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The Iliad
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The Iliad. Homer First known poet of western literature A poor, blind, old poet of great wisdom who wandered from city to city singing his tales in verse.

Dec 31, 2015

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Page 1: The Iliad. Homer First known poet of western literature A poor, blind, old poet of great wisdom who wandered from city to city singing his tales in verse.

The Iliad

Page 2: The Iliad. Homer First known poet of western literature A poor, blind, old poet of great wisdom who wandered from city to city singing his tales in verse.

Homer

• First known poet of western literature• A poor, blind, old poet of great wisdom who

wandered from city to city singing his tales in verse

• He could neither read nor write so he composed his poetry orally and sang it as he played his lyre

• Credited with writing The Iliad in the Odyssey

Page 3: The Iliad. Homer First known poet of western literature A poor, blind, old poet of great wisdom who wandered from city to city singing his tales in verse.

The Iliad and The Odyssey

• Tell stories about the heroes and events of the Trojan War.

• According to oral tradition, the war began not with a battle but with a beauty contest.

• As we learned before, the Greek gods enjoyed meddling in human affairs.

Page 4: The Iliad. Homer First known poet of western literature A poor, blind, old poet of great wisdom who wandered from city to city singing his tales in verse.

Aphrodite, Athena, and Hera decided to compete for a golden apple inscribed, “To the Fairest."

Page 5: The Iliad. Homer First known poet of western literature A poor, blind, old poet of great wisdom who wandered from city to city singing his tales in verse.

The gods of Olympus, not wanting to be involved selected Paris, a young, handsome native

prince of Troy to judge the contest.

Each goddess tried to bribe Paris

Page 6: The Iliad. Homer First known poet of western literature A poor, blind, old poet of great wisdom who wandered from city to city singing his tales in verse.

Aphrodite offered Paris

the most appealing gift, marriage to the most beautiful woman in the world, Helen.

Page 7: The Iliad. Homer First known poet of western literature A poor, blind, old poet of great wisdom who wandered from city to city singing his tales in verse.

Helen, however, was married to King Menelaus of Greece.

This did not stop Paris. He took Helen from Menelaus and the two sailed off together in the sunset to the beautiful city of

Troy.

Page 8: The Iliad. Homer First known poet of western literature A poor, blind, old poet of great wisdom who wandered from city to city singing his tales in verse.

Happy Ending?

Page 9: The Iliad. Homer First known poet of western literature A poor, blind, old poet of great wisdom who wandered from city to city singing his tales in verse.

Outraged by this “abduction” the Greek chieftains banded together

under the leadership of Menelaus’s brother,

Agamemnon, and attacked Troy.

Page 10: The Iliad. Homer First known poet of western literature A poor, blind, old poet of great wisdom who wandered from city to city singing his tales in verse.

The war party laid siege to Troy and began a battle that would last

for ten years before the Greeks would finally succeed in

conquering Troy and recapturing Helen, thanks to the clever hero

Odysseus.

Page 11: The Iliad. Homer First known poet of western literature A poor, blind, old poet of great wisdom who wandered from city to city singing his tales in verse.

Background to The Iliad

• Opens as the Trojan War enters its tenth year.

• Revolves around two main characters:

Page 12: The Iliad. Homer First known poet of western literature A poor, blind, old poet of great wisdom who wandered from city to city singing his tales in verse.

AchillesBravest and

most handsome warrior in the Greek

army

Page 13: The Iliad. Homer First known poet of western literature A poor, blind, old poet of great wisdom who wandered from city to city singing his tales in verse.

HectorHonorable

warrior prince of the Trojans. Also the older

brother of Paris and sworn enemy of Achilles.

Page 14: The Iliad. Homer First known poet of western literature A poor, blind, old poet of great wisdom who wandered from city to city singing his tales in verse.

In media res

• Prior to the story we learn that Hector has killed Achilles' dearest friend Patroclus, and strips his body of his armor, leaving the body exposed and unburied.

• What do we know about the Greek belief of burying the dead?

Page 15: The Iliad. Homer First known poet of western literature A poor, blind, old poet of great wisdom who wandered from city to city singing his tales in verse.

A dead Greek or Trojan warrior was dressed in all white and laid out so his troops could pay their respects by circling the bier and lamenting. The body was then

burned on a massive funeral pyre along with sacrificial offerings of

bulls, sheep, goats, and jars of honey and oil.

Page 16: The Iliad. Homer First known poet of western literature A poor, blind, old poet of great wisdom who wandered from city to city singing his tales in verse.

Achilles seeks revenge and we begin the story.

Apollo assists Hector and Athena, still sour about the

beauty contest assists Achilles.

Page 17: The Iliad. Homer First known poet of western literature A poor, blind, old poet of great wisdom who wandered from city to city singing his tales in verse.

EpicA long narrative poem that recounts, in grave

and stately language, the exploits of a larger-than-life hero who usually embodies the ideals of the culture that produced him.

Page 18: The Iliad. Homer First known poet of western literature A poor, blind, old poet of great wisdom who wandered from city to city singing his tales in verse.

Hero of high status Courageous deeds Fateful actions Supernatural complications Large-scale setting, long journey Formal speeches Timeless values Universal Themes

Page 19: The Iliad. Homer First known poet of western literature A poor, blind, old poet of great wisdom who wandered from city to city singing his tales in verse.

Epithet

A characterizing nickname or adjective phrase used to identify a person

Examples from the text: “tamer of horses” Hector “Archer son” Apollo

Page 20: The Iliad. Homer First known poet of western literature A poor, blind, old poet of great wisdom who wandered from city to city singing his tales in verse.

Miss Ulrich...

•Teacher of

English!