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Unit 3 Characters

Horizontales
Goddess of love and beauty
Goddesses of the seasons, order, and justice
King of Troy
Known as the goddess "Peitho," had the power to win people over through her eloquence
God of the sky and thunder; king of the gods; supports Hector, but allows his daughter Athena to intervene on behalf of Achilles
Penelope's elderly nurse; scolds Penelope for her doubt and attempts to prove that Odysseus has returned by telling Penelope that the man waiting downstairs has the same scar as Odysseus
Goddess of war, wisdom, and handicraft; often suppports Odysseus; disguises him as a beggar and as a rich man upon his return to Ithaca
Greek god of blacksmiths, goldsmiths and other craftsmen, known as "lame" because he had deformed foot
God of medicine, music, and poetry; supports Hector; often associated with the sun
Prince of Troy and son of King Priam and Queen Hecuba; Troy's greatest warrior and treated dishonorably by Achilles
Young Babylonian man whose forbidden romance with his neighbor, Thisbe, leads to his tragic death
Most learned and celebrated philosopher of his time; Alexander's tutor
Titan who created mankind from clay, a god of trickery and fire
Won the favor of the royal family by referring to Alexander and his father as the Greek heroes Achilles and Peleus
Grecian who is hired to be captured by the Trojans in order to deceive them
Trojan priest suspicious of the wooden horse; killed by sea monsters
From Macedonia; father of Alexander the Great
Craftsman hired by King Mianos of Crete to create the Labyrinth
Greek king of Ithaca and a hero of the Trojan War renowned for his strength
Odysseus's father
King of Phrygia, he asked the God Bacchus for the ability to turn anything he touches into gold
King of Ithaca (an island in Greede) and a hero of the Trojan War renowned for his strength and cunning; disguises himself as a beggar; kills wife's suitors and reuinites with son Telemachus and faithful wife Penelope
Verticales
Son of Zeus, messenger of the gods
A young Babylonian woman who was in a forbidden romance, and she was the inspiration for Shakespeare's character "Juliet"
Daughters of Zeus
Bacchus's foster father, lost and returned to Bacchus by Midas
Trojan hero and Hector's cousin; the speaker/narrator of the Aeneid
King of Troy; Hector's father; first to see Achilles as he runs toward Troy; warns his son not to fight
Queen of Carthage; holds a banquet for Aeneus and his men and begs for the story of the Trojans and Troy's downfall
Queen of Ithaca, Odysseus's wife; remains faithful to him during his long absence by tricking suitors; confirms Odysseus's identity
God of agriculture and wine, grants to King Midas the golden touch
Odyssesus's son; helps his father kill Penelope's suitors
Son of Daedalus who ignores his father's warnings and flies too close to the sun
Daughter of Zeus; goddess of war, wisdom, and handicraft; often supports Achilles and deceives Hector during the battle, helping Achilles defeat him
First woman in Zeus's "gift to mankind," given in retaliation for Prometheus's act of stealing fire from Zeus for mankind
Odysseus's faithful swineherd; friend to Telemachus in Odysseus's absence
Known as "the Great," one of history's most famous conquerors; son of Phillip II of Macedonia
Demigod (half-god) famous for his involvement in the Trojan War; known as the son of Peleus; Achaea's greatest warrior