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Ancient Studies – Summer Reading Group Exercise – 8.26.15 Edith Hamilton’s Mythology – Group Exercise Part 1 - Chapter I: The Gods (17-41) Cronus The most important of the Titans; he ruled over the other Titans until his son Zeus dethroned him and seized power for himself Zeus The supreme ruler of the Olympic Gods; he was Lord of the Sky, who wielded a thunderbolt; his power was greater than that of all the other divinities together Hera Zeus’s wife and sister; the protector of marriage; she frequently punishes the many women her husband fell in love with Poseidon The ruler of the sea, Zeus’s brother, and second only to him in eminence; commonly called “Earth-shaker,” and always shown carrying a trident Hades The third brother among the sons of Cronos, who drew for his share the underworld and the rule over the dead Pallas Athena The daughter of Zeus alone; born without a mother, she sprang full-grown from Zeus’s head; the Goddess of the City, and the protector of civilized life Phoebus Apollo The son of Zeus and Leto,; lord of the silver bow; the first to teach the art of healing; the God of Light, and the God of Truth; he had an oracle at Delphi Artemis Apollo’s twin sister, daughter of Zeus and Leto; a maiden goddess; a great huntress; Goddess of the Moon Aphrodite The Goddess of Lover and Beauty, who beguiled all, gods and men alike; she spring from the foam of the sea; in the Iliad, she is a soft and weak creature Hermes The messenger god; the son of Zeus and Maia; he wore winged sandals; the shrewdest and most cunning of the gods; the Master Thief, who started upon his career before he was a day old Ares The God of War; son of Zeus and Hera, but hated by both of them; Homer calls him murderous and blood-stained Hephaestus The God of Fire; the son of Zeus and Hera; the only ugly Olympian God; lame as well; kindly and peace-loving Ancient Studies – Summer Reading Group Exercise – 8.26.15 Eros God of Love; the son of Aphrodite; often depicted as a mischievous, naught boy Part Four – Chapter 1: The Trojan War Eris The evil goddess of Discord, who threw a golden apple into the wedding banquet for Peleus and Thetis, marked, “For the Fairest;” she caused resentment between Aphrodite, Hera, and Athena Paris The Trojan prince selected by Zeus to judge the beauty of goddesses at the wedding banquet; his reward from Aphrodite, the winning goddess, was the most beautiful woman in the world; going home with this prize provoked the Trojan War Helen The most beautiful woman in the world, and the reward for the Trojan prince who chose the winning goddess in the beauty contest; the Greeks fought the Trojan War in order to bring her back to her husband Odysseus and Achilles The two Greek heroes who did not want to join the war against Troy to win back the wife of the Spartan king Iphigenia The daughter of the Greek Commander-in-Chief, Agamemnon; he sacrificed her to the goddess Artemis in order to gain favorable winds for the Greek fleet sailing against Troy Achilles The greatest of the Greek warriors; the son of a mortal father and divine mother, he was told that he would die if he went to fight the Trojans Hector The greatest of the Trojan warriors; the son of the King Priam, he finally fell in battle against the greatest of the Greek warriors Chryseis The daughter of a priest of Apollo; when the Greek Commander refused to give her back to her father after seizing her n battle, Apollo punished the Greeks by sending a plague Agamemnon The Commander-in-Chief of the Greeks, and brother of Menelaus; his seizure of a slave girl from his greatest warrior proved costly to the Greek cause Thetis The mother of the greatest warrior among the Greeks; she asked her former lover, Zeus, to help the Trojans when the Greeks dishonored her son Patroclus Ancient Studies – Summer Reading Group Exercise – 8.26.15 The friend and companion of Achilles, who fought and died in his place when Achilles sat out the war in protest of being dishonored; his death then sparked Achilles to return to battle to slay his killer Andromache The wife of Hector and the mother of Astyanax; she pleaded with her husband not to fight Achilles, but she could not persuade him to save his own life Odysseus The Greek chieftain who tried to persuade Achilles to return to battle; he offered great rewards from Agamemnon, but he could persuade Achilles to fight again Priam The Trojan king who begged Achilles to return the corpse of his son Hector; with the help of the gods, he finally succeeded in convincing Achilles to put aside his rage Part 4 – Chapter II: The Fall of Troy Paris The Trojan prince how shot an arrow and hit Achilles in the heel, killing him; this was his one vulnerable point, because his mother held him here when she dipped him into the River Styx Ajax The Greek warrior who felt disgraced when his comrades did not vote to give him the arms of Achilles; Athena struck him with madness when he sought to take vengeance against them; he finally killed himself when he realized his mistake Odysseus The Greek chieftain who devised the trick of the Trojan Horse; his wily mind presented the Trojans presented with a “gift” in which Greek warriors hid Sinon The one Greek left behind at the camp after the ships had departed; he told the Trojans an intricate tale that convinced them to bring the wooden horse within their walls Laocoon The Trojan priest who did not believe the Greek story about the wooden horse; he died when Poseidon sent serpents to kill and thus discredit him Priam The Trojan king who died at the hand of the son of Achilles, after the Greeks succeeded in infiltrating the city Aeneas The son of Aphrodite and a Trojan chieftain; he was the chief survivor of the Greek assault and the leader of the Trojans who fled the city Hecuba The Queen of Troy and mother of Hector and Priam; she lamented the loss of her sons and husband and the fall of Troy Ancient Studies – Summer Reading Group Exercise – 8.26.15 Astyanax The son of Hector and Andromache, and the grandson of Priam and Hecuba; with his death, Troy’s last sacrifice was accomplished Part 4 – Chapter III: The Adventures of Odysseus Cassandra One of Priam’s daughters and a prophetess with the power to foretell the future; when she rejected Apollo as a lover, so he cursed her and ensured that no one would ever believe her; Agamemnon seized her and brought her back to Greece Ithaca The island home of Odysseus; gone for ten years fighting the war, Odysseus then struggled for ten more years trying to return to his kingdom Penelope The wife of Odysseus who waited patiently for the return of her husband; she resisted many suitors by weaving and unweaving a shroud Telemachus 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 to let him go; she relented only when Hermes relayed the instructions of Zeus that she let him go Athena The goddess who provided advice and guidance for Telemachus, often while disguised in human form Menelaus The Spartan king from whom Telemachus sought news about Odysseus; he was living happily with his wife, Helen, when Telemachus came seeking information Poseidon The god who sent a storm to torment Odysseus while at sea; he was bitter because Odysseus had blinded and tainted his son Nausicaa The daughter of the king of the Phaeacians; she helped Odysseus when the storm washed him onto her shores Polyphemus The Cyclops, son of Poseidon, whom Odysseus blinded when taken captive; this creature had wanted to eat alive Odysseus and all his men Aeolus The King of the Winds who gave Odysseus a sack tightly fastened; this gift turned destructive when Odysseus’ men opened it up and got blown off course Ancient Studies – Summer Reading Group Exercise – 8.26.15 Circe A beautiful and dangerous witch who turned every man who approached her into a beast; she turned Odysseus’ men into swine, but Odysseus himself resisted her curse with the help of Hermes Teiresias A prophet and holy man from Thebes, whom Odysseus visited in the underworld in order to get directions back home The Sirens Marvelous singers whose voices would make a man forget all else and eventually steal his life away; Odysseus insisted on hearing their song while bound to the mast of his ship Eumaeus Odysseus’ loyal swineherd; he showed great hospitality to Odysseus, even though he did not recognize his king Penelope The wife of Odysseus who arranged a contest with a bow and arrow in order to determine whom she would marry; although she did not recognize the stranger, only her husband Odysseus could accomplish the task Eurycleia The old nurse of Odysseus; she remained loyal to him and oversaw the cleaning of the palace after Odysseus had slaughtered all of the suitors Part 4 - Chapter IV: The Adventures of Aeneas Juno The Roman name for the goddess the Greeks called Hera; she had not forgotten the Judgment of Paris and remained Troy’s bitter enemy; she sent a great storm to prevent Aeneas from landing in Italy Neptune The Roman name for the god the Greeks called Poseidon; he calmed the storm sent by his sister to delay the Trojans Carthage City in North Africa where Aeneas landed after being blown by the storm; though he fell in love with the Queen of this city, he followed divine orders and sailed on to Italy; this caused a longlasting rivalry between this city and Rome Dido Queen of the city where Aeneas landed after the storm; she fell in love with Aeneas, and then committed suicide when he left her behind and sailed to Italy Venus Roman name for the goddess the Greeks called Aphrodite; she was the mother of Aeneas and protected him on his journey from Troy to Italy Ancient Studies – Summer Reading Group Exercise – 8.26.15 Cupid Roman name for the god the Greeks called Eros; at the instruction of his mother, he caused Aeneas to fall in love with the Queen in North Africa Jupiter Roman name for the god the Greeks called Zeus; at the insistence of Aeneas’ mother, he sent his messenger to command Aeneas to sail on to Italy The Sibyl A woman of deep wisdom who could foretell the future; she advised Aeneas about how to go to the underworld and back, gaining further instructions along the way from his father Charon Ferryman who transported the dead across the river in the underworld; he refused at to carry the living Aeneas, but relented when Aeneas showed him the golden bough Anchises The father of Aeneas; when the two met in the underworld, he gave Aeneas instructions about getting to Italy; he also explained how great Rome would be and revealed the achievements of souls yet-to-be-born Latinus King of the City of Latium; the gods had warned him not to marry his daughter to any man of the country, so he welcomed Aeneas as a potential son-in-law Lavinia The daughter of the King and Queen of Latium; her father wanted to marry her off to Aeneas, but the local Italians objected and fought for their land Alecto One of the Furies, sent by the bitter goddess to let loose bitter war between the Trojans and the Italians Turnus King of the Rutulians; he was the great rival of Aeneas in pursuit of the princess of Latium; he finally died in single combat against Aeneas at the end of the epic Ascanius The son of Aeneas; deceived by the goddess, he mistakenly killed the sacred stag and set off the war between the Trojans and the Italians Janus The god whose temple had doors kept closed in times of peace; the doors opened when the Italians declared war on the Trojans Evander King of the small town on the banks of the Tiber that was destined to become the greatest city in the world; he lent aid to Aeneas and the Trojans Mezentius Ancient Studies – Summer Reading Group Exercise – 8.26.15 Former king of the Etruscans who fought alongside the Italians against the Trojans; famous for his cruelty; he was know to bind the living to the dead in horrible torture Part 5 – Chapter I: The House of Atreus Tantalus King of Lydia who killed his own son and boiled him in a cauldron before serving him to the gods at a banquet; the gods then tormented him forever with an unquenchable thirst, and cursed his descendants with an awful fate Atreus The son of Pelops and brother of Thyestes; when Thyestes cheated on his wife; this jealous brother had Thyestes’ children killed and served as meal for their father; this king was not punished during his lifetime, but his descendants suffered for generations Agamemnon Commander-in-Chief of the Greeks forces that fought the Trojan War; he sacrificed his own daughter in order to gain favorable winds, but then was killed by his wife and her lover when he finally returned from the war Clytemnestra Wife of the Greek commander who slew her husband when he returned from the war; she had taken a new lover in his absence and remained bitter over the sacrifice of their daughter Iphigenia Daughter of the royal couple who was sacrificed by her father in order to gain more favorable winds for sailing against Troy; her father also hoped to end the family curse with this sacrifice Aegisthus Lover of the Queen, and the youngest son of Thyests, born after the horrible feast; he conspired with the Queen to kill her husband when he returned from the war Orestes Son of the royal couple who killed his mother in order to avenge the killing of his mother; the gods at last intervened to end the cycle of violence Part 5 – Chapter II: The Royal House of Thebes Cadmus Founder of the Royal House of Thebes; his descendants suffered greatly because of his sins Apollo The god of Truth; his priestess at Delphi prophesied that the King of Thebes would die at the hands of his son Laius King of Thebes who sought to prevent the prophecy from coming true; he left his son exposed to die, but a shepherd recued the boy; later the son unknowingly killed the father at a crossroads Sphinx Ancient Studies – Summer Reading Group Exercise – 8.26.15 A horrible monster with the body of a winged lion and the face of a woman that terrorized Thebes; she died only when a brave and clever passerby solved her riddle Oedipus Son of the King of Thebes who unknowingly killed his father and married his mother, becoming the new king of Thebes; he blinded himself when he learned of his horrible deeds Teiresias The old, blind prophet who warned the new king not to probe too deeply into his origins; he warned that the king would not like what he learned Jocasta Wife of the King of Thebes who then unknowingly married her son, bearing three additional children; she killed herself when she learned of her horrible misdeeds Antigone Daughter (and half-sister) of Oedipus; she insisted on burying her brother after he died in a civil war; she challenged the new king and was willing to die rather disobey the will of the gods Creon The brother of Jocasta, and the new King of Thebes after Oedipus gave up the throne; he decreed that burial of a rebel was against the law, but ultimately his arrogance led to the deaths of all his loved ones PBS Empires – “The Greeks: Crucible of Civilization” Cleisthenes Athenian aristocrat who helped to devise the democratic government for the city; he had competed for power for himself, but he responded to the demands of a popular uprising against tyranny Sparta The most powerful city in Greece before the rise of Athens; this city originally developed the strongest military in Greece as a means to keep its slave population under control Pisistratus The benevolent tyrant in Athens during the sixth century BC; he had built Athenian prosperity on the cultivation and trade of olives Hippias The brutal tyrant who oppressed Athens near the end of the sixth century BC; he did not continue the benevolent rule of his father, and he was a rival of Cleistehenes Olympia The city in southern Greece where competitors from all over the Greek world gathered for athletic contests Homer The epic poet who wrote the Iliad and Odyssey; the heroes in his poems served as role models for many Greeks aspiring to greatness Ancient Studies – Summer Reading Group Exercise – 8.26.15 Isagoras Athenian aristocrat who staged a coup and seized power with the help of the Spartans; the common people overthrew him and then established a democracy Marathon The site of a great Athenian victory over the Persians in 490 BC; the Persian king then pledged to take vengeance on Athens by mounting another attack Pheidippides Athenian runner and messenger who ran 140 miles to Sparta in two days in order to seek help against the Persian invasion in 490 BC; the Spartans made excuses and did not provide any aid Darius The Persian king who led the failed attack on Athens in 490 BC; he dies before he could get revenge Themistocles Athenian general and statesman who had the foresight to realize that Athens must build a navy in order to defend herself against the Persians; he later led the successful naval battle against the Persians in 480 BC Xerxes Persian king who led the second, massive invasion against Greece in 480 BC; he sought to atone for the defeat of his father, but his own invasion failed as well, leaving Greece free Salamis Site of the great Athenian naval victory over Persia in 480 BC; the Athenian fleet outmaneuvered the Persians in a narrow strait and sent the Persian king fleeing back to his empire Delos Island in the Aegean Sea with a temple to Apollo and the treasury for the League the Greeks formed against Persia; Athens led the alliance formed here, but took a significant turn toward empire of her own by moving the treasury back to Athens Pericles The great democratic leader of Athens during the Golden Age in the fifth century BC; he oversaw a massive building program and then devised a strategy for war against Sparta; he died from plague early in that war, thereby weakening Athens Parthenon Temple to Athena built during the Golden Age of Athens with proceeds collected from Athenian “allies” against Persia; the lasting symbol of Athenian cultural achievement Socrates Athenian philosopher who proclaimed that “the unexamined life is not worth living”; he encouraged his fellow Athenians to apply reason and to think critically, but he was charged with disrespecting the gods and corrupting the youth and was condemned to die Sicily Island in the Mediterranean where the Athenians mounted a huge invasion in 415 BC; the campaign proved to be a disaster as many Athenians lost their lives in the failed assault