Petersburg 422 (as above).
Among the events of the war between the death of Hector and the final fall of Troy, those which relate to the final exploits of Achilles are most prominent, and especially the encounters with Memnon, and with Penthesileia, his death and the events arising out of it. The story of Achilles’ fight with Penthesileia, and the death of the Amazon queen, is less frequently depicted, but there are some very fine examples remaining.[[1398]] Other representations of Amazons arming, setting out, or in combat may be placed here, but except where Penthesileia is specially indicated it is better to regard them as having no definite reference to the Trojan story.[[1399]] A remarkable painting on an Apulian amphora depicts the slaying of Thersites by Achilles in the presence of Phoinix and Diomedes. Thersites had insulted Achilles after his slaying of Penthesileia.[[1400]]
The story of Memnon is related on the vases in several scenes, beginning with his equipment and departure for the fray.[[1401]] Next we see the great fight of Achilles and Memnon over the body of Antilochos,[[1402]] at which the respective mothers of the heroes, Thetis and Eos, are usually present as spectators.[[1403]] The result of the fight was fatal to Memnon, whose body we see carried off by Thanatos and Hypnos,[[1404]] or by Eos herself,[[1405]] for burial in his native land. Eos is also represented mourning over him.[[1406]] The Psychostasia, or weighing of souls by Zeus (see p. [130]), has also been referred to this event. The body of Antilochos is finally rescued and carried off by Nestor.[[1407]]
Lastly, we find a few possible representations of the death of Achilles,[[1408]] and others, more certainly to be identified, of the battle raging round his body, in which Diomedes is wounded[[1409]]; also of Ajax carrying the body off out of the battle,[[1410]] and the subsequent mourning of the Nereids over it.[[1411]] A representation of the ghost of a warrior, winged and fully armed, flying over a ship,[[1412]] is to be regarded as that of Achilles, though to what event it alludes is not clear. The dispute over the hero’s armour and the suicide of the disappointed Ajax are introduced by a scene representing the fetching of Neoptolemos, his son, from Skyros, where he bids farewell to Lykomedes and Deidameia[[1413]]; of the quarrel between Ajax and Odysseus there are also several representations.[[1414]] It was decided finally by Athena, who is represented presiding over the Greek chiefs as they vote[[1415]]; or, according to another version, they cast lots before her statue.[[1416]] The armour is then awarded to Neoptolemos,[[1417]] who, according to an oracle, was indispensable for the capture of Troy. Ajax goes mad with disappointment, and finally commits suicide by falling on his sword[[1418]]; the episode of his slaying the sheep is not, however, represented.
The Ἰλίου Πέρσις, or sack of Troy, which is so vividly represented on many of the vases of advanced and late style, may be said to begin with the episode of the seizure of the Palladion by Odysseus and Diomede.[[1419]] It is rapidly followed by the construction of the wooden horse and its entry into the city.[[1420]] There is, however, only one certain representation of the death of Laokoön to be traced,[[1421]] and none of the traitorous Sinon.
Several vases, especially of the later epoch, collect the chief episodes in a frieze or in a series of groups, including the rape of Kassandra by Ajax, son of Oileus, the death of Priam and Astyanax, the recapture of Helen by Menelaos, and the flight of Aeneas; other scenes represented are the leading back of Aithra by Akamas and Demophon, and the sacrifice of Polyxena and subsequent blinding of Polymestor by Hecuba.
I. General.
Berlin 1685 (= Overbeck, Her. Bildw. pl. 26, 1) and 2281; Plate [LIV]. = Furtwaengler and Reichhold, pl. 25 (Brygos in Louvre); Naples 2422 = Furtwaengler and Reichhold, pl. 34 = Baumeister, i. pl. 14, fig. 795; B.M. F 160, F 278.
II. (a) Ajax seizing Kassandra at the altar of Athena.
B.F. B.M. B 242, 379; Berlin 1698; Roscher, ii. p. 979.