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As Odysseus was the chief architect of the Trojan Horse, it is also referred to in Homer's Odyssey. [1] In the Greek tradition, the horse is called the "wooden horse" ( δουράτεος ἵππος douráteos híppos in Homeric / Ionic Greek ( Odyssey 8.512); δούρειος ἵππος , doúreios híppos in Attic Greek ).
Odysseus returns to the Argive camp with Philoctetes and his arrows. [43] Perhaps Odysseus's most famous contribution to the Greek war effort is devising the strategy of the Trojan Horse, which allows the Greek army to sneak into Troy under cover of darkness.
The earliest known depiction of the Trojan Horse, from the Mykonos vase c. 670 BC The end of the war came with one final plan. Odysseus devised a new ruse – a giant hollow wooden horse , an animal that was sacred to the Trojans.
Alcinous promises to provide him a ship to return him home without knowing the identity of Odysseus. He remains for several days. Odysseus asks the blind singer Demodocus to tell the story of the Trojan Horse, a stratagem in which Odysseus had played a leading role. Unable to hide his emotion as he relives this episode, Odysseus at last reveals ...
Odysseus: Aeneas Ablerus Antilochus: Dresaeus Polypoetes: Maenalus Odysseus: Prothoon Ajax the Greater: Amphimachus Achilles: Adamas Meriones: Dresus Euryalus: Maris Thrasymedes: Prytanis Odysseus: Amphius Diomedes: Admetus Philoctetes: Dryops Achilles: Medon Philoctetes: Pylartes Patroclus: Antiphus ? Adrastus Patroclus: Dymas † Meilanion ...
The Achaeans entered the city using the Trojan Horse and slew the slumbering population. Priam and his surviving sons and grandsons were killed. Antenor, who had earlier offered hospitality to the Achaean embassy that asked the return of Helen of Troy and had advocated so [1] was spared, along with his family by Menelaus and Odysseus.
The perilous task of stealing this sacred statue again fell upon the shoulders of Odysseus and Diomedes. The two stole into the citadel in Troy by a secret passage and carried it off, leaving the desecrated city open to the deceit of the Trojan Horse. Odysseus and Diomedes steal the Palladium from Troy.
Following introductory on-screen words about himself and the Trojan War, Odysseus washes up naked on the shores of his home island Ithaca after twenty years fighting in and returning from the War. Scarred mentally and physically by his experiences, he is unrecognizable as the mighty warrior-king who left decades earlier.