 |
EncyclopediaOdysseusOdysseus (ōdis'ēus) [key], Lat. Ulysses (yOOlis'ēz) [key], in Greek mythology, son and successor of King Laertes of Ithaca. A leader of Greek forces during the Trojan War, Odysseus was noted (as in the Iliad) for his cunning strategy and his wise counsel. He is the central figure of the Odyssey, which tells of his adventures after the fall of Troy. In post-Homeric legend, however, he was pictured as a wily, lying, and evil man. He avoided service in the Trojan War by feigning madness—until exposed by Palamedes, whom he later treacherously caused to be executed. See E. Hamilton, Mythology (1942, repr. 1971). The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright © 2007, Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. More on Odysseus from Infoplease:
- Odysseus: meaning and definitions - Odysseus: Definition and Pronunciation
- Odysseus - Biography of Odysseus, Hero of The Odyssey
- Suggestions for spelling of encyclopedia/odysseus - The Infoplease spelling checker combines spelling help with our dictionary and thesaurus
- Classical Mythology: Take the Long Way Home: Odysseus - Classical Mythology figures Anticleia and Laertes raise son Odysseus, who courts Penelope and has son Telemachus, the reasons he tries to avoid fighting in the Trojan War.
- Homer, Andrew Lang, M.A., Walter Leaf, Litt.D., Ernest Myers, M.A.: How Diomedes and Odysseus slew Dolon, a spy of the Trojans, and themselves spied on the Trojan camp, and took the horses of Rhesos, the Thracian king. - Now beside the ships the other leaders of the whole Achaian host were sleeping all night long, by soft Sleep overcome, but Agamemnon son of Atreus, sh
|
|