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  2. Suitors of Penelope - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suitors_of_Penelope

    Eurymachus, son of Polybus, is the second of the suitors to appear in the epic.Eurymachus acts as a leader among the suitors because of his charisma. He is noted to be the most likely to win Penelope's hand because her father and brothers support the union and because he outdoes the other suitors in gift-giving.

  3. Penelope - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penelope

    Penelope. Drawing after Attic pottery figure. Penelope encounters the returned Odysseus posing as a beggar. From a mural in the Macellum of Pompeii. Penelope (/ p ə ˈ n ɛ l ə p i / [1] pə-NEL-ə-pee; Ancient Greek: Πηνελόπεια, Pēnelópeia, or Πηνελόπη, Pēnelópē) [2] is a character in Homer's Odyssey.

  4. Leodes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leodes

    Leodes was the last person whom Odysseus killed in his homecoming rampage, decapitated while pleading for his life: Leodes rushed in and caught the knees of Odysseus, and spoke to him in winged words and supplication: 'I am at your knees, Odysseus. Respect me, have mercy; for I claim that never in your halls did I say or do anything

  5. Gates of horn and ivory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gates_of_horn_and_ivory

    This is referenced when Odysseus talks to Xander about his vision of the future, and what his wife Penelope had taught him about dreams and their gates in the past. Edmund Spenser 's epic poem The Faerie Queene (1590, English) in book 1, stanzas XL and XLIV, in reference to a false dream being brought to the hero (Prince Arthur/the Knight of ...

  6. Odyssey - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Odyssey

    In his absence, Odysseus was assumed dead, and his wife Penelope and son Telemachus had to contend with a group of unruly suitors who were competing for Penelope's hand in marriage. The Odyssey was originally composed in Homeric Greek in around the 8th or 7th century BC and, by the mid-6th century BC, had become part of the Greek literary canon.

  7. The Penelopiad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Penelopiad

    According to Penelope in The Penelopiad, Odysseus was a liar who drunkenly fought a one-eyed bartender then boasted it was a giant cannibalistic cyclops. Homer portrays Penelope as loyal, patient, and the ideal wife, as he contrasts her to Clytemnestra who killed Agamemnon upon his return from Troy.

  8. Helen of Troy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helen_of_Troy

    Odysseus was one of the suitors, but had brought no gifts because he believed he had little chance to win the contest. He thus promised to solve the problem, if Tyndareus in turn would support him in his courting of Penelope, the daughter of Icarius. Tyndareus readily agreed, and Odysseus proposed that, before the decision was made, all the ...

  9. Talk:Penelope - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Penelope

    I doubt that Penelope could have married the son of Odysseus. The reason: Penelope had a teenager son when Telegonus (son of Odysseus and Circe) was born in Italy, so herself must have been 25-30 years older than that youngster. Our contributor(s) may have meant something else, but from the text it is unclear who has married whom.