Helen wasn't Agamemnon's to begin with. You're thinking of Menelaus, and yes, he took her back to Sparta. Some accounts, though, indicate that she was taken to Olympus as the paragon of mortal beauty, since she was a daughter of Zeus.
More than likely, Helen would have been executed or sold into slavery and never seen in Sparta again. Menelaus would have told the story of her ascension to ease questions because he was King by Helen's hand. Her death might have ended his rule.
No, Helen's husband was Menelaus, the brother of Agamemnon.
Eventually Sparta did, Meleaus took back Helen and killed her, and Agamemnon concoured another city but when he got home his wife killed him in the bath tub.
Agamemnon is wrong that is Helen's husbands brother
Menelaus and Agamemnon were brothers. Menelaus was the king of Sparta, and Agamemnon was the commander of the Achaeans in the Trojan war. Menelaus was married to Helen, and Agamemnon was married to Clytemnestra.
Paris, a prince of Troy, stole Helen from Menelaus (Agamemnon's brother)
Helen was the wife of Menelaus who was the brother of Agamemnon, so Agamemnon was her brother in law. After Helen went to Troy with Paris and became his wife, Hector, brother of Paris, became her brother-in-law.
Helen was the wife of Agamemnon , King of Sparta. She went to Troy with Paris and in so doing caused the Trojan War. She is described as "The face that launched a thousand ships" Helen's sister was married to Agamemnon and later killed him. Helen was married to Menalaus.
Helen of Troy's husband was Menelaus. This makes Agamemnon her brother-in-law.
Agamemnon was the King of Mycenae, leader of the Achaeans, and the older brother of Menelaus. Paris was a prince of Troy and therefore not under any obligation to listen to Agamemnon. As long as Troy was willing to defend against the Achaeans, Paris did not need to return Helen.
Helen, the daughter of the god Zeus and the mortal Leda, was described as the most beautiful woman in the world. She was the wife of Menelaus, brother to King Agamemnon of Sparta. The Trojan prince Paris kidnapped her, and in vengence Agamemnon "launched a thousand ships" to Troy in order to wage war (the Trojan War, specifically, which is detailed in Homer's The Illiad) and bring Helen back to Sparta.
yes. he used helen to attack troy ...
In Sparta. She was the wife of Menelaus, the brother of the Spartan king, Agamemnon.