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The story of the Trojan Horse. The Greeks left the Trojans a gift of this magnificent, monumental horse, which turned out to be filled with soldiers who opened the gates and allowed the Greek army to sack and destroy Troy.
They made a giant wooden horse (the Trojan horse) and the Greeks got inside it. They then left it at the gates of Troy. Thinking it was a gift or a peace offering, the Trojans took the horse inside their walls and celebrated. By night the Trojans were drunk from their party and the Greeks came out, opened the gates for their comrades, and they overthrew the Trojans.
It was a trick to hide themselves to get inside the Trojan gates. They offered up the large horse as a token of friendship to the Trojans, and hid inside. When dark came they attacked the Trojans from inside the city.
To build the big wooden horse and let a group of Greek warriors hide in it, hoping the Trojans would accept the horse as a gift and pull it into the city. Then the hidden Greeks would jump out and open the city gates to the Greek troops.
The greeks built a giant wooden horse and said they surrendered and they should accept it as a symbol of peace.The trojans took it inside the walls and the greeks inside the horse opened the gates and let the greek army in form inside the wall
The Trojan Horse.
The Greeks gave the Trojans the Trojan horse. After the Trojans accepted their gift, the men hiding inside the horse opened the gates to the previously-impregnable Trojan walls. This enabled the rest of the Greek army to enter unimpeded and slaughter the Trojans inside. Receiving the Trojan horse caused the defeat of the Trojan army.
they did not know who it was from and they thought it was a gift for Athena
They built underground tunnels leading to a water well outside the palace gates.
The Trojans bring the horse inside the gates because they believe it is a gift from the Greeks as a peace offering. They are unaware that Greek soldiers are hidden inside the horse waiting to attack once inside the city walls.
The story of the Trojan Horse. The Greeks left the Trojans a gift of this magnificent, monumental horse, which turned out to be filled with soldiers who opened the gates and allowed the Greek army to sack and destroy Troy.
They made a giant wooden horse (the Trojan horse) and the Greeks got inside it. They then left it at the gates of Troy. Thinking it was a gift or a peace offering, the Trojans took the horse inside their walls and celebrated. By night the Trojans were drunk from their party and the Greeks came out, opened the gates for their comrades, and they overthrew the Trojans.
the greek gave the trojans a huge wooden horse as a peace gesture. Then at night greek soldiers concealed inside of the horse came out and opened the gates for the greek army.
It was not made in the Iliad. The wooden horse (now known as the Trojan horse) was made after the events of the Iliad, in order to fool the Trojans into letting Greek troops into their city, unbeknownst to the Trojans. These Greek soldiers would then open the gates to the city, letting in the awaiting Greek army.
It was a trick to hide themselves to get inside the Trojan gates. They offered up the large horse as a token of friendship to the Trojans, and hid inside. When dark came they attacked the Trojans from inside the city.
No
Yes, according to the Federal Trade Commission, in nearly every state the repossession agent may enter your property to locate and recover the vehicle. However, they are not allowed to 'breach the peace'. They can't break fences, gates, doors, locks, etc. They can't threaten or intimidate you. You are not allowed to threaten the repossessor.