Homer: Poet of the Iliad and Odyssey
Introduction
Homer is the name tradition assigns to the greatest poet of ancient Greece, the author (or compiler) of the Iliad and the Odyssey, the two foundational epics of Western literature. Composed in the oral tradition of ancient Greece, these poems shaped how the Greeks understood their gods, heroes, and themselves for centuries.
Whether Homer was a single historical individual, a composite figure, or a convenient name for a long oral tradition remains one of the great unsolved puzzles of classical scholarship, a debate known as the "Homeric Question." What is certain is that the poems attributed to him have exercised an unparalleled influence on art, literature, philosophy, and culture for nearly three thousand years.
The Homeric Question: Who Was Homer?
Ancient Greeks had little doubt that Homer was a real person, a blind wandering bard from Ionia (the western coast of modern Turkey), most likely from the island of Chios or the city of Smyrna. Seven cities claimed to be his birthplace. He was believed to have lived sometime around the 8th or 9th century BCE, though some ancient sources placed him as far back as the Trojan War itself.
Modern scholarship has complicated this picture considerably. The Iliad and the Odyssey show evidence of long oral composition, with formulaic phrases, repeated epithets, and structural patterns typical of oral poetry handed down through generations of bards (aoidoi). Some scholars argue that the two epics were composed by different poets; others maintain a single genius shaped both.
The dominant view today is that Homer, whoever he was, worked at the culmination of a centuries-long oral tradition, giving final form to stories that had circulated since the Mycenaean age. The poems were likely written down in the 6th or 7th century BCE, possibly in Athens during the reign of the tyrant Pisistratos.
The Iliad
The Iliad is an epic poem of 24 books and roughly 15,700 lines, set during the final weeks of the Trojan War. Its central subject is the mênis, the "wrath", of the Greek hero Achilles, whose quarrel with the commander Agamemnon over the captive Briseis sets off a chain of devastating consequences for both Greeks and Trojans.
The poem is not a straightforward narrative of the entire war. It focuses tightly on a short, dramatic episode, weaving in vivid battle scenes, intimate character studies, divine councils on Olympus, and moments of profound human pathos, most memorably in the scene where the Trojan king Priam comes to Achilles to ransom the body of his son Hector.
The Iliad explores timeless themes: the nature of heroism and glory (kleos), the cost of pride and rage, the role of fate and divine will, the fragility of human life, and the tragedy of war. Its heroes, Achilles, Hector, Ajax, Diomedes, became the defining archetypes of Greek heroism.
The Odyssey
The Odyssey follows the long, perilous journey of the cunning hero Odysseus (Ulysses in Latin) as he tries to return home to Ithaca after the fall of Troy. The journey takes ten years and brings him face to face with monsters, witches, gods, the land of the dead, and the temptations of immortality.
Unlike the martial grandeur of the Iliad, the Odyssey is an adventure story, rich with exotic settings, supernatural encounters, and domestic drama. It is also a story of identity and homecoming: Odysseus must reclaim his kingdom, his wife Penelope, and his son Telemachus from the suitors who have overrun his palace.
The poem celebrates intelligence, adaptability, and endurance as heroic virtues alongside physical courage. Odysseus succeeds not through brute strength but through his renowned cunning (mêtis). The Odyssey introduced to Western literature the journey as a metaphor for the human experience.
Oral Tradition and Homeric Style
Both Homeric epics were composed in dactylic hexameter, the standard meter of Greek epic poetry. A defining feature of Homer's style is the use of formulaic epithets, repeated descriptive phrases attached to characters and objects: Achilles is "swift-footed," the sea is "wine-dark," the dawn is "rosy-fingered." These formulas were the building blocks of oral composition, allowing bards to fit names and descriptions into the meter on the fly.
Homer also employs extended similes, long, elaborate comparisons that pause the action to describe something from everyday life (harvests, animals, weather), grounding the epic world in the familiar. The Homeric poems also feature in medias res openings, divine interventions, catalogues of heroes, and speeches, all conventions that would define the epic genre for centuries.
Religious and Mythological Significance
For the ancient Greeks, Homer was far more than a poet, he was effectively their bible. The Homeric epics were the primary source through which most Greeks learned about the nature of the gods, the heroic age, and the proper relationship between mortals and immortals.
Homer's gods are vividly anthropomorphic: they quarrel, scheme, love, and take sides in human affairs with all-too-human passion. The Iliad's Olympian scenes, with Zeus presiding over the bickering gods, gave ancient Greece its most enduring image of divine governance. The gods' interventions (epiphanies) in human affairs shaped Greek ideas about fate, divine will, and piety.
The historian Herodotus wrote that Homer and Hesiod together "gave the gods their names, assigned them their honours and arts, and described their forms." This was only a modest exaggeration: Homeric theology permeated Greek religious thought, art, and cult practice.
Legacy and Influence
Homer's influence on Western culture is almost impossible to overstate. In ancient Greece, the Iliad and the Odyssey were the foundation of education, Greek boys memorized large portions of them, and the epics served as models for rhetoric, ethics, and storytelling. Alexander the Great carried a copy of the Iliad on his campaigns and kept it under his pillow alongside a dagger.
Roman poets like Virgil modeled their work directly on Homer: the Aeneid is explicitly a fusion of the Iliad and Odyssey transplanted into Roman myth. Through Rome, Homeric themes and characters flowed into the literary tradition of medieval and Renaissance Europe.
In the modern era, Homer has inspired countless retellings and adaptations, James Joyce's Ulysses, Kazuo Ishiguro's The Buried Giant, Madeline Miller's The Song of Achilles and Circe, and many more. The word "odyssey" has entered English as a common noun for a long, difficult journey.
Homer in Ancient Education and Performance
In ancient Greece, Homeric poetry was not simply read, it was performed. Professional reciters known as rhapsodes travelled from city to city, performing long passages of the epics at festivals and competitions. The great Panathenaic festival in Athens featured rhapsodic competitions as a central event.
In schools, Homer was the primary text through which Greek children learned to read, write, and think. Philosophers engaged deeply with the epics: Plato famously criticized Homer's portrayal of the gods as morally unworthy models, even as he quoted him constantly. Aristotle, by contrast, praised the Iliad and Odyssey as models of unity and dramatic construction in his Poetics.
The Alexandrian scholars of the 3rd and 2nd centuries BCE, particularly Aristarchus of Samothrace, produced critical editions of the Homeric texts that form the basis of what we read today, marking Homer as the first subject of systematic literary scholarship.
Frequently Asked Questions
Was Homer a real person?
What did Homer write?
When did Homer live?
What is the Homeric Question?
Why is Homer important?
Related Pages
Homer's near-contemporary and author of the Theogony
Greek TragedyThe dramatic tradition shaped by Homer's stories
Ancient Greek ReligionThe religious world Homer helped define
AchillesThe greatest hero of the Iliad
OdysseusThe cunning hero of the Odyssey
ZeusKing of the gods as portrayed in Homer
Trojan WarThe war at the center of the Iliad