@@HaroldoPinheiro-OK Then Morbius showed up and said "it's morbin time" and he morbed everyone at the battlefield, killing both the armies of Troy and Greece. Achilles and Morbius faces off. But Achilles was not as powerful as Dr. Michael Morbius. Eventhough he was not powerful, he had an armor covering his whole body except his feet. So Morbius, being a skilled doctor, intelligently bit Achilles' feet and drank all his blood, completely draining him. Then Morbius took Achilles' helmet and weapons and proclaimed himself as a Demigod and said "Gods at Olympus, hear this! I, Dr. Michael Morbius will destroy you all, one by one. And I will drink every one of your "God" awful blood and make myself more powerful. You guys really don't understand why I'm going to do all of this right? Cuz *IT'S MORBIN TIME!"*
The Mythbusters tackled this in one of their episodes! They built a wooden horse approximately the same size described by Homer, then they got about 30 volunteer elite soldiers (either Marines or Army Rangers) to hide in the belly of the horse for approximately a day. It was brutal for the soldiers, but they WERE able to pull it off and still be in relatively good fighting condition when they emerged. So it wound up being “Plausible” for the Trojan Horse myth
@@vj_great551 The rule is “Never Go To War On A Full Stomach”. And there’s two reasons for that. 1-Nausea to the point of throwing up is minimized if not outright negated (infamously demonstrated by the D-Day Beach Hitters). And 2-The need for bathrooming is minimized if not outright negated
"If they ever tell my story let them say that I walked with giants. Men rise and fall like the winter wheat, but these names will never die. Let them say I lived in the time of Hector, tamer of horses. Let them say I lived in the time of Achilles." - Troy, by Odysseus
If someone gave me a giant horse made out of wood, I'd think that it's supposed to be an effigy. All I'm saying is that if I were there, my pyromania would have rewritten history completely.
Just wanted to let you know that the quality of writing in this video, particularly the battle scenes are on point. Had be excited even thought I already know this story.
My favorite Epic Poem is by far Homer's Illiad. I love how you summarized it. This was the first of many ancient wrritings the Universe I attended had us study in the Classical Mythology course. Excellent portrayal of the story!
Graves' take always struck me as the most plausible: we know the walls of the city suffered from an earthquake and this may have made it possible for the Greeks to break into the city...afterwards, they left a figure of a horse behind as a token of their appreciation for the help they believed they received from Poseidon, lord of the seas and earthquakes, who's animal was the horse. When people in the region came to see the destroyed city and found the horse, well, imagination took over.
I had an 8th grade algebra teacher and he wasn’t too tightly wrapped. We’d listen every day about mythology (it was far more interesting than algebra). His stories line up very closely to the stories you’re telling! Yup!
It's always interesting seeing where mythology and historical reality meet; in a similar vein, consider the Minoan eruption, which may have inspired the story of Atlantis.
Helen may represent the Hellenic peoples in some way. Could be the Trojans were gaining more control over that group’s territory or maybe Trojan drugs and rock music were “corrupting” the youth and figuratively stealing peoples spouses
I got a question on troy, where there divorce courts back then, this would sound like a messy divorce, she left the guy and he went to war to try and get her back.
That mix between actual history and mythology really is interesting; when doing some research on Epirus - different, I know - many of the rulers drew on Greek legends to legitimize their rule, etc.
Discovering clues to what really happened between the Mycenaeans in the Trojans and real life might be the key to understanding what happened to the former that eventually led to the Greek Dark ages (seriously, what happened during that transition?).
"Men are haunted by the vastness of eternity. And so we ask ourselves: Will our actions echo across the centuries? Will strangers hear our names long after we are gone, and wonder who we were, how bravely we fought, how fiercely we loved?" - Troy, by Odysseus
12:49 I believe they were called Hercules arrows, because Hercules used poison tipped arrows that he acquired by dipping them into the blood of a creature from one of his 12 labors after that he use the arrows, many other times throughout the rest of the 12 labors
It’s self explanatory and obvious. They were written as friends so they followed the story faithfully. You’re free to draw your own conclusions and so is everyone else, but the onus isn’t on the infographics show to rewrite history.
Yes, it is true. Only reason we don't keep doing it is that everyone is scared of it now. A lesser known version that would still work is the Mongol 'abandoned baggage'. When your city is under siege, you want a relieving army to come save you by attacking them in the rear. That is why Caesar's siege of Alesia he had a walls in front and behind then needed them. So.. the Mongols PRETENDED a relieving army of Chinese was coming, so they abandoned all their works and carts and stuff, then rode away in haste. They slowly retreated for two days, then burst galloped back to the city. The people of course waited a day out of fear. When scouts reported the Mongols were gone, they all went out to loot the Mongol baggage. When the Mongols suddenly reappeared, all the gates were open and the soldiers were mixed with the civilians looting. The panic was devastating and the Mongols took the city before they people could recover a defense. The greater lesson being, getting the other person to do the maneuvering that ultimately defeats them. Which is applied game theory really. People still can't believe the horse AFTER hearing about it. They certainly would not believe it BEFORE hearing about it. Put in context of today, it is a JEWISH horse covered in RAINBOWS. The people today would tear down the walls so they could bring it in to worship it.
Gay, those guys would "jump" at the first thing they saw, I'd say pansexual, or I wouldn't say any orientation, they didn't care as long as it had... holes.
The element of Helen's "kidnapping" might have really existed in some form, but was just used as a convenient excuse by the Greeks to ravage Troy. This theme was already used in the classic 1956 movie Helen of Troy.
"The gods envy us. They envy us because we're mortal, because any moment might be our last. Everything is more beautiful because we're doomed. You will never be lovelier than you are now. We will never be here again." - Troy, by Achilles
I love how they take time at the start to imply that this is 100% fact, and then they start reading a romanticized fan fiction of what happened. This is actually good camp content for watching with friends lol
When the Iliad ends, Troy is still standing, and when the Odyssey starts it has already been destroyed. So oddly enough, the Trojan Horse isn't in either of Homer's poems and yet 3000+ years later, everyone still knows its story.
@@RoxDZoro I think it was in a later epic, the aenid. Story of the trojan prince who fled troy with what men he could gather and sailed to carthage before settling in italy. The forefather of Romulus & Remus. Founders of Rome.
I'm sorry to correct you, but the troyan horse is mentioned in the odyssey, in the first books, during the visit of Thelemacus to Menelaus. the aedus sinks about the building of the hourse and the collapse of troy. this was not the most ancient poem talking about this, there was another poem titled Hiliuous persis, in which you could read the troyan hourse story. what is left to us, iliad and odyssey are just two of a bigger set of poems about the troyan wars, which in ancient times were thought to have been written by Omer. now we know one single Omer did not exist, but all those poems share the same language, which is quite interesting to us because was not real spoken greek, but the poets wanted it to be arcaic, or if you prefer to be similar to mycenean greek (no, it is not mycenean greek, it has no labiovelars, but it is similar to it, hanax from mycenean wanax instead of basileus for example). so we could say that the myth of the troyan horse was already well known during the hellenic medioaevum, 800 BC. unfortunatelly pomes are not historical evidence, so untill we do not find something, maybe in the hittit archives (we have something frammentary and unclear til now), we have to be skeptical.
Great video, but there´s a little mistake: Hector did know that Patroclous was the one in the battlefield. Maybe not at the beggining of the fight, but after Patroclous kills Sarpedon, the troyans realize that the one in the field is Patroclous, not Achilles.
I always found it ironic that the peace offering was not burned like a sacrifice to the gods outside the city. This would of made their religious zealots happy and would of prevented the soldiers from infiltrating the city while everyone was drunk. This said the city would of still been weakened from it's partying and would of struggled to defend itself if the invaders still tried their hand at the city even with the failure of the trojan horse. But with the high walls the defenders would likely have enough time to sport the attack and sober up before the walls were under real threat of being scaled or breached.
The greeks that destroyed Troy didn't know that the city would get its revenge thousands of years later, as a Trojan man named Aeneas escaped from the destruction and started a family. Two of his descendants were named Romulus and Remus...
lol that’s a fake story, before the Romans claimed Trojan ancestry they were already at war with a group of nations called Dardania so they had rename the region as Moesia.
Trojan condoms were named after the mighty Trojans. As for the Greeks, always remember these words of wisdom…”beware of Greeks bearing gifts”, and “beware of Greeks wearing sneakers 👟 too…
Helen was said to be the daughter of Zeus, while Clytemnestra's father was Tyndareus, which makes them half sisters. But even mythology aside, sisters can have different hair colours and blonde Greeks were not unusual at the time.
Kid: The Thessalonian you are fighting, he’s the biggest man I’ve ever seen. I wouldn’t want to fight him Achilles: That is why no one will remember your name
Actually Paris kidnapped Helen we can’t see because later on the Trojans complain to Paris during the war saying she curses their children from her tower and that he should just let her go
I think the destruction of Troy VI and the origin of the Philistines are intertwined. Right around the time Troy VI was destroyed the "Sea People" started appearing in Egypt and Canaan. The Trojans spoke Luwian, and there is evidence that Luwian was the Philistine mother tongue.
You don't start many years of war of a woman if you're a king. The whole war was probably planned. The Trojan princess knew that Helen was up to no good. The achaeans, Agamemnon, Achilles etc wanted to be remembered by history. The whole story has been greko romanized
From this legend we get the Trojan horse representing a deceptive maneuver and Achilles' heel representing a fatal weakness.
John 3:16 “for God so loved the world he sacrificed his one and only son” put your faith in God!!
Also the Trojan computer virus that hides itself as a program you'd want to use
@@davidhawkins3031 Lunatic detected
My favorite line in the Illiad is when Hector turns to the audience and says:
"Its Troyin' time."
And then he started Troyin' so hard that all the Trojan's got Troyed!
@@HaroldoPinheiro-OK Then Morbius showed up and said "it's morbin time" and he morbed everyone at the battlefield, killing both the armies of Troy and Greece. Achilles and Morbius faces off. But Achilles was not as powerful as Dr. Michael Morbius. Eventhough he was not powerful, he had an armor covering his whole body except his feet. So Morbius, being a skilled doctor, intelligently bit Achilles' feet and drank all his blood, completely draining him. Then Morbius took Achilles' helmet and weapons and proclaimed himself as a Demigod and said "Gods at Olympus, hear this! I, Dr. Michael Morbius will destroy you all, one by one. And I will drink every one of your "God" awful blood and make myself more powerful. You guys really don't understand why I'm going to do all of this right? Cuz *IT'S MORBIN TIME!"*
That was not a real line.
@wargames No, it was not.
Was Hector Mexican?
“For the Trojans they bet on the wrong horse” - *Hades*
Somebody just had to go for that line.
@@ThrillSeeker3524 huh
I laughed so hard when I read great job
"THE TROJAN WAR HASNT HAPPENED YET!!"-Cinema Sins
@@ThrillSeeker3524 indeed, yk how movies be.
The Mythbusters tackled this in one of their episodes! They built a wooden horse approximately the same size described by Homer, then they got about 30 volunteer elite soldiers (either Marines or Army Rangers) to hide in the belly of the horse for approximately a day. It was brutal for the soldiers, but they WERE able to pull it off and still be in relatively good fighting condition when they emerged. So it wound up being “Plausible” for the Trojan Horse myth
Nobody bother inspecting the horse..
@@condorX2 back in the day idk if they caref
How they go to bathroom
@@vj_great551 The rule is “Never Go To War On A Full Stomach”. And there’s two reasons for that. 1-Nausea to the point of throwing up is minimized if not outright negated (infamously demonstrated by the D-Day Beach Hitters). And 2-The need for bathrooming is minimized if not outright negated
@@vj_great551 what's go on behind that wooden horse
"This war will never be forgotten, nor will the heroes who fight in it." - Troy, by Odysseus
So why wasn't Memnon mentioned?
I gotta say, the animator who designed Helen of Troy sure knew what they were doing 🤣
You simping?
Trojan knockers. Bigger than they seem?
don't forgot about Achilles mom
@@sarahgibbs9931 That's not what "simping" means!🙄🤦🏿♂️🤷🏿♂️👌🏿👍🏿
Read the guidelines
"If they ever tell my story let them say that I walked with giants. Men rise and fall like the winter wheat, but these names will never die. Let them say I lived in the time of Hector, tamer of horses. Let them say I lived in the time of Achilles." - Troy, by Odysseus
Cringe
Triple cringe
Wasn't Achilles ended by "slayer of men" like Troy got tamer of horses? Or is that a movie thing
If someone gave me a giant horse made out of wood, I'd think that it's supposed to be an effigy.
All I'm saying is that if I were there, my pyromania would have rewritten history completely.
Just wanted to let you know that the quality of writing in this video, particularly the battle scenes are on point. Had be excited even thought I already know this story.
"His *friend* Patrolis... why do I feel like I just made enemies?"
Ah yes, the craziest prank in ancient history.
My favorite Epic Poem is by far Homer's Illiad. I love how you summarized it. This was the first of many ancient wrritings the Universe I attended had us study in the Classical Mythology course. Excellent portrayal of the story!
The lesson here is: don’t cheat
Exactly! Find another chick! He was royalty! He definitely could of found another chick like Helen!
Time to rewatch Troy🤣
Graves' take always struck me as the most plausible: we know the walls of the city suffered from an earthquake and this may have made it possible for the Greeks to break into the city...afterwards, they left a figure of a horse behind as a token of their appreciation for the help they believed they received from Poseidon, lord of the seas and earthquakes, who's animal was the horse. When people in the region came to see the destroyed city and found the horse, well, imagination took over.
Maybe! That's as good as any synopsis!
I had an 8th grade algebra teacher and he wasn’t too tightly wrapped. We’d listen every day about mythology (it was far more interesting than algebra). His stories line up very closely to the stories you’re telling! Yup!
It's always interesting seeing where mythology and historical reality meet; in a similar vein, consider the Minoan eruption, which may have inspired the story of Atlantis.
Helen may represent the Hellenic peoples in some way. Could be the Trojans were gaining more control over that group’s territory or maybe Trojan drugs and rock music were “corrupting” the youth and figuratively stealing peoples spouses
I got a question on troy, where there divorce courts back then, this would sound like a messy divorce, she left the guy and he went to war to try and get her back.
That mix between actual history and mythology really is interesting; when doing some research on Epirus - different, I know - many of the rulers drew on Greek legends to legitimize their rule, etc.
Discovering clues to what really happened between the Mycenaeans in the Trojans and real life might be the key to understanding what happened to the former that eventually led to the Greek Dark ages (seriously, what happened during that transition?).
"Men are haunted by the vastness of eternity. And so we ask ourselves: Will our actions echo across the centuries? Will strangers hear our names long after we are gone, and wonder who we were, how bravely we fought, how fiercely we loved?" - Troy, by Odysseus
Nope. They'll probably misinterpret the story and make up their own...
Leaving a huge wooden horse looks dodgy AF, if this is true they deserved to get overtaken bringing this in
ikr..😅
It looks "dodgy" because it once happened. Our Ancient Ancenstors believed in multiple Gods and in gifts of them.
France gifting the eifeil tower to usa as a "gift":
Do you mean the Statue of Liberty?
Why do I have the feeling that the man with the dynamites in Turkey was the inspiration to that character in Disney's "Atlantis the Lost Empire?"
12:49 I believe they were called Hercules arrows, because Hercules used poison tipped arrows that he acquired by dipping them into the blood of a creature from one of his 12 labors after that he use the arrows, many other times throughout the rest of the 12 labors
One of Achilles’ ‘closest friends’ well…they were awful close, you’ve got that right. Folks are still so afraid to say they were in love sheesh
It’s self explanatory and obvious. They were written as friends so they followed the story faithfully. You’re free to draw your own conclusions and so is everyone else, but the onus isn’t on the infographics show to rewrite history.
Other stories suggest that Achilles and Patroclus were cousins…
@@curleddoughnuts6857 Not "other stories". They are flat out cousins in the Illiad.
The original story never suggested such though
@@shawnporterjr2890 they were cousins.
Ah yes, Achilles closet “friend” 💀
9:15 Yes, 'best friend'... 🤭🤭🤭🤭
Yes, it is true. Only reason we don't keep doing it is that everyone is scared of it now. A lesser known version that would still work is the Mongol 'abandoned baggage'. When your city is under siege, you want a relieving army to come save you by attacking them in the rear. That is why Caesar's siege of Alesia he had a walls in front and behind then needed them. So.. the Mongols PRETENDED a relieving army of Chinese was coming, so they abandoned all their works and carts and stuff, then rode away in haste. They slowly retreated for two days, then burst galloped back to the city. The people of course waited a day out of fear. When scouts reported the Mongols were gone, they all went out to loot the Mongol baggage. When the Mongols suddenly reappeared, all the gates were open and the soldiers were mixed with the civilians looting. The panic was devastating and the Mongols took the city before they people could recover a defense.
The greater lesson being, getting the other person to do the maneuvering that ultimately defeats them. Which is applied game theory really.
People still can't believe the horse AFTER hearing about it. They certainly would not believe it BEFORE hearing about it.
Put in context of today, it is a JEWISH horse covered in RAINBOWS. The people today would tear down the walls so they could bring it in to worship it.
😂 very true
Great video and animation.
You delivered the content easy and interesting.
Homer really didn't understand the difference between a historian and a guy who makes stories.
And *you* don't understand who Homer was
Oh I love this story! You never disappoint us
I love the story too
@@Magicfighter01 And I love you😏
you forgot Memnon, the man who almost killed Achilles. Let's also not forget Patroclus was Achilles's gay lover
Gay, those guys would "jump" at the first thing they saw, I'd say pansexual, or I wouldn't say any orientation, they didn't care as long as it had... holes.
So informative...first episode I came across, I subscribed and have been checking ever since. Keep it up!
Just do your research before taking what this channel says as fact, they tend to be wrong on some details.
This is a very innacurate video
@@herobrinegreek9493 plz elaborate
The element of Helen's "kidnapping" might have really existed in some form, but was just used as a convenient excuse by the Greeks to ravage Troy. This theme was already used in the classic 1956 movie Helen of Troy.
Bro woke up for days and rode his horse around in a circle😂 that is wild man
We watched this in class today! Amazing video!!
"The gods envy us. They envy us because we're mortal, because any moment might be our last. Everything is more beautiful because we're doomed. You will never be lovelier than you are now. We will never be here again." - Troy, by Achilles
“OH SHI- PEOPLE ARE CRAWLING OUTA THE HORSE”
I love how they take time at the start to imply that this is 100% fact, and then they start reading a romanticized fan fiction of what happened. This is actually good camp content for watching with friends lol
I love the way reality is just boring, modest and realistic .... Unlike the drama and noise of tales and stories....
You have teribble knowing of those events in order to find them boring
When the Iliad ends, Troy is still standing, and when the Odyssey starts it has already been destroyed. So oddly enough, the Trojan Horse isn't in either of Homer's poems and yet 3000+ years later, everyone still knows its story.
I read a version of the illiad that included the trojan horse story years ago
@@RoxDZoro you mean references to the horse within the Odyssey
the Iliad has no giant wooden horse
@@RoxDZoro
I think it was in a later epic, the aenid. Story of the trojan prince who fled troy with what men he could gather and sailed to carthage before settling in italy. The forefather of Romulus & Remus. Founders of Rome.
I'm sorry to correct you, but the troyan horse is mentioned in the odyssey, in the first books, during the visit of Thelemacus to Menelaus. the aedus sinks about the building of the hourse and the collapse of troy. this was not the most ancient poem talking about this, there was another poem titled Hiliuous persis, in which you could read the troyan hourse story. what is left to us, iliad and odyssey are just two of a bigger set of poems about the troyan wars, which in ancient times were thought to have been written by Omer. now we know one single Omer did not exist, but all those poems share the same language, which is quite interesting to us because was not real spoken greek, but the poets wanted it to be arcaic, or if you prefer to be similar to mycenean greek (no, it is not mycenean greek, it has no labiovelars, but it is similar to it, hanax from mycenean wanax instead of basileus for example). so we could say that the myth of the troyan horse was already well known during the hellenic medioaevum, 800 BC. unfortunatelly pomes are not historical evidence, so untill we do not find something, maybe in the hittit archives (we have something frammentary and unclear til now), we have to be skeptical.
Suppose we built a large wooden badger…
There's another version to Achilles's death that says that Apollo knew of Achilles's weak spot and aimed Paris's arrow to hit Achilles's heel.
Yes apparently Apollo hated him
Troy Story 1 be looking dope.
Achilles Mom: "if you stay here you will have family and great long life, if you go to war you will die but live on as a legend"
Achilles: "Ok, bye mom!"
Great video, but there´s a little mistake: Hector did know that Patroclous was the one in the battlefield. Maybe not at the beggining of the fight, but after Patroclous kills Sarpedon, the troyans realize that the one in the field is Patroclous, not Achilles.
The bulls part got me 💸😭😭😭
Patroclus his best friend? Hmmm I think they were out of the friend zone by that point
They were roommates
I always found it ironic that the peace offering was not burned like a sacrifice to the gods outside the city.
This would of made their religious zealots happy and would of prevented the soldiers from infiltrating the city while everyone was drunk.
This said the city would of still been weakened from it's partying and would of struggled to defend itself if the invaders still tried their hand at the city even with the failure of the trojan horse.
But with the high walls the defenders would likely have enough time to sport the attack and sober up before the walls were under real threat of being scaled or breached.
Am I the only one that watches these videos cause I’m bored then they come on a test
ive been watching see u in history/mythology for a while and i was surprise that gods were intervening in this war and it was kinda crazy
helped me with school project!
Have you done one of “what would happen if dinosaurs came back”
an entire war fought over one man stealing another man's wife. that's human history for ya
Dude, have read the Iliad? Trojans had not started the war, Achaean had.
Patriclous was not Achilles' "best friend". They were lovers.
History hates lovers
@wargames haha, ok
"One of Achilies closesest friends" hahahahahahahahahah.
Tell people the truth!
Fun fact: Some say the Achilles was actually gay and was in love with his best friend. Sources vary.
Not necessarily gay, because unlike today no one cared how you identified, they just... did their thing, with anyone they met.
12:49 Hercules had doused his arrows in the poisonous blood of the hydra, hence the reason behind naming these arrows after him. bonus trivia.
@wargames then it's his arrows that were dipped in the poison
Homer is more a poet than a historian you can’t use him as reliable evidence
The artists at The Infographics Show really went to town with the women's, uh, fashion
great episode!
Nicely done video
Thank me later, The Professor explains this in 2 minutes in Money Heist
It was an April morning when they told us we should go.....
This was better than the movie 👍
100 years later...
Archaeologist: we found Minas Tirith!!!
I love this channel
thank you for the content
The greeks that destroyed Troy didn't know that the city would get its revenge thousands of years later, as a Trojan man named Aeneas escaped from the destruction and started a family. Two of his descendants were named Romulus and Remus...
Lol coincidental names
The founders of Rome,the city that defeated Greek empire
lol that’s a fake story, before the Romans claimed Trojan ancestry they were already at war with a group of nations called Dardania so they had rename the region as Moesia.
He was called Aeneas not Eneas
@@curleddoughnuts6857 dardinians where Trojan allies as well and Aeneas was the dardinian commander according to mythology
I’m sure they had whatever oil is to us is to them. Made up story glad you mentioned that part
Trojan condoms were named after the mighty Trojans. As for the Greeks, always remember these words of wisdom…”beware of Greeks bearing gifts”, and “beware of Greeks wearing sneakers 👟 too…
It is awesome to watch infographics show on youtube I like what would happen if you didn't brush you're teeth for 1 week
Me Who has only seen the movie: But but Achilles and Paris are Alive when the horse is entered to the City
I literally just watched a video saying archaeologists believe that none of it happened.
Why are Clymtemtenestra and her daughter black-haired while Helen is blonde? Clym and Helen are sisters!
Helen was said to be the daughter of Zeus, while Clytemnestra's father was Tyndareus, which makes them half sisters. But even mythology aside, sisters can have different hair colours and blonde Greeks were not unusual at the time.
Excellent. Please keep your docs this length or longer. Bravo 👏 Bravo 👏
Now I know the story of the name behind BABYLON 5 Earth Alliance battle cruiser AGAMEMNON - Captain John Sheridan's first command ship.
11:25 Y'all got an increase to the drawing budget and forgot how to behave
Agamemnon was foolish. You don't ever take another man's woman! Especially if she's Achilles!
The Trojan horse, the first AT-AT from Star Wars
You should do a video about the UH-60 Black Hawk! It’d be awesome.
"'...it's just a fable story to inspire people to fight a war using strategy.!!!"'🙄🫡
I’m pretty sure the “Hercules Arrows” were named after Hercules dipped his arrows in the hydra’s blood after killing it
So this was the first "Simp War" in human history? 😂😂
"You shouldn't question the veracity of ancient tales"
- some guy
*-some wise guy
Kid: The Thessalonian you are fighting, he’s the biggest man I’ve ever seen. I wouldn’t want to fight him
Achilles: That is why no one will remember your name
My name is Troy.
Achilles "best friend" 😉
Agamemnon is from Dress to Impress 💀
No he isn't from dti
Actually Paris kidnapped Helen we can’t see because later on the Trojans complain to Paris during the war saying she curses their children from her tower and that he should just let her go
11:57 oh so thats where the term Achilles heel comes from.
When i heard thanks to homer at the begining of the video i thought they meant homer simson😂
I ALREADY KNOW THIS IS A BANGER
I think the destruction of Troy VI and the origin of the Philistines are intertwined. Right around the time Troy VI was destroyed the "Sea People" started appearing in Egypt and Canaan. The Trojans spoke Luwian, and there is evidence that Luwian was the Philistine mother tongue.
11:09 Never understood why didn't she just grabbed the other heal too and dip him again?
The actual wooden horse may be quite small,probably could hold 5 to 6 people
Vig*na started that war for sure 😂
"closest friend" lol
Helen was not loyal which led to war lol 😂
You don't start many years of war of a woman if you're a king. The whole war was probably planned. The Trojan princess knew that Helen was up to no good. The achaeans, Agamemnon, Achilles etc wanted to be remembered by history. The whole story has been greko romanized