- Homeric Epic Context: Both the Iliad and the Odyssey represent a synthesis of historical memory and mythological narrative stemming from oral traditions between 1200 and 800 b.c.
- Chronological Anachronism: Linguistic evidence and physical artifacts, such as Bronze Age tower shields and Iron Age weapons, indicate that the poems incorporate elements from multiple historical eras.
- Geographic And Political Evolution: References to locations like Phrygia suggest regional power shifts occurred during the poems' long development from the Late Bronze Age through the Iron Age.
- Archaeological Correlation: Excavations at the site of Ilium and findings at various locations throughout the Greek and Roman world provide material data used to analyze the epics.
- Evolution Of The Source Material: Scholarly consensus views the works as a collective crystallization of fragmented accounts of ancient conflicts, rather than the product of a single author.

Roman mosaic showing Odysseus and the Sirens
G. Dagli Orti/© NPL - DeA Picture Library/Bridgeman Images
But come now, tell me about your wanderings; describe the places, the people, and the cities you have seen. Which ones were wild and cruel, unwelcoming, and which were kind to visitors, respecting the gods? And please explain why you were crying, sobbing your heart out when you heard him sing what happened to the Greeks at Troy. The gods devised and measured out this devastation, to make a song for those in times to come.
The Odyssey, book 8, lines 571–580, translated by Emily Wilson

Since antiquity, scholars have made many attempts to chart Odysseus’ harrowing decade-long journey home as described by Homer in the Odyssey onto real geographic locations. This map represents one possible route the hero might have taken from Troy back to the island of Ithaca—and the many mythical places and monsters he encounters in the epic. Blown off course by storms and their own folly, Odysseus and his crew escape from the island of the one-eyed giants known as the Cyclopes only to run afoul of the cannibalistic Laestrygonians in Lamos, who kill many of the men, and the goddess Circe on the island of Aeaea. They must also navigate the narrow pass between the fearsome monsters Scylla and Charybdis. Shipwrecked alone on the island of Ogygia, Odysseus is held captive by the nymph Calypso for seven years before he finally manages to return home to his wife, son, and loyal dog on Ithaca.
Ken Feisel
So speaks a royal host to the hero Odysseus as he tries to coax his famous guest to recount the events immortalized in the Iliad and the Odyssey, two of the greatest epic poems of the ancient Greek world, both said to be the works of the blind poet Homer. The Iliad is set in the last year of the Trojan War, a grueling decade-long conflict. This contest between the Trojans, led by their champion Hector, and a Greek army commanded by heroes such as Achilles, was incited by the abduction of the Greek queen Helen by Hector’s brother Paris. The Odyssey takes place after the war’s end and follows the circuitous journey of Odysseus from Troy to his home on the island of Ithaca, where his wife Penelope, son Telemachus, and dog Argos have awaited his return for 20 years. “While myth is the basis of the epics,” says archaeologist Kim Shelton of the University of California, Berkeley, “they include elements of historical memory as well.”
Texts unearthed at Hattusha, the capital of the Hittite Empire (ca. 1680–1200 b.c.), which was based in Anatolia, tell of a series of wars that took place in western Anatolia sometime between 1400 and 1200 b.c., during the Late Bronze Age. This is the period in which, according to the epics, the events of the Trojan War unfolded. “We can trace two hundred years of conflict involving a variety of opponents,” says University of Pennsylvania archaeologist C. Brian Rose. Beginning around 1200 b.c., bards sang of the exploits of these wars’ heroes from memory, preserving their stories through a dynamic oral tradition until they were compiled and written down in the late eighth century b.c. “At some point between 1200 and 800 b.c., this multitude of wars had crystallized into a single war lasting ten years between two primary sides,” says Rose. By the sixth century b.c., ancient writers had come to regard the two epics as the work of Homer. Though most modern scholars doubt a single poet wrote the works, they still refer to Homer as the embodiment of the complex oral tradition that produced the Iliad and the Odyssey.
Both epics contain a mix of place-names, linguistic forms, and vocabulary that reflects the gradual process by which they were created beginning in the Late Bronze Age (ca. 1600–1200 b.c.) and continuing into the Iron Age (ca. 1200–700 b.c.). Some locales that appear in the Iliad, such as Mycenae, are known to have been great powers in Bronze Age Greece, while other places mentioned in the text flourished much later. For instance, Phrygia, the home of Hecuba, wife of the Trojan king Priam, was an unimportant kingdom in the Bronze Age. “By the eighth century b.c., when the Iliad was written down, Phrygia was the most powerful kingdom in Anatolia,” says Rose. Moreover, Greek names ending in “-eus” were highly unusual by the Iron Age. Thus, the moniker Odysseus was an anachronism by the time the poems were written down. Armor and weaponry described in the epics also represent an amalgam of types used throughout the Bronze and Iron Ages. What Homer calls tower shields, which covered a warrior’s entire body, were used in the Bronze Age, but were no longer part of an Iron Age warrior’s battle dress. On the other hand, the iron weapons wielded by the epics’ heroes were introduced long after the events supposedly took place.

Ken Feisel
By the seventh century b.c., a mound in the western Anatolian town of Ilium, where Bronze Age fortification walls were still visible, had been identified as the site of Troy. Following Ilium’s rediscovery in the mid-nineteenth century, German archaeologist Heinrich Schliemann—with the Iliad in hand—began excavations there, searching for the places where heroes fell. Research at the site continues to this day, although archaeologists no longer follow Schliemann’s example. Instead, they compare the material evidence they unearth with the text. “There are clearly important parts of the poems, especially for the Bronze Age, whether language, names, or objects described, that inform us about the process of creating the written stories,” says Shelton.
Such was the reach and influence of the epics that researchers find tantalizing links to the stories at archaeological sites throughout the ancient Greek and Roman world. From mosaics depicting alternative versions of the Iliad, to tablets hinting at events described in the Odyssey, the archaeological record is as rich a source of knowledge of the realm of the Homeric heroes as the epics themselves.

The town of Ilium in western Anatolia, seen here from the air, had been identified by the seventh century b.c. as ancient Troy. Many scholars believe the site was the location of the Trojan War, a 10-year-long conflict between the Greek and Trojan armies chronicled in the Iliad. The blind poet Homer, portrayed in a Roman bust, was thought by ancient writers to have been the sole author of both the Iliad and the Odyssey, which follows the disastrous journey of the Greek hero Odysseus from Troy back to his home on the island of Ithaca.
© The Trustees of the British Museum/Art Resource, NY; a_medvedkov/Adobe Stock
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The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Fletcher Fund, 1928
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Manuel Cohen/Art Resource, NY
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bpk Bildagentur/Antikensammlung, Staatliche Museen, Berlin, Germany/Johannes Laurentius/Art Resource, NY
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Bernhard Weisser, Münzkabinett der Staatlichen Museen, Berlin, 18222912; Bernhard Weisser, Münzkabinett der Staatlichen Museen, Berlin, 18317099
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