Greek hero who died in a fight with Hector. Achilles is a hero of ancient Greek mythology. Communicative means of creating images and symbols


ACHILLES

(Achilles) - in the Iliad, one of the bravest Greek heroes who besieged Troy. Son of Thetis and Peleus, grandson of Aeacus. Achilles' mother, the goddess Thetis, wanting to make her son immortal, immersed him in the sacred waters of the Styx; only the heel, by which Thetis held him, did not touch the water and remained vulnerable. The armor forged by Hephaestus also contributed to Achilles' invulnerability. Before entering the Trojan War, dressed in a woman's dress, he lived on the island of Skyros, among the daughters of King Lycomedes, where the goddess Thetis hid Achilles, wanting to protect him from participating in the war. Odysseus exposed his deception: having arrived at Skyros under the guise of a merchant, he laid out many goods attractive to women, and among these goods was a set of weapons. While the daughters of Lycomedes examined the jewelry and fabrics, Achilles looked only at the weapons. At this time, Odysseus’s comrades raised a false alarm in front of the palace, the princesses fled, and Achilles, grabbing his sword, rushed towards the imaginary danger. By this he gave himself away and soon left with Odysseus to go to war. He accomplished many feats at Troy, but in the tenth year of the war, Achilles died from an arrow from Paris, which Apollo aimed at his heel. Hence the expression “Achilles heel” (weak spot). From the union with Elena a son, Euphorion, was born. From Deidamia, the daughter of Lycomedes, Neotolemus was born, without whose participation the Trojan War could not end.

// Gottfried BENN: Fifth Century // Valery BRYUSOV: Achilles at the Altar // Konstantinos CAVAFY: Treason // Konstantinos CAVAFY: Horses of Achilles // Marina TSVETAEVA: Achilles on the Rampart // Marina TSVETAEVA: From the cycle “Under the Shawl”

Myths of Ancient Greece, dictionary-reference book. 2012

See also interpretations, synonyms, meanings of the word and what ACHILLES is in Russian in dictionaries, encyclopedias and reference books:

  • ACHILLES
    In Greek mythology, one of the greatest heroes of the Trojan War, the son of the Myrmidon king Pelen and the sea goddess Thetis. Trying to make my...
  • ACHILLES in the Directory of Characters and Cult Objects of Greek Mythology:
    Achilles (??????????), in Greek mythology, one of the greatest heroes of the Trojan War, the son of the Myrmidon king Peleus and the sea goddess Thetis. Striving...
  • ACHILLES in the Dictionary-Reference Book of Who's Who in the Ancient World:
    (Achilles) Greek hero, son of King Peleus and the sea goddess Thetis. In the Iliad, as the leader of the Myrmidons, Achilles leads fifty ships to...
  • ACHILLES in the Literary Encyclopedia.
  • ACHILLES in the Literary Encyclopedia:
    (ACHILLES) in the Iliad - the greatest hero of the Achaeans; plot about “A’s anger.” and his victory over the best Trojan fighter...
  • ACHILLES in the Big Encyclopedic Dictionary:
    (Achilles) in the Iliad, one of the bravest Greek heroes who besieged Troy. Achilles' mother, the goddess Thetis, wanting to make her son immortal, immersed...
  • ACHILLES in the Great Soviet Encyclopedia, TSB:
    Achilles, in ancient Greek mythology, the bravest of the Greek heroes who besieged Troy during the Trojan War. According to one of the myths about...
  • ACHILLES in the Modern Encyclopedic Dictionary:
  • ACHILLES
    (Achilles), in Greek mythology, one of the bravest heroes who besieged Troy. Achilles' mother Thetis, wanting to make her son immortal, immersed him...
  • ACHILLES in the Encyclopedic Dictionary:
    EU, a, m., soul., with a capital letter In ancient Greek mythology: one of the bravest heroes is a character in Homer’s poem “The Iliad.” | According to …
  • ACHILLES in the Big Russian Encyclopedic Dictionary:
    ACHILLES (Achilles), in the Iliad one of the bravest Greeks. heroes who besieged Troy. A.’s mother, the goddess Thetis, wanting to make her son immortal, immersed ...
  • ACHILLES in the Dictionary for solving and composing scanwords:
    Vulnered in...
  • ACHILLES in the New Dictionary of Foreign Words:
    , Achilles["]е()с (gr. achilleus) the main character of Homer’s poem Iliad, one of the leaders of the ancient Greeks during the siege of Troy. according to ...
  • ACHILLES in the Russian Synonyms dictionary:
    asteroid, Achilles, ...
  • ACHILLES
  • ACHILLES in Lopatin’s Dictionary of the Russian Language:
    Ach'ill, -a and Achill'es, -a...
  • ACHILLES in the Complete Spelling Dictionary of the Russian Language:
    Achilles, -a (Achilles tendon, in prof. ...
  • ACHILLES in the Spelling Dictionary:
    ach`ill, -a and achilles, -a...
  • ACHILLES in the Spelling Dictionary:
    ach`ill, -a (Achilles tendon, in prof. ...
  • ACHILLES in the Spelling Dictionary:
    ach`ill, -a and achilles, -a...
  • ACHILLES in the Modern Explanatory Dictionary, TSB:
    (Achilles), in the Iliad, one of the bravest Greek heroes who besieged Troy. Achilles' mother, the goddess Thetis, wanting to make her son immortal, ...
  • ACHILLES in the New Dictionary of the Russian Language by Efremova:
    m. Akhillovo, i.e. calcaneal tendon (in speech...

4. Death of Achilles (Dares the Phrygian, “Excidium Troiae”, 34; Dictys of Crete, 4:10-13). Achilles was promised the hand of Polyxena, daughter of Priapus, king of Troy, if he agreed to lift the siege of Troy. But this was a plot to kill Achilles. Polyxena demanded that he appear with a sacrifice to Apollo. When Achilles stood kneeling in the temple at the altar, Polyxena's brother Paris threw an arrow at him. Apollo directed it to Achilles's only weak spot - his heel. Achilles is depicted kneeling before the altar, his heel pierced by an arrow. Or - otherwise - the other Polyxene brothers may support him. She stands next to her escorts. Paris is visible at the door of the temple, with a bow in his hands. Apollo is standing nearby. Homer, from whom Ovid borrowed the plots for his poem, tells that Achilles died in battle. However, this version is rarely reflected in painting.

Since each of these events, for various reasons, affects the god Apollo, they further serve as an explanation of the revenge that Apollo inflicts on A. with the hands of Paris in the tenth year of the siege of Troy. In this regard, a variant of the myth deserves attention, moving the murder of Troilus to the last year of the war, when it foreshadows the imminent death of A. (Verg. Aen. I 474-478). A. became especially famous already in the first years of the war, when the Greeks, after unsuccessful attempts to take Troy by storm, began to ravage the outskirts of Troy and make numerous expeditions against the neighboring cities of Asia Minor and nearby islands. He ravaged the cities of Lyrnessos and Pedas, Placian Thebes - the homeland of Andromache, Methymna on Lesvos. During one of these expeditions, A. captured the beautiful Briseis and Lycaon (son of Priam), whom he sold into slavery on the island of Lemnos (Not. II. II 688-692; VI 397; IX 129; XIX 291-294; XXI 3443 ).

After the battles in which A. defeats the Amazon queen Penthesilea and the Ethiopian leader Memnon, who came to the aid of the Trojans, he breaks into Troy and here, at the Scaean Gate, dies from two arrows of Paris, directed by the hand of Apollo: the first arrow, hitting the heel, deprives A. opportunity to rush at the enemy, and Paris kills him with a second arrow in the chest (Apollod. epit. V 3). In this version, the rudimentary motif of the “Achilles heel” was preserved, according to which it was enough to hit A.’s heel with an arrow to kill the hero. The epic, abandoning the idea of ​​A.'s invulnerability, introduced a wound in the chest that was truly fatal to a person. A.'s death, as well as his battle with Penthesilea, received a romantic overtones in later sources. In particular, a later version has been preserved about A.’s love for the Trojan princess Polyxena and his readiness to persuade the Achaean army to stop the war for the sake of marriage with her. Having gone unarmed to negotiate a wedding in the sanctuary of Apollo on the Trojan plain, A. was treacherously killed by Paris with the help of Priam's son Deifob. For 17 days, A. was mourned by the Nereids led by Thetis, the muses and the entire Achaean army. On the 18th day, A.’s body was burned, and the ashes in a golden urn made by Hephaestus were buried along with the ashes of Patroclus at Cape Sigeum (at the entrance to the Hellespont from the Aegean Sea) (Not. Od. XXIV 36-86). A.'s soul, according to the beliefs of the ancients, was transferred to the island of Levka, where the hero continued to live the life of the blessed (Paus. Ill 19, 11 next).

When the Greeks finally broke into Troy, Achilles was with them, but then one of Paris’ arrows hits his weak spot - the heel, and another hits his heart. According to another version, Achilles falls in love with Princess Polyxena, daughter of Priam, and goes unarmed to negotiate an end to the war, but is then treacherously killed by Paris. Thetis mourned her son for seventeen days along with the Nereids; on the eighteenth day, Achilles’ body was burned in a golden urn made by the god Hephaestus, and the ashes were buried along with the ashes of his friend Patroclus. The soul of Achilles settled on the islands of the blessed, and there he married Medea (options: Iphigenia, Helen). We present a conversation between Achilles and his mother after the death of Patroclus in the Iliad:

and it was at the heel of Achilles, when he burst into Troy, that the poisoned arrow of Paris, guided by the hand of Apollo, hit.

The Greek hero Achilles is one of the most dazzling and at the same time most attractive figures in the myths of the Trojan War. His life, love and death, like no other hero of Greek mythology, have been sung throughout the centuries to this day, be it in literature, music, theater or the visual arts.

Like no other hero of Greek mythology, he is always viewed on the one hand as a praised hero, and on the other as an unbridled stubborn man.

Each era has its own understanding of the hero Achilles and it is discussed again and again according to current interests and social discourses.

Achilles in art

This is especially noticeable when depicting Achilles in painting, which at one time or another is at the forefront of exhibitions: depending on the era and culture, the paintings always show different episodes of Achilles’ life, emphasizing various aspects of his heroism, giving a new flavor and different qualities and the shape of his body and figure, evaluating him differently in discussions.

At the same time, images of Achilles are sought in new contexts of aspects of life: for example, in ancient Greece, the image of Achilles is found mainly on outstanding canvases depicting men's feasts.

Here the hero can be noted as an outstanding warrior who is equally distinguished by his strength and courage, and he is also distinguished by his cruelty, which transcends all human and divine barriers.

They always decorated their homes and tombs with paintings of Achilles. However, unlike, in the foreground in these paintings Achilles was depicted much less often as a warrior; rather, episodes from his childhood and youth were chosen here, which show him as a young beautiful boy or as a desired lover in a dazzlingly masculine image.

Later eras once again emphasized the completely different sides of Achilles: in the court culture of the Middle Ages, due to the fact that many ruling dynasties referred to their supposed origins with the Trojans, they showed Achilles as a cruel opponent of Troy, images of the overthrown image of the noble knight were especially favorite.

In the Baroque period, Achilles, first of all, appears before us as a courageous lover and hero, beautiful in his hour of death. The 18th and 19th centuries presented him as a reasonable, sentimental, almost tragic and unforgotten hero. This story of continuous reinterpretation of Achilles continues today: to this day we present him through the prism of our own views. But unlike the ancient Greeks, for whom their hero Achilles was neither good nor bad, but everything he did was simply outstanding for them, we need precision. This is how we see Achilles today in movies, comics or computer games. In the modern world, they pay special attention to his appearance and figure.

Birth and early life of Achilles

Achilles was the son of Peleus and the sea nymph Thetis. Since little Achilles, like his father, was a mortal, his divine mother dipped him into the River Styx to make him invulnerable and grant him eternal life. But there was a place on his leg where his mother held him, and which was not exposed to water and therefore remained vulnerable - this is the heel: as a result, this place was called the notorious “Achilles heel”.

Achilles was delighted to be trained by the Centaur Chiron, who taught the young hero horse riding, hunting and the use of weapons, as well as playing the lyre and the healing arts.

Since it was predicted that Achilles would either die before Troy or live a long but very glorious life, Thetis hid her son, disguised as a girl, on the island of Skyros. There he hid among the daughters of King Lycomedes and fell in love with one of the girls named Deidamia. However, the cunning Odysseus discovered the hero hiding on Skyros and asked him to follow him to war. So Achilles came to Troy, where he became the most outstanding hero of Greece.

Trojan War

Already at his parents' wedding, Achilles' fate was sealed. The goddess of discord, Eris, was not invited and, getting angry, caused a quarrel among the goddesses, Hera and Aphrodite.

The young Trojan prince Paris had to choose the most beautiful of the three goddesses. Finally, he chose Aphrodite as the most beautiful woman on earth. However, Paris was in love with Elena, and promised her the title of the most beautiful woman on earth. He turned to Aphrodite with a request to sell her title of beauty, which greatly angered the goddess.

Since Helen was already married to Menelaus, the king of Sparta, he kidnapped her and took her with him to Troy, and thereby summoned her, in which Achilles then took part and died.

Achilles and Penthesilea

In the fight against the Greeks, the Trojans are supported by the Amazons. While participating in the “Battle of the Amazons,” he meets Queen Penthesilea and falls in love with her, a beautiful warrior. He kills her with a sword, and is left with his love, which will remain unfulfilled.

Wrath of Achilles

After almost ten years of war and countless exploits, a dispute broke out between Achilles and King Agamemnon about the beautiful slave Chryseis. Agamemnon eventually won, and Achilles refused to obey, even though he lost his slave and his honor suffered.

The withdrawal of Achilles from the fight and the victory of the Greeks occurred, as it was predicted that only with the participation of Achilles the city of Troy would be conquered. For this reason, Agamemnon sends an envoy to Achilles, who must convince him to return to battle - this was not successful, and the problem remained. Only the death of Patroclus returns Achilles to the battlefield.

When Patroclus, Achilles's closest confidant and close friend, was killed by the son of the king of Troy, Hector, in battle, the Greek hero returned to the war and challenged Hector to a duel. Achilles is victorious in a fierce battle between two equal opponents and finally kills the Trojan heir. Filled with hatred for the man who is the murderer of his friend, Achilles dragged Hector's body around the impenetrable city wall of Troy.

He dragged the body to the Greek camp, where it was denied a proper burial. But when Priam, king of Troy and father of Hector, came to Achilles and begged him to give him the body of his son, Achilles changed his mind and gave the body to his father so that he could be buried with full honors.

Death of Achilles

Soon after Achilles killed his greatest enemy Hector, fate prepared a blow for him. Paris, Hector's brother and the main culprit of the Trojan War, struck the hero in his weak point - the heel. Since the arrow sent by the intervening god Apollo was poisoned, it immediately led to the death of the hero. Thus the prophecy was fulfilled, and Achilles died after a glorious battle, having lived an outstanding but very short life.

Achilles (Achilles), the greatest Greek hero in the Trojan War


Achilles (Achilles), Greek - the son of the Phthian king Peleus and the sea goddess Thetis, the greatest Achaean hero in the Trojan War.

None of the hundred thousand Achaeans who came under the high walls of Troy could compare with him in strength, courage, agility, speed, as well as directness of character and courageous beauty. Achilles had everything that adorns a man in abundance; fate denied him only one thing - happiness.

Achilles was born from a marriage that was forced on his mother. Initially, Zeus himself courted her, but then he learned from the titan Prometheus that, according to the prophecy, the son of Thetis would surpass his father - and then, protecting his interests, Zeus married her off to a mortal, to Peleus. When her son was born, she dipped him into the waters of the Styx, an underground river in the kingdom of the dead, and his entire body (except for the heel by which she held her son) was covered with an invisible shell. But, obviously, these are legends of later origin, since Homer knew nothing about it. He only said that Thetis rubbed Achilles with ambrosia and tempered him over fire so that he would become invulnerable and immortal. But one day Peleus found her doing this. Seeing his son on fire, he got scared, decided that Thetis wanted to kill Achilles, and rushed at her with a sword. The poor goddess had no time for explanations; she barely managed to hide in the depths of the sea and never returned to Peleus. Peleus found a teacher for his abandoned son. First he was the wise old man Phoenix, then the centaur Chiron, who fed him bear brains and roasted lions. This diet and education clearly benefited Achilles: as a ten-year-old boy, he killed a wild boar with his bare hands and caught up with a deer while running. He soon learned everything that a hero of that time was supposed to: behave like a man, wield weapons, heal wounds, play the lyre and sing.


"Achilles between the Daughters of Lycomedes", Gerard de Leresse(many paintings of Achilles-Achilles by different artists have been collected on).

Thetis was told that her son would be given a choice: to live long, but without glory, or to live a short, but glorious age. Although she wished him glory, as a mother she naturally gave preference to a long life. Having learned that the Achaean kings were preparing for war with Troy, she hid Achilles on the island of Skyros with King Lycomedes, where he had to live in women's clothing among the king's daughters. But Agamemnon, with the help of the soothsayer Calhant, found out his whereabouts and sent Odysseus and Diomedes after him. Disguised as merchants, both kings entered the palace and laid out their goods in front of the king's daughters. Among the expensive fabrics, jewelry and other products in which women have been interested since time immemorial, it was as if a sword happened to be there. And when, according to a conventional sign, the companions of Odysseus and Diomedes uttered a war cry and their weapons rang, all the girls ran away in fear - and only one hand reached for the sword. So Achilles gave himself away and, without much persuasion, promised to join the Achaean army. Neither Lycomedes' daughter Deidamia, who was expecting a son from him, nor the prospect of a long and happy reign in her homeland kept him on Skyros. Instead of Phthia, he chose glory.

Achilles led five thousand men to the harbor of Aulis, where the Achaean army was concentrated, the core of the detachment being the brave Myrmidons. His father Peleus, due to his advanced years, could not participate in the campaign, so he gave him his armor, a huge spear made of solid ash and a war chariot drawn by immortal horses. These were wedding gifts that Peleus received from the gods when he married Thetis, and Achilles was able to use them. He fought for nine years at Troy, took twenty-three cities in its vicinity, and terrified the Trojans with his very appearance. All the Achaeans, from the leaders to the last ordinary warrior, saw in him the most courageous, skillful and successful warrior - everyone except the commander-in-chief, Agamemnon.

He was a mighty king and a good warrior, but Agamemnon lacked the nobility to accept the fact that his subordinate surpassed him in merit and popularity. He hid his hostility for a long time, but one day he could not resist. And this led to a strife that almost destroyed the entire Achaean army.

This happened in the tenth year of the war, when deep discontent and disappointment reigned in the Achaean camp. The warriors dreamed of returning home, and the generals lost hope of gaining glory and booty by taking Troy. Achilles went with his Myrmidons to a neighboring kingdom to supply the army with provisions and raise its spirit with rich booty. Among the prisoners brought was the daughter of Chryses, a priest of Apollo, who, during the division of the spoils, went to Agamemnon. Achilles had nothing against it, since she was not interested in him; he fell in love with the beautiful Briseis, captured during one of the previous expeditions. However, soon Chris also appeared in the Achaean camp; he wished the soldiers a quick victory and asked Agamemnon to return his daughter to him for a rich ransom. The Achaeans were happy with this proposal, but Agamemnon was against it: he, they say, likes the girl and he will never give her up, but let Chryses go where he came from. Then the priest turned to his god Apollo with a prayer to avenge him. Apollo heeded his plea, descended from Olympus and began scattering pestilence throughout the Greek camp with arrows from his silver bow. The soldiers died, but Agamemnon did not try to appease the angry god - and then Achilles decided to intervene. He called a meeting of warriors to decide together what to do. This once again hurt Agamemnon’s pride, and he decided to take revenge. When the soothsayer Kalkhant announced to the army that in order to reconcile with Apollo, it was necessary to return his daughter to Chris (but now without any ransom, and even to apologize), Agamemnon cut him off and angrily attacked Achilles, who stood up for the soothsayer. After unheard-of insults that disgraced Achilles in front of the entire army, Agamemnon declared that in the interests of the army he was abandoning Chryseis, but would take another from one of the commanders - and chose Briseis, Achilles’s beloved.


A still from the 2004 film Troy. Actor Brad Pitt plays Achilles.

As a disciplined soldier, Achilles obeyed the commander’s decision, but also drew his own conclusions from this. He swore that he would not participate in battles until Agamemnon asked him for forgiveness and restored his trampled honor. Then he retired to the seashore, called his mother from the deep waters and asked her to put in a good word for him before Zeus: let the Almighty help the Trojans push back the Achaean army, so that Agamemnon would understand that he could not do without Achilles, and come to him with an apology and a request about help.

Thetis conveyed her son's request to Zeus, and he did not refuse her. He forbade the other gods to interfere in the war, and he himself encouraged the leader of the Trojans, Hector, to take advantage of the absence of Achilles and push the Achaeans back to the sea itself. At the same time, he sent a deceptive dream to Agamemnon, which tempted him to go on the offensive, despite Achilles’ withdrawal from the game. The Achaeans fought bravely, but were forced to retreat. The Trojans, in the evening after the battle, did not even return to the protection of the city walls, but settled down for the night right in front of the Achaean camp, so that when daylight came, they could destroy it with one powerful blow. Seeing that things were bad, Agamemnon sent to inform Achilles that he was taking back his words, returning his beloved and, in addition to her, seven more virgins with rich gifts - if only Achilles would change his anger to mercy and take up arms again. This time Achilles went too far in his anger: he rejected Agamemnon's proposal and declared that he would not engage in battle until Hector attacked his camp directly; however, things will not come to this, since he, Achilles, will soon return with his army to his native Phthia.

The catastrophe seemed inevitable: in the morning attack, the Trojans broke through the ranks of the Achaeans, broke through the wall protecting the camp, and Hector was about to set fire to the ships to deprive the Greeks of the opportunity to escape. At that moment, his best friend Patroclus came to Achilles and asked permission to put on Achilles’ armor and help his Achaean friends who were in trouble. Patroclus hoped that the Trojans would mistake him for Achilles and retreat in fear of him. At first Achilles hesitated, but seeing that Hector was already setting fire to one of the Greek ships, he immediately complied with Patroclus’ request; In addition to armor, he gave him his entire army. Patroclus rushed into battle, and his cunning was a success: thinking that Achilles was in front of them, the Trojans were taken aback. Patroclus put out the fire, pushed the Trojans back to the city walls, but was then identified because he did not dare to take Achilles’ heavy spear with him. Then the Trojans dared to engage him in battle: the spearman Euphorbus, with the help of Apollo, mortally wounded Patroclus, and then Hector pierced him with a spear.


"Achilles at the Walls of Troy", Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres, 1801

The news of the death of his friend struck Achilles and plunged him into grief. Forgetting about his grievances, he wanted to rush into battle to avenge Patroclus, but Hector had already received his armor. At the request of Thetis, the gunsmith of the gods himself, Hephaestus, made new ones for him in one night. Over the corpse of Patroclus, Achilles swore revenge on Hector. He reconciled with Agamemnon, who admitted his guilt in front of the entire army and returned Briseis to him, and in the first battle after the death of Patroclus he killed Hector.

It was a merciless battle: Achilles looked for Hector in the ranks of the Trojans and fought with him three times, but each time Hector was saved by Apollo, the faithful defender of Troy. Enraged, Achilles put the entire Trojan army to flight, killed many Trojans and their allies, and the rest took refuge behind the walls of the city. When the huge Skeian gates closed behind the last of the fugitives, only Hector remained in front of them. To save the honor of the army and his own, he challenged Achilles to a duel. In defiance, he proposed that the winner give the body of the vanquished to his friends so that they could bury him with dignity. But Achilles only accepted the challenge, not agreeing to any conditions, and rushed at the enemy like a lion at a defenseless victim. Despite all his courage, Hector became afraid and fled. He ran around the high walls of Troy three times, saving his life, but finally stopped and, at the instigation of Athena, who wanted the Trojans to die, crossed arms with Achilles. In a duel for life and death, which amazed even the gods, Hector fell, pierced by the spear of Achilles.


Achilles with Hector's body

Triumphant Achilles tied Hector's body to his war chariot and drove around the walls of Troy three times, and then dragged him to his camp to give him to be torn to pieces by the Achaean dogs. However, the gods did not allow the body of the fallen hero to be desecrated, and Zeus himself ordered Thetis to bring Achilles to reason. When, under the cover of darkness, the decrepit Priam made his way to Achilles’ camp to ransom his son’s body, Achilles, touched by the old man’s grief, voluntarily returned Hector’s corpse to him. He even suspended hostilities for twelve days so that the Trojans could solemnly bury their leader. Thus, Achilles defeated not only his opponent, but also his own passions, thereby proving that he is a true hero, moreover, that he is a man.


“Priam asking Achilles for the body of Hector”, Alexander Ivanov, 1821

Achilles was not destined to witness the fall of Troy: soon death awaited him. He still managed to defeat Penthesilea, who brought her female army to the aid of Troy, and then defeated in a duel the new leader of the Trojan army - King Memnon from distant Ethiopia. But when, after this victory, he decided to break into the city through the Skei Gate, he stood in his way. Achilles ordered him to get out of the way, threatening to pierce him with his spear. Apollo obeyed, but only to immediately take revenge for this insult. Climbing the city wall, he ordered Paris to send an arrow to Achilles. Paris willingly obeyed, and the arrow, whose flight was directed by Apollo, hit Achilles' heel, which was not protected by armor.

The fall of Achilles caused the earth to tremble and the city wall to crack. However, he immediately stood up and pulled the fatal arrow out of his heel. At the same time, the hooks of the tip tore out a large piece of meat, tore the veins, and blood gushed out of the wound like a river. Seeing that strength and life were leaving him with the flow of blood, he cursed Apollo and Troy in a terrible voice and gave up the ghost.


“Chiron, Thetis and the dead Achilles”, Pompeo Batoni, 1770

A brutal slaughter began to boil around Achilles’ body. Finally, the Achaeans snatched his body from the hands of the Trojans, brought it to their camp and with honors set it on fire on a high funeral pyre, which was set on fire by the god Hephaestus himself. Then the ashes of Achilles were mixed with the ashes of Patroclus and a high clay mound was poured over their common grave so that it would proclaim the glory of both heroes for centuries.

According to many researchers of ancient legends, Achilles is the most magnificent image of all created by Greek literature. And since these creations of Homer are the pinnacles of Greek literature, which to this day have not been surpassed in the epic poetry of any other people, Achilles can safely be classified as one of the most magnificent images in all world literature. Therefore, it is clear that none of the paintings or sculptures of Achilles can stand comparison with the literary image.

Apparently, ancient artists were aware of this limitation of their capabilities: they depicted Achilles with some timidity, and sculptors completely avoided him. But about four hundred images of Achilles have been preserved in vase paintings. The most famous is “Achilles” on an Attic amphora, ser. 5th century BC e. (Rome, Vatican Museums), “Achilles plays dice with Ajax” (84 copies in total, including the Exekius vase, c. 530 - also in the Vatican Museums), “Achilles bandages the wounded Patroclus” (Attic bowl, c. 490 BC . e., the only copy is in the State Museums in Berlin). The fights of Achilles with Hector, Memnon, Penthesilea and other subjects were also often depicted. The National Museum in Naples contains Pompeian frescoes “Chiron the Centaur teaches Achilles to play the lyre”, “Odysseus identifies Achilles among the daughters of Lycomedes”, etc.

Among the major artists of modern times, P. P. Rubens was one of the first to risk depicting Achilles (“Achilles kills Hector,” ca. 1610). Let us also name D. Teniers the Younger (“Achilles and the Daughters of Lycomedes”), F. Gerard (“Thetis Brings Armor to Achilles”) and E. Delacroix (“The Education of Achilles,” National Gallery in Prague).

Among the playwrights of modern times, Corneille was the first to turn to the image of Achilles (Achilles, 1673), in the 20th century. - S. Wyspianski (“Achilleid”, 1903), Achille Suarez (“Achilles the Avenger”, 1922), M. Matkovich (“The Legacy of Achilles”). Handel brought Achilles to the stage in the opera Deidamia (1741), Cherubini in the ballet Achilles on Skyros (1804). Only two poets tried to create the “missing link” between the Iliad and the Odyssey: Statius (1st century AD) and Goethe took on the epic poem Achilleid, but neither of them completed the job.

Achilles(ancient Greek Ἀχιλλεύς, Achilleus) (lat. Achilles) - in the heroic tales of the ancient Greeks, he is the bravest of the heroes who undertook a campaign against Troy under the leadership of Agamemnon. Name a-ki-re-u(Achilleus) was recorded in ancient Knossos, worn by ordinary people.

Myths about Achilles

Achilles' childhood

From the marriages of the Olympian gods with mortals, heroes were born. They were endowed with enormous strength and superhuman capabilities, but did not have immortality. Heroes were supposed to carry out the will of the gods on earth and bring order and justice into people's lives. With the help of their divine parents, they performed all kinds of feats. Heroes were highly revered, legends about them were passed down from generation to generation.

Thetis immerses Achilles in the waters of the Styx
(Rubens, Peter Paul (1577-1640)

The legends unanimously call Achilles the son of a mortal - Peleus, king of the Myrmidons, while his mother, the sea goddess Thetis, belongs to the host of immortals. The earliest versions of the birth of Achilles mention the oven of Hephaestus, where Thetis, wanting to deify Achilles (and make him immortal), laid her son, holding his heel. According to another ancient legend, which Homer does not mention, Achilles’ mother, Thetis, wanting to test whether her son was mortal or immortal, wanted to plunge the newborn Achilles into boiling water, just as she did with her previous children, but Peleus opposed this. Later legends tell that Thetis, wanting to make her son immortal, plunged him into the waters of the Styx or, according to another version, into fire, so that only the heel by which she held him remained vulnerable; hence the proverb still used today—“Achilles’ heel”—to denote someone’s weakness.

Baby Achilles is given to Chiron to be raised

As a child, Achilles was named Pyrrhisias (translated as “Icy”), but when fire burned his lips, he was called Achilles (“lipless”). According to other authors, Achilles was called Ligiron in childhood. Such a change from a child’s name to an adult’s, associated with injury or feat, is a relic of the initiation ritual (cf. the change of the child’s name “Alcides” to “Hercules” after the hero killed the lion of Kiferon and defeated King Ergin).

The Training of Achilles (James Barry (1741-1806)

Achilles was raised by Chiron on Pelion. He was not Helen's fiancé (as only Euripides calls him). Chiron fed Achilles the bone marrow of deer and other animals, from here, supposedly, from a-hilos, and his name came from “fedless,” that is, “not breastfed.” According to one interpretation, Achilles found a herb that could heal wounds.

The education of Achilles and the beginning of the War of Troy

Achilles received his upbringing from Phoenix, and the centaur Chiron taught him the art of healing. According to another legend, Achilles did not know the art of medicine, but nevertheless healed Telephus.

At the request of Nestor and Odysseus and in accordance with the will of his father, Achilles joined the campaign against Troy at the head of 50 ships (or 60), and took with him his teacher Phoenix and childhood friend Patroclus (some authors call Patroclus the beloved of Achilles). According to Homer, Achilles arrived in the army of Agamemnon from Phthia. According to Lesha's poem, the storm brought Achilles to Skyros.

Identification of Achilles among the daughters of Lycomedes (Bray)

The legend of the post-Homeric cycle conveys that Thetis, wanting to save her son from participating in a fatal campaign for him, hid him with Lycomedes, king of the island of Skyros, where Achilles in women's clothes was between the royal daughters. The cunning trick of Odysseus, who, under the guise of a merchant, laid out women's jewelry in front of the girls and, mixing weapons with them, ordered an unexpected battle cry and noise, discovered the sex of Achilles (who immediately grabbed the weapon), as a result, the exposed Achilles was forced to join the Greek campaign.

According to some authors, Achilles was 15 years old at the beginning of the campaign, and the war lasted 20 years. The first shield of Achilles was made by Hephaestus, this scene is depicted on vases.

During the long siege of Ilium, Achilles repeatedly launched raids on various neighboring cities. According to the existing version, he wandered the Scythian land for five years in search of Iphigenia.

At the beginning of the war, Achilles tried to take the city of Monenia (Pedas), and a local girl fell in love with him. “There is nothing strange in the fact that he, being amorous and intemperate, could zealously study music.”

Achilles in the Iliad

The main character of the Iliad.

In the tenth year of the siege of Ilion, Achilles captured the beautiful Briseis. She served as a bone of contention, which forced Astynous to return his captive to her father Chryses, and therefore laid claim to the possession of Briseis.

Achilles receives ambassadors from Agamemnon
(Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres (1780-1867)

The angry Achilles refused to further participate in battles (compare with the similar refusal to fight of the insulted Karna, the greatest hero of the Indian legend “Mahabharata”). Thetis, wanting to take revenge on Agamemnon for the insult inflicted on her son, begged Zeus to grant victory to the Trojans.

Angry Achilles (Herman Wilhelm Bissen (1798-1868)

The next morning, Thetis brought her son new armor, forged by the skillful hand of Hephaestus himself (in particular, the shield is described in the Iliad as a marvelous work of art, a description that is important for the original history of Greek art). ; Hector alone dared to resist him here, but still fled from Achilles.

Achilles duel with Hector

Pursuing the murderer of his friend, Achilles forced Hector to run around the walls of Troy three times, finally overtook and killed him, and tied him naked with him to the Greek camp. Having magnificently celebrated the funeral feast for his fallen friend Patroclus, Achilles returned Hector’s corpse to his father, King Priam, for a rich ransom, who came to the hero’s tent to beg him about it.

Priam asking Achilles for the body of Hector, 1824
(Alexander Andreevich Ivanov (1806-1858)

In the Iliad, 23 Trojans, named by name, for example, Asteropeus, died at the hands of Achilles. Aeneas crossed arms with Achilles, but then fled from him. Achilles fought Agenor, who was saved by Apollo.

Death of Achilles

The legends of the epic cycle tell that during the further siege of Troy, Achilles killed in battle the queen of the Amazons and the Ethiopian prince, who came to the aid of the Trojans. Achilles killed Memnon, avenging his friend Antilochus, the son of Nestor. In Quintus' poem, Achilles killed 6 Amazons, 2 Trojans and the Ethiopian Memnon. According to Hyginus, he killed Troilus, Astynome and Pylemenes. In total, 72 warriors fell at the hands of Achilles.

Having defeated many enemies, Achilles in the last battle reached the Scaean Gate of Ilion, but here the hero died. According to some authors, Achilles was directly killed by Apollo himself, or by the arrow of Apollo, who took the form of Paris, or by Paris, hiding behind the statue of Apollo of Thymbrey. The earliest author to mention the vulnerability of Achilles' ankle is Statius, but there is an earlier depiction on a 6th-century amphora. BC e., where we see Achilles wounded in the leg.

Death of Achilles

Later legends transfer the death of Achilles to the temple of Apollo at Thimbra, near Troy, where he came to marry Polyxena, the youngest daughter of Priam. These legends report that Achilles was killed by Paris and Deiphobus when he wooed Polyxena and came to negotiate.

According to Ptolemy Hephaestion, Achilles was killed by Helenus or Penthesilea, after which Thetis resurrected him, he killed Penthesilea and returned to Hades

Subsequent legends

According to the current version, Achilles' body was ransomed for an equal weight of gold from the gold-bearing river Pactolus.

Shield of Achilles

The Greeks erected a mausoleum for Achilles on the banks of the Hellespont, and here, in order to pacify the shadow of the hero, they sacrificed Polyxena to him. According to Homer's story, Ajax Telamonides and Odysseus Laertides argued for the armor of Achilles. Agamemnon awarded them to the latter. In the Odyssey, Achilles is in the underworld, where Odysseus meets him. Achilles was buried in a golden amphora (Homer), which Dionysus gave to Thetis (Lycophron, Stesichorus).

But already “Ethiopida,” one of the epics of the epic cycle, tells that Thetis took her son away from the burning fire and transferred him to the island of Levka (called Snake Island at the mouth of the Istra Danube), where he continues to live in the company of other idolized heroes and heroines . This island served as the center of the cult of Achilles, as well as the mound that rises on the Sigean hill in front of Troy and is still known as the tomb of Achilles. The sanctuary and monument of Achilles, as well as the monuments of Patroclus and Antilochus, were at Cape Sigei. There were also his temples in Elis, Sparta and other places.

Philostratus (born in 170) in his essay “On Heroes” (215) cites a dialogue between a Phoenician merchant and a winegrower, telling about the events on Snake Island. With the end of the Trojan War, Achilles and Helen married after death (the marriage of the bravest with the most beautiful) and live on the White Island (Levka Island) at the mouth of the Danube on the Pontus Euxine. One day, Achilles appeared to a merchant who had sailed to the island and asked him to buy a slave girl for him in Troy, indicating how to find her. The merchant fulfilled the order and delivered the girl to the island, but before his ship had time to sail far from the shore, he and his companions heard the wild screams of the unfortunate girl: Achilles tore her into pieces - she, it turns out, was the last of the descendants of the royal family of Priam. The screams of the unfortunate woman reach the ears of the merchant and his companions. The role of the owner of the White Island, performed by Achilles, becomes understandable in the light of the article by H. Hommel, who showed that even in the 7th century. BC e. this character, who had long ago turned into an epic hero, still acted in his original function as one of the afterlife demons.

Called “reigning over the Scythians.” Demodocus sings a song about him. The ghost of Achilles appeared in Troy, hunting animals.

The spear of Achilles was kept in Phaselis in the temple of Athena. The cenotaph of Achilles was in Elis, in the gymnasium. According to Timaeus, Periander built the fortification of Achilleus against the Athenians from the stones of Ilium, which Demetrius of Skepsis refutes. Statues of naked ephebes with spears were called Achilles.

Origin of the image

There is a hypothesis that initially in Greek mythology Achilles was one of the demons of the underworld (which included other heroes - for example, Hercules). The assumption about the divine nature of Achilles was expressed by H. Hommel in his article. He shows on the material of Greek early classical texts that even in the 7th century. BC e. this character, who had long ago turned into an epic hero, still acted in his original function as one of the afterlife demons. Hommel's publication caused an active discussion, which has not yet been completed.

Image in art

Literature

The protagonist of Aeschylus's tragedies "The Myrmidons" (fr. 131-139 Radt), "Nereids" (fr. 150-153 Radt), "The Phrygians, or the Ransom of the Body of Hector" (fr. 263-267 Radt); the satyr dramas of Sophocles “The Worshipers of Achilles” (fr. 149-157 Radt) and “The Companions” (fr. 562-568 Radt), the tragedy of Euripides “Iphigenia in Aulis”. The tragedies “Achilles” were written by Aristarchus of Tegea, Iophon, Astydamas the Younger, Diogenes, Karkin the Younger, Cleophon, Evaret, Chaeremon had the tragedy “Achilles - the killer of Thersites”, from the Latin authors Livy Andronicus (“Achilles”), Ennius (“Achilles according to Aristarchus "), Aktii ("Achilles, or Myrmidons").

art

The plastic art of antiquity repeatedly reproduced the image of Achilles. His image has come to us on many vases, bas-reliefs with individual scenes or a whole series of them, also on a group of pediments from Aegina (kept in Munich, see Aegina art), but there is not a single statue or bust that could be attributed to him with certainty.

One of the most remarkable busts of Achilles is kept in St. Petersburg, in the Hermitage. The sad and at the same time indignant head is crowned with a helmet, which ends in a crest hanging forward, mounted on the back of the sphinx; at the back this ridge curls like a long tail. On both sides of the crest there is a sculpture in flat relief along the fingerboard; they are separated by a palmette. The front supra-frontal plaque of the helmet, ending in curls on both sides, is also decorated with a palmette in the middle; on either side of her are a pair of sharp-faced, thin-tailed dogs with long, flat ears, wearing collars (apparently a pair of hunting dogs sniffing the ground). The facial expression is reminiscent of a bust kept in Munich. It must be assumed that this captures the moment when they had already put the armor on the hero, chained by Hephaestus, and now his face was already ablaze with anger, a thirst for vengeance, but sadness for his dear friend still trembles on his lips, like a reflection of inner heart longing. This bust apparently dates back to the 2nd century AD. e. to the era of Hadrian, but its design is too deep for this era, poor in creative thought, and therefore we can only assume that this head, like the Munich one, is an imitation, the original of which could have been created no later than Praxiteles, that is, no later than IV-III V. BC e.

In cinema

In 2003, a two-part television film “Helen of Troy” was released, where Achilles is played by Joe Montana.

Brad Pitt plays the role of Achilles in the 2004 film Troy.

In astronomy

The asteroid (588) Achilles, discovered in 1906, is named after Achilles.

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