The Trojan War: Myth, Reality, or Both? — Fexingo History

Achilles' Grief: The Man Who Quit the War

5 min · 27. juni 2026
episode Achilles' Grief: The Man Who Quit the War cover

Beskrivelse

In Episode 120 of The Trojan War: Myth, Reality, or Both?, hosts Lucas and Luna explore the psychological depths of the Iliad's central conflict: Achilles' withdrawal from battle after the loss of Briseis. This episode unpacks the Greek concept of *menis* (divine wrath) and *kleos* (glory), examining how Achilles' rage against Agamemnon nearly cost the Greeks the war. Lucas traces the ancient Greek *philotimia* (love of honor) and its role in motivating warriors, then contrasts Achilles' personal grief with the public demands of war. The conversation also touches on the Mycenaean practice of *basileus* (king) and the hierarchy on the Greek ships. Using the *Iliad* as a primary source, the hosts break down Achilles' famous speeches to Odysseus and the embassy scene, including the hero's rejection of Agamemnon's gifts. They consider whether Homer was critiquing or celebrating the heroic code. Finally, they reflect on the death of Patroclus as the turning point that brings Achilles back, but with a transformed sense of purpose. This is a deep dive into the human emotions that drive the epic. #Iliad #Achilles #Agamemnon #Briseis #Patroclus #Menis #Kleos #Philotimia #Mycenaean #Basileus #EmbassyScene #Phoenix #Ajax #Odysseus #HomericEpic #BronzeAge #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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Alle episoder

164 Episoder

episode Troy's Walls: How Teichorupaxis Shaped the War cover

Troy's Walls: How Teichorupaxis Shaped the War

Episode 164 of The Trojan War series takes a fresh look at the most iconic feature of Troy: its walls. Lucas and Luna explore the concept of 'teichorupaxis' (wall-breaking) and how the city's fortifications dictated the entire strategy of the war. Drawing on both Homeric epic and Hittite diplomatic correspondence, they discuss the walls of Troy VI and VIIa as revealed by archaeology at Hisarlik, the Hittite term 'hekur' (fortress), and the surprising parallels with the Indian Aśvamedha ritual. The episode also touches on the Luwian language and what it tells us about Troy's Anatolian identity. Lightly tied to the topic, the hosts reflect on listener support via buy me a coffee dot com slash fexingo, and then dive into how the walls were not just stone and mudbrick but a symbol of power that the Greeks had to breach through cunning rather than force. #TrojanWar #Teichorupaxis #TroyWalls #Hittite #Hisarlik #TroyVI #TroyVIIa #Hekur #Aśvamedha #Luwian #BronzeAge #Anatolia #Homer #Iliad #Archaeology #Fortifications #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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The Lost City of Troy: Luwian Evidence at Hisarlik

This episode digs into the Luwian language inscriptions found at Hisarlik (Troy) and their implications for understanding Trojan identity. Lucas and Luna explore the Luwian name for Troy — Wilusa — and how Hittite diplomatic texts mention a king named Alaksandu, possibly the historical Alexander (Paris). They discuss the Luwian origins of key Trojan figures like Hector and Paris, the role of Luwian as an Anatolian lingua franca, and the archaeological evidence for a Luwian-speaking population at Troy during the Late Bronze Age. The conversation connects the dots between Hittite records, Luwian hieroglyphs, and Homeric names, offering listeners a deeper look at the Anatolian reality behind the Greek myth. No prior Luwian knowledge needed. #Luwian #Wilusa #Troy #Hisarlik #Hittite #Alaksandu #Anatolia #BronzeAge #Iliad #Homer #Lydia #Carian #Hector #Paris #Archaeology #Mycenaean #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

19. juli 20266 min
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The Trojan War: What Archaeology Found at Hisarlik

This episode digs into the archaeological layers of Hisarlik, the site long identified as Troy, from Troy I through Troy IX. Lucas and Luna explore what each stratum reveals about the historical reality behind Homer's epic — the fortifications, the fire destruction, the foreign pottery, and the Hittite diplomatic correspondence that names a 'Wilusa' in conflict with Ahhiyawa. They discuss the Schliemann excavations and their flaws, the Korfmann dig that found a lower city, and the current consensus on which layer best corresponds to a war around 1200 BCE. They also consider the unresolved question: Was there a historical Trojan War, or did Homer conflate centuries of conflict into one story? #Hisarlik #Troy #TrojanWar #HeinrichSchliemann #ManfredKorfmann #TroyVI #TroyVIIa #Wilusa #Ahhiyawa #Hittite #BronzeAge #Archaeology #Homer #Iliad #Anatolia #Dardanelles #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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In this episode of Fexingo History, Lucas and Luna explore one of the most enduring controversies of the Trojan War: was Helen of Troy actually in Troy at all? Drawing on ancient sources like Homer's Iliad, Stesichorus, Herodotus, and Euripides, they unpack the 'phantom Helen' tradition — the idea that Helen spent the war in Egypt while a lookalike (an eidolon) went to Troy. They discuss Stesichorus' Palinode, the rationalizing historian Hecataeus of Miletus, the Egyptian king Proteus, and the cult of Helen at Sparta and Therapne. The episode also touches on the supposed visit of Helen and Menelaus to Egypt as recorded in Homer's Odyssey and Herodotus' Histories. A fascinating look at how myths were questioned even in antiquity. #TrojanWar #HelenOfTroy #Eidolon #Stesichorus #Herodotus #Homer #Iliad #Odyssey #Egypt #Proteus #Palinode #Hecataeus #Therapne #Sparta #Menelaus #AncientGreece #Mythology #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

I går5 min
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Trojan War Ships: The Greek Fleet That Sailed to Troy

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the massive Greek fleet that sailed to Troy, as catalogued in Homer's Iliad. They discuss the Catalogue of Ships — the longest list in Homer — and what it tells us about Mycenaean geography, naval power, and the logistics of assembling over a thousand vessels. They look at the numbers: 1,186 ships, perhaps 60,000 to 100,000 men. They examine Agamemnon's contingent of 100 ships from Mycenae, Achilles' 50 Myrmidons, and the puzzling absence of certain kingdoms. They also delve into the historical plausibility: Did such a fleet exist? Was it an invention for epic effect? They touch on the Hittite texts that mention Ahhiyawa, the Mycenaean Greek name for Greece, and the possibility of a historical conflict behind the legend. Along the way, they mention the Boeotians, the Athenian contingent led by Menestheus, the Rhodians under Tlepolemus, and the Cretans under Idomeneus. They end with a reflection on how the Catalogue preserves a memory of the Bronze Age world, even if the Trojan War itself remains elusive. #CatalogueOfShips #Iliad #Homer #MycenaeanGreece #TrojanWar #Agamemnon #Achilles #Ahhiyawa #HittiteTexts #BronzeAge #Boeotia #Athens #Rhodes #Crete #Mycenae #EpicPoetry #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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