Welcome to the Hum 110 Iliad
Homepage
Fallen Warrior, Temple of Aphaia, Aegina (Image from ).
The Iliad is a great poem, but also one which presents a
number of difficulties for the first-time reader. This page is
designed to be a jumping-off point to help you overcome some of the
common difficulties readers have with Homer's Iliad, and also
to provide tools to enhance and deepen your reading of the poem.
Click on any of the following topics to explore them further.
1. Homeric
Geography
2. Timeline
3. Outline of the
Iliad
4. English and Greek
texts of the Iliad for word searching.
5. Homer and Art
6. Archaeological
Sites of interest to the Iliad.
7. Some commonly asked
questions when reading the Iliad for the first time.
1. Homeric Geography.
We are not sure where all of the places mentioned in the
Iliad and Odyssey were located, but later tradition and
modern archaeological excavations have helped us gain knowledge of
the sites. Here is a map listing some of the more important sites and
a few of the heroes and heroines who were associated with them. Names
of Greek sites and people are in purple, Trojan in red.
Map developed by Daphne Kleps.
To look up other sites mentioned in the Iliad, you can try
searching the
provided by the Perseus Project at Tufts University.
There is also an excellent Glossary in the back of the Lattimore
translation of the Iliad which includes place names.
2. Basic Chronology of the Homeric Epics (all dates BC)
BRONZE AGE (3000-1100)
c. 1800-1250 Troy VI
c. 1500-1120 Mycenaean Civilization
c. 1250 possible date
of the historical fall of Troy VI
1183 traditional
date of the fall of Troy
DARK AGES (1100-800)
c. 1100-750 Stories of the fall of Troy
passed down in oral form
c. 1100 Doric Invasion
of Greece
c. 1050-950 Greek colonization of Asia Minor
(western coast of Turkey)
c. 900 Beginning
of the rise of the polis (city-state)
ARCHAIC PERIOD (800-500)
c. 800-700 Rise of the
aristocracies
776
Olympic Games
established
c. 750 Greek
colonization of Southern Italy and Sicily begins
c. 750 Introduction
of a new alphabet; writing gradually introduced
c. 720 Homer,
Iliad
c. 700 Hesiod,
Theogony and Works and Days
c. 680 Homer,
Odyssey; Archilochus (lyric poet)
c. 650 Greek
colonization around the Black Sea begins
c. 600 Sappho (lyric
poet); Thales (philosopher)
594-593 Archonship of Solon
in Athens
545-510 Tyranny of the
Peisistratids in Athens
c. 540 Singing of
Homeric poems begins at Panathenaic festival
533
Thespis wins first
tragedy competition at Athens
508
Cleisthenes reforms
the Athenian Constitution
CLASSICAL PERIOD (500-323)
490-479 Persian War
458
Aeschylus,
Oresteia
461-429 Pericles dominant in
Athenian politics; the "Periclean Age"
c. 450-420 Herodotus composes his
Histories about the Persian War.
447
Parthenon begun in
Athens
431-404 Peloponnesian War
(Athens and allies vs. Sparta and allies)
c. 428 Sophocles,
Oedipus the King
c. 424-400 Thucydides composes his
History of the Peloponnesian War
404
Athens loses
Peloponnesian War to Sparta
399 Trial
and death of Socrates
3. Outline of the Iliad
The Iliad is a very long poem, and it is hard to keep all of
the people, places, and events straight. This outline provides a
summary of the action in each of the 24 Books. Use it to review what
happens in each book, or to locate a particular scene.Outline
4. English and Greek texts of the Iliad for word
searching.
This page allows you to find passages in the Iliad in
either Greek or English. It also allows you to search for words in
the English or Greek text.
A. The of the Iliad from the Perseus Project.
B. The of the Iliad from the Perseus Project.
C. in the Iliad.
D. in the Iliad.
5. Homer and Art
The Iliad and Odyssey were composed in a culture in
which art played a central role. The poems themselves refer to
artistic productions, most famously the elaborately decorated shield
which Hephaistos makes for Achilles in Iliad 18. In addition,
many of the heroes and episodes described in the Homeric poems became
popular subjects for sculpture and painting. Here is a chart listing
the major periods of Greek art, along with examples from two of the
periods and descriptions of some of the major features as they relate
to the Homeric poems. More examples will be added as they become
available.
1. Mycenaean period (1600-1200)
This is the time contemporary to the "historical" events described
in the Iliad and Odyssey.
2. Proto-Geometric and Geometric periods (1050-750)
Dipylon
Amphora (Saskia JGCO330.GIF)
This amphora, now in the Athens National Museum, dates to about
760 BC, the time when the Iliad and Odyssey were taking
shape. This piece is typical of large (5 foot tall) geometric
amphorae which were used as tomb markers in the cemeteries just
outside Athens. Most of the vase is decorated with intricate
geometric designs, except for two bands of stylized animals on the
neck, and the central mourning scene between the two handles. The
central scene depicts the part of a Greek funeral known as the
prothesis, or laying out of the body. The corpse is shown
lying on a funeral bed, surrounded by mourners who are lamenting and
tearing out their hair. The scene may depict a contemporary funeral,
or that of a hero from the mythic past.
The next two images show details from the amphora.
3. Orientalizing period (720-620)
4. Archaic period (620-480)
Achilles
and Ajax Playing a Board Game.
This Attic black figure vase in the Vatican Museum was produced by
Exekias in Athens about 530 BC. It depicts Achilles and Ajax playing
a board game during a lull in the fighting around Troy.
5. Classical period (480-323)
6. Archaeological Sites of interest to the
Iliad.
Archaeologists have done much in the last century to increase our
knowledge about a number of sites mentioned in the Iliad and
Odyssey. Useful accounts of what we know about some of these
sites are provided by the Perseus Project. Perseus provides brief
geographical and physical descriptions, lists modern archaeological
excavations done at the sites, notes the architectural remains, and
gives (for some sites) a site plan with arrows that you can "click"
on to see views from specific locations at the sites. It is thus
possible to "walk around" the remains of Agamemnon's Mycenae or
Nestor's Pylos on your own! Here is a list of the sites from Perseus
which are of most interest to reader's of Homer.
(Agamemnon)
(Nestor)
(Priam)
7. Some commonly asked "factual" questions when reading
the Iliad for the first time.
1. Who was Homer?
No one knows. Even the ancient Greeks were not able to agree about
when and where Homer lived. One popular account was that he was born
some time in the 8th century BC in Smyrna in Asia Minor, lived on the
island of Chios, and died on the small island of Ios. Greek writers
also claimed that he was blind, that his real name was Melesigines,
and that his father was the river Meles and his mother a nymph named
Kretheis.
Though they could not agree about the details of his life, ancient
Greeks did not doubt that there was a poet named Homer who had
written the Iliad, the Odyssey, and possibly a number
of other poems. Many modern scholars dispute even this. Scholars in
the last two hundred years have established that the Iliad and
Odyssey are products of a long oral tradition which became
fixed sometime in the eighth century BC. How exactly the poems took
their final shape (Was it the work of one person or several? Did the
process involve writing?) is still a matter of speculation.
2. Is the Iliad historically accurate?
It depends on what you mean by "historically accurate." Modern
historians generally agree that the Iliad reflects a set of
historical events, but disagree about the relationship of the
Iliad to those events. Most historians accept that at some
point around 1250-1200 BC the city of Troy was destroyed by a raiding
party from the Greek mainland. Most also believe that the poem, while
probably wrong in most of its historical details, reflects some
historical realities from the Late Bronze Age and Dark Ages (1200 -
900 BC) which are consistent with the archaeological record.
3. How do you keep all of the names of people, places,
and gods straight?
It is hard at first. There is a good glossary in the back of the
Lattimore translation, and is also helpful to keep your own list of
people who occur more than once.
This page developed by Walter
Englert for Hum110 Tech.
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