Trojan horse

From Citizendium
Revision as of 15:45, 14 July 2024 by Pat Palmer (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This article is developing and not approved.
Main Article
Discussion
Related Articles  [?]
Bibliography  [?]
External Links  [?]
Citable Version  [?]
 
This editable Main Article is under development and subject to a disclaimer.
(GNU) Photo: Hynek Moravec
Armed Greek warriors hid quietly inside a giant wooden horse in a ruse that ended the ancient Trojan War. This imagined recreation of the Trojan horse stands in Prague.
(PD) Photo of a painting: Johann Georg Trautmann
"The burning of Troy", a painting by Johann Georg Trautmann (1713-1769).

the Trojan Horse in Greek mythology was a famous trick by which the Greeks defeated the Trojans to end the Trojan War by offering them an apparent grand gift, a giant wooden horse, whose real purpose was to allow Greek soldiers hidden inside it to infiltrate the city and open the city gates to the Greek invaders. The term Trojan horse has became a widely understood metaphor meaning any kind of deceptive gift which contains secret harm. It passed into computer terminology to describe malware which tricks a user to allowing harmful software onto one's computer by appearing to be beneficial.

The main literary work set at Troy is Homer's Iliad, an epic Greek poem which tells the story of the final year of the Trojan War, but it is his Odyssey that first touches on the Trojan horse trick. The Trojan horse is discussed at length in Virgil's Latin epid poem, the Aeneid, Book II.

The stratagem for the classical Trojan horse was devised by Prylis the son of Hermes, or, in other accounts, by Odysseus. The Greek expeditionary force besieging Troy pretended to sail away, leaving behind the enormous horse, constructed by Epeius, in which Greek soldiers under the command of Odysseus had secreted themselves., The horse had an inscription invoking Athene's aid for a safe return to their homes.

The Trojans were further deceived by Sinon, a Greek left behind to signal to the fleet. Sinon was seized by Trojan warriors and brought before King Priam. He began by pleading for his life:

What land, what waters, can take me now? There is nothing, nothing left for me any more, no place with the Greeks, and here are the Trojans howling for my blood.[1]

He explained that it had been proposed to sacrifice him in order to change the winds that prevented the Greeks from returning home, that the horse was likewise to appease Athene, and that it was deliberately built so large that it couldn't enter the walls of Troy; but if it was damaged, harm would come to those who damaged it.

It was Calchas, again, who bade them build a mass so mighty it almost reached the stars, too big to enter through any gate, or be brought inside the walls. For if your hands should damage it, destruction, (May God avert it) would come upon the city, but if your hands helped bring it home, then Asia would be invading Greece, and doom await our children's children (ie the Greeks).[1]

The Trojan king Priam was warned by the priest Laocoön ("I fear the Greeks, even when bearing gifts") as well as his own daughter Cassandra. In order to reduce Laocoön's credibility, Apollo sent two serpents to kill him and his two sons, and the warnings were ignored. The horse was brought into the city, even though part of the wall had to be knocked down for the purpose

At night, with the people of Troy asleep, selected Greek fighters inside the hollowed-out belly of the horse slipped out and opened the city's gates, which allowed the returning Greek army to enter and sack the city.

The list of warriors inside the horse varies according to differing accounts, with numbers varying between 23 and 50.

Homer's Iliad does not describe the episode of the Trojan horse, although there are references thoughout indicating that the bard expected listeners to the tales to be thoroughly familiar with the basic events of the Trojan War.

Commentators both classical and modern have doubted the story, and there have been various explanations, such as the horse actually being a siege tower covered with horse hides, or that Greeks, after burning their camp, hid behind Mount Hippius ("of the horse")

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Virgil; translated by Rolfe Humphries. "The Aeneid", Charles Scribner & Sons, 1951, pp. 34-39. Retrieved on 2010-04-07.