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  2. Trojan Horse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trojan_Horse

    Pictorial representations of the Trojan Horse earlier than, or contemporary to, the first literary appearances of the episode can help clarify what was the meaning of the story as perceived by its contemporary audience. There are few ancient (before 480 BC) depictions of the Trojan Horse surviving.

  3. Mykonos vase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mykonos_vase

    Detail showing the oldest known depiction of the Trojan Horse. (Note the warriors peeking out through portholes in the horse's side.) The Mykonos vase, a pithos, is one of the earliest dated objects (Archaic period, c. 675 BC) to depict the Trojan Horse from Homer's telling of the Fall of Troy during the Trojan War in the Odyssey. [1]

  4. Trojan War - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trojan_War

    The ancient Greeks believed that Troy was located near the Dardanelles and that the Trojan War was a historical event of the 13th or 12th century BC. By the mid-19th century AD, both the war and the city were widely seen as non-historical, but in 1868, the German archaeologist Heinrich Schliemann met Frank Calvert , who convinced Schliemann ...

  5. List of Trojan War characters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Trojan_War_characters

    This is a list of mythological characters who appear in narratives concerning the Trojan War. Map of Homeric Greece Map of ... Trojan Battle Order; Trojan Horse; List ...

  6. Beware of Greeks bearing gifts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beware_of_Greeks_bearing_gifts

    The Trojan Horse actually contains a hand-picked team of Greek warriors hidden in its wooden belly. The Trojan priest Laocoön suspects that some menace is hidden in the horse, and he warns the Trojans not to accept the gift, crying, Equō nē crēdite, Teucrī! Quidquid id est, timeō Danaōs et dōna ferentēs. ("Do not trust the horse, Trojans!

  7. Troy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Troy

    The fall of Troy with the story of the Trojan Horse and the sacrifice of Polyxena, Priam's youngest daughter, is the subject of a later Greek epic by Quintus Smyrnaeus ("Quintus of Smyrna"). The Greeks and Romans took for a fact the historicity of the Trojan War and the identity of Homeric Troy with a site in Anatolia on a peninsula called the ...

  8. Why Are the Ancient Greeks Everywhere Again? - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/why-ancient-greeks...

    “I fear the Greeks even when they’re bringing gifts,” a Trojan priest exclaims early on in Virgil’s Aeneid, trying to persuade his countrymen that there’s something fishy about the giant ...

  9. Returns from Troy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Returns_from_Troy

    News of Troy's fall quickly reached the Achaean kingdoms through phryctoria, a semaphore system used in ancient Greece. A fire signal lit at Troy was seen at Lemnos, relayed to Athos, then to the look-out towers of Macistus on Euboea, across the Euripus straight to Messapion, then to Mount Cithaeron, Mount Aegiplanctus and finally to Mount Arachneus, where it was seen by the people of Mycenae ...