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  • Legendary Greek warrior of the [[Trojan War]] who was one of the men hidden inside the [[Trojan horse]].
    140 bytes (21 words) - 08:42, 11 January 2024
  • Legendary Greek warrior of the [[Trojan War]] who was one of the men hidden inside the [[Trojan horse]].
    140 bytes (21 words) - 09:58, 11 January 2024
  • ...id quietly inside a giant wooden horse in a brilliant ruse which ended the Trojan War.<small>Pictured: a wooden horse in [[Prague]].</small>]] ...was sacked and burned in the ensuing battle which ended the decade-long [[Trojan War]].
    839 bytes (135 words) - 08:40, 11 January 2024
  • ...id quietly inside a giant wooden horse in a brilliant ruse which ended the Trojan War.<small>Pictured: a wooden horse in [[Prague]].</small>]] ...was sacked and burned in the ensuing battle which ended the decade-long [[Trojan War]].
    840 bytes (135 words) - 09:55, 11 January 2024
  • ...id quietly inside a giant wooden horse in a brilliant ruse which ended the Trojan War.<small>Pictured: a wooden horse in [[Prague]].</small>}}
    254 bytes (40 words) - 14:43, 7 April 2010
  • ...id quietly inside a giant wooden horse in a brilliant ruse which ended the Trojan War.<small>Pictured: a wooden horse in [[Prague]].</small>]]
    260 bytes (41 words) - 14:25, 7 April 2010
  • ...id quietly inside a giant wooden horse in a brilliant ruse which ended the Trojan War.<small>Pictured: a wooden horse in [[Prague]].</small>]]
    260 bytes (41 words) - 14:37, 7 April 2010
  • ...id quietly inside a giant wooden horse in a brilliant ruse which ended the Trojan War.<small>Pictured: a wooden horse in [[Prague]].</small>]]
    260 bytes (41 words) - 14:18, 7 April 2010
  • ...id quietly inside a giant wooden horse in a brilliant ruse which ended the Trojan War.<small>Pictured: a wooden horse in [[Prague]].</small>]]
    260 bytes (41 words) - 14:34, 7 April 2010
  • ...id quietly inside a giant wooden horse in a brilliant ruse which ended the Trojan War.<small>Pictured: a wooden horse in [[Prague]].</small>]]
    260 bytes (41 words) - 14:26, 7 April 2010
  • ...id quietly inside a giant wooden horse in a brilliant ruse which ended the Trojan War.<small>Pictured: a wooden horse in [[Prague]].</small>]]
    260 bytes (41 words) - 14:08, 7 April 2010
  • ...id quietly inside a giant wooden horse in a brilliant ruse which ended the Trojan War.<small>Pictured: a wooden horse in [[Prague]].</small>]]
    260 bytes (41 words) - 14:38, 7 April 2010
  • ...id quietly inside a giant wooden horse in a brilliant ruse which ended the Trojan War.<small>Pictured: a wooden horse in [[Prague]].</small>]]
    260 bytes (41 words) - 14:19, 7 April 2010
  • ...id quietly inside a giant wooden horse in a brilliant ruse which ended the Trojan War.<small>Pictured: a wooden horse in [[Prague]].</small>]]
    260 bytes (41 words) - 14:34, 7 April 2010
  • ...id quietly inside a giant wooden horse in a brilliant ruse which ended the Trojan War.<small>Pictured: a wooden horse in [[Prague]].</small>]]
    260 bytes (41 words) - 14:27, 7 April 2010
  • ...id quietly inside a giant wooden horse in a brilliant ruse which ended the Trojan War.<small>Pictured: a wooden horse in [[Prague]].</small>]]
    262 bytes (42 words) - 14:10, 7 April 2010
  • ...id quietly inside a giant wooden horse in a brilliant ruse which ended the Trojan War.<small>Pictured: a wooden horse in [[Prague]].</small>]]
    260 bytes (41 words) - 14:39, 7 April 2010
  • ...id quietly inside a giant wooden horse in a brilliant ruse which ended the Trojan War.<small>Pictured: a wooden horse in [[Prague]].</small>]]
    260 bytes (41 words) - 14:35, 7 April 2010
  • ...id quietly inside a giant wooden horse in a brilliant ruse which ended the Trojan War.<small>Pictured: a wooden horse in [[Prague]].</small>]]
    260 bytes (41 words) - 14:30, 7 April 2010
  • ...id quietly inside a giant wooden horse in a brilliant ruse which ended the Trojan War.<small>Pictured: a wooden horse in [[Prague]].</small>]]
    260 bytes (41 words) - 14:11, 7 April 2010
  • ...id quietly inside a giant wooden horse in a brilliant ruse which ended the Trojan War.<small>Pictured: a wooden horse in [[Prague]].</small>]]
    260 bytes (41 words) - 14:40, 7 April 2010
  • ...id quietly inside a giant wooden horse in a brilliant ruse which ended the Trojan War.<small>Pictured: a wooden horse in [[Prague]].</small>]]
    260 bytes (41 words) - 14:31, 7 April 2010
  • ...id quietly inside a giant wooden horse in a brilliant ruse which ended the Trojan War.<small>Pictured: a wooden horse in [[Prague]].</small>]]
    260 bytes (41 words) - 14:23, 7 April 2010
  • ...id quietly inside a giant wooden horse in a brilliant ruse which ended the Trojan War.<small>Pictured: a wooden horse in [[Prague]].</small>]]
    260 bytes (41 words) - 14:36, 7 April 2010
  • ...id quietly inside a giant wooden horse in a brilliant ruse which ended the Trojan War.<small>Pictured: a wooden horse in [[Prague]].</small>]]
    260 bytes (41 words) - 14:17, 7 April 2010
  • ...id quietly inside a giant wooden horse in a brilliant ruse which ended the Trojan War.<small>Pictured: a wooden horse in [[Prague]].</small>]]
    260 bytes (41 words) - 14:32, 7 April 2010
  • ...id quietly inside a giant wooden horse in a brilliant ruse which ended the Trojan War.<small>Pictured: a wooden horse in [[Prague]].</small>]] ...was sacked and burned in the ensuing battle which ended the decades-long [[Trojan War]]. Knowledge of the war is according to sources from Greek and Roman [[myth
    1,022 bytes (164 words) - 09:33, 22 February 2023
  • ...id quietly inside a giant wooden horse in a brilliant ruse which ended the Trojan War.<small>Pictured: a wooden horse in [[Prague]].</small>]] ...was sacked and burned in the ensuing battle which ended the decades-long [[Trojan War]]. Knowledge of the war is according to sources from Greek and Roman [[myth
    1 KB (164 words) - 09:34, 22 February 2023
  • ...id quietly inside a giant wooden horse in a brilliant ruse which ended the Trojan War.<small>Pictured: a wooden horse in [[Prague]].</small>]] ...was sacked and burned in the ensuing battle which ended the decades-long [[Trojan War]]. Knowledge of the war is according to sources from Greek and Roman [[myth
    1,022 bytes (164 words) - 09:34, 22 February 2023
  • ...id quietly inside a giant wooden horse in a brilliant ruse which ended the Trojan War.<small>Pictured: a wooden horse in [[Prague]].</small>]] ...was sacked and burned in the ensuing battle which ended the decades-long [[Trojan War]]. Knowledge of the war is according to sources from Greek and Roman [[myth
    1 KB (164 words) - 09:33, 22 February 2023
  • Greek hero who fought and died in the Trojan War.
    85 bytes (13 words) - 07:15, 17 May 2008
  • ...id quietly inside a giant wooden horse in a brilliant ruse which ended the Trojan War.<small>A wooden horse in [[Prague]].</small>]] ...as a result, Troy was sacked and burned, a, which ended the decades-long [[Trojan War]], according to sources from Greek and Roman [[mythology]] such as [[Homer]
    970 bytes (155 words) - 09:33, 22 February 2023
  • .... He is the most prominent [[Troy (ancient city)|Trojan]] warrior in the [[Trojan War]]. According to Homer, he is killed battling with the [[hero]] [[Achilles]]
    377 bytes (51 words) - 09:39, 22 February 2023
  • .... He is the most prominent [[Troy (ancient city)|Trojan]] warrior in the [[Trojan War]]. According to Homer, he is killed battling with the [[hero]] [[Achilles]]
    372 bytes (51 words) - 09:38, 22 February 2023
  • * [[Ajax the Greater (Greek hero)]] - Trojan war participant and suitor to Helen of Troy * [[Ajax the Lesser (Greek hero)]] - Trojan war participant and suitor to Helen of Troy
    478 bytes (76 words) - 06:56, 14 November 2011
  • ...Greek]] expeditionary force attacking [[Troy (ancient city)]] during the [[Trojan War]]. To overcome contrary winds for sailing to Troy, he sacrificed his daught On his return to Greece after the Trojan war, Agamemnon's wife [[Clytemnestra]] killed him to revenge Iphigenia, and als
    1 KB (148 words) - 09:49, 14 April 2024
  • ...elen of Troy]] and a [[Ancient Greece|Greek]] [[king]] who fought in the [[Trojan War]], and was one of the elite fighters inside the [[Trojan horse]]. When [[pr
    499 bytes (72 words) - 09:34, 22 February 2023
  • ...iful wife of Menelaus, king of Sparta, whose abduction by Paris caused the Trojan War.
    96 bytes (16 words) - 17:15, 12 January 2016
  • ...warriors who fought against the [[Ancient Greece|Greek]] warriors in the [[Trojan War]]. After the war, he founded a "mini-Troy" [[north]] of [[Greece]] on the [
    691 bytes (104 words) - 09:34, 22 February 2023
  • ...k, ''The War That Killed Achilles: The True Story of Homer's Iliad and the Trojan War''.
    426 bytes (68 words) - 15:30, 9 May 2010
  • ...was sacked and burned in the ensuing battle which ended the decades-long [[Trojan War]]. Knowledge of the war is according to sources from Greek and Roman [[myth
    777 bytes (124 words) - 09:33, 22 February 2023
  • ...was sacked and burned in the ensuing battle which ended the decades-long [[Trojan War]]. Knowledge of the war is according to sources from Greek and Roman [[myth
    777 bytes (124 words) - 09:33, 22 February 2023
  • ...was sacked and burned in the ensuing battle which ended the decades-long [[Trojan War]]. Knowledge of the war is according to sources from Greek and Roman [[myth
    777 bytes (124 words) - 09:34, 22 February 2023
  • ...was sacked and burned in the ensuing battle which ended the decades-long [[Trojan War]]. Knowledge of the war is according to sources from Greek and Roman [[myth
    777 bytes (124 words) - 09:33, 22 February 2023
  • ...was sacked and burned in the ensuing battle which ended the decades-long [[Trojan War]]. Knowledge of the war is according to sources from Greek and Roman [[myth
    777 bytes (124 words) - 09:34, 22 February 2023
  • ...was sacked and burned in the ensuing battle which ended the decades-long [[Trojan War]]. Knowledge of the war is according to sources from Greek and Roman [[myth
    777 bytes (124 words) - 09:33, 22 February 2023
  • ...was sacked and burned in the ensuing battle which ended the decades-long [[Trojan War]]. Knowledge of the war is according to sources from Greek and Roman [[myth
    777 bytes (124 words) - 09:33, 22 February 2023
  • ...was sacked and burned in the ensuing battle which ended the decades-long [[Trojan War]]. Knowledge of the war is according to sources from Greek and Roman [[myth
    777 bytes (124 words) - 09:34, 22 February 2023
  • ...was sacked and burned in the ensuing battle which ended the decades-long [[Trojan War]]. Knowledge of the war is according to sources from Greek and Roman [[myth
    777 bytes (124 words) - 09:33, 22 February 2023
  • ...was sacked and burned in the ensuing battle which ended the decades-long [[Trojan War]]. Knowledge of the war is according to sources from Greek and Roman [[myth
    777 bytes (124 words) - 09:33, 22 February 2023
  • ...was sacked and burned in the ensuing battle which ended the decades-long [[Trojan War]]. Knowledge of the war is according to sources from Greek and Roman [[myth
    777 bytes (124 words) - 09:33, 22 February 2023
  • ...was sacked and burned in the ensuing battle which ended the decades-long [[Trojan War]]. Knowledge of the war is according to sources from Greek and Roman [[myth
    777 bytes (124 words) - 09:34, 22 February 2023
  • ...was sacked and burned in the ensuing battle which ended the decades-long [[Trojan War]]. Knowledge of the war is according to sources from Greek and Roman [[myth
    777 bytes (124 words) - 09:33, 22 February 2023
  • ...was sacked and burned in the ensuing battle which ended the decades-long [[Trojan War]]. Knowledge of the war is according to sources from Greek and Roman [[myth
    777 bytes (124 words) - 09:34, 22 February 2023
  • ...was sacked and burned in the ensuing battle which ended the decades-long [[Trojan War]]. Knowledge of the war is according to sources from Greek and Roman [[myth
    777 bytes (124 words) - 09:33, 22 February 2023
  • ...was sacked and burned in the ensuing battle which ended the decades-long [[Trojan War]]. Knowledge of the war is according to sources from Greek and Roman [[myth
    777 bytes (124 words) - 09:33, 22 February 2023
  • ...was sacked and burned in the ensuing battle which ended the decades-long [[Trojan War]]. Knowledge of the war is according to sources from Greek and Roman [[myth
    777 bytes (124 words) - 09:34, 22 February 2023
  • ...was sacked and burned in the ensuing battle which ended the decades-long [[Trojan War]]. Knowledge of the war is according to sources from Greek and Roman [[myth
    777 bytes (124 words) - 09:34, 22 February 2023
  • ...was sacked and burned in the ensuing battle which ended the decades-long [[Trojan War]]. Knowledge of the war is according to sources from Greek and Roman [[myth
    777 bytes (124 words) - 09:34, 22 February 2023
  • ...was sacked and burned in the ensuing battle which ended the decades-long [[Trojan War]]. Knowledge of the war is according to sources from Greek and Roman [[myth
    777 bytes (124 words) - 09:33, 22 February 2023
  • ...was sacked and burned in the ensuing battle which ended the decades-long [[Trojan War]]. Knowledge of the war is according to sources from Greek and Roman [[myth
    777 bytes (124 words) - 09:33, 22 February 2023
  • ...was sacked and burned in the ensuing battle which ended the decades-long [[Trojan War]]. Knowledge of the war is according to sources from Greek and Roman [[myth
    777 bytes (124 words) - 09:33, 22 February 2023
  • ...was sacked and burned in the ensuing battle which ended the decades-long [[Trojan War]]. Knowledge of the war is according to sources from Greek and Roman [[myth
    777 bytes (124 words) - 09:33, 22 February 2023
  • ...was sacked and burned in the ensuing battle which ended the decades-long [[Trojan War]]. Knowledge of the war is according to sources from Greek and Roman [[myth
    784 bytes (126 words) - 09:33, 22 February 2023
  • ...and [[Menelaus]], king of [[Sparta]], caused a ten-year war known as the [[Trojan War]]. She features prominently in [[Homer]]'s [[Iliad]], which emphasises her
    871 bytes (135 words) - 10:09, 25 February 2024
  • ...the struggles of Odysseus to return to his island home of Ithaca after the Trojan war
    166 bytes (26 words) - 15:34, 16 January 2016
  • Leader of the [[Troy (ancient city)|Trojans]] during the Trojan War, and killed during the sack of Troy.
    140 bytes (21 words) - 09:39, 22 February 2023
  • ...bducting [[Helen of Troy]] from [[Sparta]], initiator of the decade-long [[Trojan War]]
    166 bytes (25 words) - 09:34, 22 February 2023
  • ...esult, Troy was sacked and burned, an event which ended the decades-long [[Trojan War]], according to sources from Greek and Roman [[mythology]] such as [[Homer]
    847 bytes (128 words) - 02:41, 15 March 2024
  • ...who was the ''seer'' or [[prophecy|prophet]] of [[Agamemnon]] during the [[Trojan War]]. He advised Agamemnon to [[murder|kill]] his [[daughter]] [[Iphigeneia]]
    354 bytes (49 words) - 09:33, 22 February 2023
  • ...uction of [[Helen of Troy|Helen]] from [[Sparta]] caused the decade-long [[Trojan War]].
    281 bytes (38 words) - 09:33, 22 February 2023
  • The account of the '''Trojan War''' that has come down to us through [[Homer]]ic epic depicts it as a ten-ye
    2 KB (270 words) - 09:33, 22 February 2023
  • ...urial. Priam's other son [[Paris (mythology)|Paris]], was the cause of the Trojan War by abducting [[Helen of Troy]] from king [[Menelaus]] of [[Sparta]] and enr
    2 KB (336 words) - 09:38, 22 February 2023
  • {{r|Trojan War}}
    281 bytes (38 words) - 02:52, 3 September 2009
  • {{r|Trojan war}}
    190 bytes (26 words) - 09:39, 22 February 2023
  • {{r|Trojan War}}
    153 bytes (20 words) - 12:11, 4 April 2010
  • ...tes'' were a Roman construction that didn't exist around the time of the [[Trojan war]], and as a result, the [[Aeneid]] was contrived as a kind of [[myth]] to s
    2 KB (249 words) - 09:39, 22 February 2023
  • {{r|Trojan War}}
    209 bytes (26 words) - 07:22, 21 April 2010
  • {{r|Trojan War}}
    147 bytes (18 words) - 15:04, 7 April 2010
  • ...9) ''The War That Killed Achilles: The True Story of Homer's Iliad and the Trojan War''. New York: Viking. ISBN 9780670021123
    2 KB (287 words) - 22:31, 20 September 2013
  • ...d flags, were too sophisticated for ships during the times following the [[Trojan War]]. The [[Ancient Greece|Greek]] [[trireme]] wasn't developed until perhaps
    1 KB (185 words) - 09:39, 22 February 2023
  • {{r|Trojan War}}
    691 bytes (91 words) - 03:36, 7 October 2009
  • ...warriors inside the walls of their city. It brought about the end of the [[Trojan War]]. ...teners to the tales to be thoroughly familiar with the basic events of the Trojan War.
    4 KB (633 words) - 09:39, 22 February 2023
  • ...''[[Aeneid|The Aeneid]]'' that the games originated from the time of the [[Trojan War]]. When Virgil wrote the Aeneid, the event was well established in Rome dur
    1 KB (227 words) - 09:34, 22 February 2023
  • ...phrodite]] and [[Athena]] were active participants in events such as the [[Trojan War]], Themis was more seen as a [[concept]] rather than a player.<noinclude><b
    734 bytes (105 words) - 12:44, 11 April 2010
  • ...e series delineates the plot derived from the mythological story of post-[[Trojan War]] homecoming of [[Agamemnon]], king of [[Mycenae]], his murder by his wife
    671 bytes (96 words) - 19:28, 28 November 2008
  • ...e -- and this "apple of discord" began a chain of events that led to the [[Trojan War]] in which a [[Ancient Greece|Greek]] expeditionary force, commanded by [[A
    663 bytes (106 words) - 23:42, 29 April 2012
  • ...Calchas]]. While Agamemnon is away at [[Troy (ancient city)]] during the [[Trojan War]], she has an illicit [[Romantic love|romance]] with Aigisthos; when Agamem
    752 bytes (104 words) - 09:33, 22 February 2023
  • ...ueen]] [[Clytemnestra]] while her husband Agamemnon is away fighting the [[Trojan War]] in [[Asia Minor]]. When Agamemnon returns, he murders the returning king,
    781 bytes (108 words) - 16:06, 7 April 2010
  • ...ent city of Troy''' was was reportedly besieged and destroyed during the [[Trojan War]] by the [[Ancient Greece|ancient Greeks]]. The exact dates of the war are ...d|first=Michael|authorlink=Michael Wood (historian)|title=In Search of the Trojan War|publisher=British Broadcasting Corporation|location=London|date=1985|pages=
    3 KB (501 words) - 09:58, 22 February 2023
  • ...rning city of [[Troy (ancient city)]] which was sacked at the end of the [[Trojan War]], and he survived this [[disaster]] although Aeneas' wife [[Creusa]] did n
    2 KB (388 words) - 09:39, 22 February 2023
  • ...t]], was [[Hermes]]. In the ''[[Iliad]]'' and in other stories about the [[Trojan war]], there were varying [[opinion]]s whether [[Helen of Troy]] was ''kidnappe
    1 KB (209 words) - 08:33, 16 April 2010
  • ...to return to his island kingdom of [[Ithaca (Greece)|Ithaca]] after the [[Trojan War]]. It is thought to have been composed around the seventh century BCE and
    3 KB (456 words) - 21:48, 1 November 2020
  • ...ose a short, glorious life over a long and undistinguished one. During the Trojan War, in his wrath over the death of his companion [[Patroclus]], who some consi .... His mother foretold two possible futures for him: if he took part in the Trojan War, his life would be glorious but short, and he would not return home; if he
    14 KB (2,138 words) - 09:33, 22 February 2023
  • ...uses to speak to him or even look at him; he sees fallen heroes from the [[Trojan War]]; he sees [[Sisyphus]]; he meets the spirits of future leaders of [[Rome]]
    9 KB (1,381 words) - 10:09, 25 February 2024
  • ...period when the (likely fully fictional) Aeneas has just escaped from the Trojan War. Per the Aeneid, Dido had previously been married before she met Aeneas, a
    2 KB (288 words) - 13:41, 3 April 2023
  • ...s said to have had the ''face that launched a thousand ships'' since the [[Trojan War]], a decade-long conflict between the Greek expeditionary forces led by [[A
    2 KB (299 words) - 09:33, 22 February 2023
  • Odysseus was king of Ithaca at the time the [[Trojan war]] was starting. The Achaeans came to seek his help. Having been warned by a
    2 KB (355 words) - 09:34, 22 February 2023
  • The poem mainly describes a few days in the final year of the [[Trojan War]], and it gets its name because Ilios was an alternative name for [[Troy (a
    2 KB (372 words) - 09:34, 22 February 2023
  • ...ris]]. Led by [[Agamemnon]] of Mycenae, the Achaeans united to fight the [[Trojan War]], after which the thrones of Mycenae, Argos and Sparta were united under [ ...ides]], the Boeotians entered [[Boeotia]] sixty years after the end of the Trojan War and the [[Dorian Invasion]] (the [[Return of the Heraclidae]]) took place t
    6 KB (943 words) - 08:51, 5 January 2024
  • ...ebes, son of on of Thamyras and Philammon who lived "lived long before the Trojan War" and wrote melics and songs.<ref>''Suda'', [http://www.stoa.org/sol-bin/sea
    4 KB (622 words) - 00:01, 11 November 2007
  • ...l historial figures is shown. One of them, Odysseus, the Greek hero of the Trojan War, chose a life of a common private citizen who avoided warfare and strifes a
    5 KB (741 words) - 15:01, 25 April 2010
  • ...main protagonist is Aeneas, leader of a band of Trojan survivors of the [[Trojan war]] with Greece, a war which took place more than a millenium before Virgil's
    14 KB (2,339 words) - 13:54, 24 February 2023
  • ...luding [[Athena]] and Hera, and set in motion the forces that caused the [[Trojan War]]. When Aphrodite gave [[Helen of Troy]] to Paris, despite Helen's marriage
    6 KB (946 words) - 13:54, 24 February 2023
  • ...ssey]]'' did for [[ancient Greece]]. It built on the famous topic of the [[Trojan War]] and its aftermath but took the story in a new direction by weaving an aft ...ntury BCE that Aeneas' new city was Rome. According to stories about the [[Trojan War]], some of which have not survived (but they're alluded to), Aeneas was the
    33 KB (5,558 words) - 15:04, 9 March 2024
  • ...dy||The love story of Troilus and Cressida set against the backdrop of the Trojan War||Troilus, Cressida||1602||1609
    8 KB (1,207 words) - 06:35, 2 February 2022
  • ...ncient city)|Trojans]] in the ensuing decades-long conflict known as the [[Trojan War]]. In an example from the ''[[Odyssey]]'', suitors entered the house of Kin
    7 KB (1,175 words) - 09:38, 22 February 2023
  • ...was Odysseus' dog, who waited patiently for his master's return from the [[Trojan War]] for over twenty years. He instantly recognized and greeted his master, ev
    8 KB (1,246 words) - 13:17, 2 February 2023
  • ...lysses]], but who fled the wreckage of [[Troy (ancient city)]] after the [[Trojan War]], fell in love with Carthaginian princess [[Dido]], and then left her to c
    13 KB (1,982 words) - 15:04, 9 March 2024
  • ...of poems''', 1830-42, included ''Œnone'', a lament on the origins of the [[Trojan War]], and ''[[Ulysses (poem)|Ulysses]]'', both monologues, as well as ''Locksl
    7 KB (1,162 words) - 16:06, 9 January 2021
  • ...ing it into the party, she caused much squabbling, and, inadvertently, the Trojan War. In Discordianism, this is known as "The Original Snub", and it is said tha
    19 KB (3,185 words) - 00:07, 17 February 2010
  • ...emigrated from the Greek mainland and colonized the area shortly after the Trojan War, thought to have occurred in the 1200s or late 1100s <span style= ...ended through the male from Asclepius’s son, Podalirius, who fought in the Trojan war, moved to Asia Minor, and whose descendants eventually settled on Cos. The
    97 KB (14,807 words) - 15:59, 3 October 2018