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Edith Hamilton’s Mythology Test prep – The Trojan War and the Fall of Troy Learning goal – students will gain knowledge regarding The Trojan War and The Fall of Troy 1, 2, 3, or 4 Question #1 • One of the most renowned cities in history is ancient Troy, made famous because of the Trojan War. Homer tells the story of this famous decade-long conflict in the ________. a. Iliad b. Odyssey c. Aeneid d. Satyrs Question #2 The Goddess of Discord, ______, is not popular on Olympus and is frequently not invited to gala events. a. Perish b. Eris c. Unfesta d. Disharmonia Question #3 All of the Olympians, except this discordant deity, are invited to a banquet celebrating the marriage of King Peleus and the sea nymph, Thetis. To cause friction and dissension, the dissonant divinity throws a golden apple into the hall; its inscription reads: “For the _______.” a. Loveliest b. Prettiest c. Finest d. Fairest Question #4 All the goddesses in attendance want this precious prize, and the three final contenders are Aphrodite, Hera and Athena. ______ is asked to be the judge, but he prudently declines and tells the three goddesses to go to Mount Ida, near the city of Troy, where Prince Paris is watching his father’s flocks. a. Apollo b. Poseidon c. Ares d. Zeus Question #5 Paris is the son of the King of Troy; the prince has been sent out of the city because a prophecy predicts he will bring about the country’s ruin. He is a shepherd, caring for his father’s sheep and living with a lovely wood sprite named ________. a. Genevieve b. Harmony c. Oenone d. Concordia Question #6 Paris is amazed when the three magnificent goddesses appear before him and ask for his judgment. Ironically, he is not asked to judge their beauty, but rather to “consider the bribes” each one offers. This is not an easy choice because the three goddesses offer what men desire most; Hera promises ________. a. immortality b. victory c. power d. the most beautiful woman Question #7-9 7. Athena offers _________. a. immortality b. victory c. power d. the most beautiful woman 8. Aphrodite offers _________. a. immortality b. victory c. power d. the most beautiful woman 9. Paris gives the golden apple to _________. a. Hera b. Athena c. Aphrodite d. none of them Question #10 The most beautiful woman in the world is Helen, the daughter of Leda and Zeus. Leda’s husband, King Tyndareus, must choose among the many suitors who want to marry Helen, but he is afraid to choose one because he thinks the others may “unite against him.” Therefore, he makes all the suitors pledge “a solemn oath … that they would champion the cause of Helen’s husband, whoever he might be, if any wrong was done to him through his marriage.” Tyndareus chooses Menelaus, Agamemnon’s brother, to be Helen’s husband, and “made him the King of ________ as well.” a. Athens b. Sparta c. Corinth d. Thebes Question #11 Paris goes to visit Menelaus and Helen, and unsuspecting Menelaus warmly welcomes the young prince. “Menelaus and Helen received him graciously as their guest. The ties between guest and host were strong.” This principle is known as “The Code of _________.” a. Visitation b. Strangers c. Hospitality d. Good Samaritans Question #12 Foolishly, Menelaus goes to Crete, leaving Helen with Paris, and Paris takes the beautiful woman to Troy. Menelaus calls for the men of Greece to help him win back his wife, and many are “eager for the great enterprise” because they want to _______ Troy. a. Pillage b. ransack c. plunder d. all of these Question #13-14 13. “Two, however, of the first rank were missing.” Odysseus is one of the men who does not enlist to fight for Helen. He does not want to leave his home and ______ for the “sake of a faithless woman.” a.Business b. friends c. family d. all of these 14. To get out of the army, Odysseus pretends to be crazy; while plowing his fields, he sows ________ instead of seed. a. salt b. seaweed c. grapes d. fish Question #15 However, the messenger from the king’s army is clever, and he suspects Odysseus is feigning lunacy. To test Odysseus’ sanity, the messenger grabs Odysseus’ ______ and places him directly in the way of the plow. Odysseus quickly turns “the plow aside,” proving he has reason and judgment. a. dog b. horse c. grandfather d. son Question #16 Thetis, Achilles’ mother, does not want him to go to Troy and fight because if he does, it has been prophesized he will __________. a. die there b. marry a Trojan c. forget his mother d. return home injured Question #17 Odysseus is sent to find Achilles. To hide him, Thetis dresses her son as a woman and sent him the court of Lycomedes. Odysseus disguises himself as a “pedlar” and travels to Lycomedes’ court with goods to sell. The ladies quickly “flocked around the trinkets,” but Achilles rejects the ornaments, charms and knick-knacks and goes straight for the swords and ________, giving away his concealed identity. a. pistols b. shields c. daggers d. clubs Question #18-20 18. ________ ships are to carry the Greeks to Troy. a. 100 b. 500 c. 1,000 d. 5,000 19. The Greek Army meets at the port of _______, “a place of strong winds and dangerous tides, impossible to sail from as long as the north wind blew.” a. Aulis b. Argos c. Olympia d. Delphi 20.The men are desperate to sail, but the winds continue to blow. A soothsayer, Calchas, reveals the problem: a _____ and her babies have been killed by one of the Greeks, and Artemis, the protector the young, is outraged. a. deer b. hare c. squirrel d. pheasant Question #21-22 21. The only way to appease Artemis and stop the winds is to have the Greek Army Commander also suffer a loss. Agamemnon must sacrifice his oldest daughter, Iphigenia, and he agrees for the sake of his _________. a. army b. reputation c. ambition d. all of these 22. When Agamemnon sends for daughter, he lies to his wife and tells her that Iphegenia will be __________. a. getting married b. going to school c. traveling with them d. none of these Question #48-50 48. The lamentation and funeral for Hector continue for ______ days. a. three b. nine c. fourteen d. twenty 49. Even ______ cries and mourns Hector’s death, saying, “I always had comfort from you through the gentleness of your spirit and your gentle words.” Among the Trojans, she views Hector as her only friend. a. Hera b. Helen c. Athena d. Aphrodite 50. Homer’s epic ends with Hector’s funeral, whose epithet is “The tamer of _______.” a. Greeks b. horses c. Hades d. hatred And the winner is… Claude Lorrain The Wrath of the King • Menelaus was enraged when he found Helen gone. He called upon all of Greece, including the great warriors Achilles and Odysseus, to attack Troy. • Today we think that the war started because his brother, Agamemnon, wanted better trade routes and mo’ money. Where have all the heroes gone? Odysseus, king of Ithaca, pretended that he had gone mad. He planted salt in his fields instead of seed when the messengers from the Greek army arrived. They, in turn, tricked him into joining the fight. What about the Trojan Heroes? • The King and Queen of Troy, Priam and Hecuba, had many sons (some say 10; some say 100; I say ginormous grocery bill either way), but the bravest and greatest was Hector. Hector had a wife name Adromache and a son named Astyanax (And you thought my name was difficult to pronounce!). When heroes collide • Both sides had great heroes upon which they pinned their hopes of winning. • The Greeks were excellent sailors and highly skilled in warfare. Achilles’s team • The Trojans had a great wall surrounding their city that made it virtually impregnable. Hector’s team. Personal Grudges • After nine years of fighting, both sides agreed to let Paris and Menelaus fight it out to declare a winner. (Seriously! It took 9 years to figure that out?) • Menelaus would have killed Paris easily, but Aphrodite saved him by whisking him away in a cloud of dust. (Paris was no great shakes as a fighter.) • The other gods joined in on their respective sides. Just whose side are you on? • Aphrodite Troy • Athena Greece • Hera Greece • Apollo Troy • Ares Troy • Poseidon Greece Many of the gods/goddesses had mortal children on one side and wanted that side to win. The Thrill of Victory • Achilles withdrew from battle because some of the spoils of war were kept from him. • His best friend, Patroclus, put on Achilles’ armor and pretended to be him because Achilles was the biggest threat to the Trojans (because of his supposed immortality from the river Styx bath as a baby). • Hector had his greatest day, slaying many men, including Patroclus, who he thought was Achilles, giving the Trojans momentum. The Agony of Defeat • When Achilles learned that Patroclus died by the hand of Hector, he became enraged and rejoined the battle. • He and Hector fought a battle by themselves. • Achilles killed Hector and refused to give his body back to his family for a proper burial. Achilles’s actions were scorned by everyone, including the gods. Achilles’s Revenge • Not content to have killed Hector, Achilles stripped his body and dragged it behind a chariot for three days. • He wanted to then feed it to the dogs, but Priam convinced him to return the corpse to the family for proper burial. • The Greeks believed that if a person did not receive a proper burial, he/she would not be allowed to pass into the Land of the Dead and would be forced to wander for 100 years as a “shade.” The Fall of Troy • Paris killed Achilles by shooting an arrow into his heel, his only weak spot (where mom held him). • Achilles’s son, Neoptolemus, then killed Paris. • The war was again at a stalemate, and the gods and humans alike were tired of the fighting. • Odysseus then got an idea to build a great wooden horse to hide soldiers inside. The Trojan Horse • The people of Troy accepted the horse as a sign of surrender. They interpreted many other favorable “signs” as signals that they had won the war. • They dragged the horse inside the walls of the city and celebrated all night long. • When everyone fell asleep, the soldiers hiding inside crept out and lit the city on fire. • The end of Troy was at hand. One guy luckily got away and eventually founded Rome. His name was Aeneas, and his story is told in The Aeneid. The Gods’ Fury • The Greeks celebrated mightily after their victory and forgot to pay homage to the gods who helped them win. • This turned the powerful Poseidon against the Greeks. • Poseidon caused many storms that killed most of the Greek warriors on their way home. • Odysseus, the mastermind, was doomed to wander home for 10 years because death was not his destiny. Odysseus and Homer • Odysseus’s story is told in The Odyssey. • The Odyssey is believed to have been created by a blind poet named Homer. Right Homer Wrong Homer