Briseis was viewed as little better than a slave to those who she was surrunded by, yet in her grief she found she loved Achilles and hated as much as he to be parted from him.
Briseis drives the plot of the Illiad; his telling of his weakness to Polyxena is how he dies.
Hippodamia is sometimes called Briseis, yes.
Prior to being a captive of Achilles, Briseis was wife of Mynes and daughter of Briseus.
Briseis was among those to lament and mourn over the death of Patroclus. She remained with Achilles until his death, which plunged her into great grief. She soon took it upon herself to prepare Achilles for the afterlife.According to some, following his death, Briseis: "... was given to one of Achilles' comrades-at-arms just as his armor had been", after the fall of Troy.
It isn't known, Briseis was a queen of Lyrnessus by her husband Mynes. Her father was Briseus, who is sometimes told to be brother to Chryses the father of Chryseis; the father of Briseus and Chryses was said to be the otherwise unknown Ardys or Ardysus. Briseis either stayed in Troy or following his death, Briseis: "... was given to one of Achilles' comrades-at-arms just as his armor had been", after the fall of Troy.
Briseis drives the plot of the Illiad; his telling of his weakness to Polyxena is how he dies.
Hippodamia is sometimes called Briseis, yes.
After the death of Patroclus; Agamemnon gives Achilles back Briseis.
Prior to being a captive of Achilles, Briseis was wife of Mynes and daughter of Briseus.
Briseis was a princess and queen captured as a war prize of Achilles, she was mortal and had no powers.
Briseis
It is not told in the Illiad.
Briseis was among those to lament and mourn over the death of Patroclus. She remained with Achilles until his death, which plunged her into great grief. She soon took it upon herself to prepare Achilles for the afterlife.According to some, following his death, Briseis: "... was given to one of Achilles' comrades-at-arms just as his armor had been", after the fall of Troy.
It isn't known, Briseis was a queen of Lyrnessus by her husband Mynes. Her father was Briseus, who is sometimes told to be brother to Chryses the father of Chryseis; the father of Briseus and Chryses was said to be the otherwise unknown Ardys or Ardysus. Briseis either stayed in Troy or following his death, Briseis: "... was given to one of Achilles' comrades-at-arms just as his armor had been", after the fall of Troy.
Agamemnon
Briseis
Rose byrne