Iliad is one of ancient works of literature by someone they called the blind poet, Homer. As one of the greatest works in this genre, it is a challenge to interpret the work with considerable care by translating, adding poetic addends, and interpreting the epic poem. According to sources, the poem covers a mere 52 days of the Trojan war between a combined Greek super army and the Trojans, protected by the m ...Täielik kirjeldus
Iliad is one of ancient works of literature by someone they called the blind poet, Homer. As one of the greatest works in this genre, it is a challenge to interpret the work with considerable care by translating, adding poetic addends, and interpreting the epic poem. According to sources, the poem covers a mere 52 days of the Trojan war between a combined Greek super army and the Trojans, protected by the massive walls of their city, Troy (aka Ilium) in Anatolia. The story and characters were already familiar to its original Greek audience after centuries of oral tellings and retellings. This oral heritage is seen in the repetition of epithets, introductory phrases, fighting descriptions, and mirrored parallel sequences in an ever-recurring cycle of themes and ideas. The listeners and readers already knew why the war started - the Trojan prince Paris has abducted Helen of Sparta and her husband Menelaus has persuaded his brother, Agamemnon, king of Mycenae, to form a mighty Greek army to get her back again. They knew the ending, too, and so the Iliad does not bother with that either. Homer seems more concerned with the universal truths the story can reveal, and so, perhaps for this reason, he jumps right into the story after already nine years of war and siege. This book contains chapter 1 to 5 of the work.