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homer`s world
homer`s world

... down in writing. The poems are traditionally credited to a blind poet named Homer. Although there have been many translations of the poems into English, Robert Fitzgerald’s verse renderings are considered among the best at capturing the poems’ high drama and intense emotions. Three important element ...
The Odyssey - MultiMediaPortfolio
The Odyssey - MultiMediaPortfolio

... For many days Odysseus and his men were lost at sea. One night they arrived on an island and discovered a cave full of goats and sheep. It was the domicile of the Cyclops, Polyphemus—son of Poseidon. He was a giant with ...
Homer, Oral Tradition, and the Trojan War
Homer, Oral Tradition, and the Trojan War

... Homer, Oral Tradition, and the Trojan War The Iliad and The Odyssey are said to have been composed around 750–700 B.C. The Iliad tells the story of fourteen days in the next-to-last year of the ten-year Trojan War. The Odyssey follows the adventures of the Greek hero Odysseus on his ten-year journey ...
Epic Project
Epic Project

... children off as human sacrifices to Cretan minotaur. • Theseus was able to slay the Cretan minotaur with the help of Ariadne. • Son of Poseidon and Aethra • Mythical founder of Athens • First proved himself as a hero by lifting a boulder when he was sixteen years old. • Under the boulder were gold c ...
Trojan War
Trojan War

... Paris was the son of King Priam of Troy. He was rather weak and cowardly. Priam had sent him away from Troy because an oracle prophesied that he would be the ruin of the city. When the goddesses appeared to him, they each offered him a bribe: – Athena would make him a great warrior. – Hera would mak ...
Greek and Roman Mythology - Shannon Hayes-
Greek and Roman Mythology - Shannon Hayes-

... Paris was the son of King Priam of Troy. He was rather weak and cowardly. Priam had sent him away from Troy because an oracle prophesied that he would be the ruin of the city. When the goddesses appeared to him, they each offered him a bribe: – Athena would make him a great warrior. – Hera would mak ...
The Odyssey Project One
The Odyssey Project One

... Odyssey Travel Brochure and God/Goddess Project Odysseus visited many places on his trip back home from Troy. You are to create a cruise brochure based on these travels. This brochure should be colorful, creative, and written to entice travelers to spend their money on this cruise. Use persuasive la ...
The Odyssey
The Odyssey

... had made to King Menelaus to help him defend Helen’s honor, all the kings of Greece went to Troy to fight to get Helen back. • The Greeks fought the Trojans for 10 years. • Odysseus came to the rescue with a strategy to win the war that involved a huge wooden horse. ...
The Odyssey
The Odyssey

... had made to King Menelaus to help him defend Helen’s honor, all the kings of Greece went to Troy to fight to get Helen back. • The Greeks fought the Trojans for 10 years. • Odysseus came to the rescue with a strategy to win the war that involved a huge wooden horse. ...
The Odyssey
The Odyssey

... had made to King Menelaus to help him defend Helen’s honor, all the kings of Greece went to Troy to fight to get Helen back. • The Greeks fought the Trojans for 10 years. • Odysseus came to the rescue with a strategy to win the war that involved a huge wooden horse. ...
Introduction to The Odyssey
Introduction to The Odyssey

... Trojans were slaughtered and the city was destroyed destroyed. 8. The Greeks set out for home in their ships. ships 9. Many gods and goddesses were offended ff d d when h G Greeks k desecrated d t d temples and did not make offerings ...
Background Information PowerPoint
Background Information PowerPoint

... journey back from the Trojan War  24 books long (We only read 6!)  Originally passed through oral tradition It would take over a day to share!  Often the “entertainment” of social gatherings ...
English idioms of mythological origin
English idioms of mythological origin

... they had spent besieging Troy, after the death of Hector, the Greeks were advised by the shrewd Odysseus (Ulysses) to indicate that they had had enough and would withdraw. He also had a monster wooden horse made by Epios, allegedly an offering to the gods to secure a prosperous voyage back to Greece ...
The Odyssey Book 4
The Odyssey Book 4

... they are greeted by the King and Queen of Sparta. The two are celebrating the weddings of their separate son and daughter. ...
Name: ANSWER KEY Hour: “The Odyssey” Study Guide Part 1
Name: ANSWER KEY Hour: “The Odyssey” Study Guide Part 1

... They saw his food & wanted to see if he would welcome them. “This is the gift I give to you, my guest.” Why didn’t Odysseus ever receive that gift – and why wouldn’t he have appreciated it if he had? The gift was that the Cyclops would eat him last. Odysseus escaped by hiding under one of Polyphemus ...
An Introduction
An Introduction

... •The Odyssey is essentially a travel tale about a hero’s struggle to get home, but it also deals with Telemachus’ struggle to become a man. ...
The Trojan War Judgment of Paris Eris was angered because she
The Trojan War Judgment of Paris Eris was angered because she

... “I who did not help my comrade in his sore need. I will kill the destroyer of him I love; then I will accept death when it comes.”-Achilles Thetis brings Achilles armor made by Hephaestus himself Achilles faces Hector Foreshadowing—Hector says let whoever is killed be returned to his people Athena h ...
Greek Gods and Mythical Creatures
Greek Gods and Mythical Creatures

... opened the gates of heaven[2] so that Apollo could ride his chariot across the sky every day. In Homer,[3] her saffron-colored robe is embroidered or woven with flowers;[4] rosy-fingered and with golden arms, she is pictured on Attic vases as a supernaturally beautiful woman, crowned with a tiara or ...
The Iliad
The Iliad

... Paris visits Helen and Menelaus • Welcomed as a guest • Kidnaps Helen • Menelaus - raises army from suitors ...
Man into Woman into Swine:
Man into Woman into Swine:

... simple transformation into a swine would deprive Bloom of his language, on the one hand providing Joyce with an excellent opportunity to enlarge on his onomatopoeic abilities in the transcription of animal voices (e.g. the cat in the Calypso episode), on the other hand, however, disrupting the text ...
THE ODYSSEY SUMMER PROJECT
THE ODYSSEY SUMMER PROJECT

... a different man at the end of the book than at the beginning. His adventures in his journey humble his pride, reveal his cleverness, and prepare him, by giving him selfcontrol, for the task of restoring order to his household and to Ithaca. In each of the twelve adventures listed below, Odysseus is ...
Rockville HS English Department: Pre‐IB English 10 Summer
Rockville HS English Department: Pre‐IB English 10 Summer

... Aeolus- Keeper of the winds. He places all of the bad winds in a bag and gives them to Odysseus. Ithaca is within sight when the ship's crew lets the winds out and the ship is blown far away by the storms within the bag. ...
Sample Pages
Sample Pages

... gods and men spoke first. At that moment he was thinking of Aegisthus, who had been killed by Agamemnon’s son Orestes;† so he said to the other gods: “See now, how men lay blame upon us gods for what is after all nothing but their own folly. Look at Aegisthus; he must needs make love to Agamemnon’s ...
The Trojan War The Trojan War was the greatest conflict
The Trojan War The Trojan War was the greatest conflict

... so she could heal him. Oenone had hoped that her husband would return to her. Despite being warned by his brother and sister who were gifted in divination that his journey would cause the destruction of Troy, Paris sailed to Greece. In Sparta, Paris became a guest of Menelaus and ...
AS-SR-Answer Key
AS-SR-Answer Key

... The son of Odysseus who grew up not knowing his absent father; he finally took a step toward manhood with the encouragement of Athena, and then fought alongside his father against the suitors after his return Calypso The nymph who kept Odysseus as a virtual prisoner; she loved him and planned never ...
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Odysseus



Odysseus (/oʊˈdɪsiəs, oʊˈdɪsjuːs/; Greek: Ὀδυσσεύς [odysˈsews]), also known by the Latin name Ulysses (US /juːˈlɪsiːz/, UK /ˈjuːlɪsiːz/; Latin: Ulyssēs, Ulixēs), was a legendary Greek king of Ithaca and the hero of Homer's epic poem the Odyssey. Odysseus also plays a key role in Homer's Iliad and other works in that same epic cycle.Husband of Penelope, father of Telemachus, and son of Laërtes and Anticlea, Odysseus is renowned for his brilliance, guile, and versatility (polytropos), and is hence known by the epithet Odysseus the Cunning (mētis, or ""cunning intelligence""). He is most famous for the ten eventful years he took to return home after the decade-long Trojan War.
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