The Odyssey

What is one of the most important virtues the Greek culture emphasized?

the odissy book

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The Odyssey nearly serves as a Greek guide to hospitality, or "xenia," which was such a dominant concept in Greece that Zeus was the god of hospitality. Telemachus and Odysseus receive warm hospitality throughout their journeys from others, usually without even having to give their names. The flip side of the equation, of course, is the suitors, who abuse Telemachus' hospitality in running through Odysseus' reserves. The other blight on hospitality comes at the end when the Phaeacians decide not to give strangers conveyance anymore, after Poseidon turns their ship that carried Odysseus to Ithaca into stone.

Telemachus’ miniature odyssey: paralleling Odysseus' greater journey, Telemachus' journey at the beginning of the poem is as much a search for maturity as it is one for his father. Athena, who sparks his travels, also grooms him in the ways of a prince. Telemachus matures from his initial weakness in the face of the suitors into the authoritative man of the house, and his place by his father's side in the climactic battle is well earned and represented.

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The amazing Greek philosophical school gave us ideas such as democracy and happiness. The Greeks have always asked vital questions that are almost impossible to find in other cultures of the ancient Mediterranean or the Middle East. I learned a lot from high-quality and unique college essay examples while studying Greek culture in college. The Greeks easily absorbed foreign culture, often married representatives of other peoples; they did not have the concept of ethnic inequality and discrimination in appearance, because there was no such thing as "different races."

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