Odyssey. You Ready?: We Are About To Embark On An
Odyssey. You Ready?: We Are About To Embark On An
Odyssey. You Ready?: We Are About To Embark On An
embark on an
Odyssey. You
ready?
What is a Myth?
▪ Myths explained phenomenon in the natural world that couldn’t
be explained or understood.
When the bards, poets, or minstrels would sing, they would first invite the
muses to come and help them tell their story.
The Greeks believed that the muses provided creative inspiration and could
“speak through” the poet.
The Illiad and The Odyssey
The Illiad and The Odyssey are epic poems from Ancient Greece. They
are famous myths which are rooted in a true historical event, the Trojan
War, which took place around 1200 B.C.
▪ Written by Homer
▪ Homer was blind.
▪ He was known as a bard, minstrel, or
rhapsode. These were considered
both historians and entertainers.
▪ The stories were originally told orally;
they were written later.
▪ They were recorded around the 8th or
9th century B.C.
▪ The actual events took place around
1200 B.C.
Oral
Tradition
• Definition: stories that were
told and retold verbally from one
generation to another
• Many ancient Greeks were not
literate unless their profession
required them to be
– Women didn’t have jobs, so most
were illiterate
– Men who partook in business
professions (trading, selling
goods) were literate
The Illiad
▪ The 10-year-war between the Greeks and the Trojans.
▪ Literary Reason: Paris, prince of Troy, “kidnapped”
Helen from Greece (Sparta). She was already married
to King Menalaus. He rallied all the Greek warriors to
go and get her back.
▪ Probable reason: Disagreement over trade on the
Aegean Sea.
▪ Troy was a strategic port that the Greeks wanted. It was a convenient place
to stop for them on their way to trade with people on the Black Sea. Before
the war, the Trojans would charge the Greeks money to stop there…like a
tax. Also, Troy and the surrounding area had nice, fertile soil, as opposed to
the rough terrain of southern Greece and the islands.
▪ Several heroes emerged from the Trojan War: Achilles, Hector, and
Odysseus.
▪ Hector and Achilles both lost their lives.
▪ According to the myth, Odysseus faked illness to try to get out of going!
The setting for the Iliad is
1. Odysseus washes up on the island of Phaeacia. They ask him to tell his
story because it’s not everyday that a muscley, handsome dude washes in with
the tide.
2. Odysseus first listens to a special singer tell the story of the Trojan Horse.
the Phaeacians don’t know he is Odysseus yet because he hasn’t told them his
identity.
4. Odysseus is taken home by the Phaeacians and has to win back his
kingdom.
The Odyssey is about
the hero Odysseus’
long trip home to Ithaca.