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- Thersites - Wikipedia
In Greek mythology, Thersites ( θɜːrˈsaɪtiːz ; Ancient Greek: Θερσίτης) [n 1] was a soldier of the Greek army during the Trojan War Thersites and Achilles, illustration for Shakespeare's 'Troilus Cressida' The Iliad does not mention his father's name, which may suggest that he should be viewed as a commoner rather than an aristocratic hero
- Thersites - World History Encyclopedia
Thersites is a character in the Iliad who made a stand against Agamemnon and the enterprise of the Trojan War Homer chose to add Thersites’ speech after Achilles ’ infamous dispute with Agamemnon, probably to emphasize the struggles that the Achaean side underwent during the war
- Thersites - Greek Mythology
Thersites was a Greek warrior who fought during the Trojan War, in Greek mythology He was described as being lame, vulgar and dull-witted According to a source, his death came by the hand of Achilles, who killed him for tearing out the eyes of the Amazon Penthesilea See Also: Achilles, Trojan War
- Thersites in Greek Mythology - Greek Legends and Myths
Thersites was a soldier or hero of the Achaean forces during the Trojan War Thersites is most famous today for his appearance in the Iliad, in which Homer has him as a relative comic character who is bow-legged and outspoken
- Thersites, the Iliad, and Not Knowing Your Place - Waggish
The scene with Thersites in Book II of the Iliad is one of the most famous in the whole epic, and with good reason Not only is it very peculiar, but it also gives voice to what any young person reading the Iliad for the first time must be thinking: why on earth are all these people getting killed for Menelaus just because someone stole his wife?
- Thersites: the “Jack Sparrow” of the Trojan War
Thersites, the “Jack Sparrow” of the Trojan War, was a soldier depicted in Homer’s “Iliad” as an anti-heroic figure Ancient Greek philosophers like Plato, perceived Thersites as a buffoon, while modern thinkers such as Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel and Karl Marx view him as a social critic of his time
- Thersites - playshakespeare. com
Thersites is a foul-mouthed Greek servant, first to Ajax and then to Achilles, and the most determinedly unpleasant person in all of Shakespeare He is constitutionally incapable of saying a nice thing
- Thersites | Facts, Information, and Mythology
In Shakespeare's Troilus and Cressida (I, iii) the character of Thersites is "a slave whose gall coins slander like a mint "
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