Silkscreen depicting Homer's Iliad, in ancient Greek.
Nine years after the start of the Trojan War, the Greek (“Achaean”) army
sacks Chryse, a town allied with Troy. During the battle, the Achaeans capture a
pair of beautiful maidens, Chryseis and Briseis. Agamemnon, the leader of the
Achaean forces, takes Chryseis as his prize, and Achilles, the Achaeans’
greatest warrior, claims Briseis. Chryseis’s father, Chryses, who serves as a
priest of the god Apollo, offers an enormous ransom in return for his daughter,
but Agamemnon refuses to give Chryseis back. Chryses then prays to Apollo, who
sends a plague upon the Achaean camp.
After many Achaeans die, Agamemnon
consults the prophet Calchas to determine the cause of the plague. When he
learns that Chryseis is the cause, he reluctantly gives her up but then demands
Briseis from Achilles as compensation. Furious at this insult, Achilles returns
to his tent in the army camp and refuses to fight in the war any longer. He
vengefully yearns to see the Achaeans destroyed and asks his mother, the
sea-nymph Thetis, to enlist the services of Zeus, king of the gods, toward this
end. The Trojan and Achaean sides have declared a cease-fire with each other,
but now the Trojans breach the treaty and Zeus comes to their aid.
With Zeus
supporting the Trojans and Achilles refusing to fight, the Achaeans suffer great
losses. Several days of fierce conflict ensue, including duels between Paris and
Menelaus and between Hector and Ajax. The Achaeans make no progress; even the
heroism of the great Achaean warrior Diomedes proves fruitless. The Trojans push
the Achaeans back, forcing them to take refuge behind the ramparts that protect
their ships. The Achaeans begin to nurture some hope for the future when a
nighttime reconnaissance mission by Diomedes and Odysseus yields information
about the Trojans’ plans, but the next day brings disaster. Several Achaean
commanders become wounded, and the Trojans break through the Achaean ramparts.
They advance all the way up to the boundary of the Achaean camp and set fire to
one of the ships. Defeat seems imminent, because without the ships, the army
will be stranded at Troy and almost certainly destroyed.
Concerned for his
comrades but still too proud to help them himself, Achilles agrees to a plan
proposed by Nestor that will allow his beloved friend Patroclus to take his
place in battle, wearing his armor. Patroclus is a fine warrior, and his
presence on the battlefield helps the Achaeans push the Trojans away from the
ships and back to the city walls. But the counterattack soon falters. Apollo
knocks Patroclus’s armor to the ground, and Hector slays him. Fighting then
breaks out as both sides try to lay claim to the body and armor. Hector ends up
with the armor, but the Achaeans, thanks to a courageous effort by Menelaus and
others, manage to bring the body back to their camp. When Achilles discovers
that Hector has killed Patroclus, he fills with such grief and rage that he
agrees to reconcile with Agamemnon and rejoin the battle. Thetis goes to Mount
Olympus and persuades the god Hephaestus to forge Achilles a new suit of armor,
which she presents to him the next morning. Achilles then rides out to battle at
the head of the Achaean army.
Meanwhile, Hector, not expecting Achilles to
rejoin the battle, has ordered his men to camp outside the walls of Troy. But
when the Trojan army glimpses Achilles, it flees in terror back behind the city
walls. Achilles cuts down every Trojan he sees. Strengthened by his rage, he
even fights the god of the river Xanthus, who is angered that Achilles has
caused so many corpses to fall into his streams. Finally, Achilles confronts
Hector outside the walls of Troy. Ashamed at the poor advice that he gave his
comrades, Hector refuses to flee inside the city with them. Achilles chases him
around the city’s periphery three times, but the goddess Athena finally tricks
Hector into turning around and fighting Achilles. In a dramatic duel, Achilles
kills Hector. He then lashes the body to the back of his chariot and drags it
across the battlefield to the Achaean camp. Upon Achilles’ arrival, the
triumphant Achaeans celebrate Patroclus’s funeral with a long series of athletic
games in his honor. Each day for the next nine days, Achilles drags Hector’s
body in circles around Patroclus’s funeral bier.
At last, the gods agree that
Hector deserves a proper burial. Zeus sends the god Hermes to escort King Priam,
Hector’s father and the ruler of Troy, into the Achaean camp. Priam tearfully
pleads with Achilles to take pity on a father bereft of his son and return
Hector’s body. He invokes the memory of Achilles’ own father, Peleus. Deeply
moved, Achilles finally relents and returns Hector’s corpse to the Trojans. Both
sides agree to a temporary truce, and Hector receives a hero’s funeral.