Test 2 Flashcards
(35 cards)
Aeneas
A Trojan hero, the son of the prince Anchises and the goddess Aphrodite.
Aeneas is one of the few Trojans who were not killed in battle or enslaved when Troy fell.
Ganymede
A divine hero whose homeland was Troy. Homer describes Ganymede as the most beautiful of mortals. He was the son of Tros of Dardania.
He is abducted by Zeus, in the form of an eagle, to serve as cup-bearer in Olympus.
Anchises
A mortal lover of the goddess Aphrodite. Son is Aeneas.
Laomedon
A Trojan king, son of Ilus, brother of Ganymede and Assaracus, and father of Priam, Astyoche, Lampus, Hicetaon, Clytius, Cilla, Proclia, Aethilla, Medesicaste, Clytodora, and Hesione.
Poseidon and Apollo, having offended Zeus, were sent to serve King Laomedon. He had them build huge walls around the city and promised to reward them well, a promise he then refused to fulfill. In vengeance, before the Trojan War, Poseidon sent a sea monster to attack Troy and Apollo sent a pestilence.
Telamon
Son of the king Aeacus of Aegina, and Endeis and brother of Peleus, accompanied Jason as one of his Argonauts.
Father of Ajax
Tithonus
Tithonus was a Trojan by birth, the son of King Laomedon of Troy by a water nymph named Strymo.
Lover of Eos.
Priam
King of Troy during the Trojan War and youngest son of Laomedon.
Hecuba
Wife of King Priam of Troy during the Trojan War, with whom she had 19 children
Hector
A Trojan prince and the greatest fighter for Troy in the Trojan War. The first-born son of King Priam and Queen Hecuba. Means “Holder”, “Protector”
Paris
the son of Priam. He caused the Trojan War by abducting Helen.
Patroclus
the son of Menoetius, grandson of Actor, King of Opus, and was Achilles’ beloved comrade and brother-in-arms. His death was the cause of Achilles poor treatment of Hectors body.
Ajax
a mythological Greek hero, the son of Telamon and Periboea, He plays an important role in Homer’s Iliad and in the Epic Cycle, a series of epic poems about the Trojan War. To distinguish him from Ajax, son of Oileus (Ajax the Lesser), he is called “Telamonian Ajax,” “Greater Ajax,” or “Ajax the Great”. A doer not a speaker. Descent from Zeus and Aigina
Diomedes
a hero in Greek mythology, known for his participation in the Trojan War.
King of Argos
Younger figure. Great figure but not Ajax level. He’s used as a stand in for Achilles. Principle fighter. He is a figure of weight with a distinguished background.
Son of Tidious.
Tydeus
an Aeolian hero of the generation before the Trojan War. He was one of the Seven Against Thebes, and the father of Diomedes, who is frequently known by the patronymic Tydides.
Odysseus
Husband of Penelope, father of Telemachus, and son of Laërtes, grandson of Autolykos “a real wolf”
Laertes
father of Odysseus. Laërtes was an Argonaut and participated in the hunt for the Calydonian Boar.
Sisyphus
a king of Ephyra (now known as Corinth) punished for chronic deceitfulness by being compelled to roll an immense boulder up a hill, only to watch it roll back down, and to repeat this action forever.
Palamedes
Agamemnon sent Palamedes to Ithaca to retrieve Odysseus, who had promised to defend the marriage of Helen and Menelaus. Paris had kidnapped Helen, but Odysseus did not want to honor his oath. He pretended to be insane and plowed his fields with salt. Palamedes guessed what was happening and put Odysseus’ son, Telemachus, in front of the plow. Odysseus stopped working and revealed his sanity.
Nestor
He became king after Heracles killed Neleus and all of Nestor’s siblings. He was an argonaut and helped fight the centaurs. Son of Poseidon.
Achilles
a Greek hero of the Trojan War and the central character and greatest warrior of Homer’s Iliad. Achilles was a demigod; his mother was the nymph Thetis, and his father, Peleus, was the king of the Myrmidons.
Thetis
Most extant material about Thetis concerns her role as mother of Achilles, but there is some evidence that as the sea-goddess she played a more central role in the religious beliefs and practices of Archaic Greece.
Agamemnon
the son of king Atreus and queen Aerope of Mycenae, the brother of Menelaus, the husband of Clytemnestra as well the father of Iphigenia,
On Agamemnon’s return from Troy he was murdered (according to the fullest version of the oldest surviving account, Odyssey 11.409–11) by Aegisthus, the lover of his wife Clytemnestra.
Talkes to Diomedes and tells him he should try harder to measure up to father.
Menelaus
was a king of Mycenaean (pre-Dorian) Sparta, the husband of Helen of Troy, and a central figure in the Trojan War.
Tantalus
most famous for his eternal punishment in Tartarus. He was made to stand in a pool of water beneath a fruit tree with low branches, with the fruit ever eluding his grasp, and the water always receding before he could take a drink.