Saturday, 4 March 2017

Heroes of the Trojan War

Meet the Heroes of the Trojan War

The Trojan War erupted (in 13th or 12th Century B.C.) when Prince Paris of Troy eloped with Helen, Queen of Sparta. Helen’s husband Menelaus turned to his powerful brother Agamemnon for help. The latter was King of Mycenae and an ambitious man who nursed a desire to unite and lead all of Greece, which was divided into a number of small kingdoms at the time. He succeeded in persuading other Greek kings, notably Odysseus of Ithaca and Achilles of Phthia, to sail across the Aegean in over a thousand ships to the shores of Troy (believed to be Hissarlik in modern-day Turkey).
Stories about the Trojan War were passed down for generations by oral tradition until the Greek poet Homer gave them epic form in Iliad and Odyssey (7th or 6th Century B.C). The Latin poet Virgil mourned the sack of Troy in his epic Aeneid. Many more poets and dramatists went on to describe events relating to the Greeks’ decade-long siege of Troy, of the Trojan Prince Hector’s bravery, of the wrath of Achilles, of Troy’s un-breached walls until the stratagem of the wooden horse...
Some of the heroes of this war are...

The painting is of Thetis dipping the infant Achilles into the River Styx. By Peter Paul Reubens, 1635

Achilles
The most famous character in the war. Son of the immortal nymph Thetis and the mortal Peleus, King of Myrmidions based in Phthia. The Achilleid, written by Statius in the first century A.D., records the story of his rumoured immorality. His mother Thetis dipped him in the sacred River Styx to render him immortal but he was left vulnerable at his heel, the part of his body by which she’d held him. Hence the term ‘Achilles Heel’, indicating a person’s vulnerability. Also the term ‘Achilles Tendon’, which describes the muscle just above the heel.
Achilles is the central character of Homer’s Iliad and the epic begins with a reference to him:
Sing, Goddess, of the rage of Peleus’ son Achilles,
The accursed rage that brought great suffering to the Achaeans...’
According to the Iliad Achilles arrived at Troy with fifty ships each carrying fifty Myrmidons (Book 2). But he left the battle towards the end of the war when Agamemnon, leader of the Greeks, deprived him of his favourite slave Briseis. Achilles was married, as well, to Deidamia, who bore him a son Neoptolemus. Achilles’ battle prowess is alluded to throughout the Iliad and the Trojans fear him. When the Trojan Prince Hector kills his cousin Patroclus, Achilles chases Hector outside the walls of Troy and kills him. It’s a turning point in the war. However, he is killed soon after by Paris’ arrow through his heel.
The legend of Achilles continued long after the Iliad. In Homer’s Odyssey, Odysseus visits the underworld and meets the shades, one of whom is Achilles. The great warrior expresses curiosity about his son Neoptolemus’ performance in the Trojan War. Achilles is mentioned in numerous other classical sources and there was a cult of Achilles worship for some time. Alexander the Great claimed Achilles as his ancestor and visited the tomb of Achilles at Achilleion near Troy.
Hector
The greatest Trojan warrior. The eldest son of King Priam and Queen Hecuba. Husband to Andromache and father to Astyanax. Described as a gallant and brave prince, a tragic figure propelled into battle because of his younger brother Paris’ selfishness. In the Iliad he is praised by Greeks and Trojans alike. He wreaks destruction upon the Greeks but his end comes when he kills Achilles’ cousin Patroclus, causing the mighty Myrmidon King to chase and kill him outside the walls of Troy. Achilles ties Hector’s body to his chariot and drags it through the Grecian camp. He mistreats it until King Priam comes in person and requests the release of his son’s body. Although Hector meets a grisly end, he is remembered as a great and noble warrior. Homer calls him the “breaker of horses” and “godlike Hector”. During the sack of Troy, however, his wife and child meet a tragic end, too. The infant Astyanax is thrown from the walls of Troy, while Andromache is taken slave by the Greeks.


 Fresco painting by Franz Matsch of Hector's body being dragged by Achilles. A poignant moment in the Trojan War.
Agamemnon
King of Mycenae. The most interesting and complex character of the Trojan War. A man of extreme passions, cruel but admired. Helen’s brother-in-law on both sides: her husband Menelaus’ brother and also husband to her sister Clytemnestra. Helen calls him a great king in the Iliad. Priam, King of Troy, describes him as: “So tall, so aweful, and almost divine.../ None match his grandeur and exalted mien.” (Alexander Pope’s translation of the Iliad). He’s the one that leads the united Greek forces against Troy after Paris elopes with Helen. But Agamemnon is a man of dark deeds. He took Clytemnestra by force after killing her husband Tantalus, King of Pisa and their infant son. Then, when the Greek forces gathered at Aulis encounter unfavourable winds, the priest Calchas tells Agamemnon to sacrifice his daughter Iphigenia to goddess Artemis. Agamemnon convinces his wife to send the young girl to Aulis on the pretext of getting her married to Achilles. When she arrives, Agamemnon kills her by slitting her throat, thereby leaving the other Kings amazed at his resolve. The winds change and the Greek forces sail for Troy.
After the sack of Troy Agamemnon takes the Trojan Princess Cassandra as his war-prize and returns to Mycenae. In his absence Clytemnestra had begun an affair with his cousin Aegisthus. She murders Agamemnon with a double-blade axe and kills Cassandra, too. Aegisthus replaces Agamemnon on the throne and rules for seven years. Once they’re of age, Clytemnestra’s children (Agamemnon’s off spring) Orestes and Electra kill her and Aegisthus to avenge their father’s death, thus ending the bloody saga of Agamemnon.
Agamemnon’s story has fascinated dramatists for centuries. Aeschylus’ Oresteia is the most famous rendition of the tragic Mycenae tale. In Homer’s Odyssey, Agamemnon meets Odysseus during the latter’s journey to the underworld, reveals the manner of his death and warns him against trusting women! (Fine one to talk, wasn’t he?)
Paris
Prince of Troy, son of King Priam and Queen Hecuba. Homer calls him “author of the (Trojan) war.” His abduction of Helen, Queen of Sparta, was the immediate cause of the war. Paris is supposed to have been one of the most handsome men of all and his older brother Hector chides him for this. “Beauty and youth, in vain to these you trust” (Alexander Pope’s translation of the Iliad, 1715). He is lily-livered and avoids doing battle with Helen’s husband Menelaus. But he redeems himself during the last stage of the war by killing the great Achilles. His end comes when the gifted archer Philoctetes sends three arrows into him.
His relationship with Helen is complex. In some versions of the tale he is supposed to have abducted her, while other stories maintain that she eloped with him. In the Iliad she’s seen as repenting of her actions. She doesn’t seem to have much love lost for him, either. But movie versions, particularly the 1997 Brad Pitt starrer in which Orlando Bloom plays Paris, present them as passionate lovers.


                        This 18th Century painting depicts the abduction of Helen by Paris.

Odysseus
King of Ithaca, husband of Penelope and father to Telemachus. He’s also given the Trojan Queen Hecuba as a war-prize after the sack of Troy (although she was no spring chicken, having raised Hector, Paris, three sons and Cassandra- all grown up- by then!). Odysseus, called Ulysses by the Romans, is arguably the greatest hero of the war since he not only survives it but reaches home safely and also gets an entire epic for his journey home, namely Homer’s Odyssey. It’s an interesting commentary on the value of brain over brawn, for Odysseus is revered more for his wisdom than bravery in battle, throughout the Iliad.
He is called “Great in council, glorious in the field” and “A chief, in wisdom equal to a god.” (Alexander Pope’s translation of the Iliad, 1715). Helen calls him “Ithacus the wise” and declares that “His fame for wisdom fills the spacious earth.” He is also the one who thinks up the stratagem of the wooden horse, which ultimately destroys the unbreached walls of Troy.





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