THE TROJAN WAR, PART THREE: APPEASING DIANA
Jan 12, 2016
THE TROJAN WAR, PART THREE:
APPEASING DIANA
Remember:
•Paris, a prince of Troy, has taken Helen, the wife of
Menelaus, king of Sparta.
•All of Greece has rallied behind Menelaus and his brother,
Agamemnon, the king of Mycenae and Commander in Chief
of all the Greek armies.
•1,000 Greek ships have prepared to set sail for Troy.
During the preparations for departure, a Greek
killed an animal sacred to the goddess Diana
(Greek name: Artemis).
Some say a soldier killed a pregnant rabbit,
others say Agamemnon himself killed one of
Diana’s sacred deer.
The Chariot of Artemis5th cent. BC red figure vase
Musee du Louvre, Paris, France
Regardless, Diana was so angry at the Greeks
that she sent a storm against the ships,
prohibiting the Greeks from setting sail for Troy.
The Chariot of Artemis5th cent. BC red figure vase
Musee du Louvre, Paris, France
Agamemnon asked the Greek prophet, Calchas, how he
could make the winds stop blowing.
Calchas’ advice was troubling – in order to appease
Diana, Agamemnon would have to sacrifice his
daughter, Iphigenia.
Detail of Calchas from Pompeian painting
Agamemnon had to trick his wife, Clytemnestra (who also happens to be Helen’s sister) and daughter, Iphigenia, in order to get them to the altar where the sacrifice was to be held.
Pompeian wall painting depicting the sacrifice of Iphigenia.
Calchas can be seen on the right-hand side of the painting.
Agamemnon had to trick his wife, Clytemnestra (who also happens to be Helen’s sister) and daughter, Iphigenia, in order to get them to the altar where the sacrifice was to be held.
He wrote to his wife and told her that their daughter was going to marry the great Achilles.
Pompeian wall painting depicting the sacrifice of Iphigenia.
Calchas can be seen on the right-hand side of the painting.
Iphigenia is then taken to the altar where she is sacrificed. According to some versions, Diana pities her at the last moment and replaces her with a deer before whisking her away to become a priestess.
Pompeian wall painting depicting the sacrifice of Iphigenia.
Calchas can be seen on the right side of the painting.
After many obstacles, the Greeks, led by Agamemnon, set sail for Troy to begin what will be a decade-long war in retaliation for Paris’ theft of Menelaus’ wife, Helen.
Helen of TroyDante Gabriel Rossetti1863