The ancient city of Troy has not yet been officially discovered. Its location, and in fact whether it ever even existed is still disputed by scholars and historians, therefore, if the city itself did not exist then it would be difficult to prove that the legend is true.
the trojan horse myth
The Trojan horse was made out of wood.
No one played the Trojan horse against the Athenians. They are greek
During the Trojan War, the Trojans "admitted defeat" and sent a "peace gift" of a beautiful, huge wooden horse to the Greeks' camp; but the Greeks didn't know that the horse was hollow and that the Trojans were hiding inside of it, ready to attack them.
Homer's Iliad does not specifically state how long the building of the Trojan Horse took. It could be assumed that it would take many days to build something that large.
no.........
Homer
because it does or whatever
there is no such thing as a real legend a legend by definition is something that is half-true for example there is proof that there was a city called troy and that it was destroyed in war but the kidnapping of helena (that was her name i think) the curse of the conquerors and the trojan horse is most likely a pile of horse crap
Legend has it that it was about 1200 BCE on the Dardanelles Strait in Turkey..
Aol4free
the trojan horse myth
It is a legend = a traditional story believed to be true.
There are so many legends about horses. It could be about the Trojan Horse, or the four horsemen of the apocolypse. I need more specifics.
Actually they aren't. Computer viruses and Trojan horses are two different types of malware, i.e., malicious software.The type known as "Trojan horses" are named after the horse which, according to legend, was given as a "gift" by the Greeks, to the Trojans - their enemies. Just like the horse in the legend, the malware called "Trojan horses" also have a malicious intention. For more information about the legend, check the Wikipedia article on "Trojan horse".
yes there was a Trojan Horse.
The legend is that they took it inside their city, not knowing there were Greek warriors inside it, and that night they opened the gates to let in the Greek armies. Since then 'trojan horse' is an expression for sneaking in a disruptive element, as in computing.