Legends Summarized: The Trojan War

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  • Опубликовано: 21 сен 2024

Комментарии • 5 тыс.

  • @dylanelliston5908
    @dylanelliston5908 2 года назад +13857

    Achilles being portrayed as an excitable kid who’s there to have fun and slowly descending into depression is actually genius

    • @Zappygunshot
      @Zappygunshot 2 года назад +708

      Probably why the idea has persisted for a cool ~3,200 years. Turns out, if people get bored for long enough, they'll eventually develop some really good dramatic story telling techniques to keep themselves entertained.

    • @mindstalk
      @mindstalk 2 года назад +348

      @@Zappygunshot On the other hand, boat list.

    • @sickfvckkkkk
      @sickfvckkkkk 2 года назад

      turns out that classical literature isn’t just some scam to make you racist

    • @aceofspades7091
      @aceofspades7091 2 года назад +362

      And Odysseus being portrayed as solid snake

    • @dalantawilliams1867
      @dalantawilliams1867 2 года назад +198

      Yea that's usually how serving in the military goes

  • @Silvershield88
    @Silvershield88 2 года назад +4678

    I love how Achilles is basically curbstomping everyone nonchalantly even when completely disinterested during his emo phase until the gods literally had to turn Paris's aimbot on to deal with him

    • @bthsr7113
      @bthsr7113 2 года назад +420

      Now I have this image of Apollo smacking a switch upside Paris' head and flipping it.

    • @raptormage2209
      @raptormage2209 2 года назад +190

      Get good get Apollobox

    • @Greytheaverage
      @Greytheaverage Год назад +91

      THE AIMBOT STOP IM CRYING LAUGHING

    • @poundlandbandit6124
      @poundlandbandit6124 Год назад +16

      He was made invincible from birth through the river Styx, Hector is far cooler

    • @travisoliver6741
      @travisoliver6741 Год назад +44

      Fun fact, Achilles was such a Chad that he would have broken his fate of death and destroyed all of Troy singlehandedly, but then Zeus stopped him because Zeus is an asshole.

  • @masterxl97
    @masterxl97 2 года назад +14517

    Odysseus still just literally being Solid Snake because of one dumb joke Red made SEVEN YEARS ago is incredibly heartwarming to me.

    • @Jaybirderino
      @Jaybirderino 2 года назад +1070

      Literally all of Odysseus' expressions made me burst out laughing, goddamn

    • @incognitoman3656
      @incognitoman3656 2 года назад +515

      I wish I was OG enough to remember that legendary video! You gotta say the name somewhere… please and thank you…
      My guess is just one of the older videos called something like Iliad summarised?

    • @wyrmshard
      @wyrmshard 2 года назад +397

      @@incognitoman3656 Correct, it is Classics Summarized: The Iliad

    • @Gameling85
      @Gameling85 2 года назад +105

      @@incognitoman3656 pretty much. I think it’s on the Classics Summarized playlist

    • @So_Indecisive
      @So_Indecisive 2 года назад +18

      @@Jaybirderino same

  • @eleavate
    @eleavate 2 года назад +808

    Odysseus being simultaneously the smartest character in the Trojan war AND the one who caused it all initially is some dramatic irony

    • @enigmatic3194
      @enigmatic3194 3 месяца назад +45

      ​@DogseatDogs good point. Even if someone thought that "If there's someone who's not bounded by the oath steals the most beautiful woman that's not a whiny goddess, they'd probably do it. But then again... if they knew about her, why weren't they an initial suitor in the first place?"
      Actually, I blame neither Odysseus (slightly for him because I think it's kinda funny) nor Paris (also slightly because bruh). I mostly blame Aphrodite for this crap.

    • @AstralDragn
      @AstralDragn 2 месяца назад +17

      I'm very late but I always find it strange that he was in the deal about defending the marriage- Like apparently he already had his eyes on Penelope. Although I suppose there 'had' to be a reason for him to be there at the time.

    • @raymondfisheriii791
      @raymondfisheriii791 16 дней назад +9

      @@AstralDragnI think the reason he was a suitor was because all the other kings were. Remember, marrying Helen was essentially for the status, the bragging rights of saying you literally have the most beautiful wife in the world (who’s not a goddess). So it was a situation where even if he didn’t want to marry her because he didn’t like her, as a king in the making, having her as a wife would look really good. But since he didn’t care too much about focusing on that status, he decided to make an opportunity out of it. I honestly like the idea that he straight up came up with the plan to use the marriage thing as a way to meet with the king and gain his favor from the get-go. Like he didn’t really care about marrying Helen and just wanted the excuse to talk to her dad into helping him marry this other lady he really likes instead.

  • @sofig1237
    @sofig1237 2 года назад +5141

    Eris, the goddess of "It's getting too chummy around here", wakes up and chooses violence.
    I love how you chose to phrase that.

    • @erisgoddessofdiscord761
      @erisgoddessofdiscord761 2 года назад +99

      It actually was. They don't know how to actually have *fun*

    • @jammo7370
      @jammo7370 2 года назад +182

      The goddess of doing a little trolling

    • @professorbutters
      @professorbutters 2 года назад +43

      And started a minor religion.

    • @John_Weiss
      @John_Weiss 2 года назад +57

      @@professorbutters Hail Eris! All Hail Discordia!
      Now, seeing as it's Friday, I must go commemorate the Great Snub by consuming a Hot Dog [without the bun, natch].

    • @WilliametcCook
      @WilliametcCook 2 года назад +79

      Now I see why Eris the dwarf planet was named how it was; its discovery is what got Pluto kicked off the planets list

  • @FarmerSlayerFromTheEdoPeriod
    @FarmerSlayerFromTheEdoPeriod 2 года назад +13372

    You know what the best part about the book is? Those long descriptions of where a character was born, what their father did five years before they were born, how their homeland was formed... Only for them to get a spear through their skull in the first battle of the chapter.

    • @onkelaule4061
      @onkelaule4061 2 года назад +1289

      Don't forget the colour of their ship/horses.

    • @yorgo2255
      @yorgo2255 2 года назад +1425

      This is perhaps the funniest part of the odyssey,all this fluff,all those histories and aspirations and dreams and then BOOM dead.

    • @FarmerSlayerFromTheEdoPeriod
      @FarmerSlayerFromTheEdoPeriod 2 года назад +771

      @@yorgo2255 Homer was a comedic genius

    • @nowhereman6019
      @nowhereman6019 2 года назад +272

      War is hell.

    • @merrittanimation7721
      @merrittanimation7721 2 года назад +736

      "This is Jeff, son of Bob. He was born in Arcadia and is 27. He liked long walks on the beach. Hector stabbed in the face. His father was very sad about that."

  • @wyattfreihon4048
    @wyattfreihon4048 2 года назад +4708

    Gotta love that Odysseus is literally the ONLY dude in the war that actually has a brain and doesn’t just jump into death traps for the sake of honor

    • @anadaere6861
      @anadaere6861 2 года назад +361

      Favorite trio for the Trojan war has to be Diomedes, Odysseus and Hector
      Ody because big brains. Diomedes because he's Achilles without some serious plot armor, and Hector because underdogs are cool

    • @the_exodusrex3385
      @the_exodusrex3385 2 года назад +17

      What is the painting at the 13 minute mark?

    • @thisisanickname231
      @thisisanickname231 2 года назад +125

      He's the kind of character that are so badass it makes you think anyone around their ballpark is just as badass.
      First time hearing about Laocoon was in this video, and just the fact he actually saw throught the troyan horse and needed divine intervention to keep him from digging deeper makes me think he's Odysseus' equal in terms of using the head above to think.
      I doubt he was even that cool, is just Odysseus puts him there by being even a little close to him in smarts.
      The Odyseuss = Solid Snake comparison is truly fitting, very much a master of trickery.

    • @DefinitelyNotCursedPen
      @DefinitelyNotCursedPen 2 года назад +43

      He's no idiot, it's kind of his whole thing

    • @tuononnovainbici
      @tuononnovainbici 2 года назад +24

      @@thisisanickname231 I already knew Laocoon because it was taught to me in school, but particularly because Michelangelo made a statue about him and his sons being attacked / devoured by the snakes! Look it up, it's tragic but SO well sculpted. It's kept in Italy in a museum and there's a replica in one of the biggest squares in Florence.

  • @talongreenlee7704
    @talongreenlee7704 Год назад +10462

    The fact that we still know Achilles’ name today means that the prophesy was kinda legit.

    • @LPVince94
      @LPVince94 Год назад +496

      Yeah but as much or even more people know Odysseus without said prophecy and without dying for it.

    • @hollyjones248
      @hollyjones248 Год назад +859

      @@LPVince94 more people know Achilles than they know Odysseus

    • @burntturkey9996
      @burntturkey9996 Год назад +626

      @@hollyjones248 Probably because of the common phrase "Achilles's heel"

    • @boardcertifiable
      @boardcertifiable Год назад +446

      @@burntturkey9996 and the fact they named a tendon after him too.

    • @emiliosuarez2232
      @emiliosuarez2232 Год назад +273

      We all know Achilles because of his downfall, but we get to know Odysseus too because he kinda was responsible for the downfall of Achilles lol

  • @downsidebrian
    @downsidebrian Год назад +4991

    Reading the bit in the Odyssey where Helen is impersonating the Achean's wives is honestly just painful. Odysseus has to literally hold people's mouths shut because they honestly think their wives are out there.
    Seriously, the entire Achean army has precisely three brain cells, and Odysseus spends the entire war juggling them.

    • @dragonfire72
      @dragonfire72 Год назад +689

      The average brain cell count in the Achean army is like 3.
      Most of them are held by Odysseus, some by Achilles and Patroclus, some by the average troops...
      And Agamemnon carries a negative amount.

    • @ProfessionalNamielleLewder69
      @ProfessionalNamielleLewder69 Год назад +1

      @@dragonfire72 Agamemnon is being hunted by the brain cell equivalent of the IRS for all the IQ debt he's accumulated just by existing.

    • @kiwibuddy5341
      @kiwibuddy5341 Год назад +376

      ​@@dragonfire72Agamemnon kills the brain cells he's given or stolen and winds down the number if Odysseus isn't careful

    • @Meowdyzone
      @Meowdyzone Год назад +244

      @@dragonfire72 Braincells Georg strikes again. The average Achaean has a healthy amount of braincells, but Agamemnon skews the statistics.

    • @lyogos2568
      @lyogos2568 Год назад +51

      They were at there for 10 years, cut them some slack dhdphdf

  • @bottled.bluebells7236
    @bottled.bluebells7236 2 года назад +1354

    I love how Red's shifted Odysseus' design so that he looks perpetually exhausted/dead inside on top of the solid snake thing. Seems like a fair choice for the guy stuck with the one braincell in the midst of all this rampant shenaniganery.

    • @bdletoast09
      @bdletoast09 2 года назад +216

      It's so funny to me that Odysseus' characterization across the centuries remained "The only one with a functioning brain" and that he suffered massively for it.

    • @xShadowChrisx
      @xShadowChrisx 10 дней назад +3

      @@bdletoast09 being a genius is often painful and isolating after all...

  • @loyaultemelie7909
    @loyaultemelie7909 2 года назад +3627

    “I feel bad for him but, I don’t”
    Honestly probably the most accurate way to describe Paris ever

    • @george2459
      @george2459 2 года назад +35

      was just about to type this comment before realising that the vid is 2 weeks old someone else had *definitely* already done it!

    • @guillermofy
      @guillermofy 2 года назад +80

      Had this moment with Jason when I watched medea's story by Red.

    • @Voltar_99
      @Voltar_99 Год назад +8

      @@george2459 happens all the time, doesn’t matter

    • @nyxie2877
      @nyxie2877 Год назад +15

      @@guillermofy No one feels bad for Jason, though

    • @Voltar_99
      @Voltar_99 Год назад +2

      @@nyxie2877 yep

  • @chaseweber6823
    @chaseweber6823 2 года назад +2826

    13:18
    On that thought, I love the fact that the epic cycle more or less starts properly with a king being beset by a million suitors, so Odysseus proposes a solution that will peacefully solve the problem with minimal bloodshed while ensuring he also walks away with some compensation, then ends with Penelope being beset by a million suitors so Odysseus's solution is to murder them all.
    That's how clever Odysseus is; he's able to learn from his mistakes.

    • @bthsr7113
      @bthsr7113 Год назад +311

      Well she was already spoken for in that instance and they'd been throwing a years long frat party in his house.

    • @TrinityCore60
      @TrinityCore60 Год назад +74

      …were people seriously that stupid back then? Learning from mistakes should be basic human behavior.

    • @Palora01
      @Palora01 Год назад +165

      @@TrinityCore60 people don't do that now, why would they do that back then?

    • @TrinityCore60
      @TrinityCore60 Год назад +82

      @@Palora01 you know what, fair point. I guess I at least be thankful that people nowadays have modern science and general understanding of the world to foster a degree of common sense.
      For most people, at least.

    • @andredunbar3773
      @andredunbar3773 Год назад +110

      Honestly, I just think he was tired of all the bs getting in the way of him being with his wife, but this is a lot funnier

  • @PakBallandSami
    @PakBallandSami 2 года назад +5540

    “They came back
    To widows,
    To fatherless children,
    To screams, to sobbing.
    The men came back
    As little clay jars
    Full of sharp cinders.”
    ― Aeschylus, The Oresteia

    • @nowhereman6019
      @nowhereman6019 2 года назад +308

      War is hell.

    • @RandomPerson-cm2wg
      @RandomPerson-cm2wg 2 года назад +150

      Metal.

    • @LordRavensong
      @LordRavensong 2 года назад +341

      @@RandomPerson-cm2wg no, clay. Didn't you read the comment?

    • @Tytoalba777
      @Tytoalba777 2 года назад +80

      new Sabaton song incoming

    • @mikaelantonkurki
      @mikaelantonkurki 2 года назад +19

      I have read enough history to know that this DOES NOT apply to all wars universally.

  • @SonicGirlsGeek
    @SonicGirlsGeek 2 года назад +2582

    Knowing Odysseus asked Menelaus to set him up with Penelope and later not wanting to go to war because he loves being a family man is the sweetest and further cements him as my favorite Greek Hero

    • @BoostedMonkey05
      @BoostedMonkey05 2 года назад +62

      Tendarius*

    • @arvinroidoatienza7082
      @arvinroidoatienza7082 Год назад +38

      And then you read this sequel in which his son by Circe accidentally kills him and marries Penelope.

    • @crawlingboy
      @crawlingboy Год назад +183

      @@arvinroidoatienza7082 yeah that is not canon and not written by homer so nah, he gets the happy ending and deserves it for being decades away from his family
      i am gonna be honest that weird like sequel sounds way to edgy to even be good writing

    • @arvinroidoatienza7082
      @arvinroidoatienza7082 Год назад +87

      @@crawlingboy Yeah me too. I mean, I loved the Odyssey and Ulysses as a character and he suffered a lot already. And then I learned about that try hard sequel and said nah, it's not canon.
      And the fact that his apparently illegitimate son marries his wife yuck

    • @crawlingboy
      @crawlingboy Год назад +112

      @@arvinroidoatienza7082 yes it just is bad
      Especially the Penelope part
      Like the woman waited 20 years for her husband and loved him and you are telling me some illegitimate bastard kills him and steals her
      That is just edgy for the sake of edgy

  • @Peteman
    @Peteman 2 года назад +5089

    Artemis: "I can't believe you actually tried to sacrifice your daughter."
    Agamemnon: "You're the one that put me up to it!"
    Artemis: "I didn't think you'd actually do it!"
    Agamemnon: "Have you even met me?!"

    • @Pihsrosnec
      @Pihsrosnec 2 года назад +392

      Imma be honest, Artemis doesn't seem like the type who'd actually save the daughter.
      Like, she's not necessarily evil but she's insanely cold and brutal. She the god of the hunt after all, impersonal carnage is her whole thing.

    • @SamJNE122
      @SamJNE122 2 года назад +371

      @@Pihsrosnec That's true, but it also seems weird that she would demand that the daughter be killed in the first place. She does also supposedly protect children (especially young women).

    • @kinrateia
      @kinrateia 2 года назад +249

      My headcanon is that Artemis wanted her to be her priestess and sent off to one of her temples to serve her, but Agamemnon ✨ misunderstood ✨

    • @naurahdeatrisyagitany8365
      @naurahdeatrisyagitany8365 2 года назад +137

      @@kinrateia Isn't one of the versions of Orestes Furies-haunted misadventures have him stumble across Iphigenia who was saved by Artemis and made into a priestess of hers? So at least one playwright shares your headcanon

    • @ToaArcan
      @ToaArcan 2 года назад +179

      @@kinrateia Artemis: Ey gimme the kid.
      Agamemnon, with two braincells: Well we give things to the gods by killing and burning them, right?

  • @Verbose_Mode
    @Verbose_Mode 2 года назад +1712

    The frame of Hera fuming "now we kill hin, right?" and big-brain Athena's deadpan "we can be MUCH more creative than that" kills me.

    • @someguy1747
      @someguy1747 Год назад +77

      Not as much as it killed ALL of Troy.

    • @elisexv1495
      @elisexv1495 Год назад +14

      @@someguy1747 I was about to say 😂😂

    • @KaiHung-wv3ul
      @KaiHung-wv3ul 6 месяцев назад +29

      "Why kill one guy when we kill an entire city instead, MHAHAHAHAHAA!" -Average Olympian god

    • @chessknowledge5150
      @chessknowledge5150 4 месяца назад +1

      CAn you pls tell me why did they say it was Odysseus fault at the end?

    • @IbizaToniTL
      @IbizaToniTL 4 месяца назад +8

      @@chessknowledge5150it was odysseus idea to do the pact of all suitors to defend Helen’s marriage. Therefore, he ensured basically all of the polis would be bound to go to the war, as if it had happened without the pact only Sparta would have gone to war against Troy

  • @Kailerification
    @Kailerification 2 года назад +2125

    There is one part where Ares tries to stay neutral in the war, I like to imagine him seeing his mom and big sister arguing with his baby mama, and him just going "nope"

    • @basilii5446
      @basilii5446 2 года назад +302

      He probably is staying neutral so that he wont get his ass kicked by said mom, big sister, and baby mama.

    • @riverstein7251
      @riverstein7251 2 года назад +250

      Also him butting in would mean he is helping settle a debate of who is prettier, his mom, sister, or baby mama/girlfriend. And no one smart enough would ever go near that

    • @thalmoragent9344
      @thalmoragent9344 2 года назад +66

      @@riverstein7251
      Well, I mean, I'd have to say my baby mama in this case. Sister's are siblings and your mom is, well, your mom. But your baby mama is your partner so, I'd go for that

    • @thalmoragent9344
      @thalmoragent9344 2 года назад +49

      Wait, so Athena is older than Ares? Actually wait, yeah cause Zeus was married to Metis before Hera, right?

    • @origamipein18
      @origamipein18 2 года назад +19

      Oh, and he lost his children during the Trojan War.

  • @MrKennybass
    @MrKennybass 2 года назад +3874

    Can we all take a minute to appreciate how far Red's style, in both her art and commentary, has come since her original Trojan War videos?

    • @Doggo761
      @Doggo761 2 года назад +49

      Yes.
      Yes we can.

    • @Lionstar16
      @Lionstar16 2 года назад +34

      We're all so proud of our girl Red :)

    • @Canadamus_Prime
      @Canadamus_Prime 2 года назад +38

      Yes. And I loved her original video too.

    • @omarsalem1219
      @omarsalem1219 2 года назад +2

      Yes

    • @charles-benoitfrin6453
      @charles-benoitfrin6453 2 года назад +4

      @@Canadamus_Prime i didn’t, she didn’t even mention the wrath of Achilles, which the entire point of the poem. This one is much better:)

  • @charleshockenbury353
    @charleshockenbury353 2 года назад +2345

    Drawing Nemesis, Goddess of Revenge, as a cute little fire angle waving at a baby is the funniest thing ever

    • @Micaerys
      @Micaerys 2 года назад +132

      Her last drawing of her was very similar, but with darker color and with messy hair, and I choose to believe that that was her not giving a single fuck about how to look when she punished Narcissus xD

    • @eyesofthecervino3366
      @eyesofthecervino3366 2 года назад +47

      2:01

    • @ChaoticRoses
      @ChaoticRoses 2 года назад +7

      @@eyesofthecervino3366 Thank you!

    • @antoinerodier
      @antoinerodier 2 года назад +37

      Well she can be your angle... or yuor Devil

    • @charleshockenbury353
      @charleshockenbury353 2 года назад +30

      @@antoinerodier god dammit did I spell Angel wrong again?
      This keeps happening.
      I blame my degree in mathematics

  • @Books-Music-Tea
    @Books-Music-Tea 2 года назад +7319

    I've watched this video a couple of times and realized something. Hera and Athena weren't just pissed at not being chosen but the additional insult to injury. For Hera, Paris snubbed her offer to make him king of the world for a woman who was already married (and happily so, if I recall correctly) showing no respect for her domain. For Athena, Paris turned down her offer of glory and victory to marry a woman whose marriage is technically under the protection of powerful kings that can and will reduce Troy to rubble to honor their oath. It's a very, very stupid move that is guaranteed to end in failure (or pyrrhic victory) especially with the Goddess of War and Wisdom against him.
    He didn't just snub them in favor of Aphrodite and her offer, Paris basically spat in their faces, even if it was unintentional.

    • @John_Weiss
      @John_Weiss 2 года назад +438

      Huh. That's a very interesting interpretation.

    • @Blokewood3
      @Blokewood3 2 года назад +393

      Paris didn't actually know that Helen would be the one he ended up with. Aphrodite only promised the most beautiful woman in the world, but didn't tell Paris who that was. So no, Hera and Athena were just being petty.

    • @Kelaiah01
      @Kelaiah01 2 года назад +478

      @@Blokewood3 I read that Aphrodite *did* tell Paris specifically about Helen, even mentioning that she was already married, "but don't worry, I'll take care of that!" or something.

    • @Blokewood3
      @Blokewood3 2 года назад +273

      @@Kelaiah01 I guess this is a detail that depends on the storyteller.

    • @Kelaiah01
      @Kelaiah01 2 года назад +68

      @@Blokewood3 I actually read that in "Dialogues of the Gods." Most of them are quite hilarious. XD

  • @Rinasoir
    @Rinasoir 2 года назад +2842

    I love that Odysseus being dressed as Solid Snake is just a thing now in OSP.
    If you want a new pin idea, him in and out of a wooden crate are something I would buy in a heartbeat.

    • @cynthesizer_
      @cynthesizer_ 2 года назад +74

      ABSOLUTELY WOULD BUY

    • @legateelizabeth
      @legateelizabeth 2 года назад +108

      It’s never not been a thing. The very first drawn summary was The Illiad, which featured Solid Snake Odysseus.

    • @unfoldingspace8
      @unfoldingspace8 2 года назад +62

      OSP
      Odysseus Snake Plissken

    • @librarianseth5572
      @librarianseth5572 2 года назад +15

      I'd try an urn, but then the Ares one might be easily confused

    • @OddHunter5504
      @OddHunter5504 2 года назад +73

      We need two types
      Solid “baby faced” snake Odysseus
      Big Boss”bearded” Naked Snake Odysseus

  • @noahthompson3451
    @noahthompson3451 2 года назад +2038

    I know this isn't intentional, but I like the idea that Aphrodite promises Hellen of Troy because of her previous status as a war goddess, and she knew it would start a big conflict.

    • @spaceoil4259
      @spaceoil4259 2 года назад +317

      Ares: “So bae, what have you been up to lately?”
      Aphrodite: “Just looking at some cute ships”
      Ares: “Aww, it’s a good thing you’re not a war goddess, you wouldn’t last a day”

    • @lern2reed
      @lern2reed 2 года назад +71

      That’s brilliant. I’m stealing this headcanon.

    • @LittleShit
      @LittleShit 2 года назад +166

      @@spaceoil4259 I think that Ares would definitely know about Aphrodite's war goddess aspect based on Red's vid on Aphrodite

    • @firebunnylover3108
      @firebunnylover3108 2 года назад +98

      Another curious aspect on Aphrodite’s role is that she and Helen sort of parallel each other as they are so beautiful people fight over her before they are put in a marriage/relationship neither of them had a say in, and the guy who they chose happens to be Spartan (ares is the patron god of Sparta so he’s spartan default)

    • @d.n5287
      @d.n5287 2 года назад +120

      @@spaceoil4259
      Ares: "You're all about that make love not war"
      Aphrodite: **under her breath** "I can do both."

  • @Kemirii_png
    @Kemirii_png 2 года назад +3817

    The nostalgia of seeing Red draw the ol bois of the Illiad in her current art style is honestly the best dose of seratonin I'll get in a while. Thank you Troy for being such a bad movie :D

    • @shekharpatait1203
      @shekharpatait1203 2 года назад +13

      Don't you mean dopamine?

    • @Satepin
      @Satepin 2 года назад +79

      @@shekharpatait1203 there's more than one good brain chemical

    • @Elegiast
      @Elegiast 2 года назад +22

      Agreed! They look great, especially Odysseus.

    • @taviebrown2271
      @taviebrown2271 2 года назад +50

      Only true fans can remember Troy being so bad Red drew it all instead. And true fans are so grateful that whoever made Troy didn’t follow the plot at all.

    • @taviebrown2271
      @taviebrown2271 2 года назад +18

      Also Odysseus looks So cool in the updated style.

  • @YouveBeenMegged
    @YouveBeenMegged Год назад +572

    Y’know, this whole mess *technically* was partially caused by Odysseus, but it’s really the fault of whoever didn’t invite Eris to the godsdamn wedding. Like, I get you’re worried she’s gonna cause trouble, but she’ll *definitely* cause more trouble if she’s not invited.

    • @BlackSwordMeister
      @BlackSwordMeister Год назад +68

      Damned if you do, damned if you dont...

    • @YouveBeenMegged
      @YouveBeenMegged Год назад +66

      @@BlackSwordMeister I suppose, but if you're damned either way, better to not give her a reason to target you specifically.

    • @kbye2321
      @kbye2321 11 месяцев назад +12

      I suppose, but who wants chaos at their wedding?

    • @FirebladesSong
      @FirebladesSong 9 месяцев назад +23

      @@kbye2321 Someone wise enough to know there's no escaping it and better to invite it than to be surprised by it.

    • @brianbell8382
      @brianbell8382 4 месяца назад +8

      So, Zeus is really to blame (which wouldn't suprise me). Interestingly, from what I understand from Greek mythology, the Trojan War is one of several methods Zeus used as a means to get rid of all his demi-god children running around on Earth so regular mankind could inherit it.

  • @cynthesizer_
    @cynthesizer_ 2 года назад +1960

    I love the small details on Eris’ bedside table. The copy of Paradise Lost and the selfie of her and Loki are *perfection*

    • @h0m3st4r
      @h0m3st4r 2 года назад +133

      Eris and Loki would totally get along.

    • @maybeitsgabriel3035
      @maybeitsgabriel3035 2 года назад +82

      3:43 for anyone who wants to see

    • @Jay_Vee1
      @Jay_Vee1 2 года назад +55

      I can already picture them going out for coffee to spill the tea from their pantheons to eachother.

    • @gabriellaburke6915
      @gabriellaburke6915 2 года назад +25

      Lmao I have no idea how you guys can tell that's Eris and Loki, but I'll take your word for it

    • @kgmotte2363
      @kgmotte2363 2 года назад +17

      Lol, How the Hell did you even Recognize that?! The Picture frame is so Tiny! But I Funny Endorse the Idea that those two would be BFFs!

  • @namechanged1248
    @namechanged1248 2 года назад +1959

    What’s kind of interesting is the implication that the Trojan war is just a hugely mythologized version of a real conflict that happened just prior to the Bronze Age collapse and beginning of the Greek dark ages.

    • @SimonClarkstone
      @SimonClarkstone 2 года назад +93

      OSP have a video about that connection too.

    • @twinkiesmaster69
      @twinkiesmaster69 2 года назад +9

      @@SimonClarkstone which one?

    • @giuliagabriela9729
      @giuliagabriela9729 2 года назад +73

      Last blue video I think its about the Crete island

    • @SpiderkillersInc
      @SpiderkillersInc 2 года назад +124

      I’d compare it to the Romance of the Three Kingdoms, a dramatization of real events that has fictional elements. Just based off oral history than written.

    • @allthebanter9316
      @allthebanter9316 2 года назад +35

      @@SpiderkillersInc I’d compare it slightly more to the book of invasions more than the three kingdoms, as well as the tales of hengest and horsa

  • @adeleaslan8182
    @adeleaslan8182 2 года назад +2228

    Achilles rage could actually easily be explained as being the result of a child never truly growing up, as his enthusiasm for war was encouraged because the soldiers knew how useful his strength was and he spent ten years, practically growing up in war and not suffering any actual consequences since he was unbeatable, and Patroclus wouldn't get hurt as long as was there. His death wasn't just the loss of the person he loved more than his fate itself, but the only loss he'd ever suffered, and first consequences of his glory quest of war and in this essay I will-

    • @jeremiahardales6597
      @jeremiahardales6597 2 года назад +215

      So he's Homelander but with slightly more empathy in the form of Patroclus?

    • @adeleaslan8182
      @adeleaslan8182 2 года назад +146

      @@jeremiahardales6597 see you get the idea

    • @Beat9
      @Beat9 2 года назад +107

      No no, continue. Please.

    • @mysticpumpkin8520
      @mysticpumpkin8520 2 года назад +225

      @@jeremiahardales6597 kinda, but no really. While Achilles was far from a saint, he wasnt Homelander-levels of psychopathy (that would be Agammenon, but without the strenght) and most of the time, he was quite justified in his anger, even if the methods to show it were not appropiate, and was capable of emphaty and humanity. Is just that the context and the people around him (except Patroclus) brought up his most callous side

    • @jeremiahardales6597
      @jeremiahardales6597 2 года назад +58

      @@mysticpumpkin8520 So he's more Omni-Man than Homelander? Got it.

  • @bordenfleetwood5773
    @bordenfleetwood5773 2 года назад +1169

    I honestly love Red's unconditional hatred of Agamemnon. It's just so pure and consistent. Like, she'll acknowledge the virtues of any debate point (even if she thinks you're wrong) on virtually any topic that's been discussed on this channel, but Agamemnon... He's just "the Worst." That's it, debate over.
    (I don't necessarily disagree with the sentiment; I just find her hatred of him to be pure and refreshingly unadulterated.)

    • @mustafam956
      @mustafam956 Год назад +9

      Agememnon is a true chad

    • @NA-AN
      @NA-AN Год назад +87

      ​@@mustafam956I'm sorry, but I think you made a typo. I believe the word you're looking for is '*Scumbag*'.

    • @Never_Gonna_Give_You_Up._Hi
      @Never_Gonna_Give_You_Up._Hi Год назад +5

      @@NA-AN Do you mean "backpfeifengesicht"?

    • @my_girl_seraphine5294
      @my_girl_seraphine5294 7 месяцев назад +13

      A hatred more than earned

    • @TomatenUndZwiebelSuppe
      @TomatenUndZwiebelSuppe 2 месяца назад +8

      He's a Henry VIII type of character, where in his youth he's quite competent and honorable, even. But towards his later life, he becomes the arrogant, bad-choice Georg.

  • @ryanmattox7408
    @ryanmattox7408 2 года назад +2218

    I’ve always believed the real reason Hera and Athena got mad about losing the Apple is because Aphrodite proved she can outsmart them. They see this young dude and offer him kind of intangible things power and boundless wisdom.
    Aphrodite knows mortal hearts and realizes Paris will much prefer something ‘real’. The most beautiful woman in the world. THAT Paris can actually conceive of.

    • @SamJNE122
      @SamJNE122 2 года назад +236

      To be honest, considering that she is literally the god of seduction, I feel as though she could have gotten him to pick her without offering anything.
      I don't think that Hera or Athena ever stood a chance.

    • @OmniGman
      @OmniGman 2 года назад +162

      Hell, in some versions Aphrodite is literally the Goddess of Love AND Beauty!
      Meanwhile, Hera can't even get her own husband to sleep with her consistently despite being the literal Goddess of Marriage and Athena never previously gave any indication of caring overmuch about her looks.
      So, yeah, not really a fair match-up.

    • @AnimeSunglasses
      @AnimeSunglasses 2 года назад +63

      "How DARE she win with a CHEAP SHOT like THAT!!!"

    • @AnimeSunglasses
      @AnimeSunglasses 2 года назад +94

      @@OmniGman Nobody in ancient Greece ever claimed that marriage and fidelity were the same thing.
      ...At least for men...

    • @richeybaumann1755
      @richeybaumann1755 2 года назад +43

      It's... really not that deep. Aphrodite Pandemos is flighty, fickle, and has absolutely no concept of consequences. She just thought "pretty people belong together" and decided to make it happen.

  • @Ajehy
    @Ajehy 2 года назад +1670

    There’s a super sad bit in the Iliad when Helen goes up to the walls to look at the Achean heroes and is confused that her brothers (the Discouri) aren’t there. She has no idea that they died 10 years ago, before even setting sail for Troy.

    • @Boss_Isaac
      @Boss_Isaac 2 года назад +83

      Helen was still at Sparta when her brothers died, wasn't she? I remember they retrieved her while Theseus went down to Erebos with Pirothoös; they took Theseus' mother Aithra back with them to serve as Helen's handmaiden and she later accompanied her to Troy.

    • @Ajehy
      @Ajehy 2 года назад +330

      @@Boss_Isaac it depends on the version, but here’s Homer’s:
      “‘There are two whom I can nowhere find, Castor, breaker of horses, and Pollux the mighty boxer; they are children of my mother, and own brothers to myself. Either they have not left Lacedaemon, or else, though they have brought their ships, they will not show themselves in battle for the shame and disgrace that I have brought upon them.’
      She knew not that both these heroes were already lying under the earth in their own land of Lacedaemon.”

    • @donnguyen1107
      @donnguyen1107 Год назад +201

      her brothers' own story is usually that Pollux is immortal but Castor is mortal and was killed in a fight with these other twins. So Zeus gave Pollux a choice: live up on Olympus as an immortal, or share his immortality with Castor with both spending a day in the underworld and a day in the heavens. So Pollux chose the latter, and now both brothers are alive AND dead, having also become the constellation Gemini.

    • @ianhogben3472
      @ianhogben3472 Год назад +46

      @@donnguyen1107 a good brother

    • @Blokewood3
      @Blokewood3 Год назад +12

      Her brothers were argonauts, which happened a generation before the Trojan War, so they would probably be in their 60s-70s by the time of the Iliad. Odd that Helen would expect them to still be fighting.

  • @halfanegg6496
    @halfanegg6496 2 года назад +1742

    I find it interesting how Patroclus getting killed was what made Achilles go all out. Like he basically heard the news and said “they could have not done that and won the war, but now they made it so that I have nothing left to fear loosing and no reason to hold back”

    • @Anna-hl9hy
      @Anna-hl9hy 2 года назад +268

      It’s quite beautiful and tragic at the same time. He was blinded by his own selfishness and the only way he could see again was by his love dying. He was so depressed but you could say everything he did from then on was for the love of a boy

    • @eyjay1508
      @eyjay1508 Год назад +36

      @@Anna-hl9hy Except the weren't in love. Achilles was already married with children before the war, married Polyxena after Patroclus died and married Medea in the afterlive after he was killed.
      Literally the sole reason he walked out of the war is because agamemnon stole his girlfriend and people still think him and patroclus were in love, despite the fact that its not writen anywhere in the illiad or the odyssey and despite the fact that it would highly blasphemus because achilles was younger but was also a god.

    • @megumintobuna-4537
      @megumintobuna-4537 Год назад +173

      @@eyjay1508 i mean it's a pretty popular interpretion of their relationship. It's not stated they were in love but it's not stated that they weren't more than friends too. Male lovers in the time of war was pretty common back there so guys as close and loving to each other as them banging here or there probably wouldn't be too weird.

    • @eyjay1508
      @eyjay1508 Год назад +24

      @@megumintobuna-4537 Males lovers weren't common, that's just a reddit/tumblr rumor. Most same gender lovers in ancient greece were teachers with underage students, it was dishonorable for men of the same stature to be in relationships, and double so when the younger one (eromenos) was a demigod.
      Also, achilles already had brieses to bang lol

    • @crawlingboy
      @crawlingboy Год назад +47

      @@eyjay1508 leave it man these people take the weird head canon some theater writers in ancient greece made for those two and everyone loves fujo bait so they go with it
      even when they were not having anything like that
      heaven forbid a man gets saddened by his comrade who he cared for like family dying

  • @Borderose
    @Borderose 2 года назад +5068

    Ares is a big, beautiful, brutish bufoon. The closest thing the Olympians had to a god of evil. But I found out he's got a surprisingly good track record when women are concerned.
    1) He is Aphrodite's favorite lover and later her surprisingly supportive husband. He doesn't even mind her sleeping around because he sees it as his girl's thing. Her form of conquest and asserting dominance and he can't get enough of it. He doesn't want to tie her down. No, he wants to unleash her on the world.
    2) He's sired pretty badass daughters. He also became the first god to go to court and nearly lose his godhood because he avenged one of his daughters getting violated by butchering the rapist. The rapist was one of Poseidon's sons, so he was up against a stacked court. He got acquited only because on the day of verdict, there were more goddesses than gods in the jury. All the gods voted to punish him. All the goddesses wanted to let him go.
    3) He's got a good relationship with his aunt, Hestia. Then again everyone does. But it's very important for Ares as his aunt was his one source of familial-warmth knowing full well how his parents feel about him and how dysfunctional they all are.
    4) On that note, Ares is apparently a hands on dad. Even to his bastards (Who Aphrodite is totally cool with too.) Even to the girls. Even to the monstrous looking ones. All his kids either see him in their lives or he leaves them with little boons to set them up. He tries to be a good father because he knew his own father hated him and he tries to be there for his kids in ways Zeus never was for him. As war, it's understandable the "defender of mankind" and "father of laws" would not love nor like the war and bloodshed god. But the war and bloodshed god relishes in fighting alongside his sons, Phobos and Deimos. Morbid, sure, but you gotta appreciate Ares for being a present father.
    5) Oh, yeah. The big one. Ares? Brutal, bloody Ares? _Isn't a rapist._ In a messed up family, the war god is the only one without a rape story. Hell, one of his kids with Aphrodite is the embodiment of reciprocity. He is also apparently the official defender of mistreated women. Women who were mistreated pray to him for strength. Which sadly might have contributed to his unpopularity. Oh, and he's a big supporter of the Amazons. The whole culture collectively sees him as their dad.

    • @sarahcole9661
      @sarahcole9661 Год назад +1394

      I heard one reason Ares gets such an awful reputation, besides that warfare sucks for everybody, is that he was the patron god of Sparta. This is important bc Sparta’s number one rival was Athens, and apparently all the people who actually wrote the oral tradition down came from there

    • @bthsr7113
      @bthsr7113 Год назад +676

      @@sarahcole9661 Yeah, he really gets the short end of the stick more often than not, while lacking severe crimes to his name. Though I see revaluations of Ares being less likely than the revaluations that Hades has gotten. Death is a natural thing we must all face, and Hades watches over all the souls of the dead (that are in his jurisdiction).
      Whereas war is not a natural thing, and it is often needlessly started by the wicked.

    • @donnguyen1107
      @donnguyen1107 Год назад +268

      Ok seriously if I were to be a demigod/greek figure, for immortal dads, Poseidon or Ares are at the top of my list. Better yet, they could both be my dads. For immortal moms, i'd say either Demeter or Aphrodite (Red's established she's got a warrior and virtuous streak too).

    • @JapanFreak2595
      @JapanFreak2595 Год назад +469

      Never thought I would return to this video with the idea of Ares being a lowkey feminist icon.

    • @toniyami
      @toniyami Год назад +54

      When did he get married to Aphrodite?

  • @betula2137
    @betula2137 2 года назад +1631

    Fun fact: Australia's defence headquarters once let in a literal Trojan horse.
    Once in, the warriors fell from the breach and were not arrested for funni reasons

    • @obi-kennawobi07
      @obi-kennawobi07 2 года назад +202

      The same guys who lost a war to emus

    • @Sb_Antimony
      @Sb_Antimony 2 года назад +26

      What was this?

    • @betula2137
      @betula2137 2 года назад +61

      @@obi-kennawobi07 You fought in the war, Uncle Ben?

    • @betula2137
      @betula2137 2 года назад +103

      @@Sb_Antimony The Chaser, you can find the video if you search for it on RUclips
      They were an iconic satire show, equipped with lawyers to make sure they didn't get themselves in serious trouble, while sticking to the very knife's edge!

    • @Out_Beyond_The_Heliopause
      @Out_Beyond_The_Heliopause 2 года назад +23

      Ah some classic Chasers War on Everything hijinks 😆

  • @lthefifteenth661
    @lthefifteenth661 2 года назад +2681

    In my opinion, I feel that Helen doesn't deserve the hate. Considering she was charmed by Aphrodite herself to go with Paris and even tries to resist her influence in the Illiad, I think it's pretty clear that she never wanted any of the collateral damage that happened over what a God demanded

    • @floricel_112
      @floricel_112 2 года назад +511

      Ancient greeks be like: "sure, Paris may have kidnapped Helen, but it's the woman's fault for being too beautiful in the first place"
      Same vibes as "the woman has no claim to the child she gave birth to, she's just the oven that cooks the bun" and "burn Penelope at the stake if she were to sleep/cheat with any of the princes courting her, but Odysseus sleeping with Calypso and Circe is 100% A-Ok and totally not cheating"

    • @ohno8398
      @ohno8398 2 года назад +256

      I always perceived it has her being a victim of kidnapping trying to figure a way out so I always find it hard to gel with other interpretations even if they were probably the intended ones. Every time she talks to Paris she sounds like she utterly despises him.

    • @lthefifteenth661
      @lthefifteenth661 2 года назад +123

      @@ohno8398 Yeah I remember writing an essay about Helen back in University. It actually irritates me how there is somehow an argument against Helen here

    • @coltonwilliams4153
      @coltonwilliams4153 2 года назад +183

      Even in the version where she pretends to be the Achean men’s wives when they’re hiding in the horse, which shows that she’s completely acting in Troy’s interests, at that point, at least, it’s obvious that that’s because of the love spell that Aphrodite cast on her. I’ve only ever blamed Paris and Aphrodite for this giant ass fiasco. Helen and Odysseus were completely innocent in this.

    • @lthefifteenth661
      @lthefifteenth661 2 года назад +64

      @@coltonwilliams4153 There's also the time leading up to the war. There was negotiations to have Helen returned but they were promptly denied.

  • @ThatoneAct
    @ThatoneAct 2 года назад +314

    I love how all of Achilles' involvement is literally just "I'm sad, you're dead now, I'm sad again, I'm dead now"

    • @MalloonTarka
      @MalloonTarka 2 года назад +23

      More like "YAAAAY, WAR! Oh noes, war causes bad things? I'm sad, your're dead now." and so on and so forth.

  • @dragonlord1861
    @dragonlord1861 Год назад +804

    Fun fact, the arrows that Philoctetes uses to kill Paris are actually Heracles’ Hydra Blood arrows. Philoctetes got them from Heracles after helping him light his funeral pyre after the whole “Hydra Blood Shirt” incident. Just a nice little detail that emphasizes how the trojan war generation was the generation right after Heracles’ generation.

    • @giorgospapoutsakis5271
      @giorgospapoutsakis5271 Год назад +2

      True, because after they took Troy the downfall of their civilization [The Mycenaean] began after the siege of Troy which lead to the Dorons migration from the north which are called Hercules descendants in the myth "The return if the Herakles"
      The conclusion is that it's indeed right

    • @ryanthelion2765
      @ryanthelion2765 8 месяцев назад +37

      This is part of the reason I love Greek mythology because there's almost a timeline

    • @davialmeida4442
      @davialmeida4442 Месяц назад +2

      I doubt Pari's wife could have done much then. But it's still nice to know Paris died thinking he could have survived was he not the worst

  • @crimsonterror5795
    @crimsonterror5795 2 года назад +1386

    Poor Cassandra, was forced to live with the knowledge of the destruction of her whole life without being able to convince anyone of her powers. Then to have her family killed, get enslaved, abused, then murdered for being enslaved.

    • @plinfan6541
      @plinfan6541 2 года назад +125

      Cassandra did nothing wrong.

    • @meauxlala2079
      @meauxlala2079 2 года назад +118

      Everyone likes to talk about Athena and Medusa (which I really hate that version of the myth but it's so popular now) but no one ever talks about how she could have saved Cassandra and didn't.

    • @wren_.
      @wren_. 2 года назад +91

      Cassandra is literally the epitome of “i told you so”

    • @Blokewood3
      @Blokewood3 Год назад +59

      Cassandra didn't deserve all the tragedy she went through, but it was her own fault she had prophesies no one believed: Apollo asked her out and she said she would only be with him if he gave her the gift of prophecy, but then she still refused to date him. Apollo couldn't take back the gift, so he cursed her so that no one would believe her prophesies.

    • @isabellp.5730
      @isabellp.5730 Год назад +78

      @@Blokewood3 Depending on the translation, he wasn't asking her out, but wanted to have sex. Yikes.

  • @thogthemighty7960
    @thogthemighty7960 2 года назад +595

    God I love Eris's OwO face. I've never seen her portrayed as anything other than a bitter crone, but her portrayal as a chaotic and sassy anime girl is new and interesting.

    • @BJGvideos
      @BJGvideos 2 года назад +77

      The DreamWorks movie about Sinbad had her as more of a...goth anime girl

    • @incognitoman3656
      @incognitoman3656 2 года назад +2

      Reversed for me?

    • @skypaver989
      @skypaver989 2 года назад +21

      I like to envision her as Raquel from Barbie life in the dreamhouse

    • @fourleafclover2064
      @fourleafclover2064 2 года назад +36

      Either way, Eris is every Sapphic person's sexual awakening

    • @incognitoman3656
      @incognitoman3656 2 года назад +1

      @@BJGvideos exactly

  • @fafaaf61
    @fafaaf61 2 года назад +1117

    So a bit of an interesting fact: most people know that the Trojan war lasted a decade but what people don't know is that the part of the story where Artemis causes the Greek ships to be lost lasts 8 years. This is interesting because the Trojan cycle doesn't actually make it entirely clear if the 8 years lost at sea "counts" as part of the 10 years which either means that the actual Trojan war only lasted 2 years or that the time the Greeks were gone actually totals to 18 years.

    • @jasondoe2596
      @jasondoe2596 2 года назад +121

      Interesting; do you remember any source for that?
      In any case, it can't be 18 years, because then Odysseus would be away from home for 28 years, and Telemachus isn't that old.

    • @Крэйден-ы6ч
      @Крэйден-ы6ч 2 года назад +110

      @@jasondoe2596 Here you can also remember that Achilles had a son, Telemachus, who was born either a couple of months before the departure of "our young hero" to Troy, or immediately after. And Telemachus is mentioned as a young warrior who fought in Troy, and who took Andromache and a couple of other personalities with him.
      So the 18 year version makes sense. Although then poor Odysseus returned home a 60-year-old old man.

    • @durrangodsgrief6503
      @durrangodsgrief6503 2 года назад +29

      @@Крэйден-ы6ч where is he called Telemachus isnt his name pyrrhus or Neoptolemus

    • @axios4702
      @axios4702 2 года назад +41

      probably the former, since Odysseus son would be over thirty and a proper king by the time the aforementioned returned if it had been 28 years.

    • @durrangodsgrief6503
      @durrangodsgrief6503 2 года назад +4

      @@axios4702 no not Odysseus son Achilles son

  • @fictional-girl_05
    @fictional-girl_05 2 года назад +790

    Because of everything that happened, I honestly think Helen as a child of Nemesis is very poetic.

    • @seanmcloughlin5983
      @seanmcloughlin5983 Год назад +127

      It’s also kinda funny thinking of it being an extension of her demigod powers that everyone who is mean to her dies horribly
      And I think the fact that Menelaus doesn’t get any negative energy and lives a long happy life means she probably did actually love him and the Paris thing was kidnapping/god BS

    • @fictional-girl_05
      @fictional-girl_05 Год назад +58

      @@seanmcloughlin5983 I actually want to write an adaptation that uses that version of her parentage in which she goes with Paris willingly in order to instigate the war as punishment for something one of the Trojans did.

    • @seanmcloughlin5983
      @seanmcloughlin5983 Год назад +9

      @@fictional-girl_05 id read that
      Reply here if you ever end up making it, that sounds rad

    • @leeh4669
      @leeh4669 Год назад +53

      @@seanmcloughlin5983 Even if she doesn't love Menelaus, she loves her daughter Hermione, and in some play or poem (not the Iliad, but maybe by Euripides? Unsure) she laments the fact that she and Hermione would weave together and now her daughter just has her tiny loom, all alone. That stuck with me because it's such a sad image, and because it signals that she really didn't want to go with Paris, if not for her husband then for her daughter.

    • @DaughterofRevenge
      @DaughterofRevenge Год назад +8

      ​@@fictional-girl_05 That is so cool btw! I was also planning to write as well about that one too! Except that I was thinking about the story of the Trojan War in Nemesis' POV and how she feels about Helen, her daughter. It is really intriguing of what their mother-daughter dynamics are like. ❤

  • @1987MartinT
    @1987MartinT 2 года назад +825

    One version I read said that Achilles, upon killing Penthesilea, was shocked when he saw how young she was(which, considering Achilles was possibly a teenager when the Trojan War started, makes me wonder how young Penthesilea was for him to be horrified by her to be fighting and to have killed her at such a young age), and forbade anyone from looting the corpses of her and her warriors.

    • @athena3268
      @athena3268 2 года назад +239

      Maybe he saw himself in her, choosing to fight for glory and dying young.

    • @shreowotheartist253
      @shreowotheartist253 2 года назад

      And then Thersites, that asshole, just straight up slammed a sword into her skull, based on the telling that Im familiar with (dunno if it's consistent with other versions or not, since I read a Vietnamese translation)

    • @jean-paulaudette9246
      @jean-paulaudette9246 2 года назад +36

      I thought females were considered to be of no accounted age at all, until they were married... then again, with folks of such far-flung upbringings, some variations in cultural 'norms' must be expected.

    • @athena3268
      @athena3268 2 года назад +61

      @@jean-paulaudette9246 During Homer's time aka 8th century BCE we have little knowledge of the sociopolitical dynamics in every single city state.

    • @A_Black_Sheep94
      @A_Black_Sheep94 2 года назад +7

      I'm pretty sure the general consensus is how shocked he was by her beauty.

  • @marowakcity3727
    @marowakcity3727 2 года назад +322

    I love the fact that Cassandra is just, there in the video constantly panicking with everyone else (including Red) ignoring her

  • @andrewkim9848
    @andrewkim9848 2 года назад +436

    I keep thinking I've heard all the weird stuff that possibly happened in Greek mythos, and then I have to hear about Helen hatching from an egg because her mom got double-teamed by Swan Zeus and her husband

    • @nidohime6233
      @nidohime6233 2 года назад +24

      And that is not even the only case of bestiality in greek mythology, remember the Minotaur?

    • @jacktaylor6253
      @jacktaylor6253 2 года назад +12

      And poseidon as a horse, cant forget that.
      Or the literal snakes

    • @leunam3004
      @leunam3004 2 года назад +25

      Greek mythology is basically 50% someone gets killed for stupid reasons that could be totally avoided and the other 50% is Zeus banging everything but never in his original form and the consequences that come out of those.

    • @evobrand1210
      @evobrand1210 2 года назад +8

      @@jacktaylor6253... golden rain. Zeus turned into golden rain.

  • @immawraffle
    @immawraffle 2 года назад +416

    The best thing about the Trojan horse is that it really *is* a tribute to Athena -- she's the goddess of *war and strategy.*

    • @KaiHung-wv3ul
      @KaiHung-wv3ul 6 месяцев назад +8

      Always thought it was awfully convenient for Laomedon to suddenly die by snakes, but all's fair in love and war I suppose.

  • @crackedhelm4292
    @crackedhelm4292 2 года назад +554

    I absolutely love how you're just merging Odysseus more and more with solid snake every episode with him in.

    • @Variocom
      @Variocom 2 года назад +87

      "Odysseus just barely managed to keep the others from blowing their cover through basic logic and the occasional application of CQC." really got me 😂

    • @liegeparadox2624
      @liegeparadox2624 2 года назад +32

      @@Variocom I’m just imagining him holding whatever poor soul first tried to speak up in a choke hold while angrily whispering to the others not to blow their cover.

    • @coltonwilliams4153
      @coltonwilliams4153 2 года назад +21

      @@liegeparadox2624 Odysseus: I will kill you all if I think you’re going to blow this! Do you Hades damned idiots understand me?!
      Everyone else: Yessir! Yessir! Whatever you say!
      Poor bastard in the chokehold: *painful grunting while tapping out*

    • @the_tactician9858
      @the_tactician9858 2 года назад +16

      Honestly young Solid Snake Odysseus might be my favourite character in this episode.

    • @leithaziz2716
      @leithaziz2716 2 года назад +13

      That'd make Achilles Raiden and Agamemnon Liquid or Ocelot.

  • @acecat2798
    @acecat2798 2 года назад +1395

    THANK YOU for the call out of the "war bride" or "bride prize" euphemism. Beating around the bush on this is incredibly sick- Briseis and Chryseis deserve better, as do basically all of the women of Troy, who got their lives ruined way harder than any of the Achaeans did during/after the war.
    One thing I'd add is that Athena wasn't just pissed at the Achaeans for stealing her statue, but that Cassandra was assaulted _in Athena's temple_ or dragged from it when she had been embracing the statue and praying to Athena for safety.

    • @sasas845
      @sasas845 2 года назад +124

      Yes. But also if you need an explanation for that, then your history class has failed you. Shit like that is so disgustingly common in war that in the region I live in, this is not a thing of legends and not even from history books but in living memory (i.e. some of the older folks around here have witnessed it themselves).

    • @Blokewood3
      @Blokewood3 2 года назад +188

      Cassandra was assaulted by Ajax the lesser, son of Oileus (not to be confused with the greater Ajax, son of Telamon). Some of the Greeks were considering killing Ajax right then and there to stave off a potential curse from the Gods, but Ajax claimed sanctuary (even though he hadn't shown Cassandra the same courtesy). On the trip away from Troy Ajax drowned, and nearly all the other leaders had a miserable time getting home except for Nestor, who had refrained from committing any war crimes.

    • @bluelfsuma
      @bluelfsuma 2 года назад +24

      Why are humans like this?

    • @sindrevangenrobberstad2889
      @sindrevangenrobberstad2889 2 года назад +183

      I really like how Madeline Miller interpreted Briseis in The Song of Achilles. Achilles, who has zero interest in women in that book, takes her as a "bed slave" because Patroclus asks him to. Patroclus does this because he sees the fear in her eyes and wants to save her from being assaulted by any of the other men present. Achilles and him proceed to "claim" various other war brides, give them their own tent to chill out and be safe in, and become friends with them. Achilles and Patroclus never lay a hand on any of the women. Briseis also falls in love with Patroclus after they become good friends, but nothing ever comes of that because Patroclus is a one-man guy.

    • @wellstiscool
      @wellstiscool 2 года назад +115

      Say what you want about the movie Troy (and there is a LOT to say), but Briseis getting to stab the fuck out of Agamemnon is a delightful and oh so satisfying piece of fanfiction.

  • @jaybonn5973
    @jaybonn5973 2 года назад +768

    this is really the OG Cinematic Universe. Imagine being that person who learned of all of these and put the pieces together.

    • @awesomemantroll1088
      @awesomemantroll1088 2 года назад +3

      *put

    • @ironicweeb4111
      @ironicweeb4111 2 года назад +19

      Red’s scholarly work on this channel is amazing and arguably more charming than Blue’s (she’s the reason I’ve been here for so long, sorry Blue)

    • @aristheodorakis7836
      @aristheodorakis7836 2 года назад +4

      That nerd would be king of the wigglers? 🤫

    • @A_Black_Sheep94
      @A_Black_Sheep94 2 года назад

      ...Homer?

    • @aristheodorakis7836
      @aristheodorakis7836 2 года назад +1

      @@A_Black_Sheep94 I believe you have to be alive to hold that position? Also, while he was a master storyteller/weaver of tales; there is no evidence that he was an Einstein, a DaVinci, Socrates?

  • @SirRadington
    @SirRadington 2 года назад +808

    In fairness, Agamemnon threatening Odysius's son to get him to join the war was probably the ONE smart thing that guy did, since Odysius is probably the one guy in that war with a brain

    • @DemonicsInc
      @DemonicsInc 2 года назад +126

      Ok but the guy is really lucky he didn't get murdered after doing that. Ngl woulda thrown him overboard the moment he and I were alone and not told anyone

    • @jee644
      @jee644 2 года назад +187

      @@DemonicsInc fun fact, there's actually a version where Palamedes is the one that threatens his son, so later Odysseus frames him by forging a letter that was supposedly from Priam to Palamedes and buries trojan treasure in Palamedes' camp. The Achaeans deem him a traitor so they stone him to death

    • @sultanmalik9808
      @sultanmalik9808 8 месяцев назад +9

      Agamemnon knew he was lying though. And Odysseus was trying to weasel out of going through with HIS PLAN

    • @lckyminer_2256
      @lckyminer_2256 4 месяца назад +1

      Yeah, but it is still a dick move on his part.

    • @Citra_188
      @Citra_188 4 месяца назад +4

      ​@@jee644 oh I've seen someone made an animatic of that!

  • @athena3268
    @athena3268 2 года назад +972

    About Achilles' heel: it was common in stories to say that where a hero got their mortal wound was actually their one weakness. Ajax also was said to be invincible except from where he plunged his own sword, and Cygnus, who Achilles kills in the Cypria, was invincible except the head.

    • @redwitch12
      @redwitch12 2 года назад +194

      That... makes a surprising amount of sense. Like "wow this dude was such a total badass in battle that he MUST have been immune to damage, except for that one thing which happened to kill him, for Reasons"

    • @colinmerritt7645
      @colinmerritt7645 2 года назад +37

      What I've never understood is how a heel strike is lethal. I'm trying to imagine the worst case scenario: crushed bone, severed muscle, blood everywhere, but it seems (again worst case scenario) they could have amputated the foot and cauterize the leg.

    • @brennantmi5063
      @brennantmi5063 2 года назад +100

      @@colinmerritt7645 Pray tell, how do you amputate a foot that is indestructible? For that matter how do you cauterize flesh that cannot be burned?
      From a practical angle, 90% of people that died in war around this time died from infection after getting a small scratch. That said, if the major artery in the leg was hit and not addressed you can very well bleed out before people know what to do.

    • @fishworshipper
      @fishworshipper 2 года назад +64

      In the case where he’s invincible everywhere else: I imagine that his heel is his weak point because all of his remaining ‘mortality’ is there. It his his only remaining tie to the mortal world. Destroying it is supernaturally lethal, not purely physically.

    • @athena3268
      @athena3268 2 года назад +36

      @@colinmerritt7645 poison

  • @spiderlegs157
    @spiderlegs157 2 года назад +287

    The play "The Trojan Women" details how the women of Troy deal with the sacking of their home. It's a fantastic play that breaks my heart.

    • @quinnsine1650
      @quinnsine1650 2 года назад +27

      The death of Andromache’s son will haunt me forever

    • @yusufnaqui713
      @yusufnaqui713 2 года назад +12

      It's my favorite Greek play. Really shows the horrors of war and how it wrecks and demoralizes both victors and vanquished.

    • @travisoliver6741
      @travisoliver6741 2 года назад +11

      "One word brings another" is probably one of my favorite simplistic quotes that I got from that play, and it's just one gut punch after another in it.
      Euripides is just awesome.

    • @Matrim42
      @Matrim42 2 года назад +14

      Complete tonal whiplash, but I saw a production of Trojan Women that some of my friends were in and there’s a scene where Menelaus throws Helen to the ground and she had a bit of a wardrobe malfunction causing her breasts to fly out of her robe. I told my mom about it later and without missing a beat she deadpan said “did it launch your boat?”

    • @cosmedelustrac5842
      @cosmedelustrac5842 Год назад +1

      I didn't know about this. Thank you for mentionning it.

  • @raiknightshade3442
    @raiknightshade3442 2 года назад +753

    Shout out to that daughter of Ares who singlehandedly ignited the concept of "hope this doesn't awaken anything in me!" In all of Troy's women, 10/10 i love her already and need an entire epic/movie just about her now

    • @KumaoftheForest
      @KumaoftheForest 2 года назад +47

      Honestly, given my power kink, She’s got my eye

    • @Nobunga
      @Nobunga 2 года назад +51

      Her legacy is a four star servant in FGO that HATES Achilles

    • @anadaere6861
      @anadaere6861 2 года назад +3

      @@Nobunga She's also really really B

    • @higonakamura1236
      @higonakamura1236 2 года назад +11

      @@Nobunga
      You mean CEO Penthesilea 😏

    • @TORchic1
      @TORchic1 2 года назад +4

      @@Nobunga Also, the Persona of a main character in Persona 3.

  • @Emily-tv1iz
    @Emily-tv1iz 11 месяцев назад +96

    So I always pictured Helen as being a young twenty-something in the Trojan War. Freshly married, freshly kidnapped, the perfect age for young suitors to look at her and go "mine". But Clytemnestra is the *exact same age* as her and had a daughter in her teens(ish?) at the start of the war. So that bumps up Helen's age to at least thirty.
    This started me down a rabbit-hole of what actually was going on between Helen's arranged marriage and Helen's...new arranged marriage. Turns out, she had at least one child by the time of Aphrodite's shenanigans. So these kids lost their mother suddenly, the father sailed off to get her back....and then a decade passes. By the time the parents returned the kids were all basically adults. That's weirdly sad to think about. Where's the story of these parents finally reuniting with their now grown-up children after a literal decade apart? Gimme that tale!

    • @Kingdomkey123678
      @Kingdomkey123678 11 месяцев назад +20

      That tale is in the Nostoi which is sadly lost to time

    • @Gioppdumister
      @Gioppdumister 5 месяцев назад +4

      It likely does exist. And is lost to time.
      There’s a shit ton of myths that are just missing from us and we know they existed.

    • @aliceinwonderbruh6433
      @aliceinwonderbruh6433 4 месяца назад +2

      also Menelaus spent SEVEN YEARS getting back after the Trojan war too

    • @Graycata
      @Graycata 2 месяца назад +3

      That goes double for Odysseus. He missed his son's entire childhood in teen years

  • @J_JonahJameson
    @J_JonahJameson 2 года назад +568

    I think it’s hilarious that the whole thing about Achilles wrapping himself in a blanket burrito is literally what happened in the Iliad

    • @Epic_Halfblood
      @Epic_Halfblood 4 месяца назад +9

      He was ahead of his time, really. The only other thing he needs to be even more ahead of his time is a giant ice cream tub

    • @whatamidoingwithmylifehaha
      @whatamidoingwithmylifehaha 3 месяца назад +2

      ​@@Epic_Halfblood And a blahaj

  • @jurriendevries
    @jurriendevries 2 года назад +467

    My absolute favorite part of the Iliad is towards the very end when Priam goes up to the Achean camp to beg for his son's corpse. The pure love of a father for his son, which goes so deep that even Achilles' wrath subsides never fails to pull on those heartstrings.

    • @alexcrick8010
      @alexcrick8010 2 года назад +76

      If I remember, Achilles gives him 10 days to grieve the death of his son, and returns Hectors body. Agamemnon then decides that this is a great time for an invasion and his side gets absolutely fucked cause Achilles refuses to rejoin until the 10 days have ended.

    • @FirePuncher183
      @FirePuncher183 2 года назад +58

      @@alexcrick8010 Agamemnon really is just the worst

    • @maks-tldr56
      @maks-tldr56 2 года назад

      And then Paris gets shot in the dick and he doesnt give a shit. Dad of the year

    • @LordDeathwing17
      @LordDeathwing17 2 года назад +23

      @@alexcrick8010 had they existed back then, what sections of the Geneva Conventions would Agamemnon be breaking by doing that?

    • @Eric6761
      @Eric6761 2 года назад +21

      @@LordDeathwing17 yes

  • @mr.goblin6039
    @mr.goblin6039 2 года назад +691

    Speaking of the Amazons that showed up on the side of Troy, another group showed up to help the Trojans: the Ethiopians. Memnon, a prince and demigod from Africa, shows up to help Troy and kills a bunch of Greeks, one of which was Antilochos, a friend of Achilles. Nestor, the dude’s dad, tells Achilles, so he gears up again and meets Memnon to fight to a stand still. This was after Hector died, so it was a battle of two dudes trying to avenge their fallen comrades. After a long battle, Achilles gets a lucky blow and strikes him through the heart. The Gods were so impressed by Memnon doing so well in battle that they turned his burial ground into a river and all his loyal soldiers into birds… Cause Greek Gods honor warriors in very weird ways. The story of Troy is filled with a lot of cool stuff that is sadly never adapted in most stories. Like, the fact that Fate GO is the only piece of media that I’ve seen that even references the fact that Amazons showed up in the war should speak to how little these other parts of the story get mentioned.

    • @pantherjoseph
      @pantherjoseph 2 года назад +18

      But man, Pent sure is useful if you know you’re going up against any Greek hero…

    • @omarsalem1219
      @omarsalem1219 2 года назад +55

      What I hate about most trojan war modern adaptations like The movie troy is The complete removal of all mythological aspects like The gods it's same problem with that boring Hercules movie starring the Rock what do these people have against mythology?

    • @TheShinyFeraligatr
      @TheShinyFeraligatr 2 года назад +31

      @@omarsalem1219 Some people just really, really fucking love mud fantasy for some godforsaken reason. The story of Camelot has the same issue.

    • @Nazuiko
      @Nazuiko 2 года назад +18

      @@omarsalem1219 Or retconning Thor into a high tech super alien because *Cant offend the Christians by using the G word*

    • @TheSuperRatt
      @TheSuperRatt 2 года назад +33

      @@Nazuiko They literally still call him a god in the movies.

  • @foulplayer7812
    @foulplayer7812 Год назад +420

    At the end of the day, Paris was doomed no matter who he chose. Giving the apple to any one goddess would invoke the wrath of the other two upon the judge. That's precisely why Zeus told Hermes to go find some mortal to settle the dispute between the three goddesses rather than dealing with it himself. It's one of the smartest and sneakiest things Zeus ever did.

    • @xaf15001
      @xaf15001 Год назад +77

      He probably thought the 2 goddesses would've just killed the mortal and be done with it. Unfortunately, he picked Paris...

    • @zainmudassir2964
      @zainmudassir2964 Год назад +37

      Maybe Choosing Athena would have helped fight off threats

    • @toetotipthatsabart5048
      @toetotipthatsabart5048 10 месяцев назад +23

      That’s why you gotta cut the apple into thirds! Unfortunately apple slicers hadn’t been invented yet.

    • @joshuaholland5279
      @joshuaholland5279 10 месяцев назад +13

      Asks hades if he wants a gift for his wife (the other goddesses are afraid of hurting him due to how scary Persephone is)

    • @rileymitchell3510
      @rileymitchell3510 10 месяцев назад +12

      I feel like hera or Athena would have been smarter choices lmao, they can both protect him.

  • @warbacca1017
    @warbacca1017 2 года назад +622

    A couple of variations Ive found more common are:
    1) agammemnon didn't exactly threaten Odysseus's son, but rather put him down in the path of the plow and then called Odysseus on it when he swerved to avoid the kid.
    2) Achilles's guardians don't want him to go so they disguise him as a girl along with the daughters of the king he's staying with. Odysseus tricks them by laying out ribbons, jewelry, etc. However he also includes a wooden sword, which Achilles picks up with interest and then they ask him to come and he agrees

    • @eyjay1508
      @eyjay1508 2 года назад +88

      Achilles cover was also blown when he ended up knocking up the actual princess while disguised.

    • @raptormage2209
      @raptormage2209 2 года назад +28

      And in another version it was Palamedes that exposed Odysseus, later he got stoned to death after Odysseus framed him of betrayal

    • @Brian-tn4cd
      @Brian-tn4cd 2 года назад +17

      Wasn't girl Achilles called Pyrrha like the one that was Prometheus' son's wife?

    • @reyonXIII
      @reyonXIII 2 года назад +29

      @@Brian-tn4cd And that is why best girl gone too soon is named Pyrrha Nikos. (Hoping you get the reference)
      Oh, and "Pyrrha" and one of the princesses that's harboring him have a kid, covered briefly in one of the later OSP Di-Vines

    • @thexenosaiyan
      @thexenosaiyan 2 года назад +7

      @@reyonXIII 5 Volumes past and there's still a twinge of pain

  • @ravenwitch45
    @ravenwitch45 2 года назад +438

    "Eris, Goddess of it's getting a little too chummy around here, wakes up one morning and choose's violence."
    That right there is a perfect representation of Red being humorous while also being completely accurate to these myths and I love it.

  • @Robinwinghood
    @Robinwinghood 2 года назад +846

    I really get the impression that the character most ancient greek storytellers ACTUALLY had the hots for wasn't Helen, but instead Achilles. with how many people he gets shipped with, however briefly.
    Especially when you count in that, if memory serves, Agamemnon tricked Iphigenia into coming to the ritual site by claiming she was going there to marry Achilles, making four Achilles love interests in total!

    • @Hyperversum3
      @Hyperversum3 2 года назад +119

      More than the hots, that's the Shounen Hero Power.
      The guy is so cool you OF COURSE ship people to him, men and women alike.
      The only issue is that the ancients weren't above having their heroes boning the other part of the ship. Anime should learn something

    • @dylan.bissendmylife
      @dylan.bissendmylife 2 года назад +36

      99.9% invulnerable hunk? sign me up

    • @SignumInterriti
      @SignumInterriti 2 года назад +76

      There was also a story, I don't remember the source, where he sieges another town for supplies during the war and the king's daughter just opens the gates hoping he'd marry her. Achilles had straightup simps, both in the stories and among their writers I assume.

    • @esmeecampbell7396
      @esmeecampbell7396 2 года назад +6

      Well I mean this was written by Athenians who were all encouraged to be bum biters so that wouldn't surprise me...

    • @DemonicsInc
      @DemonicsInc 2 года назад +15

      I mean yeah ancient Greece was Hella gay, even the most renowned heros had some dude action on the side

  • @peanut_butter_wizard1213
    @peanut_butter_wizard1213 Год назад +100

    Oh I saw a cool theory about why Artemis demanded the daughter as a sacrifice.
    Artemis is the protector of young girls in mythology, which at first makes it make less sense why she would demand that sacrifice before letting them sail to Troy. But, it was her making Agamemnon have to deal with the loss he's going to put the people of Troy through. Like, the people attacking Troy don't have to worry about their families being caught up in the fighting bc they're nowhere near it.
    Artemis was going 'hey, if you really want to do this, sail off and destroy a city, kill hundreds of innocent girls? Prove your commitment. Kill your own daughter.'
    And Agamemnon is the worst so he barely hesitated

  • @Jebbtube
    @Jebbtube 2 года назад +644

    In Paris' defense, he was forced to choose between three ultra powerful, spiteful goddesses, so there was no way this was gonna turn out well for him.

    • @kayeka4123
      @kayeka4123 2 года назад +107

      I actually kinda respect him for his choice. He was offered power, glory or love, and he choose love. Because Paris was a simple dude who knew what made life worth living, and it wasn't crushing responsibility or slaughter on the battlefield.

    • @rickkcir2151
      @rickkcir2151 2 года назад +47

      He could have just gone with Athena’s reward and been a Trojan hero.

    • @macewindu1
      @macewindu1 2 года назад +21

      @@rickkcir2151 I mean to be king of the world Means you get all of it

    • @AmryL
      @AmryL 2 года назад

      The version my Greek teacher told was that Paris wanted to be diplomatic and split the apple, with some mush about the sum of their virtues. Hermes was all "These b*tches are not gonna settle and play nice; the smart game is to take a bribe so you will have at least 1/3 of a good life and someone to pass the blame to".

    • @TheAssassin642
      @TheAssassin642 2 года назад

      @@kayeka4123 i would respect that if he didn't already have a wife. So imo fuck 'em

  • @shino4242
    @shino4242 2 года назад +795

    Hmm I dunno if I'd say this is Odysseus' fault. He may have made sure that "everyone" in Greece was honor bound to go to war to protect that marriage, but Paris is the one who shacked up with someone elses wife, Aphrodite is the one who handed said wife over to Paris, and Eris was the one who started the argument between the 3 goddesses in the first place. It's definitely more on their shoulders than Odysseus imo lmao. All HE did was make sure the ancient Greek version of a dating app went forward without the suitors killing eachother out of pettiness.

    • @syabilaazri7834
      @syabilaazri7834 2 года назад +102

      Yeah, i with you...i think that even Odysseus could not thought that this kind of war would happen over Helen got kidnap. All that he doing is just make sure every man stop fighting over a girl and let Helen choose her husband herself.

    • @tarniabook3076
      @tarniabook3076 2 года назад +60

      I'd rather blame Eris. All the others, if the idea crossed their minds, would easily feel guilty, but I would bet my right hand that Eris, goddess of discord, was laughing like a maniac and having the time of her life watching the mortals and heroes arguing and killing each other. She did her job well.

    • @beazle2543
      @beazle2543 2 года назад +38

      There's an old phrase out of Greece that hasn't really survived to the modern day: "The humour of the Fates is wry indeed.".

    • @allyrose9494
      @allyrose9494 2 года назад +32

      Yeah, the oath is what got all the armies to agree to fight Troy, but I put this more on Eris (for starting the contest with Hera, Athena and Aphrodite), Aphrodite (for offering a married woman as incentive), and Paris (who kidnapped a married woman just cause Aphrodite said he could have her)

    • @SingeScorcher
      @SingeScorcher 2 года назад +35

      I think the "Odysseus' fault" Joke is more in how people tend to overthink things after they've been through a lot. Odysseus absolutely did a good thing in preventing a buch of smaller wars, but he probably questioned how much of this mess was his fault because he technically had a hand in the setup.

  • @sailoritaly
    @sailoritaly 2 года назад +2057

    Could you possibly do a whole video on Cassandra herself? She’s such a tragic character

    • @zainmudassir2964
      @zainmudassir2964 2 года назад +134

      So are most women in Greek mythology.

    • @starcapture3040
      @starcapture3040 2 года назад +35

      No I want Gilgamesh

    • @TheShinyFeraligatr
      @TheShinyFeraligatr 2 года назад +76

      Or Philoctetes, specifically because it's a great way to show off that Odysseus absolutely fucking deserved what came to him later, and because Philoctetes is metal as hell in his own right, literally blessed by a god because he had the balls to stand up and kill said god.

    • @selenakwok8169
      @selenakwok8169 2 года назад +25

      I like that but I also want a whole video on Helen

    • @hiddenshadow2105
      @hiddenshadow2105 2 года назад +41

      I also would love a video on Clytemnestra

  • @FiendTheWhacked
    @FiendTheWhacked Год назад +313

    I know she wasn't an option but I feel the actual safest bet in the "who gets the apple" choice would be to throw a curveball on everyone & pick Persephone. Like, if you're going to have all the goddesses pissed at you anyway, might as well have the one on your side be Queen of the Underworld.

    • @Blokewood3
      @Blokewood3 Год назад +113

      Persephone might be ticked off at you if you did that, because she never asked to be dragged into this argument.

    • @FiendTheWhacked
      @FiendTheWhacked Год назад +67

      @@Blokewood3 Well if nothing else I've succeeded in making Eris happier.

    • @Richforce1
      @Richforce1 Год назад

      Part of me thinks he did that on purpose to start the war. Knowing his parents wanted to kill him because he'd destroy Tory and just loving Hector more he took Helen, while he still had a wife, in order to start the war that would destroy Troy as revenge by becoming the destroyer they feared he was.

    • @leeh4669
      @leeh4669 Год назад +65

      It's explicit that other goddesses didn't join in. Like Demeter was fully there and so was Artemis, Paris could have picked one of them. Or Hestia, she was also present. But those three (like Persephone) had the common sense to stay tf out of the drama. I also think that it's sort of related to power proximity amongst the gods: Hera is Zeus' wife, but he cheats on her, Athena is his favorite daughter, but was part of a coup to overthrow him, and Aphrodite is the only being who can make Zeus lose control through making him fall in love, and is sometimes called his most beautiful daughter (if her mother is Dione). So it's a stepmother and her stepdaughters all fighting for acknowledgement from the toxic mess that is Zeus.

    • @nara9404
      @nara9404 Год назад +2

      @@leeh4669 but persephone and Artemis are also hera's stepdaughters

  • @bobaoriley1912
    @bobaoriley1912 2 года назад +199

    You know the Trojan war was huge when Red calls the Odyssey and Anead an epilogue. I loved the character design and how unique everybody was. The witty dialogue was great!

  • @ashadasha1217
    @ashadasha1217 2 года назад +679

    For the record, Red, your Iliad video is one of my absolute favourites and what lead me to the channel

    • @thedissatisfactoryman114
      @thedissatisfactoryman114 2 года назад +17

      I agree, it was a big help to my Iliad essay

    • @Dyneamaeus
      @Dyneamaeus 2 года назад +7

      Seconded. Or Fourth'd, I guess.

    • @Togro1990
      @Togro1990 2 года назад +2

      Don’t look at how long ago it came put

    • @sorasilverstar144
      @sorasilverstar144 2 года назад +2

      DITTO!~

    • @timothymclean
      @timothymclean 2 года назад +1

      Ultimately, without those early videos none of us would be here. Doesn't mean they're not embarrassing for Red to remember, of course...

  • @SpurgeonGeneral46
    @SpurgeonGeneral46 2 года назад +894

    “Literature and art nowadays is far too emotional”
    The Iliad: first word literally being wrath

    • @bobthegamingtaco6073
      @bobthegamingtaco6073 2 года назад +48

      You mean ancient greece isn't considered nowadays anymore? Dammit, I really need to catch up with the youth... is Pliny the Younger still popular?

    • @screaming_cat2007
      @screaming_cat2007 2 года назад +29

      Me:*Opens Iliad*
      Also me: Why do I hear boss music?

    • @SpurgeonGeneral46
      @SpurgeonGeneral46 2 года назад +17

      @@bobthegamingtaco6073 sadly he has entered his flop era in my opinion

    • @alicerivierre
      @alicerivierre 2 года назад +13

      A story of wrath, some romance, compassion, and crazy ass action!

    • @starmaker75
      @starmaker75 2 года назад +17

      Everything too Emo and angsty
      ancient literature: angsty about sin and existence about being in a world of gods

  • @Shantari
    @Shantari 2 года назад +114

    "I came here to flee the furies and kick ass, and the furies are inescapable!" is an amazing pre ass kicking one liner.

  • @notjohn5988
    @notjohn5988 2 года назад +146

    In love with the characterization of Achilles being absolutely PUMPED to fight and die in battle he doesn’t even have to be in and everyone else just being like “bro you good?”

    • @loadeddice4696
      @loadeddice4696 2 года назад +14

      Patroclus: Can we just not?
      Achilles: What are you, gay or something?
      Patroclus: ...

    • @coltonwilliams4153
      @coltonwilliams4153 2 года назад +6

      @@loadeddice4696 Achilles: Oh… sweet!

    • @Blokewood3
      @Blokewood3 2 года назад

      Thetis had hidden Achilles away on an island and disguised him as a girl, but Odysseus tricked him into coming out by visiting the island disguised as a peddler. While all the girls were interested in the things the "peddler" had brought, only one of them was interested in the deadly weapons for sale...

    • @boobah5643
      @boobah5643 2 года назад

      @@Blokewood3 Was kind of disappointed Red skipped that story. Mind, there was lots that needed skipping if she was going to make a fourteen minute video.

    • @athena3268
      @athena3268 2 года назад

      Teenage enthusiasm

  • @matthewmuir8884
    @matthewmuir8884 2 года назад +214

    *Penelope:* "Agamemnon, my husband can't take part in the war; he's gone mad!"
    *Agamemnon:* "Has he actually gone mad, or has he put underwear on his head, two pencils up his nose, and started saying, 'Wibble'?"
    *Penelope:* "Um..."
    Later that day:
    *Odysseus:* Whatever your plan was, Penelope, I'm sure it was better than mine. (looks at the fleet around him) ...I mean; who would've noticed another madman around here?"

    • @oldrabbit8290
      @oldrabbit8290 2 года назад +1

      Odysseus should consult a fox who's just been appointed Professor of Cunning at Oxford University before trying that ploy..

  • @loonflam8910
    @loonflam8910 2 года назад +182

    I just think it's so cute that Odysseus sees all these suitors for Helen and is like, "I can use this." Sure, it would've been nice to be married to the most beautiful woman in the world, but Penelope had his whole heart.

  • @Eldrisaur
    @Eldrisaur 2 года назад +122

    “Zeus, recognizes disaster when he sees it”
    Because he’s caused enough to know them

  • @mythologistthe92nd
    @mythologistthe92nd 2 года назад +413

    I feel so bad for Cassandra in the background, in a perpetual state of panicked mental breakdown from knowing what will happen and all the horrible steps along the way and never being able to do anything to stop it... :(

    • @plinfan6541
      @plinfan6541 2 года назад +64

      She should have used reverse talk the entire time.
      Cassandra: "Yeah, bring in the wooden horse, it is definitly not a trap"
      Troyans: "Yeah right, their is Cassandra with her wierd talk again. Obviously the Horse is a Tr..Oh Shit!"

    • @tortis6342
      @tortis6342 Год назад +14

      It only gets worse for Cass after the Illiad. Look it up; it'll ruin your day. I blame Apollo.

    • @Kelaiah01
      @Kelaiah01 Год назад +27

      @@tortis6342 While I certainly do feel bad for Cassandra, I don't know if Apollo should be blamed. After all, Cassandra said she would sleep with him if he gave her the gift of prophecy, but then went back on what she said after he gave her said gift. That meant 3 things:
      -Apollo is the god of many domains, including truth: Cassandra basically *lied* to the *god of truth*.
      -Breaking an oath is considered a serious deal back in those days (while Cassandra's promise to sleep with him might not be considered an oath, it was still a promise, pretty closely associated)
      -She tricked/made a fool of a god; how can that *ever* be a good idea?
      So really, while Cassandra didn't deserve the tragedy that befell her, she brought Apollo's curse on herself.
      But another thing I find interesting is that Apollo fought on the Trojan's side during the war. He was basically on Cassandra's side the whole time... although why he didn't try to help her during the sack of Troy, I don't know. Maybe it had to do with Zeus ordering the gods not to interfere. Apollo did already go against those orders once when he helped kill Achilles, so maybe he was under closer watch by Zeus?

  • @donnguyen1107
    @donnguyen1107 2 года назад +453

    Eris showing up at Peleus and Thetis’ wedding and rolling the ball (or apple in this case) that gets their son killed gives me so many Maleficent vibes.
    Eris: “Well, quite a glittering assemblage king Peleus. Royalty, nobility, divinities and…(looks at Hera, Athena and Aphrodite and laughs) how quaint. Even the rabble”
    “I really felt quite distressed at not receiving an invitation”
    Everyone: “You weren’t wanted”
    Eris: “Not wa…oh dear what an awkward situation. I had hoped it was merely due to some oversight. Well in that event I’d best be on my way”
    Peleus: “And you’re not offended your excellency?”
    Eris: “Why no your majesty. And to show I bear no ill-will, I too shall bestow a gift for your wedding.”
    “LISTEN WELL ALL OF YOU! (takes out the apple) With this apple I give to the fairest one of all…but the fairest one shall be up to you to dispute” (laughs evilly)

    • @rock21611
      @rock21611 2 года назад +42

      Excellent adaptation of the script, very nicely done.

    • @erin8050
      @erin8050 2 года назад +38

      There's a theory out there somewhere that if the king and queen had apologized and invited Maleficent to stay she would have given Aurora some banger gifts which would just escilate as the faeries try to one up each other and show off. And honestly? I can see your Eris doing the same thing (banger presents evolving into a passive aggressive present war).

    • @donnguyen1107
      @donnguyen1107 2 года назад +16

      @@erin8050 Some Sleeping Beauty film adaptations I've seen have the evil fairy's curse also as a statement of her superior power to the other fairies.

    • @orph3us.the.artist
      @orph3us.the.artist 2 года назад +10

      I can actually picture a scene with Eris from Sinbad Legend of the Seven Seas actually having this dialogue and it's perfect lol. Catherine Zeta-Jones would kill it for sure!

    • @Punaparta
      @Punaparta 2 года назад +1

      @علي ياسر *She
      *daughter

  • @strubberyg7451
    @strubberyg7451 2 года назад +261

    I would like to talk a bit about the "Agamemnon threatens Odysseus' child" a bit:
    In the version of the legend I heard, Odysseus had pretended to go mad mainly by acting like an ox and plowing the fields. Agamemnon took Odysseus' newly born child and put it in the field. By stopping in his tracks, Odysseus admitted that he was still capable.
    I brought up this story because it shows that Agamemnon is pretty dang smart. He trick Odysseus, the smartest of the fighting kings. But being smart isn't all. Odysseus applied his intellect to solve a crisis that could be a prequel to the Trojan Wars - Bride Wars. He's not innocent, but most of the tricks he uses are for peaceful means. The one trick Agamemnon uses is used so someone could go to a war, not to mention the trick itself is just... cold.
    Even when he's smart he's being the worst...

    • @aliceinwonderbruh6433
      @aliceinwonderbruh6433 4 месяца назад +4

      I'd heard Ody yoked an ox & donkey together, started sowing salt, and not driving straight. the messenger stuck telemachus in front of Odysseus, and Ody goes around. with his trick foiled, he then gets dragged off to Troy

    • @Graycata
      @Graycata 2 месяца назад +1

      ​@@aliceinwonderbruh6433I heard that version too. That messenger unfortunately was part of the war in Odysseus got him framed for treason and stoned

  • @cdonovan4471
    @cdonovan4471 Год назад +594

    I would love to see an animated video, or at least a youtube short that's framed as a game show for "Ancient Greece's Next Top Asshole" between Jason, Theseus, and Agamemnon.

    • @jtmartin1170
      @jtmartin1170 Год назад +106

      Little do they know, the final challenge for the show is the contestants have to somehow out-asshole Zeus

    • @Mythmasyer4728
      @Mythmasyer4728 Год назад +33

      @@jtmartin1170 That is quite literally impossible.

    • @corvuscolbrand
      @corvuscolbrand Год назад +14

      I'm tired of the Jason slander man did nothing wrong. Worst thing you can argue was the Medea incident but that LITERALLY wasn't his choice. He had a passing interest and then Aphrodite mind controlled Medea into being madly in love with Jason and, be honest of a second. If Jason had rejected the free wife from Aphrodite Aphrodite would have fucked him up for having the audacity. When a god gives you something even if you didn't want it you do not reject it, they're Greek gods, they're awful
      And no shit he ended up leaving her eventually she commited multiple bloody yandere-esque murders including her own brother without even being prompted to do it.
      Jason was not exactly put in a position where there was no right choice.

    • @origional_name_here1429
      @origional_name_here1429 Год назад +33

      ​@@corvuscolbrandI mean, he could have just not done it, cause she single handedly carried his ass the entire time they were in her homeland, got their marriage sanctified by Hera and was at the best point he could be in and was able to cock it up and anger both Hera for trying to cheat on his wife and Zeus for the family murder. Bro had everything given to him on a silver platter and died under the rotting prow of the Argo, that is scientific levels of stupidity

    • @agatha6999
      @agatha6999 Год назад +15

      They should have a “dumbass” category to it as well so characters like Paris can join

  • @CalliopePony
    @CalliopePony 2 года назад +629

    Since Eris is supposed to throw the golden apple at Peleus and Thetis' wedding and Achilles is old enough to go fight by the time the Trojan War begins I like to imagine that the conflict over the apple lasted longer than we realize. Like maybe the goddesses spent a couple of decades (long enough for Achilles to be conceived, born, and grow to adulthood) pestering Zeus for a decision before he finally came up with the idea to foist his problem off on Paris. And he just spent that whole time desperately trying to give them the runaround.

    • @BunnyOnASnuman
      @BunnyOnASnuman 2 года назад +45

      If I recall correctly, he wasn't an adult when the war started. He was more like a teenager

    • @mysticpumpkin8520
      @mysticpumpkin8520 2 года назад +48

      Kinda. He was more of a teenager, but Achilles effectively was a child soldier send by Fate itself (no, not that Fate), and in some version, because he wanted to accompany Patroclus, since he was into the multi-national treaty of pritecting Helen
      And Eris effectively was Proto-Maleficent, since the reason she did the apple thing was because she wasnt invided to Peleus and Thetis' weeding

    • @kennyholmes5196
      @kennyholmes5196 2 года назад +15

      Probably in some way because of Hera, considering how Zeus _knows_ better than to make her ticked off... plus, he's _married_ to her, so not claiming she's the most beautiful would make her right peeved.

    • @nightlock826
      @nightlock826 2 года назад +12

      Zeus might be willing to stick it wherever he can, but even he knows a bear trap when he sees one

    • @TheJH1015
      @TheJH1015 2 года назад +14

      @@kennyholmes5196 I mean, yes, but on the other hand saying that someone is more beautiful than Aphrodite is *also* a very dangerous thing to do xD

  • @mizusenshi8172
    @mizusenshi8172 2 года назад +451

    I've read the story about Helen being in Egypt! The version I read was called "The Greek Princess" and was in a book of Egyptian mythology. It basically says that she and Paris got blown to Egypt en route to Troy, and when the Egyptians found out what was going on, they hid Helen to save her from Paris. The "Helen" that went to Troy was actually just her "ka" (a sort of spirit double). After the war, Menelaus got guided to Egypt to get her back. Helen meanwhile had been staying in the temple of I think Hathor and actually kinda become associated with the goddess by the locals in some way.

    • @ndesi62
      @ndesi62 2 года назад +63

      Two things: (1) this sounds like a story that some priest made up to in order to justify syncretism between Helen and Hathor, and (2) such syncretism makes sense, because Hathor is a solar deity, and from what I've read in the academic literature, Helen is actually also descended from the Proto-Indo-European sun goddess. It's actually really interesting how Helen got a huge downgrade from "super powerful sun goddess" to "damsel in distress".

    • @mindstalk
      @mindstalk 2 года назад

      crack fanfic is ancient

    • @spencertang5155
      @spencertang5155 2 года назад +3

      Sheesh do the woman some justice
      Not you the commenter, more just people who view this and see her as damsel in distress.

    • @jasondoe2596
      @jasondoe2596 2 года назад +28

      @@spencertang5155 eh... we must admit that Helen in the Iliad is basically a plot device.
      Greek mythology has several women with agency and with strong personalities; Helen just isn't one of them.

    • @sean668
      @sean668 2 года назад +18

      @@spencertang5155 It shouldn't really come as a surprise. Authorial intent isn't everything, but Greeks were raving misogynists.

  • @cheezemonkeyeater
    @cheezemonkeyeater 2 года назад +152

    Hera: So, we kill him now, right?
    Athena: Oh, we can be much more creative than that.
    The Greek gods in a nutshell.

  • @soaxiii6214
    @soaxiii6214 Год назад +170

    I always feel bad for Menelaus and Helen, from most of the texts, they're in a good relationship and then Paris comes along and kidnaps her, in most cases, against her will, which he responds like any good Husband would, grab all his buddies and go storm the castle. Also, Paris is a complete dick for having a wife and still choosing to get a married girl. Oh, and raiding Menelaus's treasury while kidnapping his wife is just the frosting on the shit cake that is Paris.
    I will never forget watching Troy in highschool, where they clearly tried to make Paris sympathetic, and not a single person in my class was rooting for him versus Menelaus.

    • @niserresin2006
      @niserresin2006 8 месяцев назад +19

      I remember one translation of the Iliad where the translator just went on a whole tangent about Aphrodite and Helen's interaction, with Helen simultaneously being really into Paris, hating herself for that and knowing that her emotions are fabricated by Aphrodite, and unironically saying at one point that Paris should die so this stupid war will be over (because she's grown genuinely fond of many Trojans and doesn't want them to die).

  • @blythebigcatbiologist3657
    @blythebigcatbiologist3657 2 года назад +420

    My favorite goddess is Eris and this whole war being started by her not receiving a wedding invite is just perfect. Also, to me a least, this also kinda put her up there with the most powerful gods as she played the others for puppets and got away without a scratch. But again she is my favorite so I might just be showing heavy favoritism.

    • @AnEnormousNerd
      @AnEnormousNerd 2 года назад +54

      Odysseus shows that power means nothing compared to cunning. And Eris is cunning.

    • @worthlesshuman5041
      @worthlesshuman5041 2 года назад +14

      It depends on who you ask but generally Odysseus is seen to be descended from Hermes (hemes->autolycos->anticlia->odysseus)

    • @omarsalem1219
      @omarsalem1219 2 года назад +11

      She is also the best dreamworks villain

    • @blythebigcatbiologist3657
      @blythebigcatbiologist3657 2 года назад +9

      The movie that introduced the world to the Petty Queen she is. And I will forever be thankful

    • @SeraphimCramer
      @SeraphimCramer 2 года назад +3

      @The Adventurer That doesn't make you a weird kid. Unless you also threw rocks in a pond to see how big the ripples are in a metaphorical sense, & you mean that, as a child, you also kicked off a major war for the lulz

  • @l.nombeu9346
    @l.nombeu9346 2 года назад +104

    A few things on this amazing kinda not really remake video
    1. The opening was hype as hell.
    2. The wingman treaty being called Operation M.A.D. is hilarious.
    3. Your remade art from scenes you've done like the blanket burrito, heel shot etc were amazing.
    4. Achilles picking the Elysium route over the boring Asphodel route (at 7) is hilarious.
    5. Odysseus has been cemented as my favourite Greek Human.

  • @commanderjonas5528
    @commanderjonas5528 2 года назад +291

    One of my personal favorite takes from the trojan war was that it actually portrays Zeus in a pretty decent light.
    He knew it would split the pantheon if he choose a goddess to have the apple so he made sure someone else could handle it(seems irresponsible until you realize just how bad it would have gone if he had picked anyone)
    He ordered the gods not to interfere with the war to make it a conflict between mortals, and yet everyone seemed to disobey it.
    He either stayed neutral or switched sides to try and keep the pantheon from falling to pieces.
    He only allowed to gods to interfere near the end when he got sick of them disobeying him, so he just wanted to war to end fast.
    If you think about it, Zeus was the straight man of the conflict.

    • @corhydrae3238
      @corhydrae3238 2 года назад

      Maybe Eris' true goal was creating a conflict so immense that even the mightiest dickhead of them all would be forced to get his shit together for once.

    • @omarsalem1219
      @omarsalem1219 2 года назад +110

      "zeus was The straight man of the conflict" that's a depressing thought

    • @commanderjonas5528
      @commanderjonas5528 2 года назад +46

      @@omarsalem1219 It is... Sadly.

    • @bthsr7113
      @bthsr7113 2 года назад +67

      ...
      oh Chaos, you're right. He was being level headed and Artemis was at times being impulsive and petty.
      Madness.

    • @paxtheskeleton6636
      @paxtheskeleton6636 2 года назад +55

      When the most sensible guy of the pantheon in that situation is ZEUS you know how terrible things can get…personally if I was given the choice instead of Paris I would book my ass outta there. The last thing I want is to piss off ANY of them.

  • @woodrobin
    @woodrobin Год назад +42

    There's an excellent bit of acting in the otherwise hard-to-watch movie Troy: Sean Bean, as Odysseus, overhears one of the other Greek leaders saying they'll never end the siege, because the walls of Troy are impenetrable, and the Trojans have more food within than they can gather from without. He's mulling over it, and is momentarily distracted by the fellow across from him whittling. Oddyseus asks the unnamed warrior what he's making, and he says it's a horse he's going to take home to his daughter. Oddyseus' face gets thoughtful, then he breaks out in a huge grin, and then he looks profoundly sad.
    Without one line of dialog, Sean Bean portrays the emotions Odysseus goes through as he first comes up with the idea of the Trojan Horse, and then thinks through what's going to happen if the plan succeeds. He realizes he's come up with a way to win the war, and a way to doom the Trojans to rape and slaughter with the Greeks under the command of Agamemnon, and his joy in his own cleverness is immediately snuffed out -- by his own cleverness.

  • @BurttheBard
    @BurttheBard 2 года назад +94

    I can’t properly explain how much, after all these years, I absolutely love that Red still has Odysseus dressed like Snake. It makes me SO happy.

  • @Karak-_-
    @Karak-_- 2 года назад +197

    Since "Curse of house of Atreus" was mentioned, I think it worthy to mention where that curse originated: Tantalos and his son Pelopos.
    Tantalos got cursed by the gods for stealing nectar, ambrosia and the golden dog, and serving them his own son as a test if they are all-knowing.
    Pelopos got cursed by a servant who helped him to get his wife by sabotaging her fathers chariot.

    • @merrittanimation7721
      @merrittanimation7721 2 года назад

      And then the Atreus of the house's name fed his nephews to his brother Thyestes after Thyestes had sex with Atreus's wife.

    • @Karak-_-
      @Karak-_- 2 года назад +16

      @@merrittanimation7721 Yea, that whole bloodline was cursed to be full really awful people.

  • @EndanDrachon
    @EndanDrachon 2 года назад +325

    So Odysseus just wanted to get a good referral to help him get with Penelope, and proceeded to get dragged into the Trojan War. Which he ultimately won for the Greeks with his cunning. Man I love that guy.

    • @alyssaagnew4147
      @alyssaagnew4147 2 года назад +29

      I think he probably realized that having a wife that beautiful was just going to lead to problems down the line. Better to have a less pretty, but loyal wife that is quite clever herself.

    • @marioxzzz
      @marioxzzz 2 года назад +11

      He also started the war by coming up with the whole "honor bound to go to war if somehitng happens to the marriage" thing. Hubris and Greek heroes are my favourite genre

    • @EndanDrachon
      @EndanDrachon 2 года назад +35

      @@marioxzzz Not his fault someone was stupid enough to kidnap Helen. He probably thought no one would be stupid enough to try.

    • @michaellohmeier6427
      @michaellohmeier6427 2 года назад

      Let's be honest: when Odysseus ropped everyone in on that blood oath shit he thought :,, Not eve the gods are stupid enough to start a full fledged war with the entirty of Greece only for their drama." Well, let me tell you this Odysseus: Zeus fucked a woman as an ant. If the bar is that low, you can pretty much expect everything from those inbreed maniacs.

    • @ari_dexel4288
      @ari_dexel4288 2 года назад +31

      Man’s the just enough type of smart where he’s clever enough to get out of problems but not clever enough to avoid getting stuck/causing them lol

  • @femoman
    @femoman Год назад +49

    "Really it's a happy ending for no one". Honestly this is one of the few things the movie Troy got right: the feeling during the sacking that, really, nobody is coming out looking good or heroic. Especially in the directors cut where they put more emphasis on the rape and infanticide bit of the sacking...yeesh..

  • @antitheist3206
    @antitheist3206 2 года назад +561

    So to recap:
    The trojan war is the fault of several important characters, including Aphrodite, Odysseus, Paris, and Menelaus. But not Helen.

    • @coffeewolfproductions9113
      @coffeewolfproductions9113 2 года назад +110

      Its basically everyone's fault but Helen. (Also you forgot Aganemnom since he killed his own daughter to get this trainwreck rolling in the first place)

    • @antitheist3206
      @antitheist3206 2 года назад +64

      @@coffeewolfproductions9113
      It wasn't Patroclus' fault. He was just there to fight alongside his hetero-lifepartner Achilles.
      But really, I didn't list everyone because I didn't feel like including some of them.

    • @coffeewolfproductions9113
      @coffeewolfproductions9113 2 года назад +8

      @@antitheist3206 Yeah thats fair

    • @coltonwilliams4153
      @coltonwilliams4153 2 года назад +116

      Odysseus is barely at fault. The pact was originally to prevent this kind of war from happening in the first place. He couldn’t have foreseen an idiot like Paris intentionally kicking a dozen hornet nests like this.

    • @antitheist3206
      @antitheist3206 2 года назад

      @@coltonwilliams4153
      Really? A genius couldn't foresee that a dumbass would mess things up in a world where every state basically hated everyone else?
      Seriously, it doesn't take a deep thinker like Odysseus to figure out that this was a terrible idea.

  • @nedhillier2446
    @nedhillier2446 2 года назад +186

    I cant get over Odysseus saying "I kinda like this guy" about Laocoon who literally almost impaled Menelaus.

    • @niserresin2006
      @niserresin2006 8 месяцев назад +13

      A worthy opponent. A fellow juggler of brain cells, only for the other side.

  • @such_a_dork
    @such_a_dork 2 года назад +189

    "I thought you wanted to marry my daughter." "Yes, but I'm also not stupid."
    I don't know why this made me laugh as much as it did.

    • @MaxWelton
      @MaxWelton Год назад +7

      “[not being stupid’s] kind of my whole thing” is the icing on the cake

  • @jinxcat90
    @jinxcat90 Год назад +66

    Found this on TV Tropes under "The Dead Have Names" and was so fascinated, I just had to share:
    "In The Iliad, many characters appear and are named only to be added to someone's body count. There's a very good reason for this: while lost to modern readers, Ancient Greeks knew that any named combatant of that era was a champion trained for years by multiple instructors and supported by the work of multiple people just so they could fight in their stead, to the point that it was more convenient to just capture a defeated enemy and then ransom them back, and having them appear just to be killed served to make the reader realize the waste of human lives and the horror of that war."

  • @annem4655
    @annem4655 2 года назад +330

    Finally, someone covered how much of a badass Penthesilea was. She was so underrated bc she's just another short-lived Amazonian warrior/queen on the Trojan's side, and everyone only care about Hector from the Trojan's side. That's also why I made a vase and am writing a short story about her.

    • @theredmenace22
      @theredmenace22 2 года назад +13

      omg someone else who knows Her Supreme Badassness! I would absolutely love to see your creative endeavors!

    • @reyonXIII
      @reyonXIII 2 года назад +16

      Just don't call her "beautiful" or anything of the sort. She will go berserk.

    • @crocidile90
      @crocidile90 2 года назад +11

      @@reyonXIII I see you too are a Master of culture as well....... I somehow got carrot man and am only missing Odysseus, Penth and the Dioscuri to complete my Trojan era greek collection. (don't really care for Europa gameplay wise)

    • @Master_E444
      @Master_E444 2 года назад +1

      @@reyonXIII I get that reference

    • @Master_E444
      @Master_E444 2 года назад +11

      Honestly we need a full video just diving into some examination of the Amazon's, the big names among them, their portrayal, and their relationship with the gods. Me and a friend pointed out that Ares is surprisingly one of the most Egalitarian Gods in the Pantheon given he was the Patron God of Sparta and the Amazons, two groups that treated women far better then the rest of Greece. Plus his positive relationship with the most traditionally feminine god in the Pantheon.

  • @linkmaxwell
    @linkmaxwell 2 года назад +89

    The Illiad contains one of my favorite scenes in all of Greek mythology - when Achilles has killed Hector and drug his body around behind his chariot for days, King Priam goes to him to beg him for his son's body to bury. Hermes helps him sneak into the Greek camp, and up to Achilles' tent.
    The old king, weeping, embraces Achilles in supplication. This single act breaks the infamous Rage of Achilles, bringing the Greek hero to his senses for the first time since his friend died. He, weeping, embraces Priam as he would his own father, and then makes him dinner before handing over Hector's body for proper burial.
    Within one scene, Homer effectively ends the mythological age with a touching reminder of the power of human empathy.

  • @therandomartist3201
    @therandomartist3201 2 года назад +90

    Fun fact, a meme of this story went round tumblr and someone made up a Greek goddess who was “half burned because of Aphrodite but her father being Hades she became a goddess of the underworld” and honestly I loved how many people in tumblr believed it.

    • @gabrielgonzalez3462
      @gabrielgonzalez3462 2 года назад +18

      I mean it sounds like something that would happen In Greek myth

    • @therandomartist3201
      @therandomartist3201 2 года назад +4

      @@gabrielgonzalez3462 ye that’s what made it so believable, if someone finds it and links it here I’d be thankful cause it’s fun to just read

    • @nidohime6233
      @nidohime6233 2 года назад +12

      Is one of those cases where is important to show where sources you got your info.

    • @nidohime6233
      @nidohime6233 2 года назад +2

      @@gabrielgonzalez3462 Except from what we know it never happend, at least I don't know of any account where Aphrodite banged Hades.

    • @peterp.9327
      @peterp.9327 2 года назад +30

      Sounds like reimagined or misinformed, norse/greek syncretism, concerning Loki's daughter Hel, who was half blue/corpselike and a goddess of the underworld.

  • @user-qj9en1kp1m
    @user-qj9en1kp1m 2 года назад +125

    At 9:26 Achilles mourns the death of Penthesilia, but it is interesting to note that she is like the 3rd girl who is regarded as a potential wife to Achilles since the war started. Iphigineia was lured to the greek camp under the pretense that Achilles wants to marry her. Then there was the whole drama about Briseis. Then the Amazon queen. And the thing is that he was already married, before he sailed to Troy!

    • @Blokewood3
      @Blokewood3 Год назад

      I guess Thersites kind of had a point then.

    • @1224chrisng
      @1224chrisng Год назад +39

      wow, 4 wives and a boyfriend, he sure is busy huh

    • @user-qj9en1kp1m
      @user-qj9en1kp1m Год назад +26

      @@1224chrisng I think at a certain point even his son shows up at Troy, which I never understood. How many 9-year olds went to war in ancient Greece?

    • @raptormage2209
      @raptormage2209 10 месяцев назад +9

      To make it even weirder, he mightve been a child when he was married and even had a son, achilles was in his 20s i believe in the illiad which took place 10 years into the war, put 2 and 2 together And yeah

    • @adamwu4565
      @adamwu4565 9 месяцев назад +11

      I believe some sources state that Achilles’ son was 14 when he arrived at Troy after Achilles died. So just old enough to heft a spear.
      If Achilles was in his early to mid 20’s at the start of the war, and with the war in its 10th year when he died, there is just barely enough time for his son to have been born a few years before the war started.

  • @MoonlightGuided
    @MoonlightGuided 2 года назад +195

    My boy Ajax barely gets a few moments. Oh well. Its funny the story I read growing up always depicted his suicide as being done out of guilt rather then shame because he lost. Basically after he lost he went out into a field and in a blind rage slaughtered a herd of sheep, in visioning that they where Odysseus and many others from the army. When he came to his senses he realized he had felt joy from killing his comrades, even though it was only in his imagination, and killed himself out of shame and guilt. It always amazes me just how many variations these old stories can have.

    • @Xx_Oleander_xX
      @Xx_Oleander_xX Год назад +12

      I knew he killed the livestock but had no idea he was pretending to kill his comrades till now!

  • @master0fthearts894
    @master0fthearts894 2 года назад +324

    Honestly, this is making me feel really bad for Odysseus.
    He tried to avoid the war, was the most clever, practically leading the Aneans to victory with the Trojan Horse-Ploy, all because he wanted to return to his wife and kid, who is just trying to use the deal originally to make sure that war like this never broke out, not to CAUSE it.
    He then spent another 10 years lost at sea, then having to deal with a murderous cyclops, only to clever-strat his way through it.
    The only reason be lost was because apparently the writers decided to play the ‘hubris!’ trope for the millionth time, even though it literally invalidates the fact that Odysseus’s main character trait is ‘clever,’ and having his downfall be ‘literally do the one moronic thing that will get you killed, that you *KNOW* not to do.’

    • @frederik7338
      @frederik7338 2 года назад +50

      considering he spent half of his "lost at sea" years boning a beautiful sorceress who adored him and spoiled him as a result, i wouldn't feel too bad for him xD He wasn't THAT much in a hurry to make it home to his wife and son.

    • @arahman56
      @arahman56 2 года назад +48

      @@frederik7338 The bigger question is how does one spend 10 whole years lost at the MEDITERRANEAN? That's some amazingly bad navigation going around here.

    • @gokbay3057
      @gokbay3057 2 года назад +28

      @@arahman56 Hell, Troy is in Anatolia and Ithaca is on the other side of Greece. It is not like he has to cross the whole Mediterrenean. He only has to cross the Aegean and then follow the Greek coast to the Ionian Isles

    • @brandonlyon730
      @brandonlyon730 2 года назад +94

      @@arahman56 I think a lot of it had to do with Poseidon screwing him over and over again. Hard to navigate the sea when the God of the Sea’s has it out for you.

    • @Center-For-I.E.D.Mismanagement
      @Center-For-I.E.D.Mismanagement 2 года назад +69

      @@frederik7338
      A sorceress with the ability to CONTROL MINDS AND INSTILL DELIRIUM THAT ONLY DIVINE INTERVENTION COULD BREAK.

  • @quintussertorius4447
    @quintussertorius4447 2 года назад +48

    The best scene in the Iliad for me is always the bit with Hector talking to his wife with their son. His son getting scared of his father’s helmet after Hector talks about how he had to learn to be good at war but doesn’t want to be a warrior is beautiful and heartbreaking.

  • @MrAlegeniale
    @MrAlegeniale Год назад +47

    4:26 So, some people have the theory that the reason why they believed Cassandra that time was because she actually yelled: "He's the prince of the omen that will bring doom to Troy, kill him!"
    And the people said: "Uhhhh oh! He's the lost prince, let's bring him back to the palace!"
    Cassandra: "Noooo whyyyy"

    • @KaiHung-wv3ul
      @KaiHung-wv3ul 6 месяцев назад +2

      Wonder why Cassandra never attempted a bit of reverse psycology.

    • @halothere6995
      @halothere6995 3 месяца назад

      They are just hiding in the palace and Cassandra is like: I told you so!