5
Category:
Tags: dates

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Dates


1
Dates
  • Mycenean (late Helladic) Age
  • 1250 bce
  • Homer
  • 750 bce
  • 500 years
  • Saint Joan
  • 1412-1431
  • George Bernard Shaw, Saint Joan
  • 1923
  • 500 years

2
Heroes Places
  • Agamemnon
  • Menelaos
  • Achilles
  • Patroklos
  • Greater and Lesser Ajax
  • Odysseus
  • Nestor
  • Diomedes

3
Heroes from the Peloponnese
4
(No Transcript)
5
Agamemnon, Menelaos, Nestor, Diomedes
Diomedes
6
Agamemnon
Diomedes
Menelaos
Nestor
Atrides (son of Atreus)
Atrides (son of Atreus)
7
Heroes from Northeast Greece
8
(No Transcript)
9
Achilles and Patroklos
10
Achilles
Patroklos
11
Heroes from East Locris and Salamis
12
(No Transcript)
13
Lesser Ajax Greater Ajax
14
(Lesser) Ajax
(Greater or Telamonian) Ajax
15
Hero from Northwest Islands
16
(No Transcript)
17
Odysseus
18
Odysseus
19
Trojan Allies
20
(No Transcript)
21
Chryseis and Briseis
22
Attic red figure skyphosMakron490-480 bce (late
archaic)Boston, Museum of Fine Arts
23
Attic red figure skyphosMakron490-480 bce (late
archaic)Boston, Museum of Fine Arts
24
Attic red figure kylixMakron490-480 bce (late
archaic)Berlin, Antikenmuseen
25
Attic red figure kylixMakron490-480 bce (late
archaic)Berlin, Antikenmuseen
26
Odysseus Embarks ChryseisJoseph-Marie Vien1644
27
Odysseus Embarks ChryseisJoseph-Marie Vien1644
28
Iliad XXIV.791ff.
  • Then Priam and herald, minds set on the journey
    home, / bedded down for the night within the
    porchs shelter. And deep in his sturdy
    well-built lodge Achilles slept / with Briseis in
    all her beauty sleeping by his side.

29
Briseis in Ovids Heroides 3
  • ...If it may be allowed to complain a little of
    my lord and husband, I have a few causes of
    complaint against you, who are both. I do not
    blame you that I was so tamely delivered up to
    the king when demanded and yet, even in that
    point, you are not altogether without blame for
    no sooner was I demanded by Eurybates and
    Talthybius, than I was delivered up to be carried
    away by those military heralds. Each regarding
    the other with a look of surprise, inquired in
    whispers, Where is their so famed love? I
    might have been detained somewhat longer delay
    of misery would have been grateful. Alas! when
    torn from you, I gave no parting kisses but my
    tears flowed without ceasing I tore my hair, and
    hapless seemed to myself, for the second time, a
    captive....

30
Achilles BriseisAttic red figure belly
amphora510-500 bce (archaic)London, British
Museum
31
Achilles BriseisAttic red figure belly
amphora510-500 bce (archaic)London, British
Museum
32
Achilles BriseisAttic red figure belly
amphora510-500 bce (archaic)London, British
Museum
33
Agamemnon leading away BriseisAttic red figure
skyphos480-470 bce (late archaic)Paris, Louvre
34
Agamemnon
Talthybios
Diomedes
Briseis
35
cheir epi karpôihand upon wrist
36
Hector led away by PriamAttic red figure
amphora480 bce (late archaic)
37
Hom. Il. 7.273-312 duel of Hector and Ajax
  • Hom. Il. 7.273-312 duel of Hector and Ajax
  • First they fought with heart-devouring hatred, /
    then they parted, bound by pacts of friendship
  • Ajax gives Hector his war-belt Hector gives
    Ajax his sword

38
War-belt
39
sword
Ajax led away by Phoenix
40
Briseis led away from Achilles tentAttic red
figure kylix470 bce (late archaic)London,
British Museum
41
Briseis
Patroklos
Achilles
Phoenix
herald
herald
42
Briseis led to Agamemnons tent(other side of
same vase)
43
Briseis led to Agamemnons tent
44
details
to Agamemnons tent
from Achilles tent
45
Pompeian wall painting House of the Tragic
Poet1st century ce
46
Pompeian wall painting House of the Tragic
Poet1st century ce
Achilles
Patroklos
Briseis
47
(No Transcript)
48
Briseis returned to AchillesPeter Paul
Rubensoil sketch for tapestry1630-32Detroit
Institute of Art
49
Achilles
Briseis
50
Briseis brought before AgamemnonGiambattista
Tiepolofresco1743Villa Valmarana, Vicenza
51
Agamemnon
Briseis
52
(No Transcript)
53
(No Transcript)
54
Concubines and Mistresses
  • Agamemnon (archaic and classical)
  • Laertes (archaic)
  • Lysias (classical)
  • Hellenistic marriage-contracts

55
Agamemnon in the Iliad I.130 ff.
  • ...the young girl Chryseis. / Indeed, I prefer
    her by far, the girl herself. / I want her mine
    in my own house! I rank her higher / than
    Clytemnestra, my wedded wife--shes nothing less
    / in build or breeding, in mind or works of hand.

56
Klytemnestra in Euripides Electra
  • 420-410 bce
  • Still, wronged as I was, my rage had not burst
    forth for this Iphigenia, nor would I have
    slain my lord, had he not returned to me with
    that frenzied maiden and made her his mistress,
    keeping at once two brides beneath the same roof.
    Women maybe are given to folly, I do not deny it
    this granted, when a husband goes astray and sets
    aside his own true wife, she fain will follow his
    example and find another love and then in our
    case hot abuse is heard, while the men, who are
    to blame for this, escape without a word.

57
Laertes (1.488 ff.)
  • His devoted nurse attended him, bearing a
    glowing torch, / Eurycleia the daughter of Ops,
    Pisenors son. / Laertes had paid a price for the
    woman years ago, / still in the bloom of youth.
    He traded twenty oxen, / honored her on a par
    with his own loyal wife at home / but fearing the
    queens anger, never shared her bed.

58
Lysias
  • When they madam hetaerae got here, Lysias
    did not bring them to his own house, out of
    regard for his wife, the daughter of Brachyllus
    and his own niece,
  • and for his own mother, who was elderly and who
    lived in the same house but he lodged the two,
    Metaneira and Nicaretê, with Philostratus of
    Colonus, who was a friend of his and was as yet
    unmarried.

59
Hellenistic marriage-contract (311 bce)
  • ...It shall not be lawful for Heraclides to
    bring home another wife in insult of Demetria nor
    to have children by another woman nor to do any
    evil against Demetria on any pretext...

60
Hellenistic marriage-contract (92 bce)
  • .. It shall not be lawful for Philiskos to
    bring in any other wife but Apollonia, nor to
    keep a concubine or lover, nor to beget children
    by another woman in Apollonias lifetime, nor to
    live in another house over which Apollonia is not
    mistress, nor to eject or insult or ill-treat
    her, nor to alienate any of their property to
    Apollonias disadvantage....

61
Hellenistic marriage-contract (92 bce)
  • .. It shall not be lawful for Philiskos to
    bring in any other wife but Apollonia, nor to
    keep a concubine or lover, nor to beget children
    by another woman in Apollonias lifetime, nor to
    live in another house over which Apollonia is not
    mistress, nor to eject or insult or ill-treat
    her, nor to alienate any of their property to
    Apollonias disadvantage....

i.e, male lover, boyfriend
62
Map of the Troad
  • (Thracian) Chersonese

Greeks
Simois R
Troy
Tenedos
Scamander R
Lyrnessos
Chryse
Thebe
63
Troy
64
(No Transcript)
65
(No Transcript)
66
Hisarlik before 1870
67
(No Transcript)
68
Citadel Wall ofTroy VIDörpfeld standing on
eastern bastionWall is 13 feet thick thirteen
feet high
69
(No Transcript)
70
ContemporaryReconstruction ofTroy as seen from
the North
71
N
72
ContemporaryReconstruction ofTroy as seen from
the North
Royal Palace
Plain of the Simois River
73
ContemporaryReconstruction ofTroy as seen from
the East
74
E
75
ContemporaryReconstruction ofTroy as seen from
the East
Scamander River
Scamander River
Great Tower Skaian Gate
Temple of Athena
Royal Palace
76
Scaean Gate
77
Scaean Gate
78
Scaean Gate
79
Troy VISouth City Gate
80
(No Transcript)
81
Helen ParisAndromache HectorChalcidian
black figure krater540 bce (archaic)
82
(No Transcript)
83
(No Transcript)
84
Helen Paris detail
85
PARIS
86
Andromache Hector detail
87
EKTOR
88
Departure of Warrior motif
  • helmet
  • shield
  • oinochoe
  • phiale
  • wife
  • mother
  • father

89
Andromache HectorAttic red figure
pelike430-420 bce (classical)
90
(No Transcript)
91
(No Transcript)
92
Warriors departureAttic red figure
hydria500-490 bce (early classical)
93
(No Transcript)
94
oinochoe
phiale
95
Hectors DepartureAttic red figure stamnos440
bce (classical)
96
(No Transcript)
97
Hectors DepartureTischbein1812Oldenburg,
Landesmuseum
98
(No Transcript)
99
Hectors DepartureBayreuth HermitageGeorg
Gläserc. 1740
100
(No Transcript)
101
Hector and AndromacheGiorgio de Chirico1917
102
(No Transcript)
103
Andromache and AstyanaxPierre-Paul
Prudhon1814-24New York, Metropolitan Museum of
Art
104
(No Transcript)
105
Andromache Mourning HectorJacques-Louis
David1783
106
(No Transcript)
107
Paris and HelenJacques-Louis David1788
108
(No Transcript)
109
Captive AndromacheFrederic Leighton1888
110
(No Transcript)
111
fountainhouse
hydria
112
This painting was exhibited at the Royal Academy
with the following quotation (a translation by
Elizabeth Barrett Browning) Some standing
by,Marking thy tears fall, shall say 'This is
she,The wife of that same Hector that fought
bestOf all the Trojans when all fought for
Troy'.
113
(No Transcript)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com