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Electra > Myth of the Trojan War
2. By chance, Heracles, the son of Zeus and the most powerful
mortal, was in the vicinity and pledged to save Hesione after Laomedon had
promised him a team of matchless horses, which Zeus had given to Laomedon’s
grandfather Tros. Heracles fought and killed the sea-monster and freed Hesione,
but once again Laomedon broke his promise and refused to give Heracles the
horses. Heracles, Peleus (son of Aeacus and father of Achilles), and Telamon
(brother of Peleus, the uncle of Achilles, and father of Telamonian Ajax and
Teucer), sacked Troy and killed Laomedon and his sons, but spared the youngest
Podarces (swift-foot) in exchange for a beautiful veil which Hesione herself
had embroidered with gold. Heracles then gave Hesione to Telamon who carried
her away to Salamis in Greece. From that day on, Podarces became known as
'Priam', which means "bought or "ransomed".
3. Priam had a son from his wife Hekabe (or Hecuba), who dreamed
that she had given birth to a flaming torch. Cassandra, the prophetic daughter
of Priam, foretold that the newborn son, Paris (also called Alexandros), should
be killed at birth or else he would destroy the city. Paris was taken out to be
killed, but he was rescued by shepherds and grew up in the fields by Mount Ida.
One day Hector, the son of Priam, traveled to the fields to secure animals for
a festival. When he took one of Paris’ favorite heifers, Paris returned to Troy
with the intention of demanding the return of his favored animal. While in
Troy, Paris competed in the athletic games, was recognized, and returned to the
royal family.
5. It so happened that the most beautiful woman in the world was
Helen, the daughter of Leda and Zeus. Leda’s mortal husband, Tyndareus, fearing
that Helen’s beauty would be the cause of calamity for his family, would not
agree to give her in marriage until each of her suitors promised that they
would collectively avenge any insult to her. After the suitors swore this oath,
Helen chose to marry Menelaus, King of Sparta. Her twin sister Klytaimnestra
(Clytemnestra), born at the same time as Helen but not a daughter of Zeus,
married Agamemnon, King of Argos and brother of Menelaus. Agamemnon was the
most powerful leader in Hellas (Greece).
6. As time passed, Paris returned to the royal family at
Troy (see 3 above) and his judgment of the goddesses was forgotten. Eventually
he journeyed to Sparta as a Trojan ambassador. Menelaus entertained Paris and
then left his house under Paris’ protection when he was compelled to travel
abroad on business. Paris and Helen fell in love and left Sparta together,
taking with them a vast amount of the city's treasure. Some stories claimed
that the real Helen never went to Troy, but was carried off to Egypt by the god
Hermes, and Paris took her double to Troy. The Spartans pursued them but could
not catch the lovers. When the Spartans learned that Helen and Paris had
returned to Troy, they sent a delegation, consisting of Odysseus, King of
Ithaca, and Menelaus, the wronged husband, to Troy to demand the return of
Helen and the treasure. The Trojans refused to return Helen and contemplated
killing the ambassadors but Anchises, the father of Aeneas, intervened to save
the Greeks. Having returned to Greece, Menelaus appealed to the oath that
Tyndareus had forced Helen’s suitors to take (see 5 above), and the Greeks
assembled at Aulis and began to prepare to depart for Troy.
7. Calchas, the prophet with the Greek army, told Agamemnon and
the other leaders that they could not conquer Troy without Achilles, the son of
Peleus and Thetis. To protect Achilles from death in battle Thetis had bathed
the infant in the waters of the river Styx, which conferred invulnerability to
any weapon. Achilles was then educated as a young man by Chiron, a centaur
(half man and half horse). When the Greeks began to assemble an army, Achilles’
parents hid him at Scyros disguised as a girl. While there he met Deidameia,
and they had a son Neoptolemos (also called Pyrrhus). Odysseus traveled to
Scyros and found Achilles by placing a weapon, among other trinkets, in front
of the girls of Scyros. Achilles reached for the weapon, thus revealing his
identity. Menoitios, a royal counselor, sent his son Patroclus to accompany
Achilles on the expedition as his friend and advisor. Initially Odysseus
himself had attempted to avoid serving in the expedition. When the Greeks
arrived to compel him to honor his oath, Odysseus, feigning madness, yoked a
mule to an ox and began sowing his fields with salt. Palamedes, who recognized
the ruse, put Odysseus' small son Telemachus in front of the plow. When
Odysseus swerved to avoid his son, he revealed his sanity and was forced to
join the expedition. Odysseus, however, nursed a deep grudge against Palamedes.
10. At long last, the Greek army landed on the beaches before
Troy. The first man ashore, Protesilaus, was killed by Hector, son of Priam and
leader of the Trojan army. Achilles killed the giant Cycnus, who was
invulnerable to any forged weapon, with a boulder. Having established a
beachhead, the Greeks sent another embassy to Troy, seeking to recover Helen
and the treasure. When the Trojans rejected them, the Greek army settled down
into a siege, which lasted many years. As the Greek army besieged Troy,
numerous expeditions lay waste to the surrounding towns, which were allied to
Troy. In the seventh year of the siege Troilus, the beautiful son of Priam, was
killed by Achilles.
As a result of the stalemate, Palamedes advised the Greeks to
return to home, Odysseus, who never forgave Palamedes for outwitting him (see
7), accused him of collaboration with the Trojans and prepared a false report
that implicated him as a traitor. When a stash of gold, which Odysseus had
planted, was discovered in Palamedes’ tent, Palamedes was condemned and stoned
to death.
13. While Hector was enjoying his successes
against the Greeks, the latter sent an embassy to Achilles, requesting that he
return to battle. Agamemnon offered many rewards in compensation for his
initial insult (see 11). Achilles refused the offer and added that he would
reconsider only if Hector ever reached the Greek ships. When Hector did so,
Achilles’ friend Patroclus (see 7) begged to be allowed to return to the fight.
Achilles gave him permission, advising Patroclus not to attack the city of Troy
itself. He also gave Patroclus his own suit of armor, so that the Trojans might
think that Achilles had returned to the war. Patroclus resumed the fight,
enjoyed some dazzling success (killing one of the leaders of the Trojan allies,
Sarpedon from Lykia), but he was finally killed by Euphorbus and Hector, with
the help of Apollo.
16. The Greeks captured Helenus, a son of Priam and a prophet.
Helenus revealed to the Greeks that they could not capture Troy without the
help of Philoctetes, who owned the bow and arrows of Heracles and whom the
Greeks had abandoned on Lemnos (see 9 above). Odysseus and Neoptolemus (the son
of Achilles) set out to persuade Philoctetes, who was angry at the Greeks for
abandoning him on the island, to return to the war and by trickery they
succeeded. Philoctetes killed Paris with an arrow shot from the bow of Heracles.
18. The ill-omened death of Laocoon persuaded the Trojans to bring
the Trojan Horse into their city. They tore down the part of the wall built by
Aeacus (see 1), dragged the horse inside, and celebrated their apparent
victory. At night, when the Trojans had fallen asleep, the Greek soldiers
hidden in the horse emerged, opened the gates, and gave the signal to the main
army,
which had been hiding behind Tenedos.
Despite fierce resistance from the Trojans led by Aeneas, the city was totally
destroyed. King Priam was slaughtered at his household altar by Achilles’ son
Neoptolemus. Hector's infant son, Astyanax, was thrown off the walls of Troy by
Odysseus. The women were taken prisoner, including Hecuba (wife of Priam),
Andromache (wife of Hector), and Cassandra (daughter of Priam), who was raped
in the temple of Athena by the Lesser Ajax. After some dispute about her fate,
Helen was returned to Menelaus. The Greeks sacrificed Polyxena at Achilles’
tomb.
19. The gods regarded the
sacking of Troy and especially the treatment of the temples as a sacrilege, and
they punished many of the Greek leaders. Many were killed by a storm on the
journey home and others were scattered, forced to wander for years before they
made it home. Menelaus’ ship was blown to Egypt (where, in some versions, he
recovered his real wife in the court of King Proteus--see 6 above). Diomedes
returned to find his wife unfaithful and his kingdom taken away and wandered in
exile before settling in Italy. Ajax the Lesser was impaled either by the
trident of Poseidon or the thunderbolt of Zeus (hurled by Athena) for his
impiety in dragging Cassandra from the altar and raping her in Athena’s temple.
Philoctetes, expelled by nobles who had ruled in his absence, eventually
settled in Southern Italy and founded a new city.
20. Agamemnon returned to Argos, where he was murdered by his wife
Clytemnestra and her lover, Aegisthus. Cassandra, who had been driven mad, was
also killed by Clytemnestra. Clytemnestra claimed that she was seeking revenge
for the sacrifice of her daughter Iphigenia (see 8 above). Aegisthus sought to
avenge his father Thyestes who was forced by his brother, Atreus, the father of
Agamemnon, to feast upon the cooked flesh of his own children.
22. Neoptolemus, the only son of Achilles, married Hermione, the
only daughter of Helen and Menelaus. Neoptolemus also took as a wife the widow
of Hector, Andromache. There was considerable jealously between the two women.
Orestes also wished to marry Hermione; he deceitfully arranged for the people
of Delphi killed Neoptolemus. Menelaus tried to kill both the son of
Neoptolemus, Molossus, and Andromache, but Peleus, Achilles’ father, rescued
them. Andromache later married Helenus and founded New Troy. Oresetes then
married Hermione. Orestes’ friend Pylades married Electra, Orestes sister.
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23. Odysseus wandered over
the sea for many years before reaching home. Because of the enmity of Poseidon,
the god of the sea, he lost all his men before returning to Ithaca alone. His
adventures took him from Troy to Ismareos (land of the Cicones); to the land of
the Lotos Eaters, the island of the Cyclopes; to the cave of Aeolos (god of the
winds), to the land of the Laestrygonians, to the islands of Circe and Calypso,
to the underworld, where he talked to the ghosts of Achilles and Agamemnon and
received a prophecy from Teiresias; to the land of the Sirens, past the monster
Scylla and the whirlpool Charybdis, to the pastures of the cattle of Helios,
the sun god, to Phaiacia. Having returned to Ithaca in disguise, with the help
of his son Telemachus and some loyal servants, Odysseus killed the young
princes who had been courting his wife, Penelope, wasting the treasure of his
palace, and plotting to kill Telemachus. After proving his identity to Penelope
and reconciling himself to the people of Ithaca Odysseus followed the oracle he
received in the underworld from Teiresias and made his peace with Poseidon.
Upon his return to Ithaca, in a case of mistaken identity Telegonus, his son
born to Circe, who had come in search of his father, killed Odysseus.
Eventually Telegonus married Penelope and Telemachus married Circe.
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Last Updated September 3, 2007 9:38 AM [top]