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odysseus' journey timeline map

A map of Odysseus’s journey

odysseus' journey timeline map

The Odyssey

Odysseus--soldier, sailor, trickster, and everyman--is one of the most recognizable characters in world literature. His arduous, ten-year journey home after the Trojan War, the subject of Homer's Odyssey , is the most accessible tale to survive from ancient Greece, and its impact is still felt today across many different cultures.

  • June 26 th 2014

Homer’s epic poem The Odyssey is a classic adventure filled with shipwrecks, feuds, obstacles, mythical creatures, and divine interventions. But how to visualize the thrilling voyage?

The map below traces Odysseus’s travel as recounted to the Phaeacians near the end of his wandering across the Mediterranean. Odysseus’s ten-year trek began in Asia Minor at the fallen city of Troy (the green marker) following the end of the Trojan War. His ultimate destination: his home in Ithaca (the red marker). Click the markers for information on each step of his journey. It is important to note that the 14 locations plotted on this map have been widely debated by both ancient and modern scholars.

Barry Powell, translator of a new edition of The Odyssey , asserts that the currently agreed upon location of the Island of the Sun (#11) is in fact modern-day Sicily. However, the characters in The Odyssey are in “never-never land,” and consequently, the locations plotted cannot be deemed entirely accurate.

Headline image credit: Ulysses and the Sirens by John William Waterhouse, 1891. Public domain via Wikimedia Commons .

Barry B. Powell is Halls-Bascom Professor of Classics Emeritus at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. His new free verse translation of The Odyssey was published by Oxford University Press in 2014. His translation of The Iliad was published by Oxford University Press in 2013.

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odysseus' journey timeline map

Recent Comments

There is NO ‘republic of Macedonia! There’s only a so-called Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM). Please amend your map. You of all to make such mistake?! It’s disgraceful.

Well, your work is an excellent one and enjoyed it. However, I would like to point out that your map has a huge mistake.Does not exist a state named “Republic of Macedonia”, it is FYROM. So if you want to be accepted by Greeks “Hellines”, you have to correct that name at once. FYROM did not exist at the times of Odysseus, they appeared in that territory many-many centuries later from the NE Slaves.

EDITOR’S NOTE:

The map above was created using Mapbox, which sources its geography from Open Street Map. All countries and locations named on the underlying map are modern. The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia is commonly referred to as ‘Republic of Macedonia’ in English for brevity (as ‘Italy’ instead of ‘Italian Republic’). This is reflected in the Open Street Map data and is not the direct work of the authors or editors.

Alice Northover OUPblog Editor

Thank you of your reply. In any case any official organization must not accept to participate to the propaganda game of Scopia.Their real old name was and is “Vardaska”. So we, Hellines, will never accept to play their game.In any case, if they want to belong to the Hellenic recent history, they have to ask their union with Hellenic state. Regarding “brevity” this is another of their games…..

Since you are interested of Greek/Hellenic history, please see/read new articles regarding recent discovery at ancient Amphipolis of Macedonia.This is the real history and not the constructed one.

Please do not seek in the Mediterranean!

Homeros was not a fanciful poet.

I say: explorations for Homeros should also be in the Netherlands, where in the ever sinking delta formerly was situated the land Phtia, twice a day inundated by the sea. Clay soils it had, with coarse clods, and the king was married to a sea goddess. Maps have recently been reconstructed.

Who wrote this

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Odyssey ">An Interactive Map of Odysseus’ 10-Year Journey in Homer’s Odyssey

in Literature , Maps | December 16th, 2013 14 Comments

odyssey interactive map

The Odyssey , one of Home­r’s two great epics, nar­rates Odysseus’ long, strange trip home after the Tro­jan war . Dur­ing their ten-year jour­ney, Odysseus and his men had to over­come divine and nat­ur­al forces, from bat­ter­ing storms and winds to dif­fi­cult encoun­ters with the Cyclops Polyphe­mus, the can­ni­bal­is­tic Laestry­gones, the witch-god­dess Circe and the rest. And they took a most cir­cuitous route, bounc­ing all over the Mediter­ranean, mov­ing first down to Crete and Tunisia. Next over to Sici­ly, then off toward Spain, and back to Greece again.

If you’re look­ing for an easy way to visu­al­ize all of the twists and turns in  The Odyssey, then we’d rec­om­mend spend­ing some time with the  inter­ac­tive map cre­at­ed by Gisèle Moun­z­er .  “Odysseus’ Jour­ney”  breaks down Odysseus’ voy­age into 14 key scenes and locates them on a mod­ern map designed by Esri, a com­pa­ny that cre­ates GIS map­ping soft­ware.

Mean­while, if you’re inter­est­ed in the whole con­cept of ancient trav­el, I’d sug­gest revis­it­ing one of our pre­vi­ous posts:  Play Cae­sar: Trav­el Ancient Rome with Stanford’s Inter­ac­tive Map . It tells you all about  ORBIS , a geospa­tial net­work mod­el, that lets you sim­u­late jour­neys in Ancient Roman. You pick the points of ori­gin and des­ti­na­tion for a trip, and ORBIS will recon­struct the dura­tion and finan­cial cost of mak­ing the ancient jour­ney. Pret­ty cool stuff.

If you would like to sign up for Open Culture’s free email newslet­ter,  please find it here . Or fol­low our posts on Threads , Face­book , BlueSky or Mastodon .

If you would like to sup­port the mis­sion of Open Cul­ture, con­sid­er mak­ing a dona­tion to our site . It’s hard to rely 100% on ads, and your con­tri­bu­tions will help us con­tin­ue pro­vid­ing the best free cul­tur­al and edu­ca­tion­al mate­ri­als to learn­ers every­where. You can con­tribute through Pay­Pal , Patre­on , and Ven­mo (@openculture). Thanks!

Relat­ed Con­tent:

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by OC | Permalink | Comments (14) |

odysseus' journey timeline map

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Comments (14), 14 comments so far.

Pret­ty pic­tures, “inter­ac­tive,” but no indi­ca­tion of the sources of the local­iza­tions or method. A great exam­ple of the vapid­i­ty of inter­net tech­nol­o­gy when used aim­less­ly. For a the­o­rized and researched approach to the wan­der­ings of Odysseus, see the site “In the Wake of Odysseus” by J. Burgess

This is a good map I tried screen­shot­ing for my project but it did­n’t let me.

Works ter­ri­bly on my tablet, but then, so does this site.

This map con­tains an impor­tant omission:nOdysseusu2019s near return to Ithaca.nn In Bookn10 of The Odyssey Odysseus and his men, car­ry­ing the leather sack in which Aeo­lus had con­fined the winds and car­ried by a fair wind from the west,come with­in sight of Itha­ca. “u201cFor nine days we sailed, night and day alike, and now on the tenth our native land came in sight, and lo, we were so near that we saw men tend­ing the bea­con fires. (28 ff. Trans­la­tion A.T. Murray).Then, of course, Odysseus falls asleep and his men open the sack allow­ing the winds to escape and blow them all the way back to the city of Aeo­lus. That they had come so close to home in space and end up so far from it not only in space but in time has always struck me as one of the most poignant episodes in the poem. This map includes no indi­ca­tion what­so­ev­er of that part of the jour­ney. (Peter D. Grudin)

It should be remarked that this is just one of many pos­si­ble spa­tial inter­pre­ta­tions of Odysseus’ trip.

Ako se oslan­jamo na Home­rovu Odis­e­ju onda ova teori­ja ne odgo­vara. Primer Kik­lopo­va peći­na na Sicil­i­ji je toloiko mala da taj događaj nije mogao da se odigra.Odisej je plovio Okean Rekom tj . Jad­ra­nom čija ostr­va i danas ima­ju stare Grčke nazive. U Grapčevoj peći­ni na Hvaru pron­ađen je isti broj ljuskih kos­tu­ra koliko je Polifem pojeo Odis­e­je­vih lju­di. Topon­i­mi vetro­vi položaj zvez­da i daljine se u pot­punos­ti pok­la­pa­ju sa Jad­ran­skim morem.

I think some of these local­iza­tions here are real­ly far-fetched.

i had to do this for my school and it isnt inter­ac­tive and i can­not find Ogy­gia or anythig like that. please fix this so oth­ers who come to this site arent dis­ap­point­ed like i am

I think that the map is a great resource for teach­ing, and maybe that is its aim or objec­tive. Of course, I am now inter­est­ed in the ref­er­ence giv­en: ” In the wake of Odysseus” but nev­er­the­less, is impor­tant to inter­act with this places and to see them in a map and to make stu­dents know where the action took place. All is per­fectible, I con­grat­u­late the effort tak­en by the author Gise­le Moun­z­er. The map is not only use­ful but beau­ti­ful.

Homer is quite clear in the num­ber of days Odysseus trav­els, the wind direc­tion and the type of craft he is using. As a sea­far­er one can put all this togeth­er and do a pas­sage plan of his jour­neys, as I have done in my book ‘The Odysseus Code’. For exam­ple, the dis­tance Odysseus trav­els between Ogy­gia and the land of the Phaea­cians makes it impos­si­ble for Scheria to be Cor­fu or even for Ogy­gia to be with­in the Mediter­ranean. He sails from Ogy­gia for 17 days non-stop (i.e. 408 hours)in an east­er­ly direc­tion. At less than 2.5 nau­ti­cal miles per hour he would not have had steer­age way on such a heavy craft — work it out! Homer even tells us what type of craft it was as we have a detailed descrip­tion of its con­struc­tion. But this way of tack­ling the ques­tion is ignored by aca­d­e­mics who insist on plac­ing all the jour­neys with­in the Mediter­ranean Sea because they relate the sto­ry to the Greeks of the Bronze Age where­as Homer is incor­po­rat­ing the myths and leg­ends of the more ancient and more nau­ti­cal­ly capa­ble Phoeni­cians and Minoans whose skills were large­ly lost after the upheaval of the Thera vol­cano around 1500 BC.

Too many mis­takes.

did not even work

did not even work boi

How does one map where a float­ing island (i.e. Aeo­lia) was?

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Greek Gods & Goddesses

Odysseus Journey Map

The Greeks celebrate their victory over Troy at the beginning of the Odyssey, forgetting that it was not their own strength that won the city, but rather the will of the gods.

In light of this neglect to give credit where it is due, Athena and Poseidon become very angry. They begged Zeus to make the Greeks suffer, and he agreed. Poseidon drowned many of their boats and made them go off-track with waves from the ocean.

However, this story is about Odysseus’ voyage in particular. He confronts not only perils set before him by fate or gods, but also common challenges that all people face such as fear, stupidity, and maliciousness of others. Here, we take a look at the Odysseus Journey Map in order. With some details about each of the locations.

odysseus-journey-map

  • Cicones 
  • Lotus Eaters 
  • Cyclops 
  • Island of Aeolia 
  • Laestrygonians 
  • Circe 

Teiresias and the Land of the Dead

  • Circe  
  • Sirens 
  • Charybdis 
  • Scylla 
  • Calypso 
  • Phaeacia 

The Greeks have won the Trojan War and are now journeying back to their homeland. Led by Odysseus , they could not have predicted the series of lengthy, dangerous events they would encounter along the way.

The first stop on their journey was the land of the Cicones, where they looted and pillaged to their heart’s content.

Lotus Eaters

The Lotus Eaters lived on an island where the lotus flower grew. These flowers caused anyone who ate them to forget their home and desire nothing but to stay on the island forever.

The Greeks ran into trouble when they landed on the island of the Cyclops. This one-eyed, giant creature kept the Greeks captive in his cave until they finally escaped by blinding the Cyclops.

Island of Aeolia

The next stop was the island of Aeolia, where they met the god Aeolus . He gave Odysseus a bag full of wind to help them on their journey.

Laestrygonians

The Laestrygonians were a race of giants who lived on an island and attacked the Greeks with huge boulders. Many Greek ships were destroyed and only a few men escaped.

Odysseus and his remaining men landed on the island of Circe , where they were turned into animals by the witch Circe. They were eventually turned back into humans and spent a year on the island before leaving.

Odysseus journeyed to the Land of the Dead to speak with the prophet Teiresias. The first spirit to visit Odysseus is that of the man they lost on Aeaea. This soul begs his former captain to go back and give him a burial. Next, the blind prophet Tiresias appears to him. He tells Odysseus that Poseidon is punishing the Achaeans because they blinded his son Polyphemus . Odysseus also speaks with his mother.

Upon returning to this land, Odysseus and his men partake in a burial ritual for one of their fallen comrades. Afterwards, Circe spends her last night with Odysseus.

The Sirens were creatures who sang such beautiful songs that sailors would crash their ships into the rocks just to listen. Odysseus had his men plug their ears with wax and tie him to the mast so he could hear the song without being drawn in.

Charybdis was a creature who lived under the water and would spew out a whirlpool every few days. The Greeks barely escaped her clutches.

Scylla was a creature with six heads who lived on a cliff overlooking the water. She would reach down and snatch up sailors as they passed by.

This is where they met the sun god, Helios. The Greeks angered him by eating his cattle and he punished them by causing a storm that destroyed their ship.

Odysseus was the only one who survived the storm and he washed up on the island of Calypso . She fell in love with him and held him captive for seven years.

Odysseus was finally rescued by the Phaeacians and taken back to their land. He told them the story of his journey home and they provided him with a ship to take him the rest of the way.

He finally arrived home to his wife, Penelope, and son, Telemachus. After twenty years, he was finally reunited with his family.

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Interactive Map Of Odysseus’ 10-Year Journey

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The Odyssey, one of Homer's two great epics, narrates Odysseus' long journey home after the Trojan war. During their 10-year journey, Odysseus and his men had to overcome divine and natural forces, from battering storms and winds to challenging encounters with the Cyclops Polyphemus, the cannibalistic Laestrygones, the witch-goddess Circe and the rest. They took a most circuitous route, bouncing all across the Mediterranean, moving down to Crete and Tunisia. Next over to Sicily, then off toward Spain, and then back to Greece again.

If you are looking for an easy way to visualize all the twists and turns in The Odyssey , then we'd suggest you spend some time with the interactive map created by Gisèle Mounzer . "Odysseus' Journey" breaks down Odysseus' voyage into fourteen key scenes and locates them on a modern map designed by Esri, a company which creates GIS mapping software.

Reference: Open Culture

odysseus' journey timeline map

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Travels of Odysseus

Use this geotour to follow Odysseus and his crew as they encounter nymphs and narcotics, cyclopes and sirens.

English Language Arts, Geography, Human Geography

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The Odyssey is an epic , an adventure story attributed to the Greek poet Homer . Most historians think The Odyssey was composed in the 7th or 8th century B.C.E. The Odyssey tells the adventures of the Greek hero Odysseus, a veteran of the Trojan War . ( The Odyssey is a sequel to Homer's other epic, The Iliad , which tells the story of that war.) Cursed by Poseidon, god of the sea, but favored by Athena, goddess of wisdom, Odysseus sails the eastern Mediterranean for 10 years before reaching his home and family on the island of Ithaca. Use this geotour to follow Odysseus and his crew as they encounter nymphs and narcotics , cyclopes and sirens .

Geography of The Odyssey

No map of The Odyssey is definitive. “You will find the scene of Odysseus’ wanderings when you find the cobbler who sewed up [his] bag of winds.” So wrote the ancient Greek geographer Eratosthenes in the 2nd century B.C.E. Nevertheless, countless geographers, classicists, historians, and literary critics have speculated on the landmarks of Homer’s epic. Some speculations are more exotic than others—from the Azores to the Amazon, the Caribbean to Great Britain.

Inspired by The Odyssey

The travels of Odysseus have inspired writers for more than 2,000 years.

  • The Roman poet Virgil wrote The Aeneid in the late 1st century B.C.E. The Aeneid is the story of Aeneas, as The Odyssey is the story of Odysseus. Both books tell the legend of the Trojan Horse, and both the Trojan Prince Aeneas and the Greek King Odysseus have adventures throughout the eastern Mediterranean. (Aeneas and his company of Trojans go on to settle in the western Italian region of Latium—where they became the founders of Rome.)
  • Ulysses, by James Joyce, was published in 1922. Widely regarded as one of the most important English-language novels of the 20th century, Ulysses is a day in the life of two friends, Stephen Dedalus and Leopold Bloom. As Odysseus met unanticipated adventures as he roamed the Mediterranean for 10 years, so Dedalus and Bloom meet everyday adventures on their errands and strolls through Dublin, Ireland, on June 16, 1904.
  • The Penelopiad , published in 2005, is Margaret Atwood’s “parallel novel” to The Odyssey . The Penelopiad tells the story of Odysseus’ wife, Penelope, from her own point of view. She recounts her childhood, her marriage, and how she governed the kingdom alone for 20 years. Penelope, narrating from the underworld of the 21st century, wonders why Odysseus’ stories have survived for so long, when Odysseus himself admits to being an accomplished liar.

The Odyssey

The travels of Odysseus form just one part of The Odyssey . Another part, called the Telemachy, focuses on Odysseus’ son, Telemachus, who left home in search of his long-lost father. The final section of The Odyssey is called the Nostos (“homecoming” in Greek). The Nostos addresses Odysseus’ adventures once he returns to Ithaca: meeting Telemachus, who was an infant when Odysseus left two decades earlier; slaughtering his wife’s suitors—the men who would take Odysseus’ place as king; and, finally, reuniting with Queen Penelope, who had remained a faithful wife for 20 years.

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April 22, 2024

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Related Resources

Digital Maps of the Ancient World

The Odyssey

Overview Book I   Book II   Book III   Book IV   Book V   Book VI   Book VII Book VIII   Book IX   Book X   Book XI   Book XII Book XIII Book XIV Book XV Book XVI Book XVII Book XVIII Book XIX Book XX Book XXI Book XXII Book XXIII Book XXIV

Embark on a literary odyssey with the Odyssey , one of the two major ancient Greek epic poems attributed to the illustrious Homer. Revered as one of the oldest surviving treasures of literature, this epic continues to weave its enchanting narrative for contemporary audiences. Divided into 24 books, mirroring its counterpart, the Iliad , it unfolds the epic journey of the Greek hero Odysseus , King of Ithaca, as he endeavors to return home after the conclusion of the Trojan War.

odysseus' journey timeline map

The tale transcends the war itself, spanning a remarkable two decades. For ten years, Odysseus faced the trials of battle, and for another ten, he navigated the treacherous waters of his homeward journey, encountering a myriad of dangers that tested his resilience and cunning.

Crafted in the rhythmic cadence of dactylic hexameter, the Odyssey opens in medias res, thrusting readers into the midst of the overarching story. Through a seamless interplay of flashbacks and storytelling, prior events are artfully revealed, adding depth and nuance to the hero’s epic quest.

Within the Classical period, specific books were often bestowed with individual titles:

  • Books 1–4: Telemachy, focusing on the perspective of Telemachus, Odysseus’ son.
  • Books 9–12: Apologoi, where Odysseus recounts his adventures to his hosts, the Phaeacians.
  • Book 22: Mnesterophonia, vividly depicting the climactic slaughter of the Suitors.

odysseus' journey timeline map

As you delve into the Odyssey , you’ll traverse not only the physical realms of the ancient Greek world but also the psychological landscapes of heroism, endurance, and the enduring bond between gods and mortals. Join us on a digital sojourn through the verses of the Odyssey , where the echoes of Odysseus’ journey resound, inviting you to relive the timeless allure of this epic tale. Welcome to a literary voyage where every page is a portal to the mythical realms of ancient Greece.

Below a synopsis of each book will be given:

Book I : The Fate of Odysseus

Book II: Assembly on Ithaca

Book III: Telemachus in Pylos  

Book IV: Telemachus visits Menelaus  

Book V: Odysseus sails for Phaeacia  

Book VI: Odysseus and Nausicaa

Book VII: Odysseus meets Alcinous

Book VIII: The Phaeacian Banquet

Book IX: Polyphemus  

Book X: Circe  

Book XI: The Underworld  

Book XII: The Sirens & Scylla and Charybdis

Book XIII: Odysseus arrives at Ithica

Book XIV: Odysseus seeks out Eumaeus

Book XV: Telemachus arrives home

Book XVI: A Plan is Hatched

Book XVII: A Beggar in the Palace

Book XVIII: Beggar vs. Beggar

Book XIX: Odysseus speaks with Penelope

Book XX: The Omens

Book XXI: Odysseus’ Bow

Book XXII: The Slaughter of the Suitors

Book XXIII: Odysseus and Penelope’s Reunion

Book XXIV: Peace

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odysseus' journey timeline map

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By: Emilia Irovic

Odysseus' Journey Timeline

This is a timeline of Odysseus' Journey From Ithaca to the Trojan War Then Back Home

by: Emilia Irovic

Leaving Ithaca to the Trojan War

There was a call to war of the Achaeans (Greeks) against the people of Troy. This war, the Trojan War, started because Paris, the Trojan prince, abducted (or eloped with) Helen, the wife of Menelaus. Menelaus convinced his brother, Agamemnon, the king of Mycenae, to lead an expedition to find her.

Odysseus left Ithaca and his wife, Penelope, and infant son, Telemachus, to fight in the Trojan War.

The Trojan War

Odysseus had the idea of building a large wooden horse on wheels big enough to fit a bunch of Greek soldiers to hide inside it to ambush the Trojans. The Greeks used his idea to won the war.

After the war was won, Odysseus took all his treasures and the his men (supposedly around 528 soldiers) and was headed back to Ithaca in a fleet of 12 ships.

The Journey Home

After leaving Troy, Odysseus and his men arrive at the island of the Lotus-Eaters. Odysseus sends his men out to find food and they begin to eat the Lotus Flowers. Odysseus must recover them and drag them back to the ships so they can continue their journey home.

Afterwards, Odysseus and his men land on the island of the Cicones to raid it for supplies but the Cicones retaliate and kill 72 of Odysseus' men.

While still on the island of the Cicones, Odysseus and his men come across a Cyclops' cave and is lured in by the wine and cheese. Polyphemus, the Cyclops, traps them inside the cave and kill several of Odysseus' men. Odysseus ends up blinding Polyphemus while his men sneak out under sheep and Polyphemus calls upon Poseidon, his father, to not let Odysseus to return home.

Odysseus and his remaining men come across an island floating above the sea with a steep cliff and a bronze palace on top. This island is the island of Aeolia, home of the god, Aeolus, the god of wind. Aeolus gives Odysseus all the bad winds so they can return safely home.

Odysseus' men get curious and go against his orders of not touching the bag and ends up releasing the bad winds. These winds sends them to unknown waters and they are lost at sea.

Odysseus and his men come across a race of powerful giants who's king, Antiphates, and queen decide to turn Odysseus' scouts into dinner. Odysseus and his men flee for their ships but the giants throw boulders at the ships. Only Odysseus' ship gets away.

Odysseus and his men reach the island of Circe and split into two groups. Eurylochus and his group of twenty-two men hear singing coming from Circe's house and enter her home. Circe turns the men of this group into pigs and only Eurylochus escapes to report it to Odysseus.

Still on the island of Circe, Odysseus goes off by himself and meets the god Hermes, who is disguised as a young man, who gives him a magic herb--moly--that can protect him from Circe's magic. Odysseus confronts Circe and when she uses her magic on him, it doesn't work. Circe then asks Odysseus to stay with her which makes Odysseus suspicious. Odysseus makes Circe take a solemn oath to not harm him. Circe eventually turns Odysseus' men back to normal and they stay on Circe's island for a year.

Odysseus travels to the land of the dead, guided by Circe's instructions, to seek advice of the prophet Teiresias. Teiresias tells Odysseus 3 things:

  • stay away from the cattle of Helios
  • make a sacrifice to Poseidon
  • he will have a peaceful old age

Before leaving the Land of the Dead, Odysseus talks to many people such as famous heroes, his mom, people he fought with in the war, and Agamemnon and Achilles. Agamemnon, who was killed by his wife, gives Odysseus advice about women and Achilles tells him that life is better than death. After talking, he fears the glance of the Gorgon monster and rushes back to his ship.

After leaving the Land of the Dead, Odysseus returns to the island of Circe to retrieve his men and prepare themselves to make their way past the Sirens in which Circe had warned them about.

Odysseus puts beeswax into the ears of his men to keep them from hearing the Sirens' dangerous song, while Odysseus is tied securely to the mast so he can hear the song of the Sirens. They pass by safely and lose no one.

The next feat Odysseus and his men must overcome is getting past Scylla and Charybdis. Circe advised Odysseus to cling to the walls near Scylla and lose six of his men rather than risking his whole ship to Charybdis. She advised him to sail as quickly as possible rather than trying to fight Scylla. Odysseus is not happy about this because he would rather not lose any of his men but Circe practically tells him to "suck it up" and play it safe. Odysseus does this (without telling his men about it to avoid panic) and they get past, losing six men.

Next, Odysseus and his men comes to Thrinacia, the island of the Sun, Helios. Odysseus wants to avoid it completely but Eurylochus insists they need to stop there to rest. They are kept there for a month because of a storm and for a while they are able to survive on the provisions of the ship, but when they run out Eurylochus convinces the other men to disobey Odysseus' orders and they slaughter the cattle of Helios. Odysseus was sleeping the entire time and when Helios finds out, he has Zeus destroy their ship.

Odysseus ends up drifting on the sea without any of his men left and is brought to Ogygia, the island of Calypso. Calypso, a nymph, keeps him on her island for years and years, but all Odysseus wants is to go home. Calypso offers Odysseus eternal life, but he refuses and is still miserable. Hermes is sent to the island to help Odysseus and to convince Calypso to let him go. Calypso eventually agrees and Odysseus is able to build a boat and set off for home once again.

Poseidon, seeing Odysseus at sea again, is furious and brings a violent storm and down on Odysseus and his boat is destroyed. Odysseus drifts to the island of the Phaeacians and is found by the daughter of Alcinous and Arete, Nausicaa. Odysseus is able to talk to Alcinous and Alcinous agrees to help him get home

The Phaeacians take Odysseus home to Ithaca and on their way back, they and their ship are turned to stone by Zeus to punish them for helping Odysseus return home.

After 10 years at war, and 10 years of traveling home, Odysseus is finally home at Ithaca but before he can officially return to his household, he must kick the suitors out of his house. With Athena's help, Odysseus, disguised as an old man from Crete, is able to infiltrate his own home and participate in an shooting challenge that his wife, Penelope came up with, and re-win the hand of his wife.  

Odysseus is finally home with his wife, Penelope, and son, Telemachus. This concludes his journey.

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Lapham’s quarterly, the geography of the odyssey.

Or how to map a myth.

By Elizabeth Della Zazzera

Wednesday, February 27, 2019

A painting depicting Odysseus tied to the mast of his ship while he listens to the song of the sirens. His crew rows the ship.

Ulysses and the Sirens , by John William Waterhouse, 1891. Google Arts & Culture , National Gallery of Victoria.

All quotations from the Odyssey are taken from Emily Wilson’s 2017 translation.

T he Odyssey , if you strip away enough allegory and myth, might serve as a travel guide for the Aegean Sea: which islands to avoid if you hate escape rooms, which cruises to skip if you always forget to pack earplugs, where to get that beef that angers the gods. But how does Odysseus’ trek across the wine-dark sea map onto an actual map of the Mediterranean?

Homer fans have been trying to figure this out—and squabbling over their findings—for as long as the Odyssey has been in the canon. And for just as long other people have been calling efforts to map the Odyssey a complete waste of time. If no one can agree on its physical geography, Odysseus’ imaginary journey is easy to retrace.

In which we take a step back to relate Odysseus’ journey

The Odyssey ostensibly tells the story of Odysseus’ ten-year journey home from war, but much of the poem concerns his absence: his wife Penelope’s clever attempts to stave off aggressive suitors and their son Telemachus’ search for his lost father.

Most of Odysseus’ wanderings are related to us after the fact. When we meet Odysseus, he has been living with the nymph Calypso for seven years on her island, Ogygia. With a little help from the gods, he escapes and travels to Scheria, where the Phaeacians welcome him and invite him to a banquet. There he tells his story.

After fighting in the Trojan War, the conflict at the heart of the Iliad , Odysseus leaves the burning city of Troy to travel back to his home, Ithaca. His fleet of twelve ships is almost immediately blown off course. He and his men end up at Ismarus, where they attack the Cicones, destroy the town, and kidnap the Cicones’ wives. The Cicones kill seventy-six of Odysseus’ men. The remainder get back on course but not for long: at Malea, they are pushed away from Cythera and caught up in storms for ten days. Next they reach the land of the Lotus-eaters, where some of Odysseus’ men succumb to the temptation of eating the addictive flowers; he must force them back to the ship. They travel to the Island of the Cyclopes, where Odysseus fights and blinds Polyphemus, one of Poseidon’s sons. From there they go to Aeolia, a floating island, where King Aeolus gifts Odysseus the bag of winds. After leaving Aeolia they nearly reach Ithaca, only to be blown off course once again when Odysseus’ men open the bag. They row for seven days until they reach Lamos, where the Laestrygonians kill and eat most of Odysseus’ men. Only Odysseus’ ship escapes and travels to Aeaea, where the goddess Circe turns his crew to swine. Odysseus, protected by Hermes, stays a year with Circe, who finally tells him to seek out the prophet Tiresias. Unfortunately, Tiresias is dead, so Odysseus must gain entry to the Underworld, which he finds in the land of the Cimmerians. He speaks to Achilles, Agammemnon, Ajax, and eventually Tiresias, who tells him how to return to Ithaca. Heeding Circe’s warning that they should avoid listening to the Sirens, Odysseus has his men, returned to human form, block their ears with wax and tie him to the mast of the ship, so that he might hear the strange sounds of the Sirens but remain unable to succumb to their magic. From there they navigate a narrow strait between rocky Scylla and the whirlpool Charybdis, arriving at the land of Helios. Odysseus tells his men not to eat the cattle they come across, but they do not listen and are punished by Zeus. Only Odysseus survives, floating to Calypso’s island, where he remains trapped for the next seven years. After the gods help him escape Calypso and he tells his story at the banquet, the Phaeacians take Odysseus back to Ithaca. And while the story does not end there, our maps of it do.

In which we debate whether mapping the Odyssey is possible or advisable

In 140 bc , about six hundred years after the Odyssey ’s composition, the Greek scholar Polybius wrote in his Histories that he could not agree with Eratosthenes’ quip that “you will find the scene of the wanderings of Odysseus when you find the cobbler who sewed up the bag of the winds.” Neither Polybius nor Eratosthenes knew of a cobbler outside the world of epic poetry capable of sewing a bag that could contain the power of the wind, but for Polybius and for many others who came after him, the Odyssey was a true story with some fantastical elements thrown in for color, not the reverse.

Polybius noted that Homer’s descriptions of fishing near Scylla corresponded directly with Sicilian fishing practices in Polybius’ time. Homer therefore must have imagined Scylla in a real location, and that location must be off the coast of Sicily.

For every Polybius working to read geographic detail in the text of an epic, there is at least one Eratosthenes denouncing the whole endeavor. In the 1980s, in a review of a book on the mapping of Homer’s Odyssey , the classicist Peter V. Jones remarked, “With books on this subject one heaves a sigh of relief to find decent spelling and the pages in the right order.”

In which many individuals try to geolocate Odysseus’ journey

Geographers of the Odyssey often built on the work of their predecessors. In his 7 bc Geographia , Strabo took his cues from Polybius, agreeing that the Odyssey was not a myth and that Homer clearly left clues placing the Odyssey ’s setting near Sicily. The famed geographer and astronomer Claudius Ptolemy included longitude and latitude for some of the places in the Odyssey in his own Geographia , an atlas, gazetteer, and treatise on cartography he wrote around 150. He included Lotophagitis (the land of the Lotus-eaters), Circaeum Promontorium (Aeaea, Circe’s realm), Sirenusae Insulae (the island of the Sirens), Scylaeum Promontorium (Scylla) as if they were any other town or geographical feature. Although Ptolemy did not draw any charts of these locations, maps created from his calculations in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries place Lotophagitis in Africa, Circaeum Promontorium near Terracina, Sirenusae Insulae off Campagna, and Scylaeum Promontorium in the Strait of Messina. It is very difficult to transpose Ptolemy’s longitude and latitude figures into our modern conventions. His calculation of longitude begins at a different zero degree than ours, and he used an incorrect circumference of the Earth that distorted his projections and produced longitudinal distances generally one and a half times greater than they should be.

In 1597 the cartographer Abraham Ortelius became the first person to draw a map of Odysseus’ travels. Like many Homeric geographers, Ortelius identifies Scheria, home of the Phaeacians, with Corcyra (now known as Corfu) because of a passage from Thucydides ’ History of the Peloponnesian War claiming the Phaeacians were the previous inhabitants of that island. While widely accepted, this identification of Scheria with Corcyra creates a problem. Homer clearly places Calypso’s island west of Scheria, but there is no island in the Ionian Sea west of Corcyra. Ortelius, following in the footsteps of Pliny, mapped a nonexistent island off southern Italy and called it the home of Calypso. The imaginary island appeared on maps through the mid-nineteenth century, and individuals continued to search for it into the twentieth. (Perhaps it had sunk into the sea?)

A printed map, in color, of the Mediterranean. Places Odysseus visited in the Odyssey are identified with labels.

Future British prime minister William E. Gladstone saw Homer’s world as a combination of actual and imagined geography. In volume three of his Studies on Homer and the Homeric Age , he included a “Map of the World According to Homer” where a fictional landscape that includes places both real and imagined surrounds the geography of the Aegean Sea. Writing in 1858, Gladstone seems to side with Eratosthenes when he cautions, “Do not let us engage in the vain attempt to construct the geography of the Odyssey upon the basis of the actual distribution of the earth’s surface. Such a process can lead to no satisfactory result.” But Gladstone still found some value in locating Homer’s geographic and topographic references in the real world whenever possible; in doing so, he explained, we understand the extent and nature of Homer’s worldview, the physical reach of his knowledge. While Homer describes territories that are easily recognizable as Greek isles with geographic accuracy, according to Gladstone many other recognizable geographic features—the southern coast of Italy, the Caspian Sea, the Persian Gulf—are fragmentary, transposed, or (often) both. Gladstone argues that these fragmentary and transposed locations, described without precise features or travel times, were likely known to Homer only indirectly, so he could rearrange them to suit his whims. Gladstone also identified parts of Homer’s world that could never be found on a map of the Earth: the transcendent (the Underworld), as well as the merely mythical (Odysseus’ journey from the land of the Lotus-eaters to Scheria, inclusive).

A hand drawn map showing parts of the Mediterranean surrounded by displaced and imaginary geography.

Later in the nineteenth century, the novelist and translator Samuel Butler relied primarily on topography to map Odysseus’ world, identifying specific locales from descriptions of forests, mountains, and coasts. Based on a close reading of the language and themes of the Odyssey , Butler concluded that “Homer” was a young, headstrong, unmarried woman from Sicily, specifically the region in and around Trapani on its west coast, and that area should be considered Ithaca. His cartographic reconstructions formed a significant part of his evidence for this argument; the descriptions of Ithaca were too specific to point to anything other than Trapani, he insisted, and the author’s familiarity with the region suggested that she lived there. He believed that Scheria was based on Trapani and its environs as well, specifically because of Book Thirteen, “in which passage Neptune turns the Phaeacian ship into a rock at the entrance of the Scherian harbor, I felt sure that an actual feature was being drawn from, and made a note that no place, however much it might lie between two harbors, would do for Scheria, unless at the end of one of them there was a small half sunken rock.” He searched for this sunken rock and other specific features (a nearby mountain, a town jutting out into the sea) and found them at Trapani. Based on those discoveries he insisted that the bulk of Odysseus’ journey took place in and around Sicily. This theory opens up some issues for Butler. If the Cyclopes live on Mt. Erice, the mountain visible from Trapani, and Trapani is Ithaca, then why did Odysseus not recognize how close he was to home when he fought Polyphemus? How did Odysseus travel from Scheria to Ithaca if they are both Trapani? Butler seems to have believed that much of the geographical information in the poem was simply artistic license, which allows him to ignore some details while relying on others as definitive evidence, a useful tactic in case-building that has appealed to argumentative humans throughout history.

Victor Bérard also made use of topography as evidence for his interpretation of Homeric geography. Bérard, a French diplomat and politician, took a voyage around the Mediterranean in 1912, following in Odysseus’ footsteps, taking photographs and gathering information. In 1933 his posthumously published book of photographs from the journey, Dans le sillage d’Ulysse ( In the Wake of Odysseus ) drew direct parallels between the world of the Odyssey and the world of the twentieth century. His map of Odysseus’ travels, published in his four-volume work Les navigations d’Ulysse ( The Navigations of Odysseus ) (1927–29), placed Calypso’s cave on an island near Gibraltar, his own particular innovation in the field of Odyssey geography. Gibraltar is certainly west of Corcyra. Bérard’s work spread widely in France and beyond, especially in schoolbooks; it formed the basis of the map published in the popular 1959 textbook Atlas of the Classical World , edited by A.A.M. Van Der Heyden and H.H. Scullard.

In which we ask the question, “But where is Ithaca, anyway?”

And if you find her poor, Ithaka won’t have fooled you. Wise as you will have become, so full of experience, you’ll have understood by then what these Ithakas mean. —C.F. Cavafy, “Ithaka”

The geographical descriptions in the Odyssey are never as detailed or as specific as a cartographer might like. Odysseus himself describes Ithaca’s geography and topography only briefly, saying

My fame extends to heaven, but I live in Ithaca, where shaking forest hides Mount Neriton. Close by are other islands: Dulichium, and wooded Zacynthus and Same. All the others face the dawn; my Ithaca is set apart, most distant, facing the dark. It is a rugged land, but good at raising children; to my eyes no country could be sweeter.

So Ithaca is one of a group of four islands, with smaller islands nearby, but it faces west while the others face east. (What does it mean for an island to face a direction?) It has forests and at least one mountain, and it is a good place for raising children. That isn’t much to go on.

But it is enough for some. From antiquity onward many have assumed that Homer’s Ithaca was the island Ithaca (sometimes called Ithaki or Ithaka) in the Ionian Sea. Some disagreed, pointing out discrepancies between Homer’s descriptions and the reality of the island. Others wanted to find proof to support this long-held supposition. In 1868 the famous amateur archaeologist Heinrich Schliemann conducted some minor excavations of what he claimed to be Odysseus’ palace on the isthmus Aetos, on Ithaca. In the few urns he uncovered Schliemann claimed to have found Odysseus’ and Penelope’s ashes, or at the very least those of their children. Schliemann, more famous for his later excavations of Troy at Hisarlik, said that he immediately recognized Ithaca from Homer’s descriptions. He was following growing scholarly consensus about the location of Odysseus’ Ithaca.

In 1920, Frank Brewster insisted that the passages describing Ithaca place the Homeric islands off the west coast of Greece. Brewster therefore identifies these with the Ionian Islands, and places Ithaca on the island of Ithaca, because it is, as Homer describes it, the least suitable of the four islands for chariot racing. Brewster points out that many have disagreed with this conclusion, however, with some contending that another of the islands more closely resembles Homer’s description of Ithaca and others insisting that the Ionian Islands are not Homer’s islands at all. The latter objection developed in part because one of the so-called islands, Leucas, may actually be a peninsula instead. On one side only a shallow marsh or lagoon separates Leucas from the mainland, not the deep water required for naval navigation.

What is an island, anyway? Does it need only be land surrounded by water, or does it have to be water that can be crossed only by boat or by swimming for the land to be truly “surrounded”? How deep was the water around Leucas in the time of Homer? Is it even possible to rely on topography and geographic descriptions to find locations subject to thousands of years of coastal erosion and human tampering? What is it about this story that makes people so eager to locate the exploits of gods, nymphs, and sea monsters in the real world?

In which we examine the potential value of locating sea monsters in your backyard

Unlike Middle Earth or the Hundred Acre Wood, which are arrayed in detailed maps at the beginning of the books that built them, the Homeric world—which wasn’t even constructed out of ink in the first place—does not come with its own pictorial guide. Because no one drew us a fictional landscape and told us it was the site of Odysseus’ voyage, we are left to hope, imagine, assert that his world is also ours. We can demand that Cyclopes and sirens coexist with the geographic specificity of Sicily and Corcyra. Attempts to map the Odyssey seem different from other attempts to locate the sites of famous myths and legends. Atlantis was the site of a wondrous civilization, Troy the landscape for an epic battle; finding them in the real world would mean discovering rich sources of evidence about past cultures. El Dorado’s location seems to have been coveted mainly for the lost city’s purported riches, Bimini for its rumored fountain of youth. But what do we gain by knowing where Helios kept his cows? Or which rocky, uninhabitable cave a kidnapping nymph called home?

A painting of enamel on copper depicting Aeneas fleeing Circe, in the Aeneid, book 7.

In the ancient world, imaginative reconstructions of Homeric and other mythic geographies went beyond mere exercises in intellectual curiosity. Communities wrote themselves into the Homeric world by claiming that their city’s founder had made his way home, like Odysseus, from the Trojan War. Virgil ’s Aeneid , in which Aeneas travels from Troy to Italy to sire the people who will one day be the Romans, is the most famous of these. As the scholar Irad Malkin argues in his book The Returns of Odysseus , there was political value in connecting one’s community to such lofty origins.

The desire to feel connected to the story and to bring it into the world we inhabit remains. Homer enthusiasts can even trace Odysseus’ journey on a cruise ship. In 2009, Columbia University’s alumni association held a Journey of Odysseus cruise, which took passengers from Istanbul to Athens, via a loop of the Mediterranean, stopping at several important sites from the poem, including the supposed locations of Calypso’s cave (Valetta); the Phlegraean field where Odysseus battled Polyphemus (Pompeii); Lamos, where the Laestrygonians ate Odysseus’ men (Trapani); and Scylla and Charybdis (Taormina, on the Strait of Messina). Part entertainment, part education, the tour included guided reading of the poem and lectures from experts in the field.

Created for a course on Greek and Roman mythology in 2000, the classicist Peter T. Struck ’s online interactive map of Odyssean geography is intended to give his students a general sense of Odysseus’ journey, while recognizing the uncertainty that accompanies any attempt to definitively map Homer’s locations. Struck provided his own interpretation while asking students to read the Odyssey for geographic clues and develop their own. Many of the locations Struck provides are broadly agreed upon (Troy, Ismarus), but he also locates quite a bit of the poem’s action in the western Mediterranean. Struck’s map is one of the few to chart Odysseus’ almost successful return to Ithaca, thwarted by the bag of winds, and he very clearly shows Odysseus traveling in circles.

Contributor

Elizabeth Della Zazzera

Elizabeth Della Zazzera is a historian of modern Europe and a postdoctoral research associate at the University of Connecticut Humanities Institute. She was formerly the digital producer and Mellon/ACLS Public Fellow at Lapham’s Quarterly .

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Timeline: The Odyssey

An interactive website for The Odyssey , written by Homer .

  • After the Trojan war, Odysseus and his men set sail from Troy.
  • They plunder the Cicones but are routed by reinforcements.
  • On the island of the lotus eaters , some men eat the food of the enchanting inhabitants and loose all hope of home.
  • On the Island of the Cyclops, Odysseus's curiosity causes him trouble: he and twelve others are imprisoned by the cannibal Polyphemus . They blind him in order to escape.
  • At Aeolia, the wind king Aeolus offers to help Odysseus. He bags up all the winds and places them on Odysseus's ship. But Odysseus's foolish crew open the bag, thinking it is treasure. The winds become a storm and blow the ships back to the island. Aeolus is angry at their irresponsibility and sends them away.
  • They arrive at an island inhabited by cannibals who destroy all of the ships except for Odysseus's.
  • Next they land on Aeaea, where the enchantress Circe lives. She turns some of the men into pigs. Later, she restores them and sends Odysseus on a lone quest to the Land of the Dead.
  • In the Land of the Dead, Odysseus sees his mother who died while waiting for him to return home. Next, A blind prophet named Teiresias gives Odysseus a warning and a promise: Odysseus will arrive home, but all the other men will die.
  • Odysseus and his men return to Aeaea. Circe warns him of three perils that await him: the Sirens, Scylla , and Charybdis . They set sail and manage to avoid the danger.
  • After their adventures, they arrive at the island of Helios . Eventually, the crew get discouraged and kill the holy cattle for food. Zeus kills all the crew except for Odysseus.
  • Odysseus arrives at Calypso's island where he is held captive for seven years.
  • At Athena's urging, the gods on Mount Olympus decide it is time for Calypso to free Odysseus.
  • Telemachus sets sail to find information about his father. Nestor tells Telemachus that he should ask King Menelaus about his father. King Menelaus tells Telemachus that Odysseus is being held by Calypso .
  • Calypso releases Odysseus, and he builds a raft and sets sail.
  • Poseidon , who holds a grudge against Odysseus, destroys the raft in a storm. Odysseus washes up on an island.
  • A young girl named Nausicaä finds Odysseus and leads him to the city. Athena appears to Odysseus and leads him to the palace of Alcinous.
  • The king invites Odysseus to the feast if he will entertain them for a while. The next day, the king holds a party for Odysseus. They play games and a minstrel sings for Odysseus. Odysseus tells his tale in the courts. Afterward, King Alcinous gives him passage to Ithaca . Athena disguises him as an old beggar.
  • Odysseus travels to the hut of his old swineherd, Eumaeus. Eumaeus doesn't recognize Odysseus because of the disguise, but he politely entertains Odysseus.
  • Athena appears to Telemachus and advises him to return to his home.
  • Telemachus meets his father.
  • Telemachus, followed by Odysseus, travels to the palace. There, Odysseus is first recognized by his faithful hunting dog, Argos.
  • Another beggar from the local town arrives and tries to drive Odysseus out.
  • Still disguised as a beggar, Odysseus tells Penelope that he met Odysseus in his travels. The nurse recognizes Odysseus by his scar, but Odysseus quickly tells her not to tell Penelope.
  • Odysseus is nervous about his upcoming task. Athena reassures him that the suitors will die.
  • Penelope creates a test to prevent the suitors from marrying her: they must string Odysseus's huge bow—a task that only he can do. All the others fail, but Odysseus is successful. The suitors still ignore the beggar.
  • Odysseus defeats the suitors.
  • Penelope finally recognizes Odysseus as her husband.
  • Odysseus visits his father, king Laertes , but the relatives of the suitors have gathered to revenge. Laertes kills the leader, but Athena interrupts them before anything else can happen. She commands them to end the violence.

Bibliography

COVE

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Odyssey's timeline.

Created by  Lucía García on  Thu, 06/30/2022 - 04:37

Part of Group:

In this post you'll be able to see clearly the steps of Ulysses' journey and how long he spent in every spot of the Aegean Sea. 

Bear in mind that it tells of events that supposedly occurred in the Mycenaean period (XVII century BC - XII century BC) while Homer is said to have written them down in the Archaic period, around the 8th century BC. 

For this reason, it is impossible to find the dates on which each of the events narrated took place. However, we can know how much time Ulysses spent in the different stages of his journey because of the numerous time references he makes when telling his story. Moreover, this platform doesn't allow us to write numbers with less than four digits. Therefore, in this timeline the dates are arranged in this way, being the year 1001, the year in which the Trojan War begins, as it is the beginning of Ulysses' journey, even though it isn't even set in the right millenium

Chronological table

The Odyssey Journey Map

Troy

Ismarus, land of the Cicones

Ismarus, land of the Cicones

The Lotus Eaters

The Lotus Eaters

The Cyclops, Polyphemus

The Cyclops, Polyphemus

Aeolia, isle of Aeolus

Aeolia, isle of Aeolus

The Laestrygonians

The Laestrygonians

Teiresias and the Underworld

Teiresias and the Underworld

Scylla and Charybdis

Scylla and Charybdis

Thrinacia, isle of Helios, the sun god

Thrinacia, isle of Helios, the sun god

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Odysseus Hero's Journey in Homer's Odyssey

In this activity, activity overview, template and class instructions, more storyboard that activities, this activity is part of many teacher guides.

The Odyssey Heroic Journey - Examples of hero's journey

Related to both plot diagram and types of literary conflict, the "Hero’s Journey" is a recurring pattern of stages that the hero encounters over the course of their stories. Joseph Campbell, an American mythologist, writer, and lecturer, articulated this cycle after researching and reviewing numerous myths and stories from a variety of time periods and regions of the world. He found that they all share fundamental principles. This spawned the Hero’s Journey, also known as the Monomyth. The most fundamental version has 12 steps that the hero faces, while more detailed versions can have up to 17.

Teachers may wish for students to collaborate on this activity which is possible with Storyboard That's Real Time Collaboration feature. This can help cut down on the time it takes to complete the entire storyboard while also helping students to develop communication, self-management and leadership skills. Teachers can enable collaboration for the assignment and students can either choose their partner(s) or have one chosen for them. It is suggested that since the Hero's Journey storyboard is 12 cells, it is best if completed by students in groups of 2, 3 or 4.

Hero's Journey Stages

Odysseus Hero's Journey Example

Hero’s journey project examples and more ideas for the odyssey.

Creating a storyboard that illustrates each of Odysseus’ hero’s journey steps is engaging and creative. However, there are lots of other ways for students to show what they have learned about Odysseus’ monomyth! Check out some of our ideas below:

  • Using the timeline layout, make a timeline of Odysseus’ epic journey. You don’t need to include the 12 stages of the hero’s journey for this activity, but be sure to include events in chronological order.
  • Create a the hero’s journey chart for another character in literature that you have read and compare that journey to Odysseus' journey. Use our blank template as the hero’s journey graphic organizer to help you plan.
  • Make a map of Odysseus’ journey.
  • Using one of Storyboard That’s board game templates , create a game based on Odysseus’ hero’s journey for your classmates to play! Think about the setting of the story and use that as the theme of your game.
  • Using one of Storyboard That’s biography poster templates, create a poster about the story’s hero, Odysseus.

(These instructions are completely customizable. After clicking "Copy Activity", update the instructions on the Edit Tab of the assignment.)

Student Instructions

Use the story of The Odyssey and map it to the narrative structure of the Hero's Journey. This can be done in place of The Odyssey plot diagram.

  • Depict and describe how the chosen character's story fits (or does not fit ) into each of the stages of the Hero's Journey.
  • Finalize images, edit, and proofread your work.

TEMPLATE - HERO'S JOURNEY

Lesson Plan Reference

Grade Level 9-10

Difficulty Level 3 (Developing to Mastery)

Type of Assignment Individual or Partner

Type of Activity: The Hero's Journey

  • [ELA-Literacy/RL/9-10/3] Analyze how complex characters (e.g., those with multiple or conflicting motivations) develop over the course of a text, interact with other characters, and advance the plot or develop the theme
  • [ELA-Literacy/RL/9-10/5] Analyze how an author’s choices concerning how to structure a text, order events within it (e.g., parallel plots), and manipulate time (e.g., pacing, flashbacks) create such effects as mystery, tension, or surprise
  • [ELA-Literacy/RL/9-10/6] Analyze a particular point of view or cultural experience reflected in a work of literature from outside the United States, drawing on a wide reading of world literature

(You can also create your own on Quick Rubric .)

How To Encourage Collaboration in Activities

Establish specific goals and objectives, make diverse teams, organize brainstorming sessions, set roles and responsibilities, offer rewards and incentives, reflect and learn, frequently asked questions about odysseus hero's journey, what is the call to adventure in the odyssey .

In The Odyssey , Odysseus’ call to adventure is that he is called to fight the Trojans by King Menelaus.

How does The Odyssey follow the hero’s journey?

The Odyssey hero’s journey follows the 12 steps perfectly. Odysseus is called to adventure, causing him to leave his hometown, and must conquer many challenges and obstacles during his epic journey. Eventually, he makes his journey home after his supreme ordeal.

What is the hero’s journey in The Odyssey ?

Odysseus’ journey begins when he is called to fight in the Trojan War. He goes through all 12 stages of the hero’s journey during Homer’s incredible tale of adventure.

How does Odysseus escape the cyclops cave?

This was one of the many obstacles that Odysseus’ faced, because the blind Polyphemus felt the backs of all the sheep when they left the cave to make sure the men were not riding on them. To escape and continue his journey back, Odysseus and his men tied themselves underneath the sheep to hide from the cyclops.

Odyssey, The

The Odyssey by Homer - Setting Map

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IMAGES

  1. The Odyssey

    odysseus' journey timeline map

  2. Odysseus' Journey Map by Nakul Chhabra on Prezi

    odysseus' journey timeline map

  3. Timeline of Odysseus journey in the Odyssey by Cris Gieron Dizon Cazon

    odysseus' journey timeline map

  4. Map of Odysseus's Journey

    odysseus' journey timeline map

  5. Odyssey Map

    odysseus' journey timeline map

  6. An Interactive Map of Odysseus' 10-Year Journey in Homer's Odyssey

    odysseus' journey timeline map

VIDEO

  1. Odysseus’s journey to destroy to cyclops!!

  2. The Odyssey of Odysseus: A Mythical Heroes Quests Adventure

  3. The Epic Journey of Odysseus| #greekmythology #curiosityunleashed #ancientgreek #history #poseidon

  4. Odysseus Journey- Stop Motion activity

  5. The Epic Trojan War

  6. Odysseus' Epic Odyssey: Triumphs, Trials & Homecoming in 60 Secs!

COMMENTS

  1. The Odyssey

    This map shows Odysseus' journey after he left Troy. While his encounters were fictional — there were no Lotus Eaters, Sirens, or Cyclopes in the ancient Mediterranean — his ports of call were real. As you can see from the names of the modern nations, the bards who sang of Odysseus sent him to very real places in the Greek world.

  2. Odysseus' Ten-year Journey Home

    A map illustrating the journey home of the Achaean warrior-king Odysseus after the Trojan war. His travel from Troy to Ithaca (and his wife Penelope) took innumerable twists and turns and lasted ten years. Ever since Homer's Odyssey was written about 600 BCE (and undoubtedly long before that), people have been trying to plot the hero's trek on ...

  3. An Interactive Map of Odysseus' 10-Year Journey in Homer's

    The Odyssey, one of Home­r's two great epics, nar­rates Odysseus' long, strange trip home after the Tro­jan war.Dur­ing their ten-year jour­ney, Odysseus and his men had to over­come divine and nat­ur­al forces, from bat­ter­ing storms and winds to dif­fi­cult encoun­ters with the Cyclops Polyphe­mus, the can­ni­bal­is­tic Laestry­gones, the ...

  4. A map of Odysseus's journey

    Odysseus's ten-year trek began in Asia Minor at the fallen city of Troy (the green marker) following the end of the Trojan War. His ultimate destination: his home in Ithaca (the red marker). Click the markers for information on each step of his journey. It is important to note that the 14 locations plotted on this map have been widely debated ...

  5. An Interactive Map of Odysseus' 10-Year Journey in Homer's

    This map con­tains an impor­tant omission:nOdysseusu2019s near return to Ithaca.nn In Bookn10 of The Odyssey Odysseus and his men, car­ry­ing the leather sack in which Aeo­lus had con­fined the winds and car­ried by a fair wind from the west,come with­in sight of Itha­ca. "u201cFor nine days we sailed, night and day alike, and now on the tenth our native ...

  6. Odysseus Journey Map • Greek Gods & Goddesses

    Odysseus Journey Map. The Greeks celebrate their victory over Troy at the beginning of the Odyssey, forgetting that it was not their own strength that won the city, but rather the will of the gods. In light of this neglect to give credit where it is due, Athena and Poseidon become very angry. They begged Zeus to make the Greeks suffer, and he ...

  7. Greek & Roman Mythology

    Map of Odysseus' Journey: Odysseus' journey does not map with certainty onto any known geography. Homer doesn't specify exact locations. This has not stopped Homer's readers, ancient as well as modern, from attempting to reconstruct his travels by real world landmarks in the Mediterranean -- and it won't stop us!

  8. Interactive Map Of Odysseus' 10-Year Journey

    Interactive Map Of Odysseus' 10-Year Journey. Katerina P. Thursday, July 4, 2019. The Odyssey, one of Homer's two great epics, narrates Odysseus' long journey home after the Trojan war. During their 10-year journey, Odysseus and his men had to overcome divine and natural forces, from battering storms and winds to challenging encounters with ...

  9. Travels of Odysseus

    noun. (~750) ancient Greek epic poem featuring the adventures of the hero Odysseus (or Ulysses) in his journey throughout the Mediterranean Sea. parallel novel. noun. siren. noun. mythological creature, half-woman and half-bird, who sings tantalizing songs to lure sailors to shipwrecks and death. slaughter. verb.

  10. Map: The Odyssey

    Timeline; Map; Troy. After the Trojan war, Odysseus and his men set sail from Troy. Ismaros. They plunder the Cicones but are routed by reinforcements. Island of the lotus eaters. ... Odysseus sees his mother who died while waiting for him to return home. Next, A blind prophet named Teiresias gives Odysseus a warning and a promise: Odysseus ...

  11. PDF Travels of Odysseus

    The travels of Odysseus have inspired writers for more than 2,000 years. The Roman poet Virgil wrote The Aeneid in the late 1st century BCE. The Aeneid is the story of Aeneas, as The Odyssey is the story of Odysseus. Both books tell the legend of the Trojan Horse, and both the Trojan Prince Aeneas and the Greek King Odysseus have adventures

  12. The Odyssey

    Divided into 24 books, mirroring its counterpart, the Iliad, it unfolds the epic journey of the Greek hero Odysseus, King of Ithaca, as he endeavors to return home after the conclusion of the Trojan War. A Roman mosaic depicting Odysseus and the Sirens. Carthage, 2nd c. AD, now in the Bardo Museum, Tunisia. The tale transcends the war itself ...

  13. Odyssey Timeline

    Definition. Homer's Odyssey is an epic poem written in the 8th century BCE which describes the long voyage home of the Greek hero Odysseus. The mythical king sails back to Ithaca with his men after the Trojan War but is beset by all kinds of delays and misadventures where he battles monsters and storms but also resists (eventually) the advances of beautiful women in the knowledge that, all the ...

  14. Odysseus' Journey Timeline

    This is a timeline of Odysseus' Journey From Ithaca to the Trojan War Then Back Home by: Emilia Irovic There was a call to war of the Achaeans (Greeks) against the people of Troy. This war, the Trojan War, started because Paris, the Trojan prince, abducted (or eloped with) Helen, the wife of Menelaus. Menelaus convinced his brother, Agamemnon, the king of Mycenae, to lead an expedition to find ...

  15. Odysseus Timeline

    Odysseus (Roman name: Ulysses) was one of the great pan-Hellenic heroes of Greek mythology. He was famous for his courage, intelligence, and leadership. Odysseus' resourcefulness and oratory skills were instrumental in the Greek victory in the Trojan War. After that conflict, Odysseus was the protagonist in many fantastic adventures on his ...

  16. Key for Map of Odysseus' Route

    Key to Map of Possible Route of Odysseus Graphic: Tim Severin, The Ulysses Voyage: sea search for the Odyssey (London 1987). Text: adapted from Erich Lessing, The Voyages of Ulysses (Vienna 1965) and other sources. 1. Troy: After 10 years of siege, the Greek forces capture and destroy the city; then they sail for home with their spoils.

  17. The Geography of the Odyssey

    Created for a course on Greek and Roman mythology in 2000, the classicist Peter T. Struck's online interactive map of Odyssean geography is intended to give his students a general sense of Odysseus' journey, while recognizing the uncertainty that accompanies any attempt to definitively map Homer's locations.

  18. Greek & Roman Mythology

    Odyssey Order. Odysseus and his men raid the Cicones. Council of the gods. Athena bargains with Zeus. They arrive at the Land of the Lotus Eaters. Athena visits Telemachus; he sails for Pylos. Odysseus blinds Polyphemus. Telemachus reaches Pylos, then moves on to Sparta. Aiolos gives Odysseus the bag of winds.

  19. Timeline: The Odyssey

    Timeline. Map. After the Trojan war, Odysseus and his men set sail from Troy. They plunder the Cicones but are routed by reinforcements. On the island of the lotus eaters, some men eat the food of the enchanting inhabitants and loose all hope of home. On the Island of the Cyclops, Odysseus's curiosity causes him trouble: he and twelve others ...

  20. Odyssey's timeline

    Adventures and trials to overcome. Circe offering the cup to Odysseus- John William Waterhouse. Ulysses goes through the greatest trials, in which he will lose his men. In these two years, he has his quarrel with the Cicones, the Lotus eaters, the Cyclops, he goes to the island of Aeolus, he meets Circe, they escape from the Sirens and go to ...

  21. Odyssey: Odysseus' Journey Timeline Diagram

    1. After Trojan War, Odysseus and his men begin their journey back home. 2. After leaving Troy, Odysseus and his men land on the Cicones island. After causing many drunken fights, Odysseus has to bring them back to the ship. 3. Odysseus and his men land on the island of the Lotus Eaters, where his men are persuaded to eat their Lotus Flower ...

  22. The Odyssey Journey Map timeline

    Life Story James (Jim) Carlson. American History 2. Pinewood Timeline (2013 - 2017) Ryuco'ov: Flower Artisan through Rebuilding. The English literature UNAD. Childhood in history. Technological Advancements (1900-2020) AP WORLD TIMELINE Joseph MARCELLETTI.

  23. Odysseus Hero's Journey in Homer's Odyssey

    Using the timeline layout, make a timeline of Odysseus' epic journey. You don't need to include the 12 stages of the hero's journey for this activity, but be sure to include events in chronological order. ... Make a map of Odysseus' journey. Using one of Storyboard That's board game templates, create a game based on Odysseus' hero ...