A. Sutherland - AncientPages.com - The epic poem, The Iliad, was written by Homer sometime in the 8th century BC. It recounts some of the most important events of the final weeks of the Trojan War and the Greek siege of the city of Troy.
Achilles Triumphant (The Iliad) illustration by Howard David Johnson.
One of the central figures of the epic is Achilles, who traveled to Troy to bring Helen back to her husband, King Menelaus of Sparta, Agamemnon's younger brother. Achilles was the son of King Peleus of the Myrmidons and Thetis, the leader of the 50 Nereids.
Both Zeus and Poseidon desired the beautiful sea goddess but were warned by the Titan Prometheus that any male child born to her would become more significant than his father. As such, both the brothers ceased pursuing her and convinced Peleus to marry her instead.
When Achilles was born, Thetis wanted to gift him immortality. She took him to the Underworld and, holding him by the ankle, dipped him in the waters of the River Styx. However, she was unaware that the only dead spot on his entire body was the one ankle she had held when she submerged him in the river.
Another version tells that to make Achilles immortal, she smothered his body with ambrosia and then placed him on top of a fire to burn away the mortal part of his body. As she was doing this, however, Peleus interrupted her, and enraged, she left them both with the process unfinished.
When the Trojan War began, Achilles was given the command of fifty ships, each containing 50 men. He engaged the services of five commanders-in-chief - Menesthius, Eudorus, Peisander, Phoenix, and Alcimedon. After they set sail for Troy, they accidentally landed in Mysia, where King Telephus ruled.
Telephus went to Achilles and was healed in exchange for directions to Troy.
A fight broke out with Achilles wounding Telephus, but the injury wouldn't heal, so Telephus consulted an oracle. He was told that only the person who caused the wound would be able to cure it.
The Iliad begins the narrative of the Trojan War when King Agamemnon attained a woman named Chryseis and enslaved her. Her father was a priest of the god Apollo, and she pleaded with him to aid his cause. Upon hearing this, Apollo sends a plague to curse the Greeks. Calchas informs Agamemnon of what caused this curse.
Reluctantly, Agamemnon agrees to give up Chryseis but only on the condition that Achilles hands his woman Briseis over to him. Achilles is outraged at the lack of respect and withdraws from the battle.
He visits with his mother, Thetis, and convinces her to ask Zeus to aid the Trojans so that he may demonstrate his worth in action once more. After this, the Trojans can push the Greeks back to shore.
Here, Patroclus, the friend of Achilles, puts on his armor without him knowing and commands the Myrmidons in a battle against the Trojans. However, he is slain by Hector, one of King Priam's sons. Achilles is enraged at Patroculus's death; he rejoins the Greeks on the battlefield and kills Hector. Subsequently, he ties Hector's body to his chariot throughout the funeral games held for his friend. As he lies about dying, Hector tells of how Achilles will die.
Hector's brother, Paris, shoots at the Greek hero, and the poisoned arrow lands in Achilles' one dead spot – his ankle.
According to other accounts, Apollo guided the arrow toward the Achilles heel. After Troy had fallen to the Greeks, his body was cremated and merged with the ashes of Patroclus.
Written by – A. Sutherland AncientPages.com Staff Writer
Updated on October 18, 2022
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