It’s believed that The Odyssey and The Iliad come from an oral storytelling tradition. In fact, any glimpse into Homer before medieval times is rare, and any insight into the composition of the epics is precious. If verified, it will be a priceless literary and historical artifact. In a press release, the Greek Culture Ministry says that the preliminary date of the text has been confirmed. The verses are from the epic’s fourteenth book, in which Odysseus speaks to his lifelong friend Eumaeus, the first person he sees on his return from his decade away from home. The tablet was discovered near the ruins of the Temple of Zeus during three years of excavations in the ruins of the ancient city of Olympia on the Greek peninsula the Peloponnese. or earlier, representing the oldest lines of the poet found in the ancient land. But now, reports the BBC, archeologists in Greece have found 13 verses from The Odyssey chiseled into a clay tablet dating to the third century A.D. The ancient papyrus these books were written on rarely survives, meaning that ancient copies of Homer from the lands he wrote about simply don’t exist. You might think that ancient copies of these books are dug up in Greece all the time, but that’s not the case. The epics of the Greek poet Homer, The Iliad and The Odyssey, have been recited around campfires and scrutinized by students for 2,800 years, if not longer.
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