It was right for the Achaeans to destroy Troy. The war started when Paris of Troy took another king's beautiful wife, Helen.
The Greeks actually burned the city of Troy. After sneaking into the city in a large horse, the Greeks opened the gates and Troy was destroyed.
The prince of Troy was Hector who was killed by Achilles in the ten years war between Achaeans [Greeks] and Trojans. The reason for the war was the abduction of the beautiful Helen wife of Menelaus King of Sparta by Hector's younger brother Prince Paris. The goddess Aphrodite assisted Paris to have a successful operation. This happened approximately 3000 BC years ago according to recent discoveries [astronomic]
He sends a plague that killed many Achaeans.
Athena supported the Greeks (Achaeans).
It was right for the Achaeans to destroy Troy. The war started when Paris of Troy took another king's beautiful wife, Helen.
the achaeans lived in troy
The Achaeans .
The Achaeans .
The Achaeans .
Agamemnon was the leader of the Achaean expedition against Troy.
Hector was killed in combat so Andromache was a widow. After Troy lost against the Achaeans, the Achaeans split up the men, women, and children of Troy as their prize. Neoptolemus took Andromache as his prize. He also threw Andromache and Hector's baby son Astyanax over Troy's walls.
The Achaeans.
destroy
Prince Paris "kidnapped" Helen, the wife of Menelaus and took her to Troy. When Helen was married, her father, fearing the wrath of the princes that he did not marry Helen to, made every one of Helen's suitors swear to fight whoever dares to take Helen away from her husband. So when Paris took Helen to Troy, Agamemnon, Menelaus's older brother, took this chance and lead the Achaeans to fight Troy for Helen.
The Achaeans made a failed bid to capture Troy, went on to carry out their plan to loot western Asia Minor, and after nine years of this, turned back on the riches prize, Troy.
Giving the golden apple to Aphrodite, earning the love of Helen and by doing so beginning the war between Troy and the Achaeans ("Greeks").