His son, Telemachus, his faithful servant Eumaeus, and the cowherd fight along Odysseus' side.
the swineherd, the shepherd, and the cowherd
In book 1, Telemachus tells the suitors that he will officially give them notice to leave in the morning. He tells the suitors that if they persist in eating at his house, Jove will reckon with them and they will eventually fall in his house (thinly veiled death-threats), with no man left to avenge them. He also tells the suitors to enjoy themselves and not fight, so that they can heard the bard Phemius. He also tells them that the visitor was an old friend of his father Odysseus; Mentes, son of Anchialus, chief of the Taphians.
He fights the suitors and kills all of them.
Odysseus kills the suitors in the Great Hall in his palace.
Odysseus and Telemachus receive assistance from Athena to win thou battle against the suitors.
Yes. Telemachus fights his mother's suitors in both deed and combat.
Telemachus proves he can think and act like his father by supporting his father in the battle against the suitors. Also by helping him fight and slay the suitors until they were all dead.
Telemachus, Eumaeus, and Philoetius, along with the goddess Athena, help Odysseus in the fight against the suitors in the epic poem "The Odyssey" by Homer. They assist Odysseus in his plan to reclaim his home and family from the suitors who have taken over his palace in his absence.
His son, Telemachus, his faithful servant Eumaeus, and the cowherd fight along Odysseus' side.
Antinous who was the son of Eupeithes was the leader of the suitors. Antinous helped instigate the plot to kill Telemachus as he returned from the mainland, and helped spur the fight between Odysseus and Irus, a notorious beggar.
the swineherd, the shepherd, and the cowherd
In book 1, Telemachus tells the suitors that he will officially give them notice to leave in the morning. He tells the suitors that if they persist in eating at his house, Jove will reckon with them and they will eventually fall in his house (thinly veiled death-threats), with no man left to avenge them. He also tells the suitors to enjoy themselves and not fight, so that they can heard the bard Phemius. He also tells them that the visitor was an old friend of his father Odysseus; Mentes, son of Anchialus, chief of the Taphians.
He fights the suitors and kills all of them.
Odysseus kills the suitors in the Great Hall in his palace.
he thinks they will lose.
Full ownership of the deceased's properties IF there is a testament involved. Otherwise, she would have to fight for them against possible suitors.