Pelius and Thetis had not invited the god of discord Eris for their wedding.Eris put in an apple tempting Paris and Zeus made Paris to act as judge to find the fairest woman.Aprodites promising Paris Helen wife of Meneluas made Paris carry away Helen to Troy.This brought about the downfall of Troy as all Greek nations joined together and destroyed Troy. Hence you can say that Pelius contributed by his actions for the downfall of Troy.
M.DON BOSCO
The Iliad ended with the death of Hector, it never described the sacking of Troy yet.
Troy
Achilles was killed before the sacking of Troy, there was no "after the Trojan War" for him.
If you mean the wedding that happened before the War of Troy that sort of relates to it, then it is Eris. The wedding was between Peleus and Thetis, the parents of Achilles.
Agamemnon was the son of Atreus and the brother of Menelaus. He was the king of either Mycenae (in Homer) or of Argos (in some later accounts), ... www.pantheon.org/articles/a/agamemnon.html - 11k
They didn't all die. After the sacking of Troy by the Greek army, any surviving women and children would have been taken into slavery. There was a small group that escaped the sacking and fled across the sea. They were led by Aeneas and eventually became the Romans.
Aneas was a Trojan officer (not a prince, he was not related to King Priam) who led the survivors of Troy to Latium (Italy) where their descendants later establish the city of Rome.
Achilles was a mythological character who fought in the battle of Troy. He was the sun of King Peleus and the river nymph Thetis. There are a few people that are related to Achilles. Zeus Bears was related to Achilles.
After sacking Troy, Odysseus spends the entire book trying to get back home in Ithaca. After he comes home, he teams up with his son, Telemachus, to drive the suitors from his home.
About one-third of a troy ounce.
The failed attack on Troy in the first year. The looting of western Asia Minor in the next nine years. The capture and sacking of Carthage in the 10th year.
The Achaeans (Greeks) went on an extended ten-year looting raid of Asia Minor and the Islands, culminating in capture and sacking of the richest city - Troy.