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Course Title: Classics in Translation
Presented By: Refat Ara
Id:143020100009
Course Conductor:
Tania Tabassum Mam
Greek literature
 Greek Literature, body of writings in the Greek language, with a
continuous history extending from 1st millennium BC to the present day.
 From the beginning its writers were Greeks living not only in Greece
Proper but also in Asia Minor, the Aegean Islands, and Magna Graecia
(Sicily and Southern Italy).
 Later, after the consequence of Alexander the Great, Greek become the
common language of the eastern Mediterranean Lands and then of the
Byzantine Empire.
 Literature in Greek was produced not only over a much wider area but also
by those whose mother tongue was not Greek.
 Even before the Turkish conquest (1453) the area had begun to shrink again,
and now it is chiefly confined to Greece and Cyprus
Greek literature
 The Greek word for Fate-“moira, moros” mean “portion”
 Fatalism is the system of belief that holds that the universe and everything in it is
governed by destiny or fate (moira).
 This force became personified in Greek religion in the form of the three goddesses
of fate(the Moirai).
Concept of Fate
2
Concept of Fate
 Clothospins the thread of life.
 Lachesisdetermines the length of a
person's life and measures the thread
of his glory (or its opposite).
 Atroposdetermines when that life
should end.
2
Greek literature And Fate
Homer’s ”The Iliad” and Fate
 The Trojan War was a brutal fate for both the Achaeans and the Trojans.
 The taking of Thebe and Brisies and Chryseis were captured.
 Achilles could not change his fate when King Agamemnon stole Breisis from him.
Homer’s ”The Iliad” and Fate
Gods are bound or controlled by fate
Ares even mentions his own fate.
“Now don’t be surprised, my good Olympians, if I go and pay out those Achaeans for my
son’s death! Yes, even if my fate is to be struck by a thunderbolt from on high, and I have to
lie with a heap of corpses in the blood and dust!”.
Homer’s ”The Iliad” and Fate
Andromache realized her fate.
“So we were both born to one fate, you in Troy in the palace of Priam, I in Thebe under
woody Placos, in the house of Eetion who brought me up as a tiny tot-- doomed father,
doomed child!”.
 Hectors fate to kill Patroclus but could not escape from Achilles
 Achilles fate to destroy Hector and bring a victory to the Achaeans.
Everything that happened in the Iliad was influenced by
the gods, but determined by fate.
 the king of Thebes ,Laius, receives a prophecy that his newborn son will kill him and
take his throne.
 Wishing to avoid this fate the king orders his wife Jocasta to kill the infant.
Sophocles and “Oedipus rex”
 The boy(Oedipus) eventually hears a prophecy stating that he will kill his father and sleep
with his own mother.
 Oedipus' desperate attempt to escape Fate from an understandable and pious desire to
live without committing heinous offenses.
Sophocles and “Oedipus Rex”
 Oedipus kills Laius which fulfills the prophecy.
 Traveling to Thebes Oedipus rescues the city from a creature called the Sphinx, In
their joy the city makes Oedipus their king.
Sophocles and “Oedipus Rex”
 Fulfills another prophecy.
 Oedipus gouging out his eyes and leaving the city ashamed.
Sophocles and “Oedipus Rex”
Destiny or Fate is ,a predetermined course of events,---an
unappeasable reality. And, none can be called happy until that day
when he carries His happiness down to the grave in peace.
Very Much

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Role of Destiny in Greek Literature

  • 2. Course Title: Classics in Translation Presented By: Refat Ara Id:143020100009 Course Conductor: Tania Tabassum Mam
  • 3.
  • 4. Greek literature  Greek Literature, body of writings in the Greek language, with a continuous history extending from 1st millennium BC to the present day.  From the beginning its writers were Greeks living not only in Greece Proper but also in Asia Minor, the Aegean Islands, and Magna Graecia (Sicily and Southern Italy).
  • 5.  Later, after the consequence of Alexander the Great, Greek become the common language of the eastern Mediterranean Lands and then of the Byzantine Empire.  Literature in Greek was produced not only over a much wider area but also by those whose mother tongue was not Greek.  Even before the Turkish conquest (1453) the area had begun to shrink again, and now it is chiefly confined to Greece and Cyprus Greek literature
  • 6.
  • 7.  The Greek word for Fate-“moira, moros” mean “portion”  Fatalism is the system of belief that holds that the universe and everything in it is governed by destiny or fate (moira).  This force became personified in Greek religion in the form of the three goddesses of fate(the Moirai). Concept of Fate
  • 8. 2 Concept of Fate  Clothospins the thread of life.  Lachesisdetermines the length of a person's life and measures the thread of his glory (or its opposite).  Atroposdetermines when that life should end.
  • 10. Homer’s ”The Iliad” and Fate  The Trojan War was a brutal fate for both the Achaeans and the Trojans.  The taking of Thebe and Brisies and Chryseis were captured.  Achilles could not change his fate when King Agamemnon stole Breisis from him.
  • 11. Homer’s ”The Iliad” and Fate Gods are bound or controlled by fate Ares even mentions his own fate. “Now don’t be surprised, my good Olympians, if I go and pay out those Achaeans for my son’s death! Yes, even if my fate is to be struck by a thunderbolt from on high, and I have to lie with a heap of corpses in the blood and dust!”.
  • 12. Homer’s ”The Iliad” and Fate Andromache realized her fate. “So we were both born to one fate, you in Troy in the palace of Priam, I in Thebe under woody Placos, in the house of Eetion who brought me up as a tiny tot-- doomed father, doomed child!”.  Hectors fate to kill Patroclus but could not escape from Achilles  Achilles fate to destroy Hector and bring a victory to the Achaeans.
  • 13. Everything that happened in the Iliad was influenced by the gods, but determined by fate.
  • 14.  the king of Thebes ,Laius, receives a prophecy that his newborn son will kill him and take his throne.  Wishing to avoid this fate the king orders his wife Jocasta to kill the infant. Sophocles and “Oedipus rex”
  • 15.  The boy(Oedipus) eventually hears a prophecy stating that he will kill his father and sleep with his own mother.  Oedipus' desperate attempt to escape Fate from an understandable and pious desire to live without committing heinous offenses. Sophocles and “Oedipus Rex”
  • 16.  Oedipus kills Laius which fulfills the prophecy.  Traveling to Thebes Oedipus rescues the city from a creature called the Sphinx, In their joy the city makes Oedipus their king. Sophocles and “Oedipus Rex”
  • 17.  Fulfills another prophecy.  Oedipus gouging out his eyes and leaving the city ashamed. Sophocles and “Oedipus Rex”
  • 18. Destiny or Fate is ,a predetermined course of events,---an unappeasable reality. And, none can be called happy until that day when he carries His happiness down to the grave in peace.