"Lay-ert-tees"
The Laertes in Hamlet doesn't do this. Are you thinking of some other Laertes?
No, Laertes was an argonaut and a mortal man.
Laertes is the father of Odysseus in the Iliad and the Odyssey. Laertes is also a character in the play Hamlet by William Shakespeare.
In Greek myth Laertes was king of Ithaca.
Laertes - Hamlet - was created in 1600.
Prepona laertes was created in 1811.
In Paris, where Laertes has gone to study.
In the Odyssey the son of Laertes is Odysseus.
Laertes did not pay for Eurycleia; she was actually purchased by his father Odysseus. Eurycleia was a gift to Laertes from his father.
Laertes is killed by the poisoned sword that he originally killed Hamlet with. After wounding Hamlet with the poisoned sword, the swords are switched and Hamlet wounds Laertes with the poisoned sword.
Laertes is the son of Polonius and the brother of Ophelia.
No, Laertes was the father of King Odysseus of Ithaca.