Same (Homer)

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Same (

Krocylea, Aegilips
and Zacynthus, indicating that the "Catalogue of Ships" could be a later addition to the Iliad.

In Homer's Odyssey, there is an interesting geographical description:

Now there is a rocky islet called Asteris, of no great size, in mid channel between

Map of Homer's Ithaca according to Dörpfeld's theory

From the above passage, Homer's Same is not the Greek island Samos in the Eastern Aegean Sea, Same should be in the Ionian Sea, near Homer's Ithaca and there should be at least one rocky island between the two islands. Also, this rocky island should be located South of Homer's Ithaca where Telemakhos would arrive from South-West Peloponnese. Based on the above information, Wilhelm Dörpfeld in his essay "Alt-Ithaka: Ein Beitrag zur Homer-Frage" proposed that Same was present day Ithaca.

Other authors make extensive description of Dörpfeld's theory. C.H. Goekoop relates Same to "Thiaki", "the islet Asteris" to

Erissos, the northern peninsula of Kefalonia.[4]

Odysseus's younger sister,

Eurylochus for a massive bride-price.[5]

One of the Suitors, Ctesippus of Same, is described as "a man who had no sense of right and wrong" and attempts to throw an ox's hoof from the meat-basket of the dinner table at Odysseus.[6]

Notes

  1. ^ Gardner, Dorsey (1887). Webster's Condensed Dictionary. George Routledge and Sons. p. 767. Retrieved 10 April 2018.
  2. ^ Hom. Od. 1.230
  3. ^ Homer's Odyssey, Hom. Od. 4.843–7
  4. )
  5. ^ Homer's Odyssey, Hom. Od. 15.363
  6. ^ Homer's Odyssey, Hom. Od. 20.288

External links