Ἕκτορος ἱπποδάμοιο
Hector, tamer of horses
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.
The second line of the Iliad describes Achilles' rage as [oulomene]: 'destructive'. The first word of the Iliad is [menin] :: 'rage'. In a sense, the whole poem is about rage.
The cyclops Polyphemus is not, no. But someone else named Polyphemus is. Godlike Polyphemus is mentioned by Nestor in his speech to Agamemnon and Achilles in Book 1 (Line 264). This is possibly the Polyphemus who is an Argonaut. It is probably not the cyclops.
not spicifed in the books
The STAR of Iliad is Achilles
Nowhere.
yes! It is mentioned in the The Iliad by Homer.
Hebe does not play a part in "The Odyssey", but is mentioned in Homer's "The Iliad".
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.
Those special troops mentioned in the Iliad were called Myrmidons.
The second line of the Iliad describes Achilles' rage as [oulomene]: 'destructive'. The first word of the Iliad is [menin] :: 'rage'. In a sense, the whole poem is about rage.
The "Iliad"
The cyclops Polyphemus is not, no. But someone else named Polyphemus is. Godlike Polyphemus is mentioned by Nestor in his speech to Agamemnon and Achilles in Book 1 (Line 264). This is possibly the Polyphemus who is an Argonaut. It is probably not the cyclops.
Pylos is a town that has been inhabited for centuries. This town is famous for its bay and being mentioned in the Iliad.
The Iliad tells the story of the last months of the Trojan War.
The Iliad was about a couple of months near the end of the War. The Odyssey was about Odysseus' long voyage home after it.
not spicifed in the books