The suitors staying in Odysseus' home are killed by Odysseus upon his return.
The suitors staying in Odysseus' home are killed by Odysseus upon his return.
Odysseus and his son slaughter them when Odysseus gets home.
Odysseus returns home but remains disguised. Once he learns about the 108 suitors he kills them with the help of Telemachus and Philoeteus.
In the Odyssey, the suitors who have been courting Penelope, Odysseus' wife, are killed by Odysseus upon his return to Ithaca. Odysseus, disguised as a beggar, challenges the suitors to a contest and then reveals his true identity before taking revenge on them for their disrespect and attempts to take over his home.
the suitors
The suitors staying in Odysseus' home are killed by Odysseus upon his return.
Odysseus and his son slaughter them when Odysseus gets home.
Odysseus returns home but remains disguised. Once he learns about the 108 suitors he kills them with the help of Telemachus and Philoeteus.
In the Odyssey, the suitors who have been courting Penelope, Odysseus' wife, are killed by Odysseus upon his return to Ithaca. Odysseus, disguised as a beggar, challenges the suitors to a contest and then reveals his true identity before taking revenge on them for their disrespect and attempts to take over his home.
He challenges Odysseus and of course Odysseus wins and later he kills the leader of the suitors.
the suitors
odysseus land was full of suitors try to marry odysseus wife penelope
Odysseus and Telemachus plan to disguise themselves and then take the suitors by surprise, attacking them and seeking vengeance for their disrespect and behavior in their home. They aim to execute the suitors and restore order in their household.
Believing Odysseus dead, suitors ostensibly wooing Penelope descended on Odysseus' home, and began eating and drinking him out of house and home.
The men gathered there are suitors and they want to marry Penelope, Odysseus' wife.
So that Odysseus could return home with out being recognized, so he can see what the suitors are doing to his home.
In Odysseus's absence, his home in Ithaca is overrun by suitors vying for his wife Penelope's hand in order to claim his estate. The suitors disrespect the house, consume its resources, and mistreat Odysseus's son Telemachus. Penelope remains faithful to Odysseus and holds out hope for his return.