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Mizzou CL_HUM 1060 - Lecture Notes 11.21

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Outline of Lecture 11/21/14Greeks (AKA Achaeans, Danaans)I. Menelaos: Helen’s husbandII. Agamemnon: Greek leaderIII. Achilles: Greatest Greek warriorIV. Odysseus: Cleverest GreekV. Nestor: Wisest (and oldest) GreekVI. Ajax “the Greater”: Second-greatest Greek warrior and Achilles’ cousinVII. Patroklos: Achilles’ best friend (and lover?)VIII. Diomedes: Great warrior, son of Tydeus (seven against Thebes, Epigonoi) (Almost turned immortal by Athena, until she saw him eating brains)IX. Ajax “the Lesser”: Another prominent warriorTroy (Illium)I. Founded by Dardanosa. Greekb. Son of Zeus and Elektra (daughter of Atlas, one of the Pleiades)II. Greek but non-Greeka. Greek customsb. Non-Greek attitudesIII. Clothinga. Fancyb. Perfumec. EffeminateIV. Behaviora. Untrustworthyi. Laomedonii. Paris1. Xenia (“guest-friendship”)iii. Effeminate1. Biggest womanizers2. Paris is a classic exampleV. Trojan Royal Familya. Very beautifuli. Ganymede1. Carried off by Zeusii. Tithonos1. Carried off by Eosiii. Anchises1. Seduced by Aphroditeiv. Paris1. Seduces HelenVI. Trojans (AKA Teukrians)a. Priam: King of Troyb. Hekabe (Hecuba): Priam’s wifec. Hektor: son of Priam and Hekabei. Troy’s greatest warriord. Paris: (AKA Alexander): son of Priam and Hekabei. Abductor of Helene. Kassandra: daughter of Priam and Hekabei. Prophetess; never believedf. Aineias (Aeneas): Priam’s nephewi. Son of Aphrodite and Anchisesii. Future ancestor of Romansiii. One of the only Trojan survivors after the warThe GodsI. Athena, Hera, Aphroditea. Judgment of ParisII. Plan to reduce numbers of heroesa. Keep distinction between humans and godsb. Divine involvement in human affairsDelaysI. Assembly of armyII. Attack on Mysiaa. Telephosi. Wounded by Achilles in thighii. Son of HeraklesIII. Telephosa. Delphic Oraclei. “The one who hurt must heal”b. Disguisec. Kidnaps Orestesd. Takes his place on an altare. Holds Orestes hostage until he will be curedf. Healed by Achilles’ spearIV. Departure from Aulisa. Anger of ArtemisThe Trojan WarI. Ten yearsII. The IliadIII. Agamemnon’s captive girl (Chryseis)IV. Apollo sends a plagueV. Agamemnon is at faultVI. Achilles’ captive girlVII. Wrath of Achillesa. Achilles withdraws from battleb. Greeks begVIII. Patroklosa. Persuades Achilles to let him wear his armor to make the gods think that Achilles has returned to battleb. Greeks rout TrojansIX. New Armor of Achillesa. Made by


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Mizzou CL_HUM 1060 - Lecture Notes 11.21

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