Friday, January 24, 2020
Source Analysis: The Death of Hector :: essays research papers
 The Death of Hector is actually just one part of a  larger work. The Iliad was written during the Dark  Ages of Greece by a blind poet named Homer. It  was mainly entertainment, but today has turned into  a significant, though unrealistic History of the Dark  ages of Greece.    The Iliad was written and performed for a bunch of  drunk, barbaric nobles who were the soldiers of the  time. Thatââ¬â¢s the reason Homer put so much  descriptive battle scenes and gory details. This is  what they wanted; lots of blood, to go with the  drinking and war. It is through this we get our first  accurate picture of the times of ancient Greece: A  backwards, warlike, perpetually drunk society  whose only real interest was to gain respect and  honor by killing everyone else. This makes no  sense, since if you kill everybody for glory, who is  left to honor you? Anyway, this was the main reason  Homer wrote the Iliad. The specific story of the  Death of Hector shows tells the story of Hector, who  wants to fight Achilles outside the city gates. He  refuses his fatherââ¬â¢s request to come inside and be  protected. In the end he is killed. This entire  episode shows the way one should act. Even if  scared, it is better to die in battle than to live a  coward. This was one of the basic tenants of the  Greek code of conduct. So, not only did the stories  entertain, but they also were the early Greeks code  of conduct. If they were to be a "good Greek", they  were to strive to be like someone in the pantheon of  heroes. This honor code was needed to keep the  people under one standard of honor and loyalty, and  what is good, right, and acceptable. This honor  code existed for many years, until Classical Greece    					    
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