The Trojan Horse was a plan that allowed the Greeks to enter the city of Troy after 10 years of trying to during the Trojan War. The Greeks constructed a large wooden horse and hid soldiers inside. They left the horse at the gates of Troy as a gift before pretending to sail away. That night, after the Trojans celebrated bringing the horse inside their walls, the Greek soldiers crept out and opened the city gates, allowing the rest of the Greek army to enter and attack the city.
The Trojan Horse was a plan that allowed the Greeks to enter the city of Troy after 10 years of trying to during the Trojan War. The Greeks constructed a large wooden horse and hid soldiers inside. They left the horse at the gates of Troy as a gift before pretending to sail away. That night, after the Trojans celebrated bringing the horse inside their walls, the Greek soldiers crept out and opened the city gates, allowing the rest of the Greek army to enter and attack the city.
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The Trojan Horse was a plan that allowed the Greeks to enter the city of Troy after 10 years of trying to during the Trojan War. The Greeks constructed a large wooden horse and hid soldiers inside. They left the horse at the gates of Troy as a gift before pretending to sail away. That night, after the Trojans celebrated bringing the horse inside their walls, the Greek soldiers crept out and opened the city gates, allowing the rest of the Greek army to enter and attack the city.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as SXI, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
The picture reflects the myth of the 'Trojan Horse', a success
which happened during the Trojan War, it was a plan that allowed the Greeks to enter the Troy after 10 years of trying to, this happened in the Bronze Age. This plan started with the construction of a huge Horse made out of wood, and in the inside of it there hid a lot of Greek men. They let the Horse in front of the doors from the Trojan walls as a gift, and then they pretended to sail away, at that moment the Trojans entered the Horse as a sign of victory. At the night after the Trojans had celebrated the Greeks crept out of Horse and opened the gates to let the other Greek men, whom had sailed back, enter to form the full army. Once they entered they began to