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Characters from The Iliad (The Trojan War) 1. The Goddess Eris/Discordia—Goddess of Quarreling who throws the golden apple marked “For the Fairest” into the wedding of King Peleus and the sea nymph,Thetis. 2. King Peleus—Groom at the wedding where the golden apple was thrown. Achilles’ father. 3. The nymph Thetis—Bride at the wedding where the golden apple was thrown. Achilles’ mother who dips him into the River Styx to make him invincible and tries to keep him from fighting in the Trojan War. 4. Aprhodite—Goddess of love and beauty. She wins the “Judgment of Paris” as most beautiful when he accepts her bribe of the most beautiful woman for his own. She sides with the Trojans. 5. Hera—Queen of the gods. She loses the “Judgment of Paris” when he rejects her bribe of being made Lord of Europe and Asia. She sides with the Greeks. 6. Pallas Athena—Goddess of wisdom, civilization, and strategic war. She loses the “Judgment of Paris” when he rejects her bribe of becoming a Trojan warrior who will defeat the Greeks. She betrays Hector by posing as his brother Deiphobus, then abandoning him during his battle against Achilles.. She sides with the Greeks. 7. Zeus—King of the gods. This god favored the Trojans, but tried to stay neutral to not upset Hera. 8. Paris—A prince of Troy who was predicted to bring about the downfall of Troy. He is raised as a shepherd until three goddesses visit him and ask him to judge who is the most beautiful. He chooses Aphrodite after she promises him the most beautiful woman for his own. He causes the Trojan War when he steals Helen and brings her back to Troy. He kills Achilles by shooting an arrow in Achilles’ ankle. 9. King Priam—King of Troy, father of Paris and Hector. 10. Helen of Troy—Daughter of Zeus and Leda who was the most beautiful woman in the world. She leaves her husband, Menelaus, to accompany Prince Paris to Troy, causing the Trojan War. 11. Menelaus—King of Sparta, brother of Agamemnon, who marries Helen and fights the Trojan War to get her back. 12. Agamemnon—Commander of the Greek army during the Trojan War. He sacrifices his daughter Iphigenia to appease Artemis and calm the winds. He is killed by his wife Clytemnestra for having done so. 13. Odysseus—Cleverest and trickiest of the Greek Chieftains. His invention, the Trojan Horse, finally gets the Greeks into the city of Troy and wins the war. 14. Achilles—The best fighter among the Greeks. He was invincible except for his ankles because his mother dipped him in the River Styx. 15. Artemis—Goddess who was on the side of the Trojans. 16. Iphigenia—The oldest daughter of Agamemnon who was sacrificed to Artemis to calm the wind. 17. Hermes—Disguises himself as a Greek youth and safely guides King Priam to Achilles’ tent so that he can claim Hector’s body. 18. Queen Hecuba—Queen of Troy; mother of Hector and Paris. 19. Hector—The prince of Troy who is its greatest hero. He fights Achilles in single combat and loses. 20. Andromache—Wife of Hector who survives the fall of Troy. 21. Chryseis—Daughter of Apollo’s priest who Agamemnon must give back. 22. Briseis—Achilles’ prize who Agamemnon takes away causing Achilles to stop fighting for the Greeks. 23. Ares—A bully and crybaby god who favors the Trojans. 24. Ajax—A Greek hero who goes crazy and thinks the flock of sheep he is slaughtering is an army. He kills himself in shame. 25. Diomedes—A Greek hero who wounds both Aeneas and the god Ares in battle. 26. Aeneas—Trojan hero whose mother is Aphrodite. He survives the fall of Troy and goes on to found Rome. 27. Nestor—The oldest and wisest of the Greek chieftains. He advises Agamemnon to make peace with Achilles. 28. Patroclus—Achilles’ closest friend who dons Achilles’ armor and fights in his place. He is killed by Hector in battle. 29. Iris—Rainbow goddess and messenger of Hera. 30. the Myrmidons—Achilles’ army 31. Acheans/Greeks—The armies that come to retrieve Helen from Paris. When they were courting Helen they swore to help her husband if she were ever stolen. 32. Trojans—People of the walled city of Troy, Ilium, who are attacked by the Greeks. 33. Hephaestus—God of metalworking who made Achilles’ invincible armor. 34. Prince Memnon—The Ethiopian Prince who with his army fights on the side of the Trojans. 35. Prophet Calchas—The Greek prophet who says Iphigenia must be sacrificed to Artemis to stop the wind storm allowing the Greeks to leave for Troy. 36. Prophet Helenus—Trojan prophet who reveals that Troy cannot be defeated until it is attacked by Hercules bow and arrows. 37. Philoctetes—Greek soldier who is bitten by a snake on the way to Troy and abandoned on an island. He is rescued when the Greeks find out that they need the bow and arrows of Hercules that he has with him. 38. Oenone—The beautiful nymph that Paris lives with on Mount Ida until he abandons her for Helen. She refuses to heal him later when he is injured because of this betrayal. 39. Sinon—The Greek soldier that is left behind to mislead the Trojans about the Trojan Horse. 40. Laocoön—The Trojan soothsayer who warns the Trojans not to accept the Trojan Horse from the Greeks, but is pulled into the sea by a giant sea serpent sent by Poseidon. 41. Cassandra—The daughter of Priam that has received the gift of prophecy from Apollo, but also the curse that she will never be believed. 42. Clytemnestra—The wife of Agamemnon who kills him upon his return from the Trojan War. He had told her that her daughter was to be married to Achilles, but instead he sacrificed her to Artemis. 43. Orestes—The son of Agamemnon who must kill his mother to avenge his father’s death. He is tortured by the furies/ Erinyes (the goddesses of vengeance) until finally, the gods transform the Erinyes into the consoling Eumenides to comfort him. 44. Electra—Youngest daughter of Agamemnon who waits for Orestes to rescue her from her uncle and Clyemnestra. 45. Poseidon—Sea god who fought on the side of the Greeks. He sends a sea serpent to silence Laocoon by dragging him into the sea. 46. Apollo—God of archery and truth who fights beside Hector. He is on the side of the Trojans like his twin sister. He guides Paris’ arrow to kill Achilles.