Email:
Password:
Register

Knowledgerush Search

 


Search for images of Telemachus

Community Members

adrian i…

fareeth

mhods

CloverM

Ashley J…

ramdan10

shep

Ben D. K…

Blueriver
Welcome Publish Image - Publish Soapbox - Publish Poem
My Stuff - Change My Profile and Settings
Message Boards - Post a New Topic
All Poems - All Soapbox

Telemachus

In Greek mythology, Telemachus (also transliterated as Telemachos or Telémakhos) was the son of Odysseus and Penelope. His part in the saga of Odysseus was described by Homer in the Odyssey.

After his father had been gone for nearly 20 years, young Telemachus came of age and was visited by Athena, who disguised herself as Mentor and advised him to travel in search of news of his father. He traveled to Pylos and Lacedaemon. Their rulers, Nestor and Menelaus, were very courteous. Pisistratus accompanied him on this search.

In Ithaca, Penelope was fending off countless suitors. Odysseus returned and disguised himself as an old man or a beggar and saw that she was faithful to him, pretending to knit a burial shroud (for they claimed he must be dead) and claiming she would choose one suitor when she finished. Every night she undid part of the shroud. Odysseus watched the suitors drink and take advantage of his family's hospitality, then took off his disguise and, with Telemachus and Eumaeus the swineherd, killed them all save Medon, who had been polite to Penelope, and Phemius, a local singer who had been forced to help the suitors against Penelope. Alternatively, he (or Penelope at the prompting of Athena) challenged the suitors to an archery contest and killed them after winning. In an alternate version, Odysseus tested his wife's loyalty by claiming she had moved their bed (which had a tree as a bedpost). She denied doing so and Odysseus knew she was loyal.

Telemachus is also the subject of Francois Fénelon's The Adventures of Telemachus, Son of Ulysses (1699), a scathing attack on the monarchy of France.

Homer, Odyssey; Apollodorus, Epitome III, 7; VII, 32-33.

Referenced By

Allwoes | Circe | Gilbert schema for Ulysses | Greek god | Greek gods | Helen | HelenOfTroy | James A. A. Joyce | James Joyce | James Joyce/Ulysses | King Allwoes | Kirke | Kirkê | Laertes | Laértes | Laërtês | Linati schema for Ulysses | List of Greek mythological characters | Mentor | Nausicaa | Nausikaa | Nohbdy | Noman | Náusikaa | Odysseos | Odysseus | Odysseus Laertiades | Odysseus Laertides | Odysseus Laërtiadês | Odysseus Laërtidês | Odyssey | Palamedes | Peisistratos | Peisistratus | Peistratus | Peisístratos | Penelope | Penelope the Wise | Penelopeia | Penélopê | Pesistratus | Phalaris | Pisistratus | Quarrelman | Telegonus | The Odyssey | Ulysses (novel) | Ulysses (novel)/Penelope | Ulysses (television) | Ulysses 31 | Ulysseys


License

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Telemachus".

History

View article history.

 

Start a Discussion, Reply, or Add Information

Consider sharing your essay or research on this topic. Others will benefit from your knowledge.

Your Pen Name (optional):
Subject:
Your Message:
Enter security code to post message (not needed for preview):
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Contact UsPrivacy Statement & Terms of Use

 
Authors retain copyright and ownership of all postings. Please contact the author for rights to use or purchase.
Knowledgerush © 2009