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Achilles

In Greek mythology, Achilles (/əˈkɪlz/ ə-KIL-eez) or Achilleus (Greek: Ἀχιλλεύς) was a hero of the Trojan War, the greatest of all the Greek warriors, and the central character of Homer's Iliad. He was the son of the Nereid Thetis and Peleus, king of Phthia.

Ancient Greek polychromatic pottery painting (dating to c. 300 BC) of Achilles during the Trojan War

Achilles' most notable feat during the Trojan War was the slaying of the Trojan prince Hector outside the gates of Troy. Although the death of Achilles is not presented in the Iliad, other sources concur that he was killed near the end of the Trojan War by Paris, who shot him with an arrow. Later legends (beginning with Statius' unfinished epic Achilleid, written in the 1st century AD) state that Achilles was invulnerable in all of his body except for one heel, because when his mother Thetis dipped him in the river Styx as an infant, she held him by one of his heels. Alluding to these legends, the term "Achilles' heel" has come to mean a point of weakness, especially in someone or something with an otherwise strong constitution. The Achilles tendon is also named after him due to these legends.

Etymology

Linear B tablets attest to the personal name Achilleus in the forms a-ki-re-u and a-ki-re-we,[1] the latter being the dative of the former.[2] The name grew more popular, becoming common soon after the seventh century BC[3] and was also turned into the female form Ἀχιλλεία (Achilleía), attested in Attica in the fourth century BC (IG II² 1617) and, in the form Achillia, on a stele in Halicarnassus as the name of a female gladiator fighting an "Amazon".

Achilles' name can be analyzed as a combination of ἄχος (áchos) "distress, pain, sorrow, grief"[4] and λαός (laós) "people, soldiers, nation", resulting in a proto-form *Akhí-lāu̯os "he who has the people distressed" or "he whose people have distress".[5][6] The grief or distress of the people is a theme raised numerous times in the Iliad (and frequently by Achilles himself). Achilles' role as the hero of grief or distress forms an ironic juxtaposition with the conventional view of him as the hero of κλέος kléos ("glory", usually in war). Furthermore, laós has been construed by Gregory Nagy, following Leonard Palmer, to mean "a corps of soldiers", a muster.[6] With this derivation, the name obtains a double meaning in the poem: when the hero is functioning rightly, his men bring distress to the enemy, but when wrongly, his men get the grief of war. The poem is in part about the misdirection of anger on the part of leadership.

 
The Education of Achilles, by Eugène Delacroix, pastel on paper, c. 1862 (Getty Center, Los Angeles)

Some researchers deem the name a loan word, possibly from a Pre-Greek language.[1] Achilles' descent from the Nereid Thetis and a similarity of his name with those of river deities such as Acheron and Achelous have led to speculations about his being an old water divinity (see § Worship and heroic cult, below).[7] Robert S. P. Beekes has suggested a Pre-Greek origin of the name, based among other things on the coexistence of -λλ- and -λ- in epic language, which may account for a palatalized phoneme /ly/ in the original language.[2]

Description

In the account of Dares the Phrygian, Achilles was described having "... a large chest, a fine mouth, and powerfully formed arms and legs. His head was covered with long wavy chestnut-colored hair. Though mild in manner, he was very fierce in battle. His face showed the joy of a man richly endowed."[8]

Birth and early years

 
Thetis Dipping the Infant Achilles into the River Styx by Peter Paul Rubens (c. 1625; Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, Rotterdam)

Achilles was the son of Thetis, a Nereid and daughter of the Old Man of the Sea, and Peleus, the king of the Myrmidons. Zeus and Poseidon had been rivals for Thetis's hand in marriage until Prometheus, the fore-thinker, warned Zeus of a prophecy (originally uttered by Themis, goddess of divine law) that Thetis would bear a son greater than his father. For this reason, the two gods withdrew their pursuit, and had her wed Peleus.[9]

There is a tale which offers an alternative version of these events: In the Argonautica (4.760) Zeus' sister and wife Hera alludes to Thetis' chaste resistance to the advances of Zeus, pointing out that Thetis was so loyal to Hera's marriage bond that she coolly rejected the father of gods. Thetis, although a daughter of the sea-god Nereus, was also brought up by Hera, further explaining her resistance to the advances of Zeus. Zeus was furious and decreed that she would never marry an immortal.[10]

 
Chiron teaching Achilles how to play the lyre, Roman fresco from Herculaneum, 1st century AD

According to the Achilleid, written by Statius in the 1st century AD, and to non-surviving previous sources, when Achilles was born Thetis tried to make him immortal by dipping him in the river Styx; however, he was left vulnerable at the part of the body by which she held him: his left heel[11][12] (see Achilles' heel, Achilles tendon). It is not clear if this version of events was known earlier. In another version of this story, Thetis anointed the boy in ambrosia and put him on top of a fire in order to burn away the mortal parts of his body. She was interrupted by Peleus and abandoned both father and son in a rage.[13]

None of the sources before Statius make any reference to this general invulnerability. To the contrary, in the Iliad, Homer mentions Achilles being wounded: in Book 21 the Paeonian hero Asteropaios, son of Pelagon, challenged Achilles by the river Scamander. He was ambidextrous, and cast a spear from each hand; one grazed Achilles' elbow, "drawing a spurt of blood".[14]

 
The Education of Achilles (c. 1772), by James Barry (Yale Center for British Art)

In the few fragmentary poems of the Epic Cycle which describe the hero's death (i.e. the Cypria, the Little Iliad by Lesches of Pyrrha, the Aethiopis and Iliupersis by Arctinus of Miletus), there is no trace of any reference to his general invulnerability or his famous weakness at the heel. In the later vase paintings presenting the death of Achilles, the arrow (or in many cases, arrows) hit his torso.

Peleus entrusted Achilles to Chiron the Centaur, who lived on Mount Pelion, to be reared.[15] Thetis foretold that her son's fate was either to gain glory and die young, or to live a long but uneventful life in obscurity. Achilles chose the former, and decided to take part in the Trojan War.[16] According to Homer, Achilles grew up in Phthia with his companion Patroclus.[1]

According to Photius, the sixth book of the New History by Ptolemy Hephaestion reported that Thetis burned in a secret place the children she had by Peleus. When she had Achilles, Peleus noticed, tore him from the flames with only a burnt foot, and confided him to the centaur Chiron. Later Chiron exhumed the body of the Damysus, who was the fastest of all the giants, removed the ankle, and incorporated it into Achilles' burnt foot.[17]

Other names

Among the appellations under which Achilles is generally known are the following:[18]

  • Pyrisous, "saved from the fire", his first name, which seems to favour the tradition in which his mortal parts were burned by his mother Thetis
  • Aeacides, from his grandfather Aeacus
  • Aemonius, from Aemonia, a country which afterwards acquired the name of Thessaly
  • Aspetos, "inimitable" or "vast", his name at Epirus
  • Larissaeus, from Larissa (also called Cremaste), a town of Achaia Phthiotis in Thessaly
  • Ligyron, his original name
  • Nereius, from his mother Thetis, one of the Nereids
  • Pelides, from his father, Peleus
  • Phthius, from his birthplace, Phthia
  • Podarkes, "swift-footed" (literally, "defending with the foot," from the verb ἀρκέω, "to defend, ward off"); Ptolemy Hephaestion, alternatively, says that it was due to the wings of Arke being attached to his feet.[19]

Hidden on Skyros

 
A Roman mosaic from the Poseidon Villa in Zeugma, Commagene (now in the Zeugma Mosaic Museum) depicting Achilles disguised as a woman and Odysseus tricking him into revealing himself

Some post-Homeric sources[20] claim that in order to keep Achilles safe from the war, Thetis (or, in some versions, Peleus) hid the young man dressed as a princess or at least a girl at the court of Lycomedes, king of Skyros.

There, Achilles, properly disguised, lived among Lycomedes' daughters, perhaps under the name "Pyrrha" (the red-haired girl), Cercysera or Aissa ("swift"[21]).[22] With Lycomedes' daughter Deidamia, whom in the account of Statius he raped, Achilles there fathered two sons, Neoptolemus (also called Pyrrhus, after his father's possible alias) and Oneiros. According to this story, Odysseus learned from the prophet Calchas that the Achaeans would be unable to capture Troy without Achilles' aid. Odysseus went to Skyros in the guise of a peddler selling women's clothes and jewellery and placed a shield and spear among his goods. When Achilles instantly took up the spear, Odysseus saw through his disguise and convinced him to join the Greek campaign. In another version of the story, Odysseus arranged for a trumpet alarm to be sounded while he was with Lycomedes' women. While the women fled in panic, Achilles prepared to defend the court, thus giving his identity away.

In the Trojan War

 
Achilles and Agamemnon, from a mosaic from Pompeii, 1st century AD

According to the Iliad, Achilles arrived at Troy with 50 ships, each carrying 50 Myrmidons. He appointed five leaders (each leader commanding 500 Myrmidons): Menesthius, Eudorus, Peisander, Phoenix and Alcimedon.[23]

Telephus

When the Greeks left for the Trojan War, they accidentally stopped in Mysia, ruled by King Telephus. In the resulting battle, Achilles gave Telephus a wound that would not heal; Telephus consulted an oracle, who stated that "he that wounded shall heal". Guided by the oracle, he arrived at Argos, where Achilles healed him in order that he might become their guide for the voyage to Troy.[24]

According to other reports in Euripides' lost play about Telephus, he went to Aulis pretending to be a beggar and asked Achilles to heal his wound. Achilles refused, claiming to have no medical knowledge. Alternatively, Telephus held Orestes for ransom, the ransom being Achilles' aid in healing the wound. Odysseus reasoned that the spear had inflicted the wound; therefore, the spear must be able to heal it. Pieces of the spear were scraped off onto the wound and Telephus was healed.[24]

Troilus

 
Achilles slaying Troilus, red-figure kylix signed by Euphronios

According to the Cypria (the part of the Epic Cycle that tells the events of the Trojan War before Achilles' wrath), when the Achaeans desired to return home, they were restrained by Achilles, who afterwards attacked the cattle of Aeneas, sacked neighbouring cities (like Pedasus and Lyrnessus, where the Greeks capture the queen Briseis) and killed Tenes, a son of Apollo, as well as Priam's son Troilus in the sanctuary of Apollo Thymbraios; however, the romance between Troilus and Chryseis described in Geoffrey Chaucer's Troilus and Criseyde and in William Shakespeare's Troilus and Cressida is a medieval invention.[25][1]

In Dares Phrygius' Account of the Destruction of Troy,[26] the Latin summary through which the story of Achilles was transmitted to medieval Europe, as well as in older accounts, Troilus was a young Trojan prince, the youngest of King Priam's and Hecuba's five legitimate sons (or according other sources, another son of Apollo).[27] Despite his youth, he was one of the main Trojan war leaders, a "horse fighter" or "chariot fighter" according to Homer.[28] Prophecies linked Troilus' fate to that of Troy and so he was ambushed in an attempt to capture him. Yet Achilles, struck by the beauty of both Troilus and his sister Polyxena, and overcome with lust, directed his sexual attentions on the youth – who, refusing to yield, instead found himself decapitated upon an altar-omphalos of Apollo Thymbraios.[29] Later versions of the story suggested Troilus was accidentally killed by Achilles in an over-ardent lovers' embrace.[30] In this version of the myth, Achilles' death therefore came in retribution for this sacrilege.[31] Ancient writers treated Troilus as the epitome of a dead child mourned by his parents. Had Troilus lived to adulthood, the First Vatican Mythographer claimed, Troy would have been invincible; however, the motif is older and found already in Plautus' Bacchides.[32]

In the Iliad

 
Achilles cedes Briseis to Agamemnon, from the House of the Tragic Poet in Pompeii, fresco, 1st century AD (Naples National Archaeological Museum)

Homer's Iliad is the most famous narrative of Achilles' deeds in the Trojan War. Achilles' wrath (μῆνις Ἀχιλλέως, mênis Achilléōs) is the central theme of the poem. The first two lines of the Iliad read:

Μῆνιν ἄειδε θεὰ Πηληιάδεω Ἀχιλῆος

οὐλομένην, ἣ μυρί' Ἀχαιοῖς ἄλγε' ἔθηκε, [...]

Sing, Goddess, of the rage of Peleus' son Achilles,

the accursed rage that brought great suffering to the Achaeans, [...]

The Homeric epic only covers a few weeks of the decade-long war, and does not narrate Achilles' death. It begins with Achilles' withdrawal from battle after being dishonoured by Agamemnon, the commander of the Achaean forces. Agamemnon has taken a woman named Chryseis as his slave. Her father Chryses, a priest of Apollo, begs Agamemnon to return her to him. Agamemnon refuses, and Apollo sends a plague amongst the Greeks. The prophet Calchas correctly determines the source of the troubles but will not speak unless Achilles vows to protect him. Achilles does so, and Calchas declares that Chryseis must be returned to her father. Agamemnon consents, but then commands that Achilles' battle prize Briseis, the daughter of Briseus, be brought to him to replace Chryseis. Angry at the dishonour of having his plunder and glory taken away (and, as he says later, because he loves Briseis),[33] with the urging of his mother Thetis, Achilles refuses to fight or lead his troops alongside the other Greek forces. At the same time, burning with rage over Agamemnon's theft, Achilles prays to Thetis to convince Zeus to help the Trojans gain ground in the war, so that he may regain his honour.

As the battle turns against the Greeks, thanks to the influence of Zeus, Nestor declares that the Trojans are winning because Agamemnon has angered Achilles, and urges the king to appease the warrior. Agamemnon agrees and sends Odysseus and two other chieftains, Ajax and Phoenix. They promise that, if Achilles returns to battle, Agamemnon will return the captive Briseis and other gifts. Achilles rejects all Agamemnon offers him and simply urges the Greeks to sail home as he was planning to do.

 
The Rage of Achilles, fresco by Giovanni Battista Tiepolo (1757, Villa Valmarana ai Nani, Vicenza)

The Trojans, led by Hector, subsequently push the Greek army back toward the beaches and assault the Greek ships. With the Greek forces on the verge of absolute destruction, Patroclus leads the Myrmidons into battle, wearing Achilles' armour, though Achilles remains at his camp. Patroclus succeeds in pushing the Trojans back from the beaches, but is killed by Hector before he can lead a proper assault on the city of Troy.

After receiving the news of the death of Patroclus from Antilochus, the son of Nestor, Achilles grieves over his beloved companion's death. His mother Thetis comes to comfort the distraught Achilles. She persuades Hephaestus to make new armour for him, in place of the armour that Patroclus had been wearing, which was taken by Hector. The new armour includes the Shield of Achilles, described in great detail in the poem.

Enraged over the death of Patroclus, Achilles ends his refusal to fight and takes the field, killing many men in his rage but always seeking out Hector. Achilles even engages in battle with the river god Scamander, who has become angry that Achilles is choking his waters with all the men he has killed. The god tries to drown Achilles but is stopped by Hera and Hephaestus. Zeus himself takes note of Achilles' rage and sends the gods to restrain him so that he will not go on to sack Troy itself before the time allotted for its destruction, seeming to show that the unhindered rage of Achilles can defy fate itself. Finally, Achilles finds his prey. Achilles chases Hector around the wall of Troy three times before Athena, in the form of Hector's favorite and dearest brother, Deiphobus, persuades Hector to stop running and fight Achilles face to face. After Hector realizes the trick, he knows the battle is inevitable. Wanting to go down fighting, he charges at Achilles with his only weapon, his sword, but misses. Accepting his fate, Hector begs Achilles not to spare his life, but to treat his body with respect after killing him. Achilles tells Hector it is hopeless to expect that of him, declaring that "my rage, my fury would drive me now to hack your flesh away and eat you raw – such agonies you have caused me".[34] Achilles then kills Hector and drags his corpse by its heels behind his chariot. After having a dream where Patroclus begs Achilles to hold his funeral, Achilles hosts a series of funeral games in honour of his companion.[35]

At the onset of his duel with Hector, Achilles is referred to as the brightest star in the sky, which comes on in the autumn, Orion's dog (Sirius); a sign of evil. During the cremation of Patroclus, he is compared to Hesperus, the evening/western star (Venus), while the burning of the funeral pyre lasts until Phosphorus, the morning/eastern star (also Venus) has set (descended).

With the assistance of the god Hermes (Argeiphontes), Hector's father Priam goes to Achilles' tent to plead with Achilles for the return of Hector's body so that he can be buried. Achilles relents and promises a truce for the duration of the funeral, lasting 9 days with a burial on the 10th (in the tradition of Niobe's offspring). The poem ends with a description of Hector's funeral, with the doom of Troy and Achilles himself still to come.

Later epic accounts: fighting Penthesilea and Memnon

 
Achilles and Memnon fighting, between Thetis and Eos, Attic black-figure amphora, c. 510 BC, from Vulci

The Aethiopis (7th century BC) and a work named Posthomerica, composed by Quintus of Smyrna in the fourth century CE, relate further events from the Trojan War. When Penthesilea, queen of the Amazons and daughter of Ares, arrives in Troy, Priam hopes that she will defeat Achilles. After his temporary truce with Priam, Achilles fights and kills the warrior queen, only to grieve over her death later.[36] At first, he was so distracted by her beauty, he did not fight as intensely as usual. Once he realized that his distraction was endangering his life, he refocused and killed her.

Following the death of Patroclus, Nestor's son Antilochus becomes Achilles' closest companion. When Memnon, son of the Dawn Goddess Eos and king of Ethiopia, slays Antilochus, Achilles once more obtains revenge on the battlefield, killing Memnon. Consequently, Eos will not let the sun rise until Zeus persuades her. The fight between Achilles and Memnon over Antilochus echoes that of Achilles and Hector over Patroclus, except that Memnon (unlike Hector) was also the son of a goddess.

Many Homeric scholars argued that episode inspired many details in the Iliad's description of the death of Patroclus and Achilles' reaction to it. The episode then formed the basis of the cyclic epic Aethiopis, which was composed after the Iliad, possibly in the 7th century BC. The Aethiopis is now lost, except for scattered fragments quoted by later authors.

 
Achilles tending Patroclus wounded by an arrow, Attic red-figure kylix, c. 500 BC (Altes Museum, Berlin)

Achilles and Patroclus

The exact nature of Achilles' relationship with Patroclus has been a subject of dispute in both the classical period and modern times. In the Iliad, it appears to be the model of a deep and loyal friendship. Homer does not suggest that Achilles and his close friend Patroclus had sexual relations.[37][38] Although there is no direct evidence in the text of the Iliad that Achilles and Patroclus were lovers, this theory was expressed by some later authors. Commentators from classical antiquity to the present have often interpreted the relationship through the lens of their own cultures. In 5th-century BC Athens, the intense bond was often viewed in light of the Greek custom of paiderasteia, which is the relationship between an older male and a younger one, usually a teenager. In Patroclus and Achilles' case, Achilles would have been the younger as Patroclus is usually seen as his elder. In Plato's Symposium, the participants in a dialogue about love assume that Achilles and Patroclus were a couple; Phaedrus argues that Achilles was the younger and more beautiful one so he was the beloved and Patroclus was the lover.[39] However, ancient Greek had no words to distinguish heterosexual and homosexual,[40] and it was assumed that a man could both desire handsome young men and have sex with women. Many pairs of men throughout history have been compared to Achilles and Patroclus to imply a homosexual relationship.

Death

 
Dying Achilles (Achilleas thniskon) in the gardens of the Achilleion

The death of Achilles, even if considered solely as it occurred in the oldest sources, is a complex one, with many different versions.[41] Starting with the oldest account, In the Iliad Book XXII, Hector predicts with his last dying breath that Paris and Apollo will slay him at the Scaean Gates leading to Troy (with an arrow to the heel according to Statius). In Book XXIII, the sad spirit of dead Patroclus visits Achilles just as he drifts off into slumber, requesting that his bones be placed with those of Achilles in his golden vase, a gift of his mother.

 
Ajax carries off the body of Achilles, Attic black-figure lekythos from Sicily, c. 510 BC (Staatliche Antikensammlungen, Munich)

In the Odyssey Book XI, Odysseus sails to the underworld and converses with the shades. One of these is Achilles, who when greeted as "blessed in life, blessed in death", responds that he would rather be a slave to the worst of masters than be king of all the dead. But Achilles then asks Odysseus of his son's exploits in the Trojan war, and when Odysseus tells of Neoptolemus' heroic actions, Achilles is filled with satisfaction.[42]

In the Odyssey Book XXIV we read dead King Agamemnon's ghostly account of his death: Achilles' funeral pyre bleached bones had been mixed with those of Patroclus and put into his mother's golden vase. Also, the bones of Antilocus, who had become closer to Achilles than any other following Patroclus' death, were separately enclosed. And, the customary funeral games of a hero were performed, and a massive tomb or mound was built on the Hellespont for approaching seagoers to celebrate.[43]

Achilles was represented in the Aethiopis as living after his death in the island of Leuke at the mouth of the river Danube. Another version of Achilles' death is that he fell deeply in love with one of the Trojan princesses, Polyxena. Achilles asks Priam for Polyxena's hand in marriage. Priam is willing because it would mean the end of the war and an alliance with the world's greatest warrior. But while Priam is overseeing the private marriage of Polyxena and Achilles, Paris, who would have to give up Helen if Achilles married his sister, hides in the bushes and shoots Achilles with a divine arrow, killing him. According to some accounts, he had married Medea in life, so that after both their deaths they were united in the Elysian Fields of Hades – as Hera promised Thetis in Apollonius' Argonautica (3rd century BC).

Fate of Achilles' armour

 
Oinochoe, ca 520 BC, Ajax and Odysseus fighting over the armour of Achilles

Achilles' armour was the object of a feud between Odysseus and Telamonian Ajax (Ajax the greater). They competed for it by giving speeches on why they were the bravest after Achilles to their Trojan prisoners, who, after considering both men's presentations, decided Odysseus was more deserving of the armour. Furious, Ajax cursed Odysseus, which earned him the ire of Athena, who temporarily made Ajax so mad with grief and anguish that he began killing sheep, thinking them his comrades. After a while, when Athena lifted his madness and Ajax realized that he had actually been killing sheep, he was so ashamed that he committed suicide. Odysseus eventually gave the armour to Neoptolemus, the son of Achilles. When Odysseus encounters the shade of Ajax much later in the House of Hades (Odyssey 11.543–566), Ajax is still so angry about the outcome of the competition that he refuses to speak to Odysseus.

The armour they fought for was made by Hephaestus thus making it much stronger and more beautiful than any armour a mortal could craft. He was made the gear because his first set was worn by Patroclus when he went to battle and taken by Hector when he killed Patroclus. The Shield of Achilles was also made by the fire god. His legendary spear was given to him by his mentor Chiron before he participated in the Trojan War. It was called the Pelian Spear which allegedly no other man could wield.

A relic claimed to be Achilles' bronze-headed spear was preserved for centuries in the temple of Athena on the acropolis of Phaselis, Lycia, a port on the Pamphylian Gulf. The city was visited in 333 BC by Alexander the Great, who envisioned himself as the new Achilles and carried the Iliad with him, but his court biographers do not mention the spear; however, it was shown in the time of Pausanias in the 2nd century CE.[44][45]

Achilles, Ajax and a game of petteia

Numerous paintings on pottery have suggested a tale not mentioned in the literary traditions. At some point in the war, Achilles and Ajax were playing a board game (petteia).[46][47] They were absorbed in the game and oblivious to the surrounding battle.[48] The Trojans attacked and reached the heroes, who were saved only by an intervention of Athena.[49]

Worship and heroic cult

 
Sacrifice of Polyxena and tumulus-shaped tomb of Achilles with a tripod in front, on the Polyxena sarcophagus, c. 500 BC.[50]
 
Roman statue of a man with the dead body of a boy, identified as Achilles and Troilus, 2nd century AD (Naples National Archaeological Museum)
 
Achilles on Skyros, where – according to the Achilleid – Odysseus discovers him dressed as a woman and hiding among the princesses of the royal court, late Roman mosaic from La Olmeda, Spain, 4th–5th centuries AD
 
Detail of Achilles

The tomb of Achilles,[51] extant throughout antiquity in Troad,[52] was venerated by Thessalians, but also by Persian expeditionary forces, as well as by Alexander the Great and the Roman emperor Caracalla.[53] Achilles' cult was also to be found at other places, e. g. on the island of Astypalaea in the Sporades,[54] in Sparta which had a sanctuary,[55] in Elis and in Achilles' homeland Thessaly, as well as in the Magna Graecia cities of Tarentum, Locri and Croton,[56] accounting for an almost Panhellenic cult to the hero.

The cult of Achilles is illustrated in the 500 BC Polyxena sarcophagus, which depicts the sacrifice of Polyxena near the tumulus of Achilles.[57] Strabo (13.1.32) also suggested that such a cult of Achilles existed in Troad:[50][58]

Near the Sigeium is a temple and monument of Achilles, and monuments also of Patroclus and Anthlochus. The Ilienses perform sacred ceremonies in honour of them all, and even of Ajax. But they do not worship Hercules, alleging as a reason that he ravaged their country.

— Strabo (13.1.32).[59]

The spread and intensity of the hero's veneration among the Greeks that had settled on the northern coast of the Pontus Euxinus, today's Black Sea, appears to have been remarkable. An archaic cult is attested for the Milesian colony of Olbia as well as for an island in the middle of the Black Sea, today identified with Snake Island (Ukrainian Зміїний, Zmiinyi, near Kiliya, Ukraine). Early dedicatory inscriptions from the Greek colonies on the Black Sea (graffiti and inscribed clay disks, these possibly being votive offerings, from Olbia, the area of Berezan Island and the Tauric Chersonese[60]) attest the existence of a heroic cult of Achilles[61] from the sixth century BC onwards. The cult was still thriving in the third century CE, when dedicatory stelae from Olbia refer to an Achilles Pontárchēs (Ποντάρχης, roughly "lord of the Sea," or "of the Pontus Euxinus"), who was invoked as a protector of the city of Olbia, venerated on par with Olympian gods such as the local Apollo Prostates, Hermes Agoraeus,[53] or Poseidon.[62]

Pliny the Elder (23–79 AD) in his Natural History mentions a "port of the Achæi" and an "island of Achilles", famous for the tomb of that "man" (portus Achaeorum, insula Achillis, tumulo eius viri clara), situated somewhat nearby Olbia and the Dnieper-Bug Estuary; furthermore, at 125 Roman miles from this island, he places a peninsula "which stretches forth in the shape of a sword" obliquely, called Dromos Achilleos (Ἀχιλλέως δρόμος, Achilléōs drómos "the Race-course of Achilles")[63] and considered the place of the hero's exercise or of games instituted by him.[53] This last feature of Pliny's account is considered to be the iconic spit, called today Tendra (or Kosa Tendra and Kosa Djarilgatch), situated between the mouth of the Dnieper and Karkinit Bay, but which is hardly 125 Roman miles (c. 185 km) away from the Dnieper-Bug estuary, as Pliny states. (To the "Race-course" he gives a length of 80 miles, c. 120 km, whereas the spit measures c. 70 km today.)

In the following chapter of his book, Pliny refers to the same island as Achillea and introduces two further names for it: Leuce or Macaron (from Greek [νῆσος] μακαρῶν "island of the blest"). The "present day" measures, he gives at this point, seem to account for an identification of Achillea or Leuce with today's Snake Island.[64] Pliny's contemporary Pomponius Mela (c. 43 AD) tells that Achilles was buried on an island named Achillea, situated between the Borysthenes and the Ister, adding to the geographical confusion.[65] Ruins of a square temple, measuring 30 meters to a side, possibly that dedicated to Achilles, were discovered by Captain Kritzikly (Russian: Критский, Николай Дмитриевич) in 1823 on Snake Island. A second exploration in 1840 showed that the construction of a lighthouse had destroyed all traces of this temple. A fifth century BC black-glazed lekythos inscription, found on the island in 1840, reads: "Glaukos, son of Poseidon, dedicated me to Achilles, lord of Leuke." In another inscription from the fifth or fourth century BC, a statue is dedicated to Achilles, lord of Leuke, by a citizen of Olbia, while in a further dedication, the city of Olbia confirms its continuous maintenance of the island's cult, again suggesting its quality as a place of a supra-regional hero veneration.[53]

The heroic cult dedicated to Achilles on Leuce seems to go back to an account from the lost epic Aethiopis according to which, after his untimely death, Thetis had snatched her son from the funeral pyre and removed him to a mythical Λεύκη Νῆσος (Leúkē Nêsos "White Island").[66] Already in the fifth century BC, Pindar had mentioned a cult of Achilles on a "bright island" (φαεννά νᾶσος, phaenná nâsos) of the Black Sea,[67] while in another of his works, Pindar would retell the story of the immortalized Achilles living on a geographically indefinite Island of the Blest together with other heroes such as his father Peleus and Cadmus.[68] Well known is the connection of these mythological Fortunate Isles (μακαρῶν νῆσοι, makárôn nêsoi) or the Homeric Elysium with the stream Oceanus which according to Greek mythology surrounds the inhabited world, which should have accounted for the identification of the northern strands of the Euxine with it.[53] Guy Hedreen has found further evidence for this connection of Achilles with the northern margin of the inhabited world in a poem by Alcaeus, speaking of "Achilles lord of Scythia"[69] and the opposition of North and South, as evoked by Achilles' fight against the Aethiopian prince Memnon, who in his turn would be removed to his homeland by his mother Eos after his death.

The Periplus of the Euxine Sea (c. 130 AD) gives the following details:

It is said that the goddess Thetis raised this island from the sea, for her son Achilles, who dwells there. Here is his temple and his statue, an archaic work. This island is not inhabited, and goats graze on it, not many, which the people who happen to arrive here with their ships, sacrifice to Achilles. In this temple are also deposited a great many holy gifts, craters, rings and precious stones, offered to Achilles in gratitude. One can still read inscriptions in Greek and Latin, in which Achilles is praised and celebrated. Some of these are worded in Patroclus' honour, because those who wish to be favored by Achilles, honour Patroclus at the same time. There are also in this island countless numbers of sea birds, which look after Achilles' temple. Every morning they fly out to sea, wet their wings with water, and return quickly to the temple and sprinkle it. And after they finish the sprinkling, they clean the hearth of the temple with their wings. Other people say still more, that some of the men who reach this island, come here intentionally. They bring animals in their ships, destined to be sacrificed. Some of these animals they slaughter, others they set free on the island, in Achilles' honour. But there are others, who are forced to come to this island by sea storms. As they have no sacrificial animals, but wish to get them from the god of the island himself, they consult Achilles' oracle. They ask permission to slaughter the victims chosen from among the animals that graze freely on the island, and to deposit in exchange the price which they consider fair. But in case the oracle denies them permission, because there is an oracle here, they add something to the price offered, and if the oracle refuses again, they add something more, until at last, the oracle agrees that the price is sufficient. And then the victim doesn't run away any more, but waits willingly to be caught. So, there is a great quantity of silver there, consecrated to the hero, as price for the sacrificial victims. To some of the people who come to this island, Achilles appears in dreams, to others he would appear even during their navigation, if they were not too far away, and would instruct them as to which part of the island they would better anchor their ships.[70]

The Greek geographer Dionysius Periegetes, who likely lived during the first century CE, wrote that the island was called Leuce "because the wild animals which live there are white. It is said that there, in Leuce island, reside the souls of Achilles and other heroes, and that they wander through the uninhabited valleys of this island; this is how Jove rewarded the men who had distinguished themselves through their virtues, because through virtue they had acquired everlasting honour".[71] Similarly, others relate the island's name to its white cliffs, snakes or birds dwelling there.[53][72] Pausanias has been told that the island is "covered with forests and full of animals, some wild, some tame. In this island there is also Achilles' temple and his statue".[73] Leuce had also a reputation as a place of healing. Pausanias reports that the Delphic Pythia sent a lord of Croton to be cured of a chest wound.[74] Ammianus Marcellinus attributes the healing to waters (aquae) on the island.[75]

Strabo mentioned that the cape of the Racecourse of Achilles was sacred to Achilles and although it was treeless, was called Alsos (ἄλσος).[76] Alsos in Greek means "grove".

A number of important commercial port cities of the Greek waters were dedicated to Achilles. Herodotus, Pliny the Elder and Strabo reported on the existence of a town Achílleion (Ἀχίλλειον), built by settlers from Mytilene in the sixth century BC, close to the hero's presumed burial mound in the Troad.[52] Later attestations point to an Achílleion in Messenia (according to Stephanus Byzantinus) and an Achílleios (Ἀχίλλειος) in Laconia.[77] Nicolae Densuşianu recognized a connection to Achilles in the names of Aquileia and of the northern arm of the Danube delta, called Chilia (presumably from an older Achileii), though his conclusion, that Leuce had sovereign rights over the Black Sea, evokes modern rather than archaic sea-law.[70]

The kings of Epirus claimed to be descended from Achilles through his son, Neoptolemus. Alexander the Great, son of the Epirote princess Olympias, could therefore also claim this descent, and in many ways strove to be like his great ancestor. He is said to have visited the tomb of Achilles at Achilleion while passing Troy.[78] In AD 216 the Roman Emperor Caracalla, while on his way to war against Parthia, emulated Alexander by holding games around Achilles' tumulus.[79]

Reception during antiquity

In Greek tragedy

The Greek tragedian Aeschylus wrote a trilogy of plays about Achilles, given the title Achilleis by modern scholars. The tragedies relate the deeds of Achilles during the Trojan War, including his defeat of Hector and eventual death when an arrow shot by Paris and guided by Apollo punctures his heel. Extant fragments of the Achilleis and other Aeschylean fragments have been assembled to produce a workable modern play. The first part of the Achilleis trilogy, The Myrmidons, focused on the relationship between Achilles and chorus, who represent the Achaean army and try to convince Achilles to give up his quarrel with Agamemnon; only a few lines survive today.[80] In Plato's Symposium, Phaedrus points out that Aeschylus portrayed Achilles as the lover and Patroclus as the beloved; Phaedrus argues that this is incorrect because Achilles, being the younger and more beautiful of the two, was the beloved, who loved his lover so much that he chose to die to avenge him.[81]

The tragedian Sophocles also wrote The Lovers of Achilles, a play with Achilles as the main character. Only a few fragments survive.[82]

Towards the end of the 5th century BC, a more negative view of Achilles emerges in Greek drama; Euripides refers to Achilles in a bitter or ironic tone in Hecuba, Electra, and Iphigenia in Aulis.[83]

In Greek philosophy

Zeno

The philosopher Zeno of Elea centred one of his paradoxes on an imaginary footrace between "swift-footed" Achilles and a tortoise, by which he attempted to show that Achilles could not catch up to a tortoise with a head start, and therefore that motion and change were impossible. As a student of the monist Parmenides and a member of the Eleatic school, Zeno believed time and motion to be illusions.

Plato

In Hippias Minor, a dialogue attributed to Plato, an arrogant man named Hippias argues with Socrates. The two get into a discussion about lying. They decide that a person who is intentionally false must be "better" than a person who is unintentionally false, on the basis that someone who lies intentionally must understand the subject about which they are lying.[84] Socrates uses various analogies, discussing athletics and the sciences to prove his point. The two also reference Homer extensively. Socrates and Hippias agree that Odysseus, who concocted a number of lies throughout the Odyssey and other stories in the Trojan War Cycle, was false intentionally. Achilles, like Odysseus, told numerous falsehoods. Hippias believes that Achilles was a generally honest man, while Socrates believes that Achilles lied for his own benefit. The two argue over whether it is better to lie on purpose or by accident. Socrates eventually abandons Homeric arguments and makes sports analogies to drive home the point: someone who does wrong on purpose is a better person than someone who does wrong unintentionally.

In Roman and medieval literature

The Romans, who traditionally traced their lineage to Troy, took a highly negative view of Achilles.[83] Virgil refers to Achilles as a savage and a merciless butcher of men,[85] while Horace portrays Achilles ruthlessly slaying women and children.[86] Other writers, such as Catullus, Propertius, and Ovid, represent a second strand of disparagement, with an emphasis on Achilles' erotic career. This strand continues in Latin accounts of the Trojan War by writers such as Dictys Cretensis and Dares Phrygius and in Benoît de Sainte-Maure's Roman de Troie and Guido delle Colonne's Historia destructionis Troiae, which remained the most widely read and retold versions of the Matter of Troy until the 17th century.

Achilles was described by the Byzantine chronicler Leo the Deacon, not as Hellene, but as Scythian, while according to the Byzantine author John Malalas, his army was made up of a tribe previously known as Myrmidons and later as Bulgars.[87][88]

In modern literature and arts

 
Briseis and Achilles, engraving by Wenceslaus Hollar (1607–1677)
 
The Wrath of Achilles (c. 1630–1635), painting by Peter Paul Rubens
 
The death of Hector, unfinished oil painting by Peter Paul Rubens
 
Achilles and Agamemnon by Gottlieb Schick (1801)
 
The Wrath of Achilles, by François-Léon Benouville (1847; Musée Fabre)

Literature

  • Achilles appears in Dante's Inferno (composed 1308–1320). He is seen in Hell's second circle, that of lust.
  • Achilles is portrayed as a former hero who has become lazy and devoted to the love of Patroclus, in William Shakespeare's Troilus and Cressida (1602). Despicably, he has his Myrmidons murder the unarmed Hector, and then gets them to announce that Achilles himself has slain Hector, as if it had been in a fair fight (Act 5.9.5-14).
  • The French dramatist Thomas Corneille wrote a tragedy La Mort d'Achille (1673).
  • Achilles is the subject of the poem Achilleis (1799), a fragment by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe.
  • In 1899, the Polish playwright, painter and poet Stanisław Wyspiański published a national drama, based on Polish history, named Achilles.
  • In 1921, Edward Shanks published The Island of Youth and Other Poems, concerned among others with Achilles.
  • The 1983 novel Kassandra by Christa Wolf also treats the death of Achilles.
  • H.D.'s 1961 long poem Helen in Egypt features Achilles prominently as a figure who's irrational hatred of Helen traumatizes her, the bulk of the poem's plot being about her recovery.
  • Akhilles is killed by a poisoned Kentaur arrow shot by Kassandra in Marion Zimmer Bradley's novel The Firebrand (1987).
  • Achilles is one of various 'narrators' in Colleen McCullough's novel The Song of Troy (1998).
  • The Death of Achilles (Смерть Ахиллеса, 1998) is an historical detective novel by Russian writer Boris Akunin that alludes to various figures and motifs from the Iliad.
  • The character Achilles in Ender's Shadow (1999), by Orson Scott Card, shares his namesake's cunning mind and ruthless attitude.
  • Achilles is one of the main characters in Dan Simmons's novels Ilium (2003) and Olympos (2005).
  • Achilles is a major supporting character in David Gemmell's Troy series of books (2005–2007).
  • Achilles is the main character in David Malouf's novel Ransom (2009).
  • The ghost of Achilles appears in Rick Riordan's The Last Olympian (2009). He warns Percy Jackson about the Curse of Achilles and its side effects.
  • Achilles is a main character in Terence Hawkins' 2009 novel The Rage of Achilles.
  • Achilles is a major character in Madeline Miller's debut novel, The Song of Achilles (2011), which won the 2012 Orange Prize for Fiction. The novel explores the relationship between Patroclus and Achilles from boyhood to the fateful events of the Iliad.
  • Achilles appears in the light novel series Fate/Apocrypha (2012–2014) as the Rider of Red.
  • Achilles is a main character in Pat Barker's 2018 novel The Silence of the Girls, much of which is narrated by his slave Briseis.

Visual arts

Music

Achilles has been frequently the subject of operas, ballets and related genres.

Film and television

In films Achilles has been portrayed in the following films and television series:

Architecture

Namesakes

  • The name of Achilles has been used for at least nine Royal Navy warships since 1744 – both as HMS Achilles and with the French spelling HMS Achille. A 60-gun ship of that name served at the Battle of Belleisle in 1761 while a 74-gun ship served at the Battle of Trafalgar. Other battle honours include Walcheren 1809. An armored cruiser of that name served in the Royal Navy during the First World War.
  • HMNZS Achilles was a Leander-class cruiser which served with the Royal New Zealand Navy in World War II. It became famous for its part in the Battle of the River Plate, alongside HMS Ajax and HMS Exeter. In addition to earning the battle honour 'River Plate', HMNZS Achilles also served at Guadalcanal 1942–1943 and Okinawa in 1945. After returning to the Royal Navy, the ship was sold to the Indian Navy in 1948, but when she was scrapped parts of the ship were saved and preserved in New Zealand.
  • A species of lizard, Anolis achilles, which has widened heel plates, is named for Achilles.[90]

Gallery

References

  1. ^ a b c d Dorothea Sigel; Anne Ley; Bruno Bleckmann. "Achilles". In Hubert Cancik; et al. (eds.). Achilles. Brill's New Pauly. Brill Reference Online. doi:10.1163/1574-9347_bnp_e102220. Retrieved 5 May 2017.
  2. ^ a b Robert S. P. Beekes, Etymological Dictionary of Greek, Brill, 2009, pp. 183ff.
  3. ^ gives 476 matches for Ἀχιλ-.The earliest ones: Corinth 7th c. BC, Delphi 530 BC, Attica and Elis 5th c. BC.
  4. ^ Scholia to the Iliad, 1.1.
  5. ^ Leonard Palmer (1963). The Interpretation of Mycenaean Greek Texts. Oxford: Clarendon Press. p. 79.
  6. ^ a b Gregory Nagy. . CHS. The Center for Hellenic Studies, Harvard University. Archived from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 19 March 2015.
  7. ^ Cf. the supportive position of Hildebrecht Hommel (1980). "Der Gott Achilleus". Sitzungsberichte der Heidelberger Akademie der Wissenschaften (1): 38–44. – A critical point of view is taken by J. T. Hooker (1988). "The cults of Achilleus". Rheinisches Museum für Philologie. 131 (3): 1–7.
  8. ^ Dares Phrygius, History of the Fall of Troy 13
  9. ^ Aeschylus, Prometheus Bound 755–768; Pindar, Nemean 5.34–37, Isthmian 8.26–47; Pseudo-Apollodorus, Bibliotheca 3.13.5; Poeticon astronomicon 2.15.
  10. ^ Pseudo-Apollodorus, Bibliotheca 3.13.5.
  11. ^ Statius, Achilleid 1.269; Hyginus, Fabulae 107.
  12. ^ Jonathan S. Burgess (2009). The Death and Afterlife of Achilles. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 9. ISBN 978-0-8018-9029-1. Retrieved 5 February 2010.
  13. ^ Apollonius of Rhodes, Argonautica 4.869–879.
  14. ^ Homer (Robert Fagles translation). The Iliad. p. 525. But the other (spear) grazed Achilles' strong right arm and dark blood gushed as the spear shot past his back
  15. ^ Hesiod, Catalogue of Women, fr. 204.87–89 MW; Iliad 11.830–832.
  16. ^ Iliad 9.410ff.
  17. ^ Photius, Bibliotheca, cod. 190: "Thetis burned in a secret place the children she had by Peleus; six were born; when she had Achilles, Peleus noticed and tore him from the flames with only a burnt foot and confided him to Chiron. The latter exhumed the body of the giant Damysos who was buried at Pallene—Damysos was the fastest of all the giants—removed the 'astragale' and incorporated it into Achilles' foot using 'ingredients'. This 'astragale' fell when Achilles was pursued by Apollo and it was thus that Achilles, fallen, was killed. It is said, on the other hand, that he was called Podarkes by the Poet, because, it is said, Thetis gave the newborn child the wings of Arce and Podarkes means that his feet had the wings of Arce."
  18. ^   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain: Murray, John (1833). A Classical Manual: Being a Mythological, Historical and Geographical Commentary on Pope's Homer, and Dryden's Aeneid of Virgil, with a Copious Index. Albemarle Street, London. p. 3.
  19. ^ Ptolemy Hephaestion, New History Book 6 (summary from Photius, Myriobiblon 190) (trans. Pearse) (Greek mythographer C1st to C2nd A.D.) : "It is said . . . that he [Akhilleus (Achilles)] was called Podarkes (Podarces, Swift-Footed) by the Poet [i.e. Homer], because, it is said, Thetis gave the newborn child the wings of Arke (Arce) and Podarkes means that his feet had the wings of Arke. And Arke was the daughter of Thaumas and her sister was Iris; both had wings, but, during the struggle of the gods against the Titanes (Titans), Arke flew out of the camp of the gods and joined the Titanes. After the victory Zeus removed her wings before throwing her into Tartaros and, when he came to the wedding of Peleus and Thetis, he brought these wings as a gift for Thetis.
  20. ^ Euripides, Skyrioi, surviving only in fragmentary form; Philostratus Junior, Imagines i; Scholiast on Homer's Iliad, 9.326; Ovid, Metamorphoses 13.162–180; Ovid, Tristia 2.409–412 (mentioning a Roman tragedy on this subject); Pseudo-Apollodorus, Bibliotheca 3.13.8; Statius, Achilleid 1.689–880, 2.167ff.
  21. ^ Graves, Robert (2017). The Greek Myths - The Complete and Definitive Edition. Penguin Books Limited. pp. Index s.v. Aissa. ISBN 9780241983386.
  22. ^ Graves, Robert (2017). The Greek Myths - The Complete and Definitive Edition. Penguin Books Limited. p. 642. ISBN 9780241983386.
  23. ^ Iliad 16.168–197.
  24. ^ a b Pseudo-Apollodorus. "Bibliotheca, Epitome 3.20". theoi.com.
  25. ^ . Stoa.org. Archived from the original on 9 October 2009. Retrieved 9 March 2010.
  26. ^ . Homepage.mac.com. Archived from the original on 30 November 2001. Retrieved 9 March 2010.
  27. ^ Pseudo-Apollodorus, Bibliotheca 3.151.
  28. ^ Iliad 24.257. Cf. Vergil, Aeneid 1.474–478.
  29. ^ Pseudo-Apollodorus, Bibliotheca Epitome 3.32.
  30. ^ Scholia to Lycophron 307; Servius, Scholia to the Aeneid 1.474.
  31. ^ James Davidson, "Zeus Be Nice Now" in London Review of Books, 19 July 2007. Retrieved 23 October 2007.
  32. ^ Plautus, Bacchides 953ff.
  33. ^ Iliad 9.334–343.
  34. ^ "The Iliad", Fagles translation. Penguin Books, 1991: 22.346.
  35. ^ Lattimore, Richmond (2011). The Illiad of Homer. Chicago: The University of Chicago. ISBN 978-0-226-46937-9.
  36. ^ Propertius, 3.11.15; Quintus Smyrnaeus 1.
  37. ^ Robin Fox (2011). The Tribal Imagination: Civilization and the Savage Mind. Harvard University Press. p. 223. ISBN 9780674060944. There is certainly no evidence in the text of the Iliad that Achilles and Patroclus were lovers.
  38. ^ Martin, Thomas R (2012). Alexander the Great: The Story of an Ancient Life. Cambridge University Press. p. 100. ISBN 978-0521148443. The ancient sources do not report, however, what modern scholars have asserted: that Alexander and his very close friend Hephaestion were lovers. Achilles and his equally close friend Patroclus provided the legendary model for this friendship, but Homer in the Iliad never suggested that they had sex with each other. (That came from later authors.)
  39. ^ Plato, Symposium, 180a; the beauty of Achilles was a topic already broached at Iliad 2.673–674.
  40. ^ Kenneth Dover, Greek Homosexuality (Harvard University Press, 1978, 1989), p. 1 et passim.
  41. ^ Abrantes 2016: c. 4.3.1
  42. ^ Odyssey 11.467–564.
  43. ^ Richmond Lattimore (2007). The Odyssey of Homer. New York: Harper Perennial. p. 347. ISBN 978-0-06-124418-6.
  44. ^ "Alexander came to rest at Phaselis, a coastal city which was later renowned for the possession of Achilles' original spear." Robin Lane Fox, Alexander the Great, 1973, p. 144.
  45. ^ Pausanias, iii.3.6; see Christian Jacob and Anne Mullen-Hohl, "The Greek Traveler's Areas of Knowledge: Myths and Other Discourses in Pausanias' Description of Greece", Yale French Studies 59: Rethinking History: Time, Myth, and Writing (1980:65–85, especially 81).
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  50. ^ a b Rose, Charles Brian (2014). The Archaeology of Greek and Roman Troy. Cambridge University Press. p. 79. ISBN 9780521762076.
  51. ^ Cf. Homer, Iliad 24.80–84.
  52. ^ a b Herodotus, Histories 5.94; Pliny, Naturalis Historia 5.125; Strabo, Geographica 13.1.32 (C596); Diogenes Laërtius 1.74.
  53. ^ a b c d e f Guy Hedreen (July 1991). "The Cult of Achilles in the Euxine". Hesperia. 60 (3): 313–330. doi:10.2307/148068. JSTOR 148068.
  54. ^ Cicero, De Natura Deorum 3.45.
  55. ^ Pausanias, Description of Greece 3.20.8.
  56. ^ Lycophron 856.
  57. ^ Burgess, Jonathan S. (2009). The Death and Afterlife of Achilles. JHU Press. p. 114. ISBN 9781421403618.
  58. ^ Burgess, Jonathan S. (2009). The Death and Afterlife of Achilles. JHU Press. p. 116. ISBN 9781421403618.
  59. ^ Str. 13.1.32. Translated by Falconer, W.
  60. ^ Hildebrecht Hommel (1980). "Der Gott Achilleus". Sitzungsberichte der Heidelberger Akademie der Wissenschaften (1): 38–44.
  61. ^ J. T. Hooker (1988). "The cults of Achilleus". Rheinisches Museum für Philologie. 131 (3): 1–7.
  62. ^ Quintus Smyrnaeus, 3.770–779.
  63. ^ Pliny, Naturalis Historia 4.12.83 (chapter 4.26).
  64. ^ Pliny, Naturalis Historia 4.13.93 (chapter 4.27): "Researches which have been made at the present day place this island at a distance of 140 miles from the Borysthenes, of 120 from Tyras, and of fifty from the island of Peuce. It is about ten miles in circumference." Though afterwards he speaks again of "the remaining islands in the Gulf of Carcinites" which are "Cephalonesos, Rhosphodusa [or Spodusa], and Macra".
  65. ^ Pomponius Mela, De situ orbis 2.7.
  66. ^ Proclus, Chrestomathia 2.
  67. ^ Pindar, Nemea 4.49ff.; Arrian, Periplus of the Euxine Sea 21.
  68. ^ Pindar, Olympia 2.78ff.
  69. ^ D. Page, Lyrica Graeca Selecta, Oxford 1968, p. 89, no. 166.
  70. ^ a b Nicolae Densuşianu: Dacia preistorică. Bucharest: Carol Göbl, 1913.
  71. ^ Dionysius Periegetes, Orbis descriptio 5.541, quoted in Densuşianu 1913.
  72. ^ Arrian, Periplus of the Euxine Sea 21; Scholion to Pindar, Nemea 4.79.
  73. ^ Pausanias, Description of Greece 3.19.11.
  74. ^ Pausanias, Description of Greece 3.19.13.
  75. ^ Ammianus Marcellinus, Res Gestae 22.8.
  76. ^ Strabo, Geography, 7.3.19
  77. ^ Pausanias, Description of Greece 3.25.4.
  78. ^ Arrian, Anabasis Alexandri 1.12.1, Cicero, Pro Archia Poeta 24.
  79. ^ Dio Cassius 78.16.7.
  80. ^ Pantelis Michelakis, Achilles in Greek Tragedy, 2002, p. 22
  81. ^ Plato, Symposium, translated Benjamin Jowett, Dover Thrift Editions, page 8
  82. ^ S. Radt. Tragicorum Graecorum fragmenta, vol. 4, (Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1977) frr. 149–157a.
  83. ^ a b Latacz 2010
  84. ^ Jowett, Benjamin; Plato (15 January 2013). "Lesser Hippias". Project Gutenberg.
  85. ^ Aeneid 2.28, 1.30, 3.87.
  86. ^ Odes 4.6.17–20.
  87. ^ Ekonomou, Andrew (2007). Byzantine Rome and the Greek Popes. UK: Lexington Books. p. 123. ISBN 9780739119778. Retrieved 14 September 2015.
  88. ^ Jeffreys, Elizabeth; Croke, Brian (1990). Studies in John Malalas. Australian Association for Byzantine Studies, Department of Modern Greek, University of Sydney. p. 206. ISBN 9780959362657. Retrieved 14 September 2015.
  89. ^ Entry at Musical World.
  90. ^ Beolens, Bo; Watkins, Michael; Grayson, Michael (2011). The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. xiii + 296 pp. ISBN 978-1-4214-0135-5. ("Achilles", p. 1).
  91. ^ Iliad 16.220–252.

Further reading

  • Ileana Chirassi Colombo (1977), "Heroes Achilleus – Theos Apollon." In Il Mito Greco, edd. Bruno Gentili and Giuseppe Paione. Rome: Edizione dell'Ateneo e Bizzarri.
  • Anthony Edwards (1985a), "Achilles in the Underworld: Iliad, Odyssey, and Æthiopis". Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies. 26: pp. 215–227.
  • Anthony Edwards (1985b), "Achilles in the Odyssey: Ideologies of Heroism in the Homeric Epic". Beiträge zur klassischen Philologie. 171.
  • Edwards, Anthony T. (1988). "ΚΛΕΟΣ ΑΦΘΙΤΟΝ and Oral Theory". The Classical Quarterly. 38: 25–30. doi:10.1017/S0009838800031220. S2CID 170947595.
  • Graves, Robert, The Greek Myths, Harmondsworth, London, England, Penguin Books, 1960. ISBN 978-0143106715
  • Graves, Robert, The Greek Myths: The Complete and Definitive Edition. Penguin Books Limited. 2017. ISBN 978-0-241-98338-6, 024198338X
  • Guy Hedreen (1991). "The Cult of Achilles in the Euxine". Hesperia. American School of Classical Studies at Athens. 60 (3): 313–330. doi:10.2307/148068. JSTOR 148068.
  • Karl Kerényi (1959). The Heroes of the Greeks. New York/London: Thames and Hudson.
  • Jakob Escher-Bürkli: Achilleus 1.(in German) In: Realencyclopädie der classischen Altertumswissenschaft (RE). Vol. I,1, Stuttgart 1893, col. 221–245.
  • Joachim Latacz (2010). "Achilles". In Anthony Grafton; Glenn Most; Salvatore Settis (eds.). The Classical Tradition. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. pp. 3–5. ISBN 978-0-674-03572-0.
  • Hélène Monsacré (1984), Les larmes d'Achille. Le héros, la femme et la souffrance dans la poésie d'Homère, Paris: Albin Michel.
  • Gregory Nagy (1984), The Name of Achilles: Questions of Etymology and 'Folk Etymology, Illinois Classical Studies. 19.
  • Gregory Nagy (1999), The Best of The Acheans: Concepts of the Hero in Archaic Greek Poetry. Johns Hopkins University Press (revised edition, online 24 December 2018 at the Wayback Machine).
  • Dorothea Sigel; Anne Ley; Bruno Bleckmann. "Achilles". In Hubert Cancik; et al. (eds.). Achilles. Brill's New Pauly. Brill Reference Online. doi:10.1163/1574-9347_bnp_e102220.
  • Dale S. Sinos (1991), The Entry of Achilles into Greek Epic, PhD thesis, Johns Hopkins University. Ann Arbor, Michigan: University Microfilms International.
  • Jonathan S. Burgess (2009), The Death and Afterlife of Achilles. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.
  • Abrantes, M.C. (2016), Themes of the Trojan Cycle: Contribution to the study of the greek mythological tradition (Coimbra). ISBN 978-1530337118

External links

  • Trojan War Resources
  • Gallery of the Ancient Art: Achilles
  • Achilles  – via Wikisource. Poem by Florence Earle Coates

achilles, achilleus, redirects, here, roman, usurper, with, this, name, aurelius, achilleus, other, uses, disambiguation, greek, mythology, achilleus, greek, Ἀχιλλεύς, hero, trojan, greatest, greek, warriors, central, character, homer, iliad, nereid, thetis, p. Achilleus redirects here For the Roman usurper with this name see Aurelius Achilleus For other uses see Achilles disambiguation In Greek mythology Achilles e ˈ k ɪ l iː z e KIL eez or Achilleus Greek Ἀxilleys was a hero of the Trojan War the greatest of all the Greek warriors and the central character of Homer s Iliad He was the son of the Nereid Thetis and Peleus king of Phthia Ancient Greek polychromatic pottery painting dating to c 300 BC of Achilles during the Trojan War Achilles most notable feat during the Trojan War was the slaying of the Trojan prince Hector outside the gates of Troy Although the death of Achilles is not presented in the Iliad other sources concur that he was killed near the end of the Trojan War by Paris who shot him with an arrow Later legends beginning with Statius unfinished epic Achilleid written in the 1st century AD state that Achilles was invulnerable in all of his body except for one heel because when his mother Thetis dipped him in the river Styx as an infant she held him by one of his heels Alluding to these legends the term Achilles heel has come to mean a point of weakness especially in someone or something with an otherwise strong constitution The Achilles tendon is also named after him due to these legends Contents 1 Etymology 2 Description 3 Birth and early years 3 1 Other names 3 2 Hidden on Skyros 4 In the Trojan War 4 1 Telephus 4 2 Troilus 4 3 In the Iliad 4 4 Later epic accounts fighting Penthesilea and Memnon 4 5 Achilles and Patroclus 4 6 Death 4 7 Fate of Achilles armour 4 8 Achilles Ajax and a game of petteia 5 Worship and heroic cult 6 Reception during antiquity 6 1 In Greek tragedy 6 2 In Greek philosophy 6 2 1 Zeno 6 2 2 Plato 6 3 In Roman and medieval literature 7 In modern literature and arts 7 1 Literature 7 2 Visual arts 7 3 Music 7 4 Film and television 7 5 Architecture 8 Namesakes 9 Gallery 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksEtymology EditLinear B tablets attest to the personal name Achilleus in the forms a ki re u and a ki re we 1 the latter being the dative of the former 2 The name grew more popular becoming common soon after the seventh century BC 3 and was also turned into the female form Ἀxilleia Achilleia attested in Attica in the fourth century BC IG II 1617 and in the form Achillia on a stele in Halicarnassus as the name of a female gladiator fighting an Amazon Achilles name can be analyzed as a combination of ἄxos achos distress pain sorrow grief 4 and laos laos people soldiers nation resulting in a proto form Akhi lau os he who has the people distressed or he whose people have distress 5 6 The grief or distress of the people is a theme raised numerous times in the Iliad and frequently by Achilles himself Achilles role as the hero of grief or distress forms an ironic juxtaposition with the conventional view of him as the hero of kleos kleos glory usually in war Furthermore laos has been construed by Gregory Nagy following Leonard Palmer to mean a corps of soldiers a muster 6 With this derivation the name obtains a double meaning in the poem when the hero is functioning rightly his men bring distress to the enemy but when wrongly his men get the grief of war The poem is in part about the misdirection of anger on the part of leadership The Education of Achilles by Eugene Delacroix pastel on paper c 1862 Getty Center Los Angeles Some researchers deem the name a loan word possibly from a Pre Greek language 1 Achilles descent from the Nereid Thetis and a similarity of his name with those of river deities such as Acheron and Achelous have led to speculations about his being an old water divinity see Worship and heroic cult below 7 Robert S P Beekes has suggested a Pre Greek origin of the name based among other things on the coexistence of ll and l in epic language which may account for a palatalized phoneme ly in the original language 2 Description EditIn the account of Dares the Phrygian Achilles was described having a large chest a fine mouth and powerfully formed arms and legs His head was covered with long wavy chestnut colored hair Though mild in manner he was very fierce in battle His face showed the joy of a man richly endowed 8 Birth and early years Edit Thetis Dipping the Infant Achilles into the River Styx by Peter Paul Rubens c 1625 Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen Rotterdam Achilles was the son of Thetis a Nereid and daughter of the Old Man of the Sea and Peleus the king of the Myrmidons Zeus and Poseidon had been rivals for Thetis s hand in marriage until Prometheus the fore thinker warned Zeus of a prophecy originally uttered by Themis goddess of divine law that Thetis would bear a son greater than his father For this reason the two gods withdrew their pursuit and had her wed Peleus 9 There is a tale which offers an alternative version of these events In the Argonautica 4 760 Zeus sister and wife Hera alludes to Thetis chaste resistance to the advances of Zeus pointing out that Thetis was so loyal to Hera s marriage bond that she coolly rejected the father of gods Thetis although a daughter of the sea god Nereus was also brought up by Hera further explaining her resistance to the advances of Zeus Zeus was furious and decreed that she would never marry an immortal 10 Chiron teaching Achilles how to play the lyre Roman fresco from Herculaneum 1st century AD According to the Achilleid written by Statius in the 1st century AD and to non surviving previous sources when Achilles was born Thetis tried to make him immortal by dipping him in the river Styx however he was left vulnerable at the part of the body by which she held him his left heel 11 12 see Achilles heel Achilles tendon It is not clear if this version of events was known earlier In another version of this story Thetis anointed the boy in ambrosia and put him on top of a fire in order to burn away the mortal parts of his body She was interrupted by Peleus and abandoned both father and son in a rage 13 None of the sources before Statius make any reference to this general invulnerability To the contrary in the Iliad Homer mentions Achilles being wounded in Book 21 the Paeonian hero Asteropaios son of Pelagon challenged Achilles by the river Scamander He was ambidextrous and cast a spear from each hand one grazed Achilles elbow drawing a spurt of blood 14 The Education of Achilles c 1772 by James Barry Yale Center for British Art In the few fragmentary poems of the Epic Cycle which describe the hero s death i e the Cypria the Little Iliad by Lesches of Pyrrha the Aethiopis and Iliupersis by Arctinus of Miletus there is no trace of any reference to his general invulnerability or his famous weakness at the heel In the later vase paintings presenting the death of Achilles the arrow or in many cases arrows hit his torso Peleus entrusted Achilles to Chiron the Centaur who lived on Mount Pelion to be reared 15 Thetis foretold that her son s fate was either to gain glory and die young or to live a long but uneventful life in obscurity Achilles chose the former and decided to take part in the Trojan War 16 According to Homer Achilles grew up in Phthia with his companion Patroclus 1 According to Photius the sixth book of the New History by Ptolemy Hephaestion reported that Thetis burned in a secret place the children she had by Peleus When she had Achilles Peleus noticed tore him from the flames with only a burnt foot and confided him to the centaur Chiron Later Chiron exhumed the body of the Damysus who was the fastest of all the giants removed the ankle and incorporated it into Achilles burnt foot 17 Other names Edit Among the appellations under which Achilles is generally known are the following 18 Pyrisous saved from the fire his first name which seems to favour the tradition in which his mortal parts were burned by his mother Thetis Aeacides from his grandfather Aeacus Aemonius from Aemonia a country which afterwards acquired the name of Thessaly Aspetos inimitable or vast his name at Epirus Larissaeus from Larissa also called Cremaste a town of Achaia Phthiotis in Thessaly Ligyron his original name Nereius from his mother Thetis one of the Nereids Pelides from his father Peleus Phthius from his birthplace Phthia Podarkes swift footed literally defending with the foot from the verb ἀrkew to defend ward off Ptolemy Hephaestion alternatively says that it was due to the wings of Arke being attached to his feet 19 Hidden on Skyros Edit Main article Achilles on Skyros A Roman mosaic from the Poseidon Villa in Zeugma Commagene now in the Zeugma Mosaic Museum depicting Achilles disguised as a woman and Odysseus tricking him into revealing himself Some post Homeric sources 20 claim that in order to keep Achilles safe from the war Thetis or in some versions Peleus hid the young man dressed as a princess or at least a girl at the court of Lycomedes king of Skyros There Achilles properly disguised lived among Lycomedes daughters perhaps under the name Pyrrha the red haired girl Cercysera or Aissa swift 21 22 With Lycomedes daughter Deidamia whom in the account of Statius he raped Achilles there fathered two sons Neoptolemus also called Pyrrhus after his father s possible alias and Oneiros According to this story Odysseus learned from the prophet Calchas that the Achaeans would be unable to capture Troy without Achilles aid Odysseus went to Skyros in the guise of a peddler selling women s clothes and jewellery and placed a shield and spear among his goods When Achilles instantly took up the spear Odysseus saw through his disguise and convinced him to join the Greek campaign In another version of the story Odysseus arranged for a trumpet alarm to be sounded while he was with Lycomedes women While the women fled in panic Achilles prepared to defend the court thus giving his identity away In the Trojan War Edit Achilles and Agamemnon from a mosaic from Pompeii 1st century AD According to the Iliad Achilles arrived at Troy with 50 ships each carrying 50 Myrmidons He appointed five leaders each leader commanding 500 Myrmidons Menesthius Eudorus Peisander Phoenix and Alcimedon 23 Telephus Edit When the Greeks left for the Trojan War they accidentally stopped in Mysia ruled by King Telephus In the resulting battle Achilles gave Telephus a wound that would not heal Telephus consulted an oracle who stated that he that wounded shall heal Guided by the oracle he arrived at Argos where Achilles healed him in order that he might become their guide for the voyage to Troy 24 According to other reports in Euripides lost play about Telephus he went to Aulis pretending to be a beggar and asked Achilles to heal his wound Achilles refused claiming to have no medical knowledge Alternatively Telephus held Orestes for ransom the ransom being Achilles aid in healing the wound Odysseus reasoned that the spear had inflicted the wound therefore the spear must be able to heal it Pieces of the spear were scraped off onto the wound and Telephus was healed 24 Troilus Edit Achilles slaying Troilus red figure kylix signed by Euphronios According to the Cypria the part of the Epic Cycle that tells the events of the Trojan War before Achilles wrath when the Achaeans desired to return home they were restrained by Achilles who afterwards attacked the cattle of Aeneas sacked neighbouring cities like Pedasus and Lyrnessus where the Greeks capture the queen Briseis and killed Tenes a son of Apollo as well as Priam s son Troilus in the sanctuary of Apollo Thymbraios however the romance between Troilus and Chryseis described in Geoffrey Chaucer s Troilus and Criseyde and in William Shakespeare s Troilus and Cressida is a medieval invention 25 1 In Dares Phrygius Account of the Destruction of Troy 26 the Latin summary through which the story of Achilles was transmitted to medieval Europe as well as in older accounts Troilus was a young Trojan prince the youngest of King Priam s and Hecuba s five legitimate sons or according other sources another son of Apollo 27 Despite his youth he was one of the main Trojan war leaders a horse fighter or chariot fighter according to Homer 28 Prophecies linked Troilus fate to that of Troy and so he was ambushed in an attempt to capture him Yet Achilles struck by the beauty of both Troilus and his sister Polyxena and overcome with lust directed his sexual attentions on the youth who refusing to yield instead found himself decapitated upon an altar omphalos of Apollo Thymbraios 29 Later versions of the story suggested Troilus was accidentally killed by Achilles in an over ardent lovers embrace 30 In this version of the myth Achilles death therefore came in retribution for this sacrilege 31 Ancient writers treated Troilus as the epitome of a dead child mourned by his parents Had Troilus lived to adulthood the First Vatican Mythographer claimed Troy would have been invincible however the motif is older and found already in Plautus Bacchides 32 In the Iliad Edit Main article Iliad Achilles cedes Briseis to Agamemnon from the House of the Tragic Poet in Pompeii fresco 1st century AD Naples National Archaeological Museum Homer s Iliad is the most famous narrative of Achilles deeds in the Trojan War Achilles wrath mῆnis Ἀxillews menis Achilleōs is the central theme of the poem The first two lines of the Iliad read Mῆnin ἄeide 8eὰ Phlhiadew Ἀxilῆosoὐlomenhn ἣ myri Ἀxaioῖs ἄlge ἔ8hke Sing Goddess of the rage of Peleus son Achilles the accursed rage that brought great suffering to the Achaeans The Homeric epic only covers a few weeks of the decade long war and does not narrate Achilles death It begins with Achilles withdrawal from battle after being dishonoured by Agamemnon the commander of the Achaean forces Agamemnon has taken a woman named Chryseis as his slave Her father Chryses a priest of Apollo begs Agamemnon to return her to him Agamemnon refuses and Apollo sends a plague amongst the Greeks The prophet Calchas correctly determines the source of the troubles but will not speak unless Achilles vows to protect him Achilles does so and Calchas declares that Chryseis must be returned to her father Agamemnon consents but then commands that Achilles battle prize Briseis the daughter of Briseus be brought to him to replace Chryseis Angry at the dishonour of having his plunder and glory taken away and as he says later because he loves Briseis 33 with the urging of his mother Thetis Achilles refuses to fight or lead his troops alongside the other Greek forces At the same time burning with rage over Agamemnon s theft Achilles prays to Thetis to convince Zeus to help the Trojans gain ground in the war so that he may regain his honour As the battle turns against the Greeks thanks to the influence of Zeus Nestor declares that the Trojans are winning because Agamemnon has angered Achilles and urges the king to appease the warrior Agamemnon agrees and sends Odysseus and two other chieftains Ajax and Phoenix They promise that if Achilles returns to battle Agamemnon will return the captive Briseis and other gifts Achilles rejects all Agamemnon offers him and simply urges the Greeks to sail home as he was planning to do The Rage of Achilles fresco by Giovanni Battista Tiepolo 1757 Villa Valmarana ai Nani Vicenza The Trojans led by Hector subsequently push the Greek army back toward the beaches and assault the Greek ships With the Greek forces on the verge of absolute destruction Patroclus leads the Myrmidons into battle wearing Achilles armour though Achilles remains at his camp Patroclus succeeds in pushing the Trojans back from the beaches but is killed by Hector before he can lead a proper assault on the city of Troy After receiving the news of the death of Patroclus from Antilochus the son of Nestor Achilles grieves over his beloved companion s death His mother Thetis comes to comfort the distraught Achilles She persuades Hephaestus to make new armour for him in place of the armour that Patroclus had been wearing which was taken by Hector The new armour includes the Shield of Achilles described in great detail in the poem Enraged over the death of Patroclus Achilles ends his refusal to fight and takes the field killing many men in his rage but always seeking out Hector Achilles even engages in battle with the river god Scamander who has become angry that Achilles is choking his waters with all the men he has killed The god tries to drown Achilles but is stopped by Hera and Hephaestus Zeus himself takes note of Achilles rage and sends the gods to restrain him so that he will not go on to sack Troy itself before the time allotted for its destruction seeming to show that the unhindered rage of Achilles can defy fate itself Finally Achilles finds his prey Achilles chases Hector around the wall of Troy three times before Athena in the form of Hector s favorite and dearest brother Deiphobus persuades Hector to stop running and fight Achilles face to face After Hector realizes the trick he knows the battle is inevitable Wanting to go down fighting he charges at Achilles with his only weapon his sword but misses Accepting his fate Hector begs Achilles not to spare his life but to treat his body with respect after killing him Achilles tells Hector it is hopeless to expect that of him declaring that my rage my fury would drive me now to hack your flesh away and eat you raw such agonies you have caused me 34 Achilles then kills Hector and drags his corpse by its heels behind his chariot After having a dream where Patroclus begs Achilles to hold his funeral Achilles hosts a series of funeral games in honour of his companion 35 At the onset of his duel with Hector Achilles is referred to as the brightest star in the sky which comes on in the autumn Orion s dog Sirius a sign of evil During the cremation of Patroclus he is compared to Hesperus the evening western star Venus while the burning of the funeral pyre lasts until Phosphorus the morning eastern star also Venus has set descended With the assistance of the god Hermes Argeiphontes Hector s father Priam goes to Achilles tent to plead with Achilles for the return of Hector s body so that he can be buried Achilles relents and promises a truce for the duration of the funeral lasting 9 days with a burial on the 10th in the tradition of Niobe s offspring The poem ends with a description of Hector s funeral with the doom of Troy and Achilles himself still to come Later epic accounts fighting Penthesilea and Memnon Edit Achilles and Memnon fighting between Thetis and Eos Attic black figure amphora c 510 BC from Vulci The Aethiopis 7th century BC and a work named Posthomerica composed by Quintus of Smyrna in the fourth century CE relate further events from the Trojan War When Penthesilea queen of the Amazons and daughter of Ares arrives in Troy Priam hopes that she will defeat Achilles After his temporary truce with Priam Achilles fights and kills the warrior queen only to grieve over her death later 36 At first he was so distracted by her beauty he did not fight as intensely as usual Once he realized that his distraction was endangering his life he refocused and killed her Following the death of Patroclus Nestor s son Antilochus becomes Achilles closest companion When Memnon son of the Dawn Goddess Eos and king of Ethiopia slays Antilochus Achilles once more obtains revenge on the battlefield killing Memnon Consequently Eos will not let the sun rise until Zeus persuades her The fight between Achilles and Memnon over Antilochus echoes that of Achilles and Hector over Patroclus except that Memnon unlike Hector was also the son of a goddess Many Homeric scholars argued that episode inspired many details in the Iliad s description of the death of Patroclus and Achilles reaction to it The episode then formed the basis of the cyclic epic Aethiopis which was composed after the Iliad possibly in the 7th century BC The Aethiopis is now lost except for scattered fragments quoted by later authors Achilles tending Patroclus wounded by an arrow Attic red figure kylix c 500 BC Altes Museum Berlin Achilles and Patroclus Edit Main article Achilles and Patroclus The exact nature of Achilles relationship with Patroclus has been a subject of dispute in both the classical period and modern times In the Iliad it appears to be the model of a deep and loyal friendship Homer does not suggest that Achilles and his close friend Patroclus had sexual relations 37 38 Although there is no direct evidence in the text of the Iliad that Achilles and Patroclus were lovers this theory was expressed by some later authors Commentators from classical antiquity to the present have often interpreted the relationship through the lens of their own cultures In 5th century BC Athens the intense bond was often viewed in light of the Greek custom of paiderasteia which is the relationship between an older male and a younger one usually a teenager In Patroclus and Achilles case Achilles would have been the younger as Patroclus is usually seen as his elder In Plato s Symposium the participants in a dialogue about love assume that Achilles and Patroclus were a couple Phaedrus argues that Achilles was the younger and more beautiful one so he was the beloved and Patroclus was the lover 39 However ancient Greek had no words to distinguish heterosexual and homosexual 40 and it was assumed that a man could both desire handsome young men and have sex with women Many pairs of men throughout history have been compared to Achilles and Patroclus to imply a homosexual relationship Death Edit Dying Achilles Achilleas thniskon in the gardens of the Achilleion The death of Achilles even if considered solely as it occurred in the oldest sources is a complex one with many different versions 41 Starting with the oldest account In the Iliad Book XXII Hector predicts with his last dying breath that Paris and Apollo will slay him at the Scaean Gates leading to Troy with an arrow to the heel according to Statius In Book XXIII the sad spirit of dead Patroclus visits Achilles just as he drifts off into slumber requesting that his bones be placed with those of Achilles in his golden vase a gift of his mother Ajax carries off the body of Achilles Attic black figure lekythos from Sicily c 510 BC Staatliche Antikensammlungen Munich In the Odyssey Book XI Odysseus sails to the underworld and converses with the shades One of these is Achilles who when greeted as blessed in life blessed in death responds that he would rather be a slave to the worst of masters than be king of all the dead But Achilles then asks Odysseus of his son s exploits in the Trojan war and when Odysseus tells of Neoptolemus heroic actions Achilles is filled with satisfaction 42 In the Odyssey Book XXIV we read dead King Agamemnon s ghostly account of his death Achilles funeral pyre bleached bones had been mixed with those of Patroclus and put into his mother s golden vase Also the bones of Antilocus who had become closer to Achilles than any other following Patroclus death were separately enclosed And the customary funeral games of a hero were performed and a massive tomb or mound was built on the Hellespont for approaching seagoers to celebrate 43 Achilles was represented in the Aethiopis as living after his death in the island of Leuke at the mouth of the river Danube Another version of Achilles death is that he fell deeply in love with one of the Trojan princesses Polyxena Achilles asks Priam for Polyxena s hand in marriage Priam is willing because it would mean the end of the war and an alliance with the world s greatest warrior But while Priam is overseeing the private marriage of Polyxena and Achilles Paris who would have to give up Helen if Achilles married his sister hides in the bushes and shoots Achilles with a divine arrow killing him According to some accounts he had married Medea in life so that after both their deaths they were united in the Elysian Fields of Hades as Hera promised Thetis in Apollonius Argonautica 3rd century BC Fate of Achilles armour Edit Oinochoe ca 520 BC Ajax and Odysseus fighting over the armour of Achilles Achilles armour was the object of a feud between Odysseus and Telamonian Ajax Ajax the greater They competed for it by giving speeches on why they were the bravest after Achilles to their Trojan prisoners who after considering both men s presentations decided Odysseus was more deserving of the armour Furious Ajax cursed Odysseus which earned him the ire of Athena who temporarily made Ajax so mad with grief and anguish that he began killing sheep thinking them his comrades After a while when Athena lifted his madness and Ajax realized that he had actually been killing sheep he was so ashamed that he committed suicide Odysseus eventually gave the armour to Neoptolemus the son of Achilles When Odysseus encounters the shade of Ajax much later in the House of Hades Odyssey 11 543 566 Ajax is still so angry about the outcome of the competition that he refuses to speak to Odysseus The armour they fought for was made by Hephaestus thus making it much stronger and more beautiful than any armour a mortal could craft He was made the gear because his first set was worn by Patroclus when he went to battle and taken by Hector when he killed Patroclus The Shield of Achilles was also made by the fire god His legendary spear was given to him by his mentor Chiron before he participated in the Trojan War It was called the Pelian Spear which allegedly no other man could wield A relic claimed to be Achilles bronze headed spear was preserved for centuries in the temple of Athena on the acropolis of Phaselis Lycia a port on the Pamphylian Gulf The city was visited in 333 BC by Alexander the Great who envisioned himself as the new Achilles and carried the Iliad with him but his court biographers do not mention the spear however it was shown in the time of Pausanias in the 2nd century CE 44 45 Achilles Ajax and a game of petteia Edit Numerous paintings on pottery have suggested a tale not mentioned in the literary traditions At some point in the war Achilles and Ajax were playing a board game petteia 46 47 They were absorbed in the game and oblivious to the surrounding battle 48 The Trojans attacked and reached the heroes who were saved only by an intervention of Athena 49 Worship and heroic cult Edit Sacrifice of Polyxena and tumulus shaped tomb of Achilles with a tripod in front on the Polyxena sarcophagus c 500 BC 50 Roman statue of a man with the dead body of a boy identified as Achilles and Troilus 2nd century AD Naples National Archaeological Museum See also Heroon Achilles on Skyros where according to the Achilleid Odysseus discovers him dressed as a woman and hiding among the princesses of the royal court late Roman mosaic from La Olmeda Spain 4th 5th centuries AD Detail of Achilles The tomb of Achilles 51 extant throughout antiquity in Troad 52 was venerated by Thessalians but also by Persian expeditionary forces as well as by Alexander the Great and the Roman emperor Caracalla 53 Achilles cult was also to be found at other places e g on the island of Astypalaea in the Sporades 54 in Sparta which had a sanctuary 55 in Elis and in Achilles homeland Thessaly as well as in the Magna Graecia cities of Tarentum Locri and Croton 56 accounting for an almost Panhellenic cult to the hero The cult of Achilles is illustrated in the 500 BC Polyxena sarcophagus which depicts the sacrifice of Polyxena near the tumulus of Achilles 57 Strabo 13 1 32 also suggested that such a cult of Achilles existed in Troad 50 58 Near the Sigeium is a temple and monument of Achilles and monuments also of Patroclus and Anthlochus The Ilienses perform sacred ceremonies in honour of them all and even of Ajax But they do not worship Hercules alleging as a reason that he ravaged their country Strabo 13 1 32 59 The spread and intensity of the hero s veneration among the Greeks that had settled on the northern coast of the Pontus Euxinus today s Black Sea appears to have been remarkable An archaic cult is attested for the Milesian colony of Olbia as well as for an island in the middle of the Black Sea today identified with Snake Island Ukrainian Zmiyinij Zmiinyi near Kiliya Ukraine Early dedicatory inscriptions from the Greek colonies on the Black Sea graffiti and inscribed clay disks these possibly being votive offerings from Olbia the area of Berezan Island and the Tauric Chersonese 60 attest the existence of a heroic cult of Achilles 61 from the sixth century BC onwards The cult was still thriving in the third century CE when dedicatory stelae from Olbia refer to an Achilles Pontarches Pontarxhs roughly lord of the Sea or of the Pontus Euxinus who was invoked as a protector of the city of Olbia venerated on par with Olympian gods such as the local Apollo Prostates Hermes Agoraeus 53 or Poseidon 62 Pliny the Elder 23 79 AD in his Natural History mentions a port of the Achaei and an island of Achilles famous for the tomb of that man portus Achaeorum insula Achillis tumulo eius viri clara situated somewhat nearby Olbia and the Dnieper Bug Estuary furthermore at 125 Roman miles from this island he places a peninsula which stretches forth in the shape of a sword obliquely called Dromos Achilleos Ἀxillews dromos Achilleōs dromos the Race course of Achilles 63 and considered the place of the hero s exercise or of games instituted by him 53 This last feature of Pliny s account is considered to be the iconic spit called today Tendra or Kosa Tendra and Kosa Djarilgatch situated between the mouth of the Dnieper and Karkinit Bay but which is hardly 125 Roman miles c 185 km away from the Dnieper Bug estuary as Pliny states To the Race course he gives a length of 80 miles c 120 km whereas the spit measures c 70 km today In the following chapter of his book Pliny refers to the same island as Achillea and introduces two further names for it Leuce or Macaron from Greek nῆsos makarῶn island of the blest The present day measures he gives at this point seem to account for an identification of Achillea or Leuce with today s Snake Island 64 Pliny s contemporary Pomponius Mela c 43 AD tells that Achilles was buried on an island named Achillea situated between the Borysthenes and the Ister adding to the geographical confusion 65 Ruins of a square temple measuring 30 meters to a side possibly that dedicated to Achilles were discovered by Captain Kritzikly Russian Kritskij Nikolaj Dmitrievich in 1823 on Snake Island A second exploration in 1840 showed that the construction of a lighthouse had destroyed all traces of this temple A fifth century BC black glazed lekythos inscription found on the island in 1840 reads Glaukos son of Poseidon dedicated me to Achilles lord of Leuke In another inscription from the fifth or fourth century BC a statue is dedicated to Achilles lord of Leuke by a citizen of Olbia while in a further dedication the city of Olbia confirms its continuous maintenance of the island s cult again suggesting its quality as a place of a supra regional hero veneration 53 The heroic cult dedicated to Achilles on Leuce seems to go back to an account from the lost epic Aethiopis according to which after his untimely death Thetis had snatched her son from the funeral pyre and removed him to a mythical Leykh Nῆsos Leuke Nesos White Island 66 Already in the fifth century BC Pindar had mentioned a cult of Achilles on a bright island faenna nᾶsos phaenna nasos of the Black Sea 67 while in another of his works Pindar would retell the story of the immortalized Achilles living on a geographically indefinite Island of the Blest together with other heroes such as his father Peleus and Cadmus 68 Well known is the connection of these mythological Fortunate Isles makarῶn nῆsoi makaron nesoi or the Homeric Elysium with the stream Oceanus which according to Greek mythology surrounds the inhabited world which should have accounted for the identification of the northern strands of the Euxine with it 53 Guy Hedreen has found further evidence for this connection of Achilles with the northern margin of the inhabited world in a poem by Alcaeus speaking of Achilles lord of Scythia 69 and the opposition of North and South as evoked by Achilles fight against the Aethiopian prince Memnon who in his turn would be removed to his homeland by his mother Eos after his death The Periplus of the Euxine Sea c 130 AD gives the following details It is said that the goddess Thetis raised this island from the sea for her son Achilles who dwells there Here is his temple and his statue an archaic work This island is not inhabited and goats graze on it not many which the people who happen to arrive here with their ships sacrifice to Achilles In this temple are also deposited a great many holy gifts craters rings and precious stones offered to Achilles in gratitude One can still read inscriptions in Greek and Latin in which Achilles is praised and celebrated Some of these are worded in Patroclus honour because those who wish to be favored by Achilles honour Patroclus at the same time There are also in this island countless numbers of sea birds which look after Achilles temple Every morning they fly out to sea wet their wings with water and return quickly to the temple and sprinkle it And after they finish the sprinkling they clean the hearth of the temple with their wings Other people say still more that some of the men who reach this island come here intentionally They bring animals in their ships destined to be sacrificed Some of these animals they slaughter others they set free on the island in Achilles honour But there are others who are forced to come to this island by sea storms As they have no sacrificial animals but wish to get them from the god of the island himself they consult Achilles oracle They ask permission to slaughter the victims chosen from among the animals that graze freely on the island and to deposit in exchange the price which they consider fair But in case the oracle denies them permission because there is an oracle here they add something to the price offered and if the oracle refuses again they add something more until at last the oracle agrees that the price is sufficient And then the victim doesn t run away any more but waits willingly to be caught So there is a great quantity of silver there consecrated to the hero as price for the sacrificial victims To some of the people who come to this island Achilles appears in dreams to others he would appear even during their navigation if they were not too far away and would instruct them as to which part of the island they would better anchor their ships 70 The Greek geographer Dionysius Periegetes who likely lived during the first century CE wrote that the island was called Leuce because the wild animals which live there are white It is said that there in Leuce island reside the souls of Achilles and other heroes and that they wander through the uninhabited valleys of this island this is how Jove rewarded the men who had distinguished themselves through their virtues because through virtue they had acquired everlasting honour 71 Similarly others relate the island s name to its white cliffs snakes or birds dwelling there 53 72 Pausanias has been told that the island is covered with forests and full of animals some wild some tame In this island there is also Achilles temple and his statue 73 Leuce had also a reputation as a place of healing Pausanias reports that the Delphic Pythia sent a lord of Croton to be cured of a chest wound 74 Ammianus Marcellinus attributes the healing to waters aquae on the island 75 Strabo mentioned that the cape of the Racecourse of Achilles was sacred to Achilles and although it was treeless was called Alsos ἄlsos 76 Alsos in Greek means grove A number of important commercial port cities of the Greek waters were dedicated to Achilles Herodotus Pliny the Elder and Strabo reported on the existence of a town Achilleion Ἀxilleion built by settlers from Mytilene in the sixth century BC close to the hero s presumed burial mound in the Troad 52 Later attestations point to an Achilleion in Messenia according to Stephanus Byzantinus and an Achilleios Ἀxilleios in Laconia 77 Nicolae Densusianu recognized a connection to Achilles in the names of Aquileia and of the northern arm of the Danube delta called Chilia presumably from an older Achileii though his conclusion that Leuce had sovereign rights over the Black Sea evokes modern rather than archaic sea law 70 The kings of Epirus claimed to be descended from Achilles through his son Neoptolemus Alexander the Great son of the Epirote princess Olympias could therefore also claim this descent and in many ways strove to be like his great ancestor He is said to have visited the tomb of Achilles at Achilleion while passing Troy 78 In AD 216 the Roman Emperor Caracalla while on his way to war against Parthia emulated Alexander by holding games around Achilles tumulus 79 Reception during antiquity EditIn Greek tragedy Edit Main article Achilleis trilogy The Greek tragedian Aeschylus wrote a trilogy of plays about Achilles given the title Achilleis by modern scholars The tragedies relate the deeds of Achilles during the Trojan War including his defeat of Hector and eventual death when an arrow shot by Paris and guided by Apollo punctures his heel Extant fragments of the Achilleis and other Aeschylean fragments have been assembled to produce a workable modern play The first part of the Achilleis trilogy The Myrmidons focused on the relationship between Achilles and chorus who represent the Achaean army and try to convince Achilles to give up his quarrel with Agamemnon only a few lines survive today 80 In Plato s Symposium Phaedrus points out that Aeschylus portrayed Achilles as the lover and Patroclus as the beloved Phaedrus argues that this is incorrect because Achilles being the younger and more beautiful of the two was the beloved who loved his lover so much that he chose to die to avenge him 81 The tragedian Sophocles also wrote The Lovers of Achilles a play with Achilles as the main character Only a few fragments survive 82 Towards the end of the 5th century BC a more negative view of Achilles emerges in Greek drama Euripides refers to Achilles in a bitter or ironic tone in Hecuba Electra and Iphigenia in Aulis 83 In Greek philosophy Edit Zeno Edit The philosopher Zeno of Elea centred one of his paradoxes on an imaginary footrace between swift footed Achilles and a tortoise by which he attempted to show that Achilles could not catch up to a tortoise with a head start and therefore that motion and change were impossible As a student of the monist Parmenides and a member of the Eleatic school Zeno believed time and motion to be illusions Plato Edit In Hippias Minor a dialogue attributed to Plato an arrogant man named Hippias argues with Socrates The two get into a discussion about lying They decide that a person who is intentionally false must be better than a person who is unintentionally false on the basis that someone who lies intentionally must understand the subject about which they are lying 84 Socrates uses various analogies discussing athletics and the sciences to prove his point The two also reference Homer extensively Socrates and Hippias agree that Odysseus who concocted a number of lies throughout the Odyssey and other stories in the Trojan War Cycle was false intentionally Achilles like Odysseus told numerous falsehoods Hippias believes that Achilles was a generally honest man while Socrates believes that Achilles lied for his own benefit The two argue over whether it is better to lie on purpose or by accident Socrates eventually abandons Homeric arguments and makes sports analogies to drive home the point someone who does wrong on purpose is a better person than someone who does wrong unintentionally In Roman and medieval literature Edit The Romans who traditionally traced their lineage to Troy took a highly negative view of Achilles 83 Virgil refers to Achilles as a savage and a merciless butcher of men 85 while Horace portrays Achilles ruthlessly slaying women and children 86 Other writers such as Catullus Propertius and Ovid represent a second strand of disparagement with an emphasis on Achilles erotic career This strand continues in Latin accounts of the Trojan War by writers such as Dictys Cretensis and Dares Phrygius and in Benoit de Sainte Maure s Roman de Troie and Guido delle Colonne s Historia destructionis Troiae which remained the most widely read and retold versions of the Matter of Troy until the 17th century Achilles was described by the Byzantine chronicler Leo the Deacon not as Hellene but as Scythian while according to the Byzantine author John Malalas his army was made up of a tribe previously known as Myrmidons and later as Bulgars 87 88 In modern literature and arts Edit Briseis and Achilles engraving by Wenceslaus Hollar 1607 1677 The Wrath of Achilles c 1630 1635 painting by Peter Paul Rubens The death of Hector unfinished oil painting by Peter Paul Rubens Achilles and Agamemnon by Gottlieb Schick 1801 The Wrath of Achilles by Francois Leon Benouville 1847 Musee Fabre Literature Edit Achilles appears in Dante s Inferno composed 1308 1320 He is seen in Hell s second circle that of lust Achilles is portrayed as a former hero who has become lazy and devoted to the love of Patroclus in William Shakespeare s Troilus and Cressida 1602 Despicably he has his Myrmidons murder the unarmed Hector and then gets them to announce that Achilles himself has slain Hector as if it had been in a fair fight Act 5 9 5 14 The French dramatist Thomas Corneille wrote a tragedy La Mort d Achille 1673 Achilles is the subject of the poem Achilleis 1799 a fragment by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe In 1899 the Polish playwright painter and poet Stanislaw Wyspianski published a national drama based on Polish history named Achilles In 1921 Edward Shanks published The Island of Youth and Other Poems concerned among others with Achilles The 1983 novel Kassandra by Christa Wolf also treats the death of Achilles H D s 1961 long poem Helen in Egypt features Achilles prominently as a figure who s irrational hatred of Helen traumatizes her the bulk of the poem s plot being about her recovery Akhilles is killed by a poisoned Kentaur arrow shot by Kassandra in Marion Zimmer Bradley s novel The Firebrand 1987 Achilles is one of various narrators in Colleen McCullough s novel The Song of Troy 1998 The Death of Achilles Smert Ahillesa 1998 is an historical detective novel by Russian writer Boris Akunin that alludes to various figures and motifs from the Iliad The character Achilles in Ender s Shadow 1999 by Orson Scott Card shares his namesake s cunning mind and ruthless attitude Achilles is one of the main characters in Dan Simmons s novels Ilium 2003 and Olympos 2005 Achilles is a major supporting character in David Gemmell s Troy series of books 2005 2007 Achilles is the main character in David Malouf s novel Ransom 2009 The ghost of Achilles appears in Rick Riordan s The Last Olympian 2009 He warns Percy Jackson about the Curse of Achilles and its side effects Achilles is a main character in Terence Hawkins 2009 novel The Rage of Achilles Achilles is a major character in Madeline Miller s debut novel The Song of Achilles 2011 which won the 2012 Orange Prize for Fiction The novel explores the relationship between Patroclus and Achilles from boyhood to the fateful events of the Iliad Achilles appears in the light novel series Fate Apocrypha 2012 2014 as the Rider of Red Achilles is a main character in Pat Barker s 2018 novel The Silence of the Girls much of which is narrated by his slave Briseis Visual arts Edit Achilles with the Daughters of Lycomedes is a subject treated in paintings by Anthony van Dyck before 1618 Museo del Prado Madrid and Nicolas Poussin c 1652 Museum of Fine Arts Boston among others Peter Paul Rubens has authored a series of works on the life of Achilles comprising the titles Thetis dipping the infant Achilles into the river Styx Achilles educated by the centaur Chiron Achilles recognized among the daughters of Lycomedes The wrath of Achilles The death of Hector Thetis receiving the arms of Achilles from Vulcanus The death of Achilles Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen Rotterdam and Briseis restored to Achilles Detroit Institute of Arts all c 1630 1635 Pieter van Lint Achilles Discovered among the Daughters of Lycomedes 1645 at the Israel Museum Jerusalem Dying Achilles is a sculpture created by Christophe Veyrier c 1683 Victoria and Albert Museum London The Rage of Achilles is a fresco by Giovanni Battista Tiepolo 1757 Villa Valmarana Ai Nani Vicenza Eugene Delacroix painted a version of The Education of Achilles for the ceiling of the Paris Palais Bourbon 1833 1847 one of the seats of the French Parliament Arthur Kaan de created a statue group Achilles and Penthesilea 1895 Vienna Achilleus 1908 is a lithography by Max Slevogt Music Edit Achilles has been frequently the subject of operas ballets and related genres Operas titled Deidamia were composed by Francesco Cavalli 1644 and George Frideric Handel 1739 Achille et Polyxene Paris 1687 is an opera begun by Jean Baptiste Lully and finished by Pascal Collasse Achille et Deidamie Paris 1735 is an opera composed by Andre Campra Achilles London 1733 is a ballad opera written by John Gay parodied by Thomas Arne as Achilles in petticoats in 1773 Achille in Sciro is a libretto by Metastasio composed by Domenico Sarro for the inauguration of the Teatro di San Carlo Naples 4 November 1737 An even earlier composition is from Antonio Caldara Vienna 1736 Later operas on the same libretto were composed by Leonardo Leo Turin 1739 Niccolo Jommelli Vienna 1749 and Rome 1772 Giuseppe Sarti Copenhagen 1759 and Florence 1779 Johann Adolph Hasse Naples 1759 Giovanni Paisiello St Petersburg 1772 Giuseppe Gazzaniga Palermo 1781 and many others It has also been set to music as Il Trionfo della gloria Achille Vienna 1801 is an opera by Ferdinando Paer on a libretto by Giovanni de Gamerra Achille a Scyros Paris 1804 is a ballet by Pierre Gardel composed by Luigi Cherubini Achilles oder Das zerstorte Troja Achilles or Troy Destroyed Bonn 1885 is an oratorio by the German composer Max Bruch Achilles auf Skyros Stuttgart 1926 is a ballet by the Austrian British composer and musicologist Egon Wellesz Achilles Wrath is a concert piece by Sean O Loughlin 89 Achilles Last Stand is a track on the 1976 Led Zeppelin album Presence Achilles Agony and Ecstasy in Eight Parts is the first song on the 1992 Manowar album The Triumph of Steel Achilles Come Down is a song on the 2017 Gang of Youths album Go Farther in Lightness Film and television Edit In films Achilles has been portrayed in the following films and television series The 1924 film Helena by Carlo Aldini The 1954 film Ulysses by Piero Lulli The 1956 film Helen of Troy by Stanley Baker The 1961 film The Trojan Horse by Arturo Dominici The 1962 film The Fury of Achilles by Gordon Mitchell The 1997 television miniseries The Odyssey by Richard Trewett The 2003 television miniseries Helen of Troy by Joe Montana The 2004 film Troy by Brad Pitt The 2018 TV series Troy Fall of a City by David GyasiArchitecture Edit In 1890 Elisabeth of Bavaria Empress of Austria had a summer palace built in Corfu The building is named the Achilleion after Achilles Its paintings and statuary depict scenes from the Trojan War with particular focus on Achilles The Wellington Monument is a statue representing Achilles erected as a memorial to Arthur Wellesley the first duke of Wellington and his victories in the Peninsular War and the latter stages of the Napoleonic Wars Namesakes EditThe name of Achilles has been used for at least nine Royal Navy warships since 1744 both as HMS Achilles and with the French spelling HMS Achille A 60 gun ship of that name served at the Battle of Belleisle in 1761 while a 74 gun ship served at the Battle of Trafalgar Other battle honours include Walcheren 1809 An armored cruiser of that name served in the Royal Navy during the First World War HMNZS Achilles was a Leander class cruiser which served with the Royal New Zealand Navy in World War II It became famous for its part in the Battle of the River Plate alongside HMS Ajax and HMS Exeter In addition to earning the battle honour River Plate HMNZS Achilles also served at Guadalcanal 1942 1943 and Okinawa in 1945 After returning to the Royal Navy the ship was sold to the Indian Navy in 1948 but when she was scrapped parts of the ship were saved and preserved in New Zealand A species of lizard Anolis achilles which has widened heel plates is named for Achilles 90 Gallery Edit Achilles and the Nereid Cymothoe Attic red figure kantharos from Volci Cabinet des Medailles Bibliotheque nationale Paris The embassy to Achilles Attic red figure hydria c 480 BC Staatliche Antikensammlungen Berlin Achilles sacrificing to Zeus for Patroclus safe return 91 from the Ambrosian Iliad a 5th century illuminated manuscript Achilles and Penthesilea fighting Lucanian red figure bell krater late 5th century BC Achilles killing Penthesilea tondo of an Attic red figure kylix c 465 BC from Vulci Thetis and the Nereids mourning Achilles Corinthian black figure hydria c 555 BC Louvre Paris Achilles and Ajax playing the board game petteia black figure oinochoe c 530 BC Capitoline Museums Rome Head of Achilles depicted on a 4th century BC coin from Kremaste Phthia Reverse Thetis wearing and holding the shield of Achilles with his AX monogram Achilles on a Roman mosaic with the Removal of Briseis 2nd centuryReferences Edit a b c d Dorothea Sigel Anne Ley Bruno Bleckmann Achilles In Hubert Cancik et al eds Achilles Brill s New Pauly Brill Reference Online doi 10 1163 1574 9347 bnp e102220 Retrieved 5 May 2017 a b Robert S P Beekes Etymological Dictionary of Greek Brill 2009 pp 183ff Epigraphical database gives 476 matches for Ἀxil The earliest ones Corinth 7th c BC Delphi 530 BC Attica and Elis 5th c BC Scholia to the Iliad 1 1 Leonard Palmer 1963 The Interpretation of Mycenaean Greek Texts Oxford Clarendon Press p 79 a b Gregory Nagy The best of the Achaeans CHS The Center for Hellenic Studies Harvard University Archived from the original on 2 April 2015 Retrieved 19 March 2015 Cf the supportive position of Hildebrecht Hommel 1980 Der Gott Achilleus Sitzungsberichte der Heidelberger Akademie der Wissenschaften 1 38 44 A critical point of view is taken by J T Hooker 1988 The cults of Achilleus Rheinisches Museum fur Philologie 131 3 1 7 Dares Phrygius History of the Fall of Troy 13 Aeschylus Prometheus Bound 755 768 Pindar Nemean 5 34 37 Isthmian 8 26 47 Pseudo Apollodorus Bibliotheca 3 13 5 Poeticon astronomicon 2 15 Pseudo Apollodorus Bibliotheca 3 13 5 Statius Achilleid 1 269 Hyginus Fabulae 107 Jonathan S Burgess 2009 The Death and Afterlife of Achilles Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press p 9 ISBN 978 0 8018 9029 1 Retrieved 5 February 2010 Apollonius of Rhodes Argonautica 4 869 879 Homer Robert Fagles translation The Iliad p 525 But the other spear grazed Achilles strong right arm and dark blood gushed as the spear shot past his back Hesiod Catalogue of Women fr 204 87 89 MW Iliad 11 830 832 Iliad 9 410ff Photius Bibliotheca cod 190 Thetis burned in a secret place the children she had by Peleus six were born when she had Achilles Peleus noticed and tore him from the flames with only a burnt foot and confided him to Chiron The latter exhumed the body of the giant Damysos who was buried at Pallene Damysos was the fastest of all the giants removed the astragale and incorporated it into Achilles foot using ingredients This astragale fell when Achilles was pursued by Apollo and it was thus that Achilles fallen was killed It is said on the other hand that he was called Podarkes by the Poet because it is said Thetis gave the newborn child the wings of Arce and Podarkes means that his feet had the wings of Arce One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Murray John 1833 A Classical Manual Being a Mythological Historical and Geographical Commentary on Pope s Homer and Dryden s Aeneid of Virgil with a Copious Index Albemarle Street London p 3 Ptolemy Hephaestion New History Book 6 summary from Photius Myriobiblon 190 trans Pearse Greek mythographer C1st to C2nd A D It is said that he Akhilleus Achilles was called Podarkes Podarces Swift Footed by the Poet i e Homer because it is said Thetis gave the newborn child the wings of Arke Arce and Podarkes means that his feet had the wings of Arke And Arke was the daughter of Thaumas and her sister was Iris both had wings but during the struggle of the gods against the Titanes Titans Arke flew out of the camp of the gods and joined the Titanes After the victory Zeus removed her wings before throwing her into Tartaros and when he came to the wedding of Peleus and Thetis he brought these wings as a gift for Thetis Euripides Skyrioi surviving only in fragmentary form Philostratus Junior Imagines i Scholiast on Homer s Iliad 9 326 Ovid Metamorphoses 13 162 180 Ovid Tristia 2 409 412 mentioning a Roman tragedy on this subject Pseudo Apollodorus Bibliotheca 3 13 8 Statius Achilleid 1 689 880 2 167ff Graves Robert 2017 The Greek Myths The Complete and Definitive Edition Penguin Books Limited pp Index s v Aissa ISBN 9780241983386 Graves Robert 2017 The Greek Myths The Complete and Definitive Edition Penguin Books Limited p 642 ISBN 9780241983386 Iliad 16 168 197 a b Pseudo Apollodorus Bibliotheca Epitome 3 20 theoi com Proclus Summary of the Cypria Stoa org Archived from the original on 9 October 2009 Retrieved 9 March 2010 Dares account of the destruction of Troy Greek Mythology Link Homepage mac com Archived from the original on 30 November 2001 Retrieved 9 March 2010 Pseudo Apollodorus Bibliotheca 3 151 Iliad 24 257 Cf Vergil Aeneid 1 474 478 Pseudo Apollodorus Bibliotheca Epitome 3 32 Scholia to Lycophron 307 Servius Scholia to the Aeneid 1 474 James Davidson Zeus Be Nice Now in London Review of Books 19 July 2007 Retrieved 23 October 2007 Plautus Bacchides 953ff Iliad 9 334 343 The Iliad Fagles translation Penguin Books 1991 22 346 Lattimore Richmond 2011 The Illiad of Homer Chicago The University of Chicago ISBN 978 0 226 46937 9 Propertius 3 11 15 Quintus Smyrnaeus 1 Robin Fox 2011 The Tribal Imagination Civilization and the Savage Mind Harvard University Press p 223 ISBN 9780674060944 There is certainly no evidence in the text of the Iliad that Achilles and Patroclus were lovers Martin Thomas R 2012 Alexander the Great The Story of an Ancient Life Cambridge University Press p 100 ISBN 978 0521148443 The ancient sources do not report however what modern scholars have asserted that Alexander and his very close friend Hephaestion were lovers Achilles and his equally close friend Patroclus provided the legendary model for this friendship but Homer in the Iliad never suggested that they had sex with each other That came from later authors Plato Symposium 180a the beauty of Achilles was a topic already broached at Iliad 2 673 674 Kenneth Dover Greek Homosexuality Harvard University Press 1978 1989 p 1 et passim Abrantes 2016 c 4 3 1 Odyssey 11 467 564 Richmond Lattimore 2007 The Odyssey of Homer New York Harper Perennial p 347 ISBN 978 0 06 124418 6 Alexander came to rest at Phaselis a coastal city which was later renowned for the possession of Achilles original spear Robin Lane Fox Alexander the Great 1973 p 144 Pausanias iii 3 6 see Christian Jacob and Anne Mullen Hohl The Greek Traveler s Areas of Knowledge Myths and Other Discourses in Pausanias Description of Greece Yale French Studies 59 Rethinking History Time Myth and Writing 1980 65 85 especially 81 Petteia Archived 9 December 2006 at the Wayback Machine Greek Board Games Archived 8 April 2009 at the Wayback Machine Latrunculi Archived 15 September 2006 at the Wayback Machine Ioannis Kakridis 1988 Ellhnikh My8ologia Greek mythology Athens Ekdotiki Athinon Vol 5 p 92 a b Rose Charles Brian 2014 The Archaeology of Greek and Roman Troy Cambridge University Press p 79 ISBN 9780521762076 Cf Homer Iliad 24 80 84 a b Herodotus Histories 5 94 Pliny Naturalis Historia 5 125 Strabo Geographica 13 1 32 C596 Diogenes Laertius 1 74 a b c d e f Guy Hedreen July 1991 The Cult of Achilles in the Euxine Hesperia 60 3 313 330 doi 10 2307 148068 JSTOR 148068 Cicero De Natura Deorum 3 45 Pausanias Description of Greece 3 20 8 Lycophron 856 Burgess Jonathan S 2009 The Death and Afterlife of Achilles JHU Press p 114 ISBN 9781421403618 Burgess Jonathan S 2009 The Death and Afterlife of Achilles JHU Press p 116 ISBN 9781421403618 Str 13 1 32 Translated by Falconer W Hildebrecht Hommel 1980 Der Gott Achilleus Sitzungsberichte der Heidelberger Akademie der Wissenschaften 1 38 44 J T Hooker 1988 The cults of Achilleus Rheinisches Museum fur Philologie 131 3 1 7 Quintus Smyrnaeus 3 770 779 Pliny Naturalis Historia 4 12 83 chapter 4 26 Pliny Naturalis Historia 4 13 93 chapter 4 27 Researches which have been made at the present day place this island at a distance of 140 miles from the Borysthenes of 120 from Tyras and of fifty from the island of Peuce It is about ten miles in circumference Though afterwards he speaks again of the remaining islands in the Gulf of Carcinites which are Cephalonesos Rhosphodusa or Spodusa and Macra Pomponius Mela De situ orbis 2 7 Proclus Chrestomathia 2 Pindar Nemea 4 49ff Arrian Periplus of the Euxine Sea 21 Pindar Olympia 2 78ff D Page Lyrica Graeca Selecta Oxford 1968 p 89 no 166 a b Nicolae Densusianu Dacia preistorică Bucharest Carol Gobl 1913 Dionysius Periegetes Orbis descriptio 5 541 quoted in Densusianu 1913 Arrian Periplus of the Euxine Sea 21 Scholion to Pindar Nemea 4 79 Pausanias Description of Greece 3 19 11 Pausanias Description of Greece 3 19 13 Ammianus Marcellinus Res Gestae 22 8 Strabo Geography 7 3 19 Pausanias Description of Greece 3 25 4 Arrian Anabasis Alexandri 1 12 1 Cicero Pro Archia Poeta 24 Dio Cassius 78 16 7 Pantelis Michelakis Achilles in Greek Tragedy 2002 p 22 Plato Symposium translated Benjamin Jowett Dover Thrift Editions page 8 S Radt Tragicorum Graecorum fragmenta vol 4 Gottingen Vandenhoeck amp Ruprecht 1977 frr 149 157a a b Latacz 2010 Jowett Benjamin Plato 15 January 2013 Lesser Hippias Project Gutenberg Aeneid 2 28 1 30 3 87 Odes 4 6 17 20 Ekonomou Andrew 2007 Byzantine Rome and the Greek Popes UK Lexington Books p 123 ISBN 9780739119778 Retrieved 14 September 2015 Jeffreys Elizabeth Croke Brian 1990 Studies in John Malalas Australian Association for Byzantine Studies Department of Modern Greek University of Sydney p 206 ISBN 9780959362657 Retrieved 14 September 2015 Entry at Musical World Beolens Bo Watkins Michael Grayson Michael 2011 The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press xiii 296 pp ISBN 978 1 4214 0135 5 Achilles p 1 Iliad 16 220 252 Further reading EditIleana Chirassi Colombo 1977 Heroes Achilleus Theos Apollon In Il Mito Greco edd Bruno Gentili and Giuseppe Paione Rome Edizione dell Ateneo e Bizzarri Anthony Edwards 1985a Achilles in the Underworld Iliad Odyssey and AEthiopis Greek Roman and Byzantine Studies 26 pp 215 227 Anthony Edwards 1985b Achilles in the Odyssey Ideologies of Heroism in the Homeric Epic Beitrage zur klassischen Philologie 171 Edwards Anthony T 1988 KLEOS AF8ITON and Oral Theory The Classical Quarterly 38 25 30 doi 10 1017 S0009838800031220 S2CID 170947595 Graves Robert The Greek Myths Harmondsworth London England Penguin Books 1960 ISBN 978 0143106715 Graves Robert The Greek Myths The Complete and Definitive Edition Penguin Books Limited 2017 ISBN 978 0 241 98338 6 024198338X Guy Hedreen 1991 The Cult of Achilles in the Euxine Hesperia American School of Classical Studies at Athens 60 3 313 330 doi 10 2307 148068 JSTOR 148068 Karl Kerenyi 1959 The Heroes of the Greeks New York London Thames and Hudson Jakob Escher Burkli Achilleus 1 in German In Realencyclopadie der classischen Altertumswissenschaft RE Vol I 1 Stuttgart 1893 col 221 245 Joachim Latacz 2010 Achilles In Anthony Grafton Glenn Most Salvatore Settis eds The Classical Tradition Cambridge MA Harvard University Press pp 3 5 ISBN 978 0 674 03572 0 Helene Monsacre 1984 Les larmes d Achille Le heros la femme et la souffrance dans la poesie d Homere Paris Albin Michel Gregory Nagy 1984 The Name of Achilles Questions of Etymology and Folk Etymology Illinois Classical Studies 19 Gregory Nagy 1999 The Best of The Acheans Concepts of the Hero in Archaic Greek Poetry Johns Hopkins University Press revised edition online Archived 24 December 2018 at the Wayback Machine Dorothea Sigel Anne Ley Bruno Bleckmann Achilles In Hubert Cancik et al eds Achilles Brill s New Pauly Brill Reference Online doi 10 1163 1574 9347 bnp e102220 Dale S Sinos 1991 The Entry of Achilles into Greek Epic PhD thesis Johns Hopkins University Ann Arbor Michigan University Microfilms International Jonathan S Burgess 2009 The Death and Afterlife of Achilles Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press Abrantes M C 2016 Themes of the Trojan Cycle Contribution to the study of the greek mythological tradition Coimbra ISBN 978 1530337118External links Edit Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Achilles Wikimedia Commons has media related to Achilles Look up Achillean in Wiktionary the free dictionary Trojan War Resources Gallery of the Ancient Art Achilles Achilles via Wikisource Poem by Florence Earle Coates Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Achilles amp oldid 1151351098, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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