Helen of Troy: Difference between revisions

From Citizendium
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>Thomas Wright Sulcer
(created)
 
imported>Pat Palmer
m (commas help the sentence scan)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{subpages}}
{{subpages}}
'''Helen of Troy''' was a character from [[Ancient Greece|Greek]] [[mythology]] who figured prominently in the [[epic]] [[poetry|poem]] called the ''[[Iliad]]'' by [[Homer]]. Helen was reportedly the most [[beauty|beautiful]] woman in the world, and her abduction by [[Paris (Iliad)|Paris]] of [[Troy]] away from her husband [[Menalaus]] who was the king of [[Sparta]] caused a ten-year [[war]] known as the [[Trojan War]]. Helen was the daughter of the [[Greek god|god]] [[Zeus]] and [[Leda]]. When Greeks, after a ten-year struggle, using cunning to devise the [[Trojan horse]] subterfuge to gain entrance to the city of Troy, the Trojan [[hero]] [[Aeneas]] had an opportunity to kill Helen but was dissuaded by his mother, the goddess [[Venus (goddess)|Venus]]. Helen returned home with [[Menelaus]] back to Sparta, according to Greek mythology.
'''Helen of Troy''' was a character from [[Ancient Greece|Greek]] [[mythology]] who figured prominently in the [[epic]] [[poetry|poem]] called the ''[[Iliad]]'' by [[Homer]]. Helen was reportedly the most [[beauty|beautiful]] woman in the world, and her abduction by [[Paris (Iliad)|Paris]] of [[Troy]] away from her husband [[Menalaus]], who was the king of [[Sparta]], caused a ten-year [[war]] known as the [[Trojan War]]. Helen was the daughter of the [[Greek god|god]] [[Zeus]] and [[Leda]]. When Greeks, after a ten-year struggle, using cunning to devise the [[Trojan horse]] subterfuge to gain entrance to the city of Troy, the Trojan [[hero]] [[Aeneas]] had an opportunity to kill Helen but was dissuaded by his mother, the goddess [[Venus (goddess)|Venus]]. Helen returned home with [[Menelaus]] back to Sparta, according to Greek mythology.

Revision as of 20:40, 19 April 2011

This article is a stub and thus not approved.
Main Article
Discussion
Related Articles  [?]
Bibliography  [?]
External Links  [?]
Citable Version  [?]
 
This editable Main Article is under development and subject to a disclaimer.

Helen of Troy was a character from Greek mythology who figured prominently in the epic poem called the Iliad by Homer. Helen was reportedly the most beautiful woman in the world, and her abduction by Paris of Troy away from her husband Menalaus, who was the king of Sparta, caused a ten-year war known as the Trojan War. Helen was the daughter of the god Zeus and Leda. When Greeks, after a ten-year struggle, using cunning to devise the Trojan horse subterfuge to gain entrance to the city of Troy, the Trojan hero Aeneas had an opportunity to kill Helen but was dissuaded by his mother, the goddess Venus. Helen returned home with Menelaus back to Sparta, according to Greek mythology.