yes they were opposing teams
well the Greeks won 4m a trickery
Troy was attacked by a fleet, gathered from several of the Greek city states under the command of Agamemnon.
Greek & Roman armies :D
The site of a successful siege by Greek armies which were on a 10 year looting expedition in western Asia Minor.
He was on the Greek side (rather than just Spartan), but to confuse matters, The Illiad refers to two Greek armies-Agamemnon's and Achilles'.
The siege of Troy had lasted for ten years when the Greeks (Odysseus and other leaders) devised a plan to end the war. They constructed a large wooden horse and concealed soldiers inside it, then their armies boarded their ships. The Trojans thought that the Greeks had abandoned the siege and they dragged the wooden horse into the city. At night the Greek armies returned. The soldiers crept out of the horse and opened the city gates thus allowing the Greek armies to rush in and capture the city.
The Trojan Horse and Helen of Troy is one good example.
The two opposing armies in the Trojan War were the Achaeans (Greeks) and the Trojans. The Achaeans, led by notable figures such as Agamemnon and Achilles, sought to reclaim Helen, the wife of Menelaus, who had been taken by Paris of Troy. The Trojans defended their city, with prominent leaders like Hector and Priam. This legendary conflict is central to Homer's epics, notably the "Iliad."
the Trojans and Achaean
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.
England
The Trojan War was a war waged, according to legend, against the city of Troy by the armies of the Achaeans, following the kidnapping of Helen (Eleni) of Sparta, by Paris of Troy. It is considered among the most important events in Greek mythology.
Sparta. and you!