There is a certain criteria that all Greek heroes must fit to truly be considered a hero. There are multiple heroes in Greek mythology, some heroic, some strong, and some extremely intelligent. Odysseus was a very knowledgeable hero, known for his skill in escaping the wrath of Poseidon with his many strategies. Odysseus may not have died a histrionic death, but he had a fatal flaw, suffered physically as well as mentally, was of royal birth, accomplished major feats, and fought for himself. He had many adventures like many other Greek heroes and slaughtered horrifying monsters to return home to his wife, Penelope, and son, Telemachus. His fatal flaw was the grudge that Poseidon held against him, this caused Odysseus to be away from home for 20 years. …show more content…
Ithaca was the island in which he ruled over, and where his wife and child stayed during his absence. Like the hero Heracles, Odysseus conquered many monsters and accomplished many feats, such as killing the cyclops, Polyphemus, creating the Trojan horse, and escaping Scylla and Charybdis, the monsters that prevented him from getting through an abyss (they are also the myths that created the saying “in between a rock and a hard place”). He also fought to return home after he was forced to join in the Trojan War, and acted insane when a leader in the war came to accompany him on a boat to the war by acting like he was going to run his newborn child, Telemachus, over with a plow (unfortunately, that strategy didn’t work). Odysseus was a clever, perspicacious hero unlike other supposed heroes like Daedalus and Icarus who were the embodiment of hubris, and he had many adventures and difficulties like that of