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Odyssey

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After the ancient Greeks adopted the Phoenician alphabet around 800 BCE, they began to write down the stories from and about their past, known as their archaiologia (Sayre, 115). For generations these stories were pasted down by word of mouth, the two most important being the Iliad and the Odyssey, created by an author history knows as Homer.
Widely considered the first and greatest epic poet by the ancient Greeks, Homer is credited as the author of the epic poems the Iliad and the Odyssey. He is believed to be a bard, a singer of songs about the deeds of heroes and the ways of the gods. His stories were part of a long-standing oral tradition that dated back to the time of the Trojan War, which is believed to have taken place around 1200 BCE (Sayre, 115).
Homer’s poems have also been a source of controversy among scholars. Until the discovery of Troy by archaeologist Heinrich Schliemann, his poems were believed to be fiction. Further evidence was found in a Mycenaean vase known as the Warrior Vase, which bared …show more content…

Over the course of his journey, Odysseus encounters monsters, giants, a seductive enchantress, sojourn on a floating island and the underworld. During his twenty year absence from his wife, Penelope, she was sought after my many suitors, however she remained faithful and gained her own arête (Sayre, 118-119). This employs loyalty, one of the Odyssey’s major themes. Other themes of the Odyssey include fate and free will, pride, justice and pity. The Iliad and the Odyssey laid out the individual values and responsibilities that all Greeks believed to be their personal obligations if they were to ever fully realize their goals (Sayre, 119). While the true nature of these epic poems may remain in question, there important will forever remain a staple in the ancient Greek time

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