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  1. THE PHRASE "CATALOGUE OF SHIPS" the council has in book II, the Greeks march led generations of readers and out critics to attack the Trojans, and the Trojans to think of the passage (Iliad 11.484-785) prepare to meet them. It would seem most as being something detachable and natural lumpy that we get a description of the two -a long, boring ...

  2. 1607. Yard Number 755. Passenger and cargo ship (also schooner rigged) built for the Union Steam Ship Company and operated in New Zealand coastal waters until May 1949. Hulk sunk as a target in 1952. 1905. SS Maheno. 5282. Yard Number 746. Passenger ship owned by Union Company of New Zealand.

  3. File:The Homeric catalogue of ships (IA homericcatalogue00homerich).pdf Metadata This file contains additional information such as Exif metadata which may have been added by the digital camera, scanner, or software program used to create or digitize it.

  4. List of Achaean Leaders and their Catalogue of Ships; Ethnicity Leader Suitor of Helen Sources Homer: Ships: Euripides: Ships: Apollodorus: Ships: Dictys: Ships: Hyginus: Ships: Malalas: Ships: Dares: Ships: Boeotians: Thersander 50 of 120 men each 10 leaders: 40 50 Peneleos 50 12 50 Leitus 50 12 Clonius 9

  5. The Catalogue of Ships ( Ancient Greek: νεῶν κατάλογος, neōn katálogos) is an epic catalogue in Book 2 of Homer 's Iliad (2.494–759), which lists the contingents of the Achaean army that sailed to Troy. The catalogue gives the names of the leaders of each contingent, lists the settlements in the kingdom represented by the ...

  6. An epic catalogue is a long, detailed list of objects, places or people that is a characteristic of epic poetry. Examples. In the Iliad: Catalogue of Ships, the most famous epic catalogue; Trojan Battle Order; In the Odyssey, the catalogue of women in Hades in Book XI. In the Argonautica, the catalogue of heroes in Book I.

  7. Now, since you don’t have ships about, you should catalogue things that you do have: the books in your room, your family, the trees in your yard, the clothes on your floor, the assignments you’ve missed, etc. Whatever you choose to catalogue, you must use epic language (if you can say it simply, then simply avoid saying it that way).

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