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Classical Greek language --- Classical Greek literature --- Achilles Tatius --- Greek language --- Grec (Langue) --- Glossaries, vocabularies, etc --- Glossaires, vocabulaires, etc --- Language --- Glossaries, etc --- Langue --- Glossaires, etc. --- -Classical languages --- Indo-European languages --- Classical philology --- Greek philology --- Tatius, Achilles --- Achilleus Tatios --- Tatios, Achilleus --- Achilles Tatius Alexandrinus --- Achille Tazio --- Tazio, Achille --- Aquiles Tácio --- Tácio, Aquiles --- Achille Tatios --- Tatios, Achille --- Achille Tatius --- Tatius, Achille --- Ἀχιλλεὺς Τάτιος --- Τάτιος, Ἀχιλλεύς --- -Glossaries, etc. --- Glossaries, vocabularies, etc. --- Glossaries, etc. --- -Glossaries, vocabularies, etc --- Greek language - Glossaries, vocabularies, etc --- Achilles Tatius - Language - Glossaries, etc
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"The Iliad is organized according to two complementary, mutually reinforcing artistic principles, one related to its traditional narrative and mythological content, the other to its symmetrical form and to eighth-century aesthetic norms. The narrative moves linearly toward the death of Achilles and the fall of Troy, both of which, as Homer's audiences knew, will follow shortly after the burial of Hektor with which the Iliad concludes, and both of which are anticipated with increasing frequency in the course of the poem. In the mortal world of the Iliad, the movement toward death is a one-way movement, an overriding reality that lends the poem much of its power as a representation of the human condition. Nevertheless, as Aristotle observed, unlike other epic poets who told in chronological order everything that was supposed to have happened in the course of the events they described, Homer organized the Iliad and Odyssey thematically, rather than chronologically, each around a single subject - the wrath of Achilles and its consequences and the man Odysseus and his return home - and gave them an organic unity in which, in the case of the Iliad, the death of Achilles and fall of Troy have no place. Even so, most events in the poem are told in the order in which they occur; there is nothing like the extraordinarily complex narrative form of the Odyssey, with its multiple plots, its movement back and forth in time, its numerous internal narrators and narrative perspectives, and its constant change of locale"--
Homer. - Iliad. - Book 1 --- Trojan War --- Homer. --- Achilles --- Achìe --- Achilas --- Achille --- Achilleus --- Achilli --- Ahil --- Ahile --- Ahilej --- Ahillejs --- Aĥilo --- Aichill --- Akhilles --- Akhilleus --- Akhilleusz --- Akiles --- Akili --- Akille --- Akilles --- Akkilles --- Aquiles --- Aquilles --- Axill --- Axilles --- Ἀχιλλεύς --- آخيل --- アキレウス --- Akireusu --- 아킬레우스 --- 阿喀琉斯 --- Ахіл --- Ахил --- Ахилл --- Akhill --- Ахіллес --- אכילס --- Akhiles
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Romance-language literature --- Love stories, Greek --- Littérature romane --- Histoires d'amour grecques --- History and criticism --- History and criticism. --- Histoire et critique --- Eustathius, --- Achilles Tatius. --- Romances, Byzantine --- -Romances, Byzantine --- -875-993 --- 877.3 --- Byzantine romances --- Romances, Greek --- Byzantine literature --- Greek romance fiction --- Greek fiction --- Griekse literatuur: erotische literatuur --- Byzantijnse literatuur --- Eustathius Macrembolites --- Tatius, Achilles --- Achilleus Tatios --- Tatios, Achilleus --- Achilles Tatius Alexandrinus --- Achille Tazio --- Tazio, Achille --- Aquiles Tácio --- Tácio, Aquiles --- Achille Tatios --- Tatios, Achille --- Achille Tatius --- Tatius, Achille --- Ἀχιλλεὺς Τάτιος --- Τάτιος, Ἀχιλλεύς --- Theses --- 877.3 Byzantijnse literatuur --- 875-993 Griekse literatuur: erotische literatuur --- Eumathios --- Macrembolita, Eustazio --- Romance fiction, Greek --- Littérature romane --- 875-993 --- Achilles Tatius --- Romances, Byzantine - History and criticism. --- Love stories, Greek - History and criticism.
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Achilles (Greek mythology) in literature --- Homer --- Characters --- Achilles --- -Characters --- -Achilles --- -Hóiméar --- Hūmīrūs --- Homeros --- Homerus --- Gomer --- Omir --- Omer --- Omero --- Ho-ma --- Homa --- Homérosz --- האמער --- הומירוס --- הומר --- הומרוס --- هومر --- هوميروس --- 荷马 --- Ὅμηρος --- Гамэр --- Hamėr --- Омир --- Homero --- 호메로스 --- Homerosŭ --- Homērs --- Homeras --- Хомер --- ホメーロス --- ホメロス --- Гомер --- Homeri --- Hema --- Pseudo-Homer --- Pseudo Omero --- -Homer --- Homère --- Homer. --- Homerus. --- Achilles. --- Homère. Odyssée. Achille. --- Homerus. Odyssee. Achilleus. --- Hóiméar --- Homer. - Odyssey --- Homer - Characters - Achilles
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