The Trojan Horse is part of the myth of the Trojan War, as told in Virgil's Latin epic poem The Aeneid. The events of this myth take place after Homer's Iliad, and before both Homer's The Odyssey and Virgil's The Aeneid. Although this incident is mentioned in the Odyssey:
The Greek siege of Troy had lasted for ten years. The Greeks devised a new ruse: a giant hollow wooden horse. It was built by Epeius and filled with Greek warriors led by Odysseus. The rest of the Greek army appeared to leave, but actually hid behind Tenedos. Meanwhile, a Greek spy, Sinon, convinced the Trojans the horse was a gift despite the warnings of Laocoon and Cassandra; Helen and Deiphobus even investigated the horse; in the end, the Trojans accepted the gift. It should be noted here that the horse was the sacred animal of Poseidon —during the contest with Athena over the patronship of Athens, Poseidon gave men the horse, whilst Athena gave the olive tree.
The Trojans hugely celebrated the end of the siege, so that, when the Greeks emerged from the horse, the city was in a drunken stupor. The Greek warriors opened the city gates to allow the rest of the army to enter, and the city was pillaged ruthlessly —all the men were killed, and all the women and children were taken into slavery.
The Trojan Bell is an ancillary component to the myth; according to lore, it signaled the beginning of the assault on Troy.
The Trojan horse may or may not actually have been built and used. The only evidence known to modern scholars is literary references written long after the alleged event.
Within the territories of the ancient city of Troy, near the Dardanelles (modern Turkey), is a small museum, founded in 1955, that includes the remnants of the city, along with a wooden horse built in the museum garden to depict the legendary Trojan horse. The wooden horse from the recent film Troy is displayed on the seafront in the nearby town of Çanakkale.
From this mythological episode comes the term Trojan horse as a general term describing an apparent advantage that is actually a trick; "Trojan horse" tactics are those considered sneaky, underhand, deceitful. The term can also refer to a "sneak attack" in general. The term "Trojan" is also widely used today to refer to malicious computer software that looks harmless to the user but actually contains a computer virus or spyware.
Book II of Virgil's Aeneid covers the siege of Troy, and includes these lines spoken by Laocoön:
Pausanias who lived in the 2nd century AD wrote on his book Description of Greece:
According to the Little Iliad it had 3,000 on its belly, Apollodorus 50Epitome 5.14,Tzetzes 23,Posthomerica 641-650 Quintus Smyrnaeus gives the names of thirty, and he says that there were more of them.Posthomerica xii.314-335 In late tradition it seems it was standardised at 40. Their names follow:
حصان طروادة | Троянски кон | Cavall de Troia | Den trojanske hest | Trojanisches Pferd (Mythologie) | Caballo de Troya | Cheval de Troie | Cabalo de Troia | סוס טרויאני | トロイの木馬 | Paard van Troje | Koń trojański | Cavalo de Tróia | Троянский конь | Тројански коњ (митологија) | 特洛伊木马
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"Trojan Horse".
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