They hung garlands on it and made it appear that they (the Greeks) had left in their ships. There wasn't really any other conclusion that the Trojans could reach, it was a new trick that had never been played before so they had no reason to suspect.
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 Greeks won by making a huge wooden horse and offering it to the trojans as a gift but had a lot of troops in it so when the trojans took it in and went to sleep and the Greeks popped out and killed them all. P.S. plan made by Odysseus
The Trojans gave a hallow wooden horse filled with soldiers the Greeks as a "Gift", but in the night the soldiers came out of the horse and successfully seized the city.
The Greeks built a huge wooden horse, and the Trojans brought it into their city. Then at night, when the Trojans were sound asleep, the Greeks came out of the horse and destroyed the city. So to sum it all up, the Trojans lost.
The wooden one who fooled the Trojans was the Trojan Horse, a cunning strategy employed by the Greeks during the Trojan War. The Greeks constructed a large wooden horse and hid soldiers inside, leaving it at the gates of Troy as a supposed offering. The Trojans, believing they had won the war, brought the horse into their city, leading to their downfall when the hidden Greek soldiers emerged at night to open the gates for their comrades. This story is famously recounted in Virgil's "Aeneid" and other ancient texts.
The Greeks his soldiers in a wooden horse (Trojan horse) and gave it to the Trojans as a gift to get Helen back.
In Greek mythology, the Greeks built the horse.
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 Greeks won by making a huge wooden horse and offering it to the trojans as a gift but had a lot of troops in it so when the trojans took it in and went to sleep and the Greeks popped out and killed them all. P.S. plan made by Odysseus
It was hollow. The Greeks head inside the hollow horse and made a surprise attack upon the Trojans. The Trojans thought the great wooden horse was a gift from the Greeks, a peace offering. So they unwittingly moved into there city. As a result, the Greeks were able to attack the Trojans in their own beds and unlock the gates for the rest of their allies.
The Trojans gave a hallow wooden horse filled with soldiers the Greeks as a "Gift", but in the night the soldiers came out of the horse and successfully seized the city.
In a huge wooden horse.
The Trojans initially thought that the large wooden horse left outside their walls by the Greeks was a peace offering or a gift to the gods. They believed it was a sign of the end of the war and a symbol of victory.
The Greeks built a huge wooden horse, and the Trojans brought it into their city. Then at night, when the Trojans were sound asleep, the Greeks came out of the horse and destroyed the city. So to sum it all up, the Trojans lost.
The Spartans did not give the wooden horse as a gift; this act is attributed to the Greeks during the Trojan War. The wooden horse, known as the Trojan Horse, was presented to the Trojans by the Greeks as a deceptive offering, concealing soldiers inside. The Spartans, as part of the Greek coalition, participated in the war against Troy, but the story of the wooden horse is primarily linked to the cunning of Odysseus and the broader Greek strategy.
The wooden one who fooled the Trojans was the Trojan Horse, a cunning strategy employed by the Greeks during the Trojan War. The Greeks constructed a large wooden horse and hid soldiers inside, leaving it at the gates of Troy as a supposed offering. The Trojans, believing they had won the war, brought the horse into their city, leading to their downfall when the hidden Greek soldiers emerged at night to open the gates for their comrades. This story is famously recounted in Virgil's "Aeneid" and other ancient texts.
The Greeks left behind the character Sinon to tell the story to the Trojans. Sinon deceived the Trojans into believing that the Greek forces had abandoned their siege and left the wooden horse as an offering to the gods, claiming it would bring them favor. His cunning words convinced the Trojans to bring the horse into their city, ultimately leading to their downfall.