One of the few Greek deities who did not side with the Greeks during the Trojan War was Aphrodite. She supported the Trojans, particularly due to her favoring of Paris, who had awarded her the golden apple for being the fairest goddess. Aphrodite's allegiance to the Trojans stemmed from her desire to protect her mortal lover, Paris, and to oppose the Greek heroes.
The Trojan wars involved only Bronze Age Aegean civilizations. This included Troy, it's allies and all the Greek city states. Are you asking which cities were involved?The Achaean Greeks and the Asia Minor Dardaneans.
Diomedes
the greek influence was only in philosophy and art
This is unknown, because only the Greeks wrote about their myths at that time.
The gods did take sides in the Trojan War. The Olympian Gods took the following sides: -Athena- Greek -Hera- Greek -Hephaestus- Greek -Poseidon- Greek -Zeus- Neutral -Aphrodite- Trojan -Apollo- Trojan -Ares- Trojan -Artemis- Trojan -Hermes- Trojan -Hades- Neutral they split themselves. some on troy others greek Actually Hermes sided with the greeks. In the Odyssey, he helps Odysseus on his journey.There are only 11 gods here
One of the few Greek deities who did not side with the Greeks during the Trojan War was Aphrodite. She supported the Trojans, particularly due to her favoring of Paris, who had awarded her the golden apple for being the fairest goddess. Aphrodite's allegiance to the Trojans stemmed from her desire to protect her mortal lover, Paris, and to oppose the Greek heroes.
The Trojan wars involved only Bronze Age Aegean civilizations. This included Troy, it's allies and all the Greek city states. Are you asking which cities were involved?The Achaean Greeks and the Asia Minor Dardaneans.
he killed the gorgon medusa Perseus was the Founder-king of Argos and the archetype for not only all Greek heroes, but also Greeks in general. In fact, the Greeks during the Trojan War were sometimes called by the Trojans, "Danaans" after Perseus' mother, Danae.
Diomedes
Possibly you mean the 'Trojan Horse', which was a huge wooden model of a horse in which the Greeks concealed soldiers in order to capture Troy. So, since the Trojan Horse was only a model, it wasn't alive, thus couldn't die.
If you need it narrowed down to a single thing it would be, omnipotence. Contrary to the way we often think about them today, the Greeks viewed ALL of their deities as being all-powerful. Every god had the power to do whatever they wanted. This is why there is a distinction between gods, and the lesser divinities like nymphs (who only had powers that pertained to their particular domain, like water or trees). The Greek gods were really just an extension of the Greeks themselves, so in many ways, they were more similar than different.
no they are called greek one is only orthodox if they follow the orthodox religion
the greek influence was only in philosophy and art
greeks always named different terms as they were the most educated at that periiod of time.like what of biology,the greek only knew the word to express the study of living things,so greeks named it,as they had enough education to express it.so,greeks only named different terms.
"Trojan Horse" does not refer to a specific computer virus, rather it refers to a particular characteristic of some computer malware. A Trojan Horse or Trojan is a bit of software that masquerades as legitimate software but contains hidden malware. It takes its name from the Greek tale from the Trojan War where the Greeks left a big wooden horse outside the gates of Troy with a bunch of Greek soldiers hidden inside. Just like the Greeks used their "Trojan Horse" to trick the Trojans into bringing them inside their defenses, Trojan malware tries to trick users into bringing the malware inside their computer defenses where it can then do its dirty work - such as (but not limited to) data theft, installing backdoors, turning the user's computer into a zombie in a botnet, trashing the computer. Since "Trojan Horse" only refers to a characteristic and not a specific virus, it is impossible to assign an actual date or perpetrator to it. It should also be understood that a Trojan is not really a virus. A virus replicates itself without user intervention, whereas a Trojan relies on tricking a user into downloading it. According to a survey conducted by BitDefender from January to June 2009, "Trojan-type malware is on the rise, accounting for 83-percent of the global malware detected in the world".
Not usually. There are, however, Greek cemeteries where only Greeks bury their dead. But Orthodox Churches usually do not have their own graveyards.