Background Info
Main Characters
Literary Devices
Monsters
Events
100

The author of "The Odyssey"

Homer

100

The hero that the audience follows throughout the epic

Odysseus

100

A comparison of two things using "like" or "as"

Simile

100

The half-human, half-bird creatures whose songs drive men to sail their ships into rocks

Sirens

100

The two nymphs who hold Odysseus captive on their islands for a collective 8 years

Calypso and Circe

200

The modern-day name for the area of the world where "The Odyssey" takes place

Greece, or the Mediterranean 

200

The Greek god who helps the hero throughout the epic

Athena

200

A moral idea that repeats throughout a text

Theme

200

A one-eyed giant who traps Odysseus and his men in his cave

Cyclops, or Polyphemus

200

Odysseus's men upset the sun god, Helios, by doing this

Killing and eating his cattle
300

The island that the hero is the king of

Ithaka

300
The hero's wife and son

Penelope & Telemachus

300

In which part of the text hints at what will happen later in the text

Foreshadowing

300

The six-headed, dog-faced monster who lives in a cave on a mountain

Scylla

300
Where Odysseus found his soldier, his mother, and the blind prophet

The Underworld

400

The name of the war that the hero is returning from at the beginning of the epic

The Trojan War

400

The Greek god hunting the hero down to exact revenge

Poseidon

400

A test the hero must go through to prove themself 

A trial

400

The sea monster who spins in a circle and creates a massive whirlpool in the Mediterranean

Charybdis

400

Penelope asks the suitors to do these two things in order to become her husband

Bend and string Odysseus's bow, then fire an arrow through 12 axeheads

500

When "The Odyssey" takes place

The Bronze Age, between 1600 and 1200 B.C.

500

The blind prophet whom the hero meets in the Underworld

Tiresias

500

A phrase used as a nickname for people or gods, highlighting a specific trait

Epithet

500

Cannibals who are responsible for eating Odysseus's men and destroyed their ships

The Laestrygones 

500

King Aeolus gave Odysseus and his men these gifts, proving to be disastrous for the crew

A bag of fair winds and a bag of stormy winds