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During the Greek Dark Age, poets called bards traveled to different poli. The bards told
stories in the form of long poems called epics. People would often pay to hear the bards describe
stories of the distant past. The bards would sing many of the epic poems while accompanied
by a stringed instrument called a lyre. The musical epics were called lyric poetry.
The two oldest surviving examples of Greek literature are the Iliad and the Odyssey,
epic poems that describe the Trojan War, a conflict between the Greeks and the city of
Troy that the epics say was fought almost 1200 years before the Common Era. The Trojan
War was fought over Helen, who according to legend was the beautiful daughter of Zeus
and the wife of the king of the Greek polis of Sparta. The war began after a Trojan prince
named Paris kidnapped Helen. According to the Odyssey, the Trojan War ended
when the Greeks pretended to give up their quest for Helen. The Greeks left a huge wooden
horse as a peace offering to the Trojans. The Greek navy pretended to sail away, but
they only sailed out to a hidden location. The joyous Trojans opened the city gates and
pulled in the giant statue. After a great victory celebration of their defeat of the
Greek army, the people of Troy slept for the night. As the Trojans slept, Greek soldiers
emerged from their hiding place inside the wooden horse, opened the city gates, and began
to burn the sleeping city. Modern scholars believe the Iliad and the
Odyssey are based on oral legends, but the epics are often attributed to a storyteller
named Homer. The language of the Iliad and the Odyssey suggest that Homer came from the
western coast of the modern nation of Turkey. Homer’s name can be translated from a word
that means blind, but the vivid imagery of the Iliad and the Odyssey suggest that the
author of the poems must have had sight at some point in his life.
We have only a few clues about who Homer might have been. Herodotus was a Greek writer who
lived in the fifth century before the Common Era. Herodotus is often called “the Father
of History.” The great historian estimated that the story of the Trojan War was at that
time at least seven centuries old. The epic stories of the bards are the foundation
of Greek theater. During the Classical Age, the Greeks often performed plays at festivals
honoring Dionysus. Dionysus was the Greek god of the harvest, but he was also the god
of pleasure. In many Greek plays, a few actors played roles while a chorus narrated the play
and offered advice to the characters. Greek tragedies were plays that described great
conflicts and often ended unhappily; Greek comedies told amusing stories about Greek
culture and society and generally had happy endings. The modern movies we see today are
rooted in the plays of ancient Greece and the stories of the mysterious Heroic Era of
ancient Greece.