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The Iliad -

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The Iliad - by Homer 1200 B.C The Trojan War The Judgment of Paris Wedding of Peleus and Thetis (grandson to Zeus and a sea nymph) Eris goddess of discord, not ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Iliad -


1
The Iliad - by Homer 1200 B.C
2
The Trojan War
3
The Judgment of Paris
4
Wedding of Peleus and Thetis(grandson to Zeus
and a sea nymph)
  • Eris goddess of discord, not invited
  • Eris crashes party and starts trouble by throwing
    a Golden apple marked To the fairest in the
    middle
  • Hera, Athena, Aphrodite claim it

Its mine!
Me!
No, me!
5
The Trojan War arose out of a dispute between the
goddesses Hera, Athena and Aphrodite. They were
guests at a wedding, when the goddess Discord
threw a golden apple in their midst, which was
written for the fairest. Each of the three
goddesses believed that she should have the
apple.
6
Zeus asked to judge
No way! Choose between my wife, daughter, and
Aphrodite? Who else can I get?
7
Paris Prince of Troy
(a playboy)
  • Goddesses bribe Paris
  • Athena offers ambition, fame, success in war
  • Hera offers power, riches, King of Europe
  • and Asia
  • Aphrodite offers the love of the most beautiful
  • woman in the world

8
Paris chooses Aphrodite -
Theres just one little problem
The most beautiful woman in the world is Helen
and shes married.
9
"the face that launched a thousand ships"
Helen wife to Menelaus, King of Sparta
(a half-mortal daughter
of Zeus)
10
Helens father, Tyndareus
  • Knew many men would pursue Helen
  • Was afraid conflicts or wars would be fought over
    her
  • Convinced suitors to swear an oath
  • to always protect Helen
  • to support her husband ,
  • whomever she chose

11
It is said that Helen was the face that launched
a thousand ships, for that is how many eventually
set sail for Troy.
12
Paris visits Helen and Menelaus
  • Welcomed as a guest
  • Kidnaps Helen
  • Menelaus - raises army from suitors
  • Agamemnon- Menelauss brother leads expedition
  • Achilles greatest Greek warrior
  • - son of Peleus and Thetis
  • - invulnerable, except for heel

13
  • The Greeks and the Trojans fought fiercely on the
    coastal plain, and although the Greeks won many
    battles they were unable to penetrate the
    defences of the Trojan city.
  • The Greeks were supported by the goddesses Hera
    and Athena, and also benefited from the services
    of a number of mighty warriors within their
    ranks. The greatest of these was undoubtedly
    Achilles, whose mother had dipped him into the
    river Styx when he was a baby, thereby causing
    him to be virtually invincible in battle.
  • The Greeks and the Trojans fought fiercely on the
    coastal plain, and although the Greeks won many
    battles they were unable to penetrate the
    defences of the Trojan city.

14
  • Nevertheless, he agreed to lend his armour to his
    friend Patroclus. Unfortunately, Patroclus,
    mistaken for Achilles, was killed by Hector, the
    son of King Priam, and the greatest of the Trojan
    warriors.

15
With Patroclus dead, Achilles vowed to avenge his
friends death. Achilles quickly found his sworn
enemy, and, following a fierce fight, Hector soon
lay dead on the battlefield.
  • Achilles tied Hectors body to the back of his
    chariot and then drove in glorious triumph around
    the walls of Troy. After much beseeching by King
    Priam, Achilles eventually agreed to return
    Hectors body to the Trojans.

16
Styx.
  • Despite Hectors death, the Greeks were still
    unable to break down the defences of Troy. And
    then tragedy struck Achilles was slain, shot in
    the heel by Paris. Held there by his mother, his
    heel had been the only part of his body not to
    have been dipped into the river

17
The war reached its tenth year, and yet neither
side could gain the upper hand.
  • At last Odysseus, the king of Ithaca, came up
    with a cunning plan. He suggested that the Greeks
    should build a huge wooden horse, inside which
    fifty of the strongest warriors could be hidden.
  • Agamemnon eventually agreed to this idea, and the
    horse was built. The chosen men, including
    Odysseus, climbed up into the belly of the horse,
    and the horse was left on the shore. The rest of
    the Greeks deserted their camp, and sailed to the
    other side of the nearby island, Tenedos.

18
  • However, one Greek, named Sinon who was renowned
    for making up stories, was left with the horse to
    convince the Trojans that they should drag the
    Horse into their city.

19
  • When the Trojans saw that the Greeks had gone
    away they were overjoyed, for they believed the
    war was finally over.

20
  • However, they were in awe of the horse and were
    unsure what to do with it.

21
  • Sinon, who explained he had been left as a
    deserter and a prisoner, told the Trojans that
    the horse had been built as an offering to the
    god Poseidon to provide them with a safe passage
    back to Greece.

22
  • The Trojans dragged the wooden horse into their
    city, unaware of the danger that was concealed
    inside the huge belly. Happy that the war was
    over the Trojans planned parties and celebrations
    that would last late into the night. They did not
    even bother to post guards on the ramparts, so
    sure were they that all danger of attack had
    passed with the departure of the Greeks.

23
  • It did not take long for the Trojans to become
    delirious from celebrating, and soon they all
    fell into a deep sleep. It was then that the
    warriors descended from the belly of the horse.
    They crept to the outer walls and opened the
    gates. Then they lit a fire on the ramparts as a
    signal to the rest of the Greeks, who in the
    meantime had returned to the mainland, that the
    plan had worked.

24
  • The sleeping revellers were easy prey for the
    rampaging Greeks, and with the city burning, the
    Trojans were slaughtered without mercy.

25
The once proud city of Troy was The once proud
city of Troy was reduced to a smoking ruin. The
Greeks were victoriouswas restored to
  • The Greeks prepared to sail back to their
    homelands most completing the journey in little
    time. However, many years were to pass before
    Odysseus would see the shores of Ithaca again.

26
(No Transcript)
27
Odyssey Begins Here
  • Greeks are scattered around the Mediterranean
  • Odysseuss 10 year journey home begins
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