There is a picture on http://www.latinastereo.com. Good luck. I do want Hector Lavoe's pictures Yes, I do want Hector Lavoe and Puchi's pictures
Achilles and Hector fought with each other when Hector killed Achilles' friend Patroclus, and Achilles won the bet Hector asked. Hector placed a curse on Achilles, and Achilles stabbed his feet, then dragged him around town to show he won. Achilles dragged the corpse of Hector around the city walls.
Hector Pieterson died in 1976.
Hector Crawford's birth name is Crawford, Hector William.
Hector Iruegas's birth name is Hector H. Iruegas Garcia.
The Funeral Home they used for Hector Lavoe's Funeral was the Frank E. Campbell Funeral Home in Manhattan. The same one used for Celia Cruz.
The Iliad ends with a description of Hector's burial.
There is a picture on http://www.latinastereo.com. Good luck. I do want Hector Lavoe's pictures Yes, I do want Hector Lavoe and Puchi's pictures
You can find pictures of Hector Lavoe's wife, Nilda "Puchi" Roman, under Google pictures.
He lets Priam give his son Hector a proper Trojan funeral and some peace.
Hector Buslin has written: 'Vincent van Gogh' -- subject(s): Artists, Psychology 'Cuesmes en cartes postales anciennes' -- subject(s): Pictorial works
Funeral rites were paramount in the ancient world. If a body did not receive proper burial then that person's soul would not be able to cross into the afterlife. Achilles parading Hectors body was not only depriving him of his funeral rites but was also a sign of great offense to Hector's family.
Hector - acting chief of the Trojan forces - is by far the most important Trojan in the Iliad. Hector's death marks the end of the poem, and the last line is: These were the funeral rites of Hector, tamer of horses. Other important Trojan characters in the Iliad include Aeneas, Paris, Priam, and Hecuba.
Hector Berlioz attended the Conservatoire in 1826 to study composition. He was appointed the deputy librarian there in 1839 and in 1850, he became the head librarian.
The Seven Outstanding Episodes of Iliad: 1) The Quarrel Between Agamemnon & Achilles 2) The Single Combat Between Menelaus & Paris 3) The Farewell of Hector from Andromache 4) The Single Combat Between Aias (a.k.a. Ajax) & Hector 5) The Games Played at the Funeral of Patroclos 6) The Ransoming of the Dead Body of Hector by His Father, King Priam 7) The Lamentations of the Trojan Women Over the Dead Body of Hector
In the Iliad, there is no indication that the Greeks were anything other than appalled at Achilles' treatment of Hector. While Hector was a significant enemy, Greek burial practices were strictly adhered to, and often truces would be made to allow for funeral rites to be observed. For Achilles to desecrate Hector's body (which was, in truth, not damaged because of the intervention of the gods), was a tremendous insult.
Hector is a demigod