The odyssey. an introduction by David Adams Leeming

Similar documents
An Introduction to The Odyssey

B.C. Amphora with Chariot Race

THE GIFT THAT HID A NASTY SURPRISE The war between the Greek and Trojan armies finally ended last week when the Greeks used a cunning trick to mount

The Odyssey. December 5, 2016

Introduction to the Odyssey

Text 3: Homer and the Great Greek Legends. Topic 5: Ancient Greece Lesson 1: Early Greece

The Odyssey. Now I will avow that men call me Odysseus, Sacker of Cities, Laertes' son, a Prince of the Achaeans," said the Wanderer.

#5 Introduction to The Odyssey CN

The Odyssey Background Notes. Written by Homer

homer the odyssey 92DD8E230BE554A34FEDE BB68 Homer The Odyssey 1 / 6

4 What god punishes the Greeks with plague for withholding the girl from her father? a. Zeus b. Athena c. Thetis d. Apollo e.

The Trojan War: Real or Myth?

Lessons & Activities for the Elementary & Middle School Focusing on Ancient Greek Language and Culture

The Odyssey. The Trojan War. The Odyssey is the sequel to the poem, The Iliad.

DAY 1 WHO, WHERE, WHY, WHEN?

10.1 Beliefs. pp Essential Question: What makes the Greek s culture unique? Standard 6.56

Of course, Paris chose Aphrodite. This action set in motion several things which would eventually culminate in the Trojan War.

The Myth of Troy. Mycenaeans (my see NEE ans) were the first Greek-speaking people. Trojan War, 1200 B.C.

The Iliad and the Odyssey, Part 1

Ancient Greece. Chapter 6 Section 1 Page 166 to 173

The Minoans and Mycenaeans. Who were they? Where did they come from? What did they accomplish? Where did they go?

The Odyssey Of Homer By William Morris READ ONLINE

Religious Practices. The Ancient Greeks believe in many different gods, each of them was in charge of a different aspect of life.

ACHILLES FATE FOLLOWS AND MEN AND CHILDREN WILL BE SLAUGHTERED AS

Trojan War Actors at their best (I can look at an event from different perspectives and act out what can happen when two different civilizations want

One of the earliest civilizations began on the island of CRETE This was the Minoan civilization, named for King MINOS Crete is long and narrow, about

WHI.05: Ancient Greece: Geography to Persian Wars

Fiction Excerpt 2: Excerpts from Homer s Iliad. The Judgment of Paris

DO NOW: Pick up the map of Eastern Europe pg 978

Background & Books One and Nine

Topic Page: Agamemnon (Greek mythology)

A Short History of Greek and Roman Myth: Gods, Goddesses and Heroes

Homer s The Odyssey - Review Guide

Tour of the Holy Lands - Mycenae

Level: DRA: Genre: Strategy: Skill: Word Count: Online Leveled Books HOUGHTON MIFFLIN

Achilles Study Guide. fire or, in some accounts, dipped him into the River Styx by his heel in order to make him

Iliad: The Story Of Achilles By Homer

Study Guide. By John O Neil. Wheelock Family Theatre 200 The Riverway Boston, MA

A LONG AND DIFFICULT JOURNEY

αρχαία Ελλάδα (Ancient Greece)

TEACHER S PET PUBLICATIONS. PUZZLE PACK for THE ODYSSEY based on the work by Homer

Homer s Epics 11/21/2011 1

The Odyssey. By Homer

Greek Test Review Chapter 10 and Chapter 11

GREEK MYTHS. But the baby is rescued and the king and queen of Corinth adopt the baby, But they don't tell the baby, Oedipus, that he is adopted.

Clst 181SK Ancient Greece and the Origins of Western Culture. Homer s Iliad. Final Preliminaries

History Lesson 4 The Rise of Ancient Greece (Grade 6) Instruction 4-1 Aegean Civilizations (Grade 6)

GLOBAL PERSPECTIVE - Life of Buddha frieze from Gandhara

World History I Mrs. Rogers Sem

Teacher s Pet Publications

ELENI DIKAIOU ILLUSTRATED BY LOUISA KARAGEORGIOU

1. Sea: heavy influence on physical environment of Greece (Aegean Sea, Ionian Sea)

The Odyssey-The Story Of Odysseus By Homer; W.H.D. Rouse READ ONLINE

Lesson 1

World History I SOL WH1.5e, f Mr. Driskell

EPISODES OF NOSTALGIA: THE WARRIORS RETURN HOME

TROY: Sacrifice and Survival

1) The Greek Hero: How did the Concept Evolve? - What made each of these figures heroic? For what qualities did they receive respect or admiration?

MINOAN AND MYCENAEAN WORLDS BC

King Of Ithaca (Adventures Of Odysseus) By Glyn Iliffe READ ONLINE

Athens and Sparta THE EARLIEST GREEK CIVILIZATIONS THRIVED NEARLY 4,000 YEARS AGO. YET THEIR CULTURE STILL IMPACTS OUR LIVES TODAY.

From Greece to Rome: Homer, Vergil and the Trojan War

Geography *1/5 of the land can be farmed *The Attica peninsula had the best farmland *Since Greece was made up of so many peninsulas there were many

The Persian Empire. An Outsider Invader Threatens the Greek Mainland.

Ancient Greece. Theme: Religion Theme: Society & Culture -Slide 1 -Slide2 Theme: Science & Tech. -Slide 1 -Slide 2

Chapter IV: The Ancient Greeks (p.76)

I. HELLENIC GREECE. A. Hellenic an adjective that describes anything from ancient Greece

Plan of the City of Troy 7/9/2009

Chapter 4. Daily Focus Skills

The Iliad AND THE ODYSSEY. Marshall High School Mr. Cline Western Civilization I: Ancient Foundations Unit Three BA

Athena and Poseidon s Contest for Athens By AthenaEurope.org 2016

A FEW NOTES ABOUT HOMER AND HIS WORKS

Short stories greek mythology fake

Objective: I understand when two groups meet what can happen? Can Sparta and Athens actually get along? Pericles comes to the rescue, maybe?

Write Me!!! peninsula

PERSIAN EXPANSION 520 B.C.,

War in Ancient Greece. Essential Question: Why does conflict develop?

Geography and Early Greek Civilization

Athenian Background. Located NE of Sparta, on the Aegean Sea Had different philosophy than Spartans

January 6, Chapter 7 & 8 Vocab. due Wednesday, 1/11

LATIN PREPS FOR YEAR 6

Ancient Greece. Greek Literature Chapter 8, Section 3 Ancient Civilizations

The Legacies of Ancient Greece

Greek Mythology. Mrs. Dianne Cline Oak Mountain Middle School Shelby County Schools

Geography of Ancient Greece Document Based Question

The Persian Wars: Ionian Revolt The Ionian Revolt, which began in 499 B.C. marked the beginning of the Greek-Persian wars. In 546 B.C.

THE PREHISTORIC AEGEAN AP ART HISTORY CHAPTER 4

Chapter 6. The Rise of Ancient Greece. Section 1 The Rise of Greek Civilization Section 2 Religion, Philosophy, and the Arts

Cultures of the Mountains and the Sea

Name: # Block: V BN M dlskfsdflk JO EWRN;DFL/ 5 G 6 K 9 P R 1 T 3 Y 4 U 5 I 6 O 8 P 0 G - H = J 9. V BN M dlskfsdflk JO EWRN;DFL/

Ancient Greece BCE

Athletes Warriors and Heroes at Wardown Park Museum. All Images Copyright The British Museum

Review 06 and 07 World History and the Bible

Clst 181SK Ancient Greece and the Origins of Western Culture. Homer s Iliad. Books 6, 9

Athens and Sparta. Chapter 7, Section 2

Ancient Greece: The Birthplace of Western Individualism By USHistory.org 2016

To Helen Edgar Allen Poe

Carmella Van Vleet Illustrated by Alex Kim

Sample file. Permission is granted to backup and store the audio tracks on a CD disk.

Ancient Greece. Written by: Marci Haines. Sample file. Rainbow Horizons Publishing Inc. ISBN-13:

Transcription:

The odyssey an introduction by David Adams Leeming

Almost 3,000 years ago, people who lived in the starkly beautiful part of the world we now call Greece were telling stories about a great war. The person credited with later gathering all these stories together and telling them as one unified epic is a man named Homer (Homeros, in Greek). Homer s great war stories are called, in English, the Iliad and the Odyssey. (In Greek, the Iliad is Ilias and the Odyssey is Odysseia.)

Homer s stories probably can be traced to historical struggles for control of the waterway leading from the Aegean Sea to the Sea of Marmara and the Black Sea. These real battles would have taken place as early as 1200 B.C. a time that was at least as long ago for Homer s audience as the Pilgrim s landing at the Plymouth Rock is for us. (#1)

Homer s first epic was the Iliad, which tells of a ten-year war fought on the plains outside the walls of a great city called Troy (also known as Ilion). The ruins of Troy can still be seen in western Turkey. In Homer s story the Trojan War was fought between the people of Troy and an alliance of Greek kings (at that time each island and area of the Greek mainland had its own king). The Iliad tells us that the cause of the war was sexual jealousy: The world s most beautiful woman, Helen, abandoned her husband, Menelaus, a Greek king, and ran off with Paris, a prince of Troy. (#2)

The Odyssey, Homer s second epic, is the story of the attempt of one Greek soldier, Odysseus, to get home after the Trojan War. All epic poems in the Western world owe something to the basic patterns established by these two stories. (#3)

EPICS AND VALUES Epics are long narrative poems that tell of the adventures of heroes who in some way embody the values of their civilizations. The Greeks for centuries used the Iliad and the Odyssey in schools to teach Greek virtues. So it is not surprising that later cultures that admired the Homeric epics created their own epics, imitating Homer s style but conveying their own value systems. (#4-5)

Still, for all the epics written since Homer s time and for all the ones composed before it, when we think of the word epic, we think primarily of the Iliad and the Odyssey.

The Iliad is the primary model for the epic of war. The Odyssey is the model for the epic of the long journey, as Odysseus makes his way home to Ithaca. The theme of the journey has been basic in Western literature it is found in fairy tales, in such novels as The Incredible Journey, Moby Dick, and The Hobbit, and in such movies as The Wizard of Oz, Star Wars, The Lion King, and Forrest Gump. Thus, the Odyssey has been more widely read of Homer s two great stories. (#3;6)

THE WAR-STORY BACKGROUND: VIOLENCE AND BRUTALITY The background for Odysseus story is found in the Iliad, which is set in the tenth and final year of the Trojan War. According to the Iliad, the Greeks attacked Troy to avenge the insult suffered by Menelaus, king of Sparta, when his wife, Helen, ran off with Paris, a young prince of Troy. The Greek kings banded together under the leadership of Agamemnon, the brother of Menelaus. In 1,000 ships, they sailed across the Aegean Sea and encircled the walled city of Troy. (#8)

Listeners would have known that the Greeks were eventually victorious, that they gained entrance to Troy, reduced the city to smoldering ruins, and butchered all the inhabitants, except for those they took as slaves back to Greece. They would have known all about the greatest of the Greek warriors, Achilles, who was to die young in the final year of the war. They would especially have known about the homecoming of Agamemnon, the leader of the Greek forces, who was murdered by his unfaithful wife when he returned from Troy. (#9)

Finally, Homer s listeners might well have been particularly fascinated by another homecoming story this one about a somewhat unusual hero, known as much for his brain as for his brawn. In fact, many legends had already grown up around this hero, whose name was Odysseus. He was the subject of Homer s new epic, the Odyssey.

ODYSSEUS: A HERO IN TROUBLE Odysseus was a hero in trouble. We can relate to Odysseus because we share with him a sense of being somehow lost in a world of difficult choices. Like Odysseus, we have to cope with unfair authority figures. Like him, we have to work very hard to get what we want.

THE WOODEN-HORSE TRICK Once in Troy, Odysseus performed extremely well as a soldier and commander. It was he, for example, who thought of the famous wooden-horse trick that would lead to the downfall of Troy. For ten years the Greeks had been fighting the Trojans, but they were fighting outside the Troy s massive walls. They had been unable to break through the walls and enter the city. (#10)

THE WOODEN-HORSE TRICK Odysseus plan was to build an enormous wooden horse and hide a few Greek soldiers inside its hollow belly. After the horse was built, the Greeks pushed it up to the gates of Troy and withdrew their armies, so that their camp appeared to be abandoned. Thinking that the Greeks had given up the fight and that the horse was a peace offering, the Trojans brought the horse into their city. That night, the Greeks hidden inside the wooden body came out, opened the gates of Troy to the whole Greek army, and began the battle that was to win the war. (#7)

RELATIONSHIPS WIH THE GODS This brings us to mythic and religious questions in the Odyssey. Myths are stories that use fantasy to express ideas about life that cannot be expressed easily in realistic terms. Myths are essentially religious because they are concerned with the relationship between human beings and the unknown or spiritual realm.

As you will see, Homer is always concerned with the relationship between humans and gods. Homer is religious: For him, the gods control all things. Athena, the goddess of wisdom, is always at the side of Odysseus. This is appropriate because Odysseus is known for his mental abilities. The god who works against Odysseus is Poseidon, the god of the sea, who is known for arrogance and a certain brutishness. (#12-13)

WHO WAS HOMER? No one knows for sure who Homer was. The later Greeks believed he was a blind minstrel who came from the island of Chios. Some scholars feel there must have been two Homers; some think he was just a legend. But scholars have also argued about whether a man called Shakespeare ever existed. It is almost as if they were saying that Homer and Shakespeare are too good to be true. On the whole, it seems sensible to take the word of the Greeks themselves. We can at least accept the existence of Homer as a role model for a class of wandering bards or minstrels later called rhapsodes. (#14)