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Q83MYT Greek Mythology Lecture 7: The Trojan Cycle – part 1 Looking at: Narrative Versions Meanings Texts: Author Homer Hesiod Sappho Text Iliad Catalogue of Women Cypria & epitome Frr. 16, 141 Alcaeus Frr. 42, 238 Stesichorus Aeschylus Herodotus Palinode Agamemnon Histories Gorgias Encomium of Helen Trojan Women Iphigenia in Tauris Philoctetes Iphigenia in Aulis Epithalamium of Achilles and Deidameia Heroides 5, 16 Fabulae (esp. 92) Biblioteca, Epitome Dialogues of the Gods 20 [Stasinus] Euripides Sophocles Euripides Ps-Bion Ovid Hyginus Apollodorus Lucian Date C8th BC C8th BC Location ? Boeotia Genre Epic Epic Late C7th BC Cyprus? Epic Late C7th/early C6th BC Late C7th/early C6th BC C7th/6th BC 468 BC C5th BC Lesbos Lyric Lesbos Lyric Lyric Tragedy Historiography C5th BC Himera (Sicily) Athens Halicarnassus/ Athens/ Thurii Sicily/Athens 415 BC 415 BC Athens Athens Tragedy Tragedy 409 BC 405 BC Athens Athens Tragedy Tragedy C2nd BC? Alexandria? Bucolic AD C1st AD C1st AD C1st/2nd Rome Rome ? Elegy Mythography Mythography AD C2nd Samosata Satire Rhetoric Quotes: There was a time when the countless tribes of men, though wide-dispersed, oppressed the surface of the deep-bosomed earth, and Zeus saw it and had pity and in his wide heart resolved to relieve the all-nurturing earth of men by causing the great struggle of the Ilian War, that the load of death might empty the world. And so the heroes were slain in Troy, and the plan of Zeus came to pass. Cypria fr. 3 …so that Europe and Asia would go to war and his daughter would become famous. Apd. Ep. 3.1 Let her win a mortal marriage and see her son die in war. Pind. Isth. 8.36-38 Of sea-nymphs I alone was given in thrall to a mortal warrior, Peleus Aeacides, and I endured a mortal warrior’s bed many a time, without desire. Hom. Il. 18.456-59 Cheiron gave him a stout ashen shaft which he had cut for a spear, and Athena, it is said, polished it, and Hephaestus fitted it with a head. Cypria fr. 5 Not such was the delicate maiden whom the noble son of Aeacus, inviting all the blessed gods to the wedding, married, taking her from the halls of Nereus to the home of Cheiron; he loosened the pure maiden’s girdle, and the love of Peleus and the best of Nereus’ daughters flourished; and within the year she bore a son, the finest of demigods… Alc. fr. 42.5-13 …Ilium and Priam and his people had incurred their hatred first, the day when Alexandrus made his mad choice and piqued two goddesses, visitors in his sheep-fold: for he praised a third, who offered ruinous lust. Hom. Il. 24.25-30 Painful death would have been sweeter for me, on that day I joined your son, and left my bridal chamber, my brothers, my grown child, my childhood friends! But no death came, though I have pined and wept. Hom. Il. 3.172-76 She who far surpassed all mankind in beauty, Helen, led her most noble husband and went sailing off to Troy with no thought at all for her child or dear parents, but (love) led her astray… Sappho fr. 16.6-11 Oh for all the world a Helen! Hell at the prows, hell at the gates, hell on the men-of-war, from her lair’s sheer veils she drifted, launched by the giant western wind. Aesch. Ag. 689-92 I spake vanities, and I will go seek another prelude. The story is not true; thou wentest not in the benched ships, thou camest not to the city of Troy” Stesichorus, Palinode: Plat. Phdr. 243a She’s fainting – lift her, sweep her robes around her, but slip this strap in her gentle curving lips...here, gag her hard, a sound will curse the house’ – and the bridle chokes her voice... Aesch. Ag. 233-37 Whoever gets the upper hand in this shall take the treasure and the woman home; let the rest part as friends, let all take oath, that you may live in peace in Troy’s rich land while they make sail for Argos and the land of lovely womankind, Achaea. Hom. Il. 3.71-75 Bibliography: N. Austin, Helen of Troy and her shameless phantom, Ithaca 1994. J. S. Burgess, The tradition of the Trojan War in Homer and the epic cycle, Baltimore 2001. M. Davies, The epic cycle, Bristol 1989. J. M. Foley (ed.) A companion to ancient epic, Oxford 2005. L. Foxhall & J. K. Davies (eds.) The Trojan War: its historicity and context : papers of the first Greenbank Colloquium, Liverpool, 1981, Bristol 1984. J. Latacz, Troy and Homer: towards a solution of an old mystery, Oxford : Oxford 2004. B. Louden, The Iliad: structure, myth, and meaning, Baltimore 2006. M. Wood, In search of the Trojan War, London 2005.