Depressed and angry.
Achilles' big disagreement is with King Agamemnon.
He had long been in an argument with Agamemnon, the commander of the Achaians. Agamamnon stole his war prize slave girl (whom he had fallen in love with) Briseis, and from that moment on Achilles refused to fight (till his best friend's , Patroclus', death).
Agamemnon sacked the temple and stole the Seer's priestesses, giving one, Briseis, to Achilles, and keeping the other, Chryseis, who so happened to be the Seer's daughter, for himself.
The softly belted girl in the Iliad is Briseis, Achilles' girl, the prisoner of war. King Agamemnon took her because he had to give up Cryseis, the daughter of Apollo's priest, Cryses, whom Agamemnon angered, causing Apollo to send a plague on Agamemnon's soldiers.
No, Agamemnon was the very mortal King of Mycenae.
Achilles' big disagreement is with King Agamemnon.
No, he just went and sulked in his tent after King Agamemnon pinched his slave girlfriend.
He had long been in an argument with Agamemnon, the commander of the Achaians. Agamamnon stole his war prize slave girl (whom he had fallen in love with) Briseis, and from that moment on Achilles refused to fight (till his best friend's , Patroclus', death).
Agamemnon, principal chief of the gathered Greeks (as he was king of Mycenae and all of Achaea) took a woman named Chryseis as a slave. Her father, a priest of Apollo, praed for her return, so Apollo sent a plague among the Greeks. The prophet, Calchas, after being sworn protection by Achilles, told Agamemnon that Chryseis needed to be returned to end the plague. Agamemnon agreed, but also declared that Achilles' slave, Briseis be brought to him as a replacement. Achilles, raging over the dishonor (and because he loves Briseis), prays to his mother, Thetis, for Zeus to help the Trojans gain the upper hand.
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
Achilles leaves the battle in Homer's Iliad due to a conflict with King Agamemnon over a captured woman named Briseis. Achilles feels dishonored when Agamemnon takes Briseis from him, which leads to his decision to withdraw from the fighting and seek retribution.
Assuming that you mean the quarrel between Achilles and king Agamemnon: the result was that Achilles 'remained in his tent' and no longer took part in the fighting against Troy.
He was in a hissy fit because his commander King Agamemnon had taken over his girlfriend Briseis.
Agamemnon sacked the temple and stole the Seer's priestesses, giving one, Briseis, to Achilles, and keeping the other, Chryseis, who so happened to be the Seer's daughter, for himself.
The softly belted girl in the Iliad is Briseis, Achilles' girl, the prisoner of war. King Agamemnon took her because he had to give up Cryseis, the daughter of Apollo's priest, Cryses, whom Agamemnon angered, causing Apollo to send a plague on Agamemnon's soldiers.
Odysseus The Iliad chronicles the exploits of the Greek warrior hero Achilles during the siege of Troy, and his conflicts with King Agamemnon of Greece.
No, Agamemnon was the very mortal King of Mycenae.