The Odyssey Characters

Meet the Cast

Odysseus

(Click the character infographic to download.) Odysseus is brave, strong, handsome, wily, loyal, pious—and did we mention handsome? He's basically begging for a "hey girl" meme. ("Hey girl. I may...

Telemachos

(Click the character infographic to download.) Shmoop has a secret. Odysseus may be the Odyssey's hero, but we actually think Telemachos is more interesting. Sure, Odysseus is the strongest, braves...

Penelope

(Click the character infographic to download.) The other Greek wives must have hated Penelope. She's like an ancient Greek Martha Stewart, without the pesky insider trading scandal: the perfect hos...

Athene

(Click the character infographic to download.) Zeus' daughter Athene may be the patroness of warfare but she's also the goddess of wisdom, so it's no surprise that she likes a hero with some brains...

Agelaos

Sometimes spelled Agelaus. One of the suitors we see in Book XXI. He asks Telemachos to reason with Penelope about marrying someone already.

Aigisthos

Sometimes spelled Aegisthus. The treacherous lover of Agamemnon’s wife, Klytaimestra. He conspired with her to kill her husband and was later murdered in revenge by Orestes, Agamemnon’s...

Aithon

The fake name that Odysseus gives when speaking with Penelope while in the guise of a beggar. The scholar Olga Levaniouk has recently argued that this name means “fiery,” in the sense o...

Kassandra

Sometimes spelled Cassandra. A Trojan princess. She was raped and killed by Little Aias on the altar of Athene, which meant he had to die for his disrespect. (The problem was the location more than...

Dolios

Laertes’s housekeeper.

Eidothea

A nymph who comes into play in Menelaos’s story to Telemachos about that one time he was stranded on an island. It was Eidothea who advised him to capture Proteus, the god of the island, to d...

Eperitos

The name that Odysseus gives to his father, Laertes, in Book XXIV, before revealing his true identity.

Eumaios

Eumaios is Ithakan swineherd who takes Odysseus in when he returns home in the guise of a beggar, and he shows us that it's not just kings who can be hospitable—even swineherds know how to treat...

Eurylochos

Sometimes spelled Eurylochus. One of the Ithakans traveling with Odysseus on the way back from Troy. He is a cautious man, refusing to enter Circe’s hall even when accompanied by armed men. H...

Iphitos

A minor character in the story of How Odysseus Got His Bow. Actually, Iphitos is the man who gave him the bow.

Iphthime

Penelope’s sister. She isn’t actually present in the Odyssey, but in Book IV Athene sends a vision of her to Penelope in her sleep, to reassure the Queen that her husband is soon coming...

Ktimene

The daughter of Laertes, Odysseus’s sister.

Klytaimestra

Sometimes spelled Clytemnestra. Agamemnon’s no-good wife. She sleeps with Aigisthos while her husband is gone and kills Agamemnon when he finally does get home. She meets her death the same w...

Mykene

Sometimes spelled Mycenae. Agamemnon’s kingdom.

Nestor

Telemachos meets this guy, the King of Pylos, while he's searching for news of his father. Nestor provides another great example of good Greek hospitality, plying the Ithakan Prince with gifts...

The Taphians

Mentes, the man Athene pretends to be when she first arrives in Ithaka, is the ruler of the Taphians.

Amphimedon

In the Underworld, he tells the story of the slaughter to Achilleus and Agamemnon. It's clear from his version that the suitors are none-too-repentant of their ways: he accuses Penelope of "plan...

Amphinomos

Sometimes spelled Amphinomus. The good suitor, relatively speaking: his "heart saddened within him, shaking his head, for in his spirit he saw the evil" (18.153-54). Penelope seems to recognize...

Eurymachos

Sometimes spelled Eurymachus. One of the not-so-nice suitors. He even plots to kill Telemachos and then deceives Penelope about it.

Ktesippos

An evil suitor. Pretty much all he does in the Odyssey is to throw a cow's foot at beggar Odysseus and then die gruesomely.

Achilleus

Achilleus (or Achilles) is a big Greek hero who fought against the Trojans. He's already dead by the time the Odyssey begins, so we only see him in the Underworld. In the Iliad we hear Achilleus...

Agamemnon

Agamemnon is a Greek king and Menelaos' brother. His unfaithful wife Klytaimestra (Clytemnestra) teamed up with her lover Aigisthos to kill him when he came back from fighting the Trojan War. In...

Antilochos

Sometimes spelled Antilochus. One of Odysseus' war buddies, who he talks to in the Underworld. When alive, he was a good friend of Achilleus.

Little Aias

Sometimes spelled Ajax. A Greek who fought in the Trojan war, and also a total jerk who raped and killed a princess on Athene's altar. He's about to escape Athene's punishment, when he goes "wild...

Neoptolemos

Also known as Pyrrhus. Achilleus' son. Achilleus asks for him in the Underworld, and Odysseus responds with details of the boy's accomplishments in battles, etc., etc. A nice contrast to our whin...

Orestes

Agamemnon's son; he kills Klytaimestra and her lover Aigisthos as vengeance for his father's death. When the gods meet at the beginning of the Odyssey, first on the agenda is the murder and wheth...

Patroklos

Sometimes spelled Patroclus. One of the shades Odysseus sees in the Underworld. Patroklos was Achilleus' best friend. The Iliad tells us that after Trojan warrior Hektor killed Patroklos, Achilleu...

Telamonian Aias

Sometimes spelled Ajax. A Greek hero in the Trojan War whom Odysseus encounters in the Underworld. Aias killed himself after Odysseus was named a greater man than he, and still refuses to speak t...

Alkinoös

Sometimes spelled Alcinous. King of the Phaiakians, husband of Arete, father to Nausikaa. He's a super hospitable guy, who offers Odysseus passage home:this stranger, I do not know who he is, com...

Arete

Queen of the Phaiakians, wife to Alkinoös, and mother to Nausikaa. She's apparently the one who calls the shots in the marriage, since Nausikaa advises Odysseus to get on her good side: "Go on p...

Demodokos

Sometimes spelled Demodocus. This guy is the Phaiakians' blind bard, and he's traditionally been thought (without any real basis) to be a representation of Homer himself. He's a major reason that...

Euryalos

A Phaiakian who competes in the athletic contests held during Odysseus' stay. He teases Odysseus about not wanting to take part, leading Odysseus to bust out some top-notch discus-throwing.

Klytoneos

A Phaiakian prince, the son of Alkinoös and Arete. He wins the foot-race during the athletic games, before Odysseus starts flexing his muscles in everyone's face.

Laodamas

A Phaiakian prince, the son of Alkinoös and Arete. He wins the boxing match during the athletic games, before Odysseus beats everyone at everything. He challenges Odysseus in the games, saying t...

Nausikaa

Sometimes spelled Nausicaa. The Phaiakian princess, daughter of Alkinoös and Arete. Nausikaa finds Odysseus, and she who brings him to the palace (somewhat indirectly) to ask for help from the Q...

Antiphates

King of Lamos, the land of the not-so-human Laistrygones. He greets the Ithakans by attacking the first man he sees and drinking his blood. Sadly, his skin does not sparkle.

The Cyclopes

Sometimes spelled Kyklopes. The one-eyed monsters that the Ithakans encounter on their way home.For more on these guys, check out Shmoop's guide to the Cyclopes.

Helen

Menelaos' wife and instigator of the entire Trojan war. Although we don't hear about it in the Odyssey, her story would have been common knowledge among Homer's audience. Here's the deal: Helen w...

The Kikonians

Sometimes spelled the Cicones. The resident natives in Ismaros, where Odysseus first lands after leaving Troy. The Ithakans plunder them, because they can, and the Kikonians retaliate, also becau...

The Laistrygones

Sometimes spelled Laestrygonians. The scary and not-quite human folk that the Ithakans encounter in Lamos on the way home from Troy.

The Lotus Eaters

The Lotus Eaters are basically druggies. They (very innocently) give some of Odysseus' men some fruit to eat, and this is what happens:of them who ate the honey-sweet fruit of lotus was unwilling...

Menelaos

A King of Sparta and husband to Helen; he's the second man Telemachos visits in his search for Odysseus, and he's the one who confirms the boy's father is still alive and on Kalypso's island. Lik...

Polyphemos

(Click the character infographic to download.) Sometimes spelled Polyphemus. The specific one-eyed monster that the Ithakans encounter on their way home. Unfortunately for everyone involved, Poly...

Proteus

An island god we hear about in Menelaos' tale to Telemachos; he reveals to the King how to escape the island he's stuck on (namely, by traveling to Egypt and sacrificing to Zeus).

The Sirens

These are the dangerous ladies who lure men to their deaths with their voices. Odysseus becomes the first mortal to live to tell the tale, because he has his men tie him to the mast while they pl...

Skylla

Skylla (or Scylla) is a monster that Odysseus must pass with his men. Odysseus has been instructed not to try to fight the monster, but rather to row by as quickly as possible. Unfortunately, it...

Charybdis

(Click the character infographic to download.) Charybdis is one of the monsters Odysseus must pass with his men. Graphic image: Charybdis is a whirlpool that swallows the sea and vomits it back u...

Teiresias

Sometimes spelled Tiresias. The blind prophet whose help Odysseus seeks in the Underworld.For more on this guy, check out Shmoop's guide to Tiresias.

Aiolos

Sometimes spelled Aeolus, Eolus or Aeolos. God of the winds; he helps Odysseus and his men in Book X, before he realizes there is no hope for the Ithakans and sends them packing: "O least of livi...

Aphrodite

Goddess of love. In the land of the Phaiakians, the bard Demodokos sings a tale about Aphrodite cheating on her husband (Hephaistos) with the God of war (Ares); she is caught in the act, literall...

Ares

God of war who gets busy (and then caught) with Aphrodite. For more on this guy, check out Shmoop's guide to Ares.

Circe

(Click the character infographic to download.) The sorceress of the island Aiaia. She turns Odysseus' men into pigs, seduces him, and then finally sends them on their way with directions to the U...

Helios

God of the sun and master of some really awesome cattle that no one was allowed to touch, much less kill and eat. When Odysseus' men do just that, Helios demands revenge, basically by holding his...

Hephaistos

Sometimes spelled Hephæstos. Aphrodite's crippled blacksmith husband. Luckily, he married a beautiful goddess. Unluckily, she cheats.For more on this guy, check out Shmoop's guide to Hephaestus.

Hermes

The messenger of the Gods. He doesn't seem to have any real personality of his own, but he sure is Zeus' yes-man.For more on this guy, check out Shmoop's guide to Hermes.

Kalypso

(Click the character infographic to download.) Sometimes spelled Calypso. The goddess who holds Odysseus hostage for purposes of sex. On the one hand, she sure is hospitable: she invites Hermes t...

Poseidon

(Click the character infographic to download.) God of the sea, as well as an ever-angry and vengeful grudge-holder. He's the one who forces Odysseus to wander the sea for nearly twenty years, all...

Melampous

Sometimes spelled Melampus. This is another minor name in a major digression over yet another minor character. Let's see if we can identify some sort of relevance to our tale: In Book XV, Telemac...

Neleus

This guy is part of the digression regarding Theoklymenos, the hitchhiking fugitive seer that Telemachos picks up on his way back from Sparta. In the story, Neleus is the not-so-nice King that ex...

Peiraios

One of Telemachos' crewmen. When the Prince comes back to Ithaka at Athene's urging, Peiraios agrees to house Theoklymenos, the hitchhiking fugitive seer they picked up on the way. (More good hos...

Peisistratos

Sometimes spelled Peisistratus or Pisistratus. Nestor's son. He accompanies Telemachos to Sparta to see King Menelaos. Unlike Telemachos, he's super good at speaking in public. Check out the way...

Theoklymenos

Sometimes spelled Theoclymenus. The hitchhiker fugitive seer who grabs a ride with Telemachos on his way out of Sparta and conveniently prophesies good fortune for Telemachos: "Telemachos, not wi...

Autolykos

Sometimes spelled Autolycus. Odysseus' maternal grandfather. We only hear about him in a flashback; he's the one Odysseus was hunting with as a boy when he got the telltale scar on his thigh. Thi...

Antikleia

Odysseus' mother; he talks with her in the Underworld and discovers that she's killed herself from grief: "that was the reason I perished, nor in my palace did the lady of arrows, well-aiming, co...

Elpenor

Elpenor is the guy who wandered up to Circe's roof and fell to his death before the men departed. Odysseus talks to him in the underworld, where Elpenor asks for a proper burial: "I ask that you...

Eurylochos

Eurylochos is one of Odysseus' companions. He's a cautious man, refusing to enter Circe's hall even when accompanied by armed men—until he's not cautious at all, like when he convinces everyone...

Laertes

Odysseus' father. For some reason, he seems to live in a shack at the outskirts of Ithaka, although he also apparently has a nice farm. Mostly, he mourns for Odysseus and then for Telemachos. As...

Aigyptios

An Ithakan lord present at Telemachos' meeting in Book II.

Antiphos

Sometimes spelled Antiphus. One of the Ithakan men. He remains loyal to Odysseus; Telemachos consults with him among others in Book XVII.

Eupeithes

Antinoös' father. We meet him post-slaughter, while he's looking for a little vengeful slaughter action himself—against Odysseus and Telemachos.

Halitherses

An Ithakan augur and loyal to Odysseus. In Book II, he interprets the two vicious eagles as a sign that Odysseus is coming home soon.

Iros

Sometimes spelled Irus. Also known as Arnaeus. The real beggar of the palace in Ithaka. He gets territorial when a new beggar (who we know to be Odysseus in disguise) starts poking around his tur...

Mentes

Athene first takes the disguise of this man, friend of Odysseus and ruler of the Taphians, when she comes to Ithaka to council Telemachos

Mentor

Mentor can be confusing in the Odyssey since the name either refers to Mentor, the elderly Ithakan, or Mentor, Athene in yet another guise. (Imagine how much easier everyone's life would be if th...

Noemon

A wealthy ship-seller in Ithaka. Athene obtains a ship for Telemachos from him, and then he accidentally spills the beans to the suitors.

Argos

Odysseus' loyal dog. When his master return homes after nearly twenty years, Argos recognizes him, rejoices, and dies. If you think Penelope had to wait a long time to see Odysseus again, try thi...

Eurykleia

Odysseus' nurse when he was a little boy. She's still around in the palace working as a servant (and trying to keep Telemachos from running off) when Odysseus returns and she recognizes her maste...

Maron

The keeper of Apollo's groves at Ismaros; he provides the Ithakans with wine.

Melantho

Melantho is a palace servant who's loyal to the suitors rather than the Queen, if you know what we mean. And she gets hanged, obviously, because that's apparently the most humiliating way to die.

Melanthios

Sometimes spelled Melanthius. The Ithakan goatherd. Unlike many of the other, loyal servants we meet, Melanthios sides with the suitors and insults beggar Odysseus. On the one hand, he arms the s...

Medon

The town crier of Ithaka. He's called out as one of the men loyal to Odysseus, so he accordingly isn't slaughtered along with everyone else in sight.

Phemios

Sometimes spelled Phemius. The resident bard in Ithaka. We first meet him as he saddens Penelope by singing of the Trojan war. Later, he is spared from the slaughter because he has been loyal to...

Philoitios

A cowherd in Ithaka and one of the servants who remain loyal to Odysseus. He fights on Odysseus' side against the suitors during the slaughter.