How to combine Greek Mythology, modern technology and English writing skills in one blog post!

MasterKAF has been working on a great article as part of his Classics studies on Ancient Greece. We spent time researching the myth of the Trojan horse and being as he loves all things tech, it was not long before we were making comparisons with the modern-day variety. We decided to use a “Compare and Contrast” framework from Teachit English, a really good resource for literacy and creative writing lesson plans. Here is the final article.

The meaning of the Trojan Horse, then and now. Discuss.

The legend of the Trojan Horse, told in the Iliad, by the Greek poet Homer gives an account of the war between the Mycenaeans and Troy (in modern Turkey). Iliad technically means “Troy Story” in modern English, no need to thank us for that pun, thank this particular video from Overly Sarcastic Productions instead!  After 10 years of fighting, Agamemnon’s army finally defeated Troy by trickery. Greek soldiers hid inside a wooden horse, which was given as a gift by the “defeated Greeks” and towed into the city by the triumphant Trojans. At nightfall, the Greeks emerged to capture the city. Today a Trojan Horse is usually a digital construct designed to look normal and harmless, it’s often disguised as legitimate software so it can easily infiltrate computers, often private computers. Here are some further contrasts and comparisons between the ancient and the modern.

The horse was made of wood and contained soldiers. The horse would have been very large and everyone could see it plainly. Modern Trojan horses whereas, are not on a physical plain and are often designed to not be large and obvious and do not contain soldiers obviously!

There are at least nineteen different general types of modern Trojan malware, while there was only one Trojan horse in history. 

Users are typically tricked by some form of social engineering into loading and executing modern Trojans on to their computer systems. Similarly, the residents of Troy were tricked to letting the Trojan horse in but not directly interacting with it. If they had the plan would have failed. 

Trojan-Spy is another type of Trojan which can spy on your computer.  Yet, in the myth of the Trojan horse, the Greeks did not spy in any way, but it did let an army sneak passed the defences of Troy.

There was a Trojan-like programme called Zeus first identified in 2007, often used to steal banking information. By 2009 it had been used to compromise 74000 FTP accounts on websites like The Bank of America, NASA, Play.com, Oracle and Amazon. Whereas, in actual Greek mythology Zeus (called Jupiter by the Romans) was the king of the gods.

A type of Trojan called “Backdoor” gives malicious users total remote control over the computer allowing them to do anything they want. It can unite a group of computers into a botnet or zombie network.  This compares quite well with the original Trojan horse since it has a similar purpose. Although it would not literally result in the opening of a gate it would periodically disable the firewall to allow other malicious software in. 

More often than not, in modern times when referring to the term “Trojan Horse” (especially digitally) it does not compare with the ancient Greek mythos

How Ragnarok is similar to the Christian Creation Story – discuss.

On our walk to the park on Tuesday, MasterKAF and MrsDTB got chatting about Norse Mythology. MasterKAF came up with a theory that Ragnarok ( the end of days story in Norse mythology) leads into the Christian Creation Story. MrsDTB asked him why and this is what he came up with.

For:
2 surviving humans after the events of Ragnarok although they don’t have the same names as in the Bible
There is a serpent in both stories, the Norse snake is called Jormungand. thankfully he gets slain dramatically by Thor. Sadly, Thor is killed by the exhaustion of the whole fight with a snake who is large enough to wrap around the whole world so MasterK says “you’d be tired too!”
Odin’s immortal warriors are known as the Einherjar. Those who survive Ragnarok may be the first group of angels along with any Valkyrie. There might also be some warriors who fought for Freya in Midgard included in the choir.

Against:
The 7 days part from the Bible does not appear in the Ragnorok tale.

Who knew that there is a ship made from toenails and finger nails in Norse Mythology?

MrsDTB didn’t for one and thus got the shock of her life when MasterKAF announced this over breakfast this morning! MasterKAF is currently reading Magnus Chase and the Ship of The Dead by Rick Riordan.

http://rickriordan.com/book/the-ship-of-the-dead/

This made MrsDTB feel a little queasy but also inquisitive to find out more as we had watched Thor: Ragnarok the day before. It got us to thinking how accurate both the Marvel films and the Rick Riordan books are, when compared with other records of Norse Mythology.

The Magnus Chase book is called The Ship of the Dead. Here is a quick synopsis from the Penguin Randomhouse website:

” Magnus Chase, a once-homeless teen, is a resident of the Hotel Valhalla and one of Odin’s chosen warriors. As the son of Frey, the god of summer, fertility, and health, Magnus isn’t naturally inclined to fighting. But he has strong and steadfast friends, including Hearthstone the elf, Blitzen the dwarf, and Samirah the Valkyrie, and together they have achieved brave deeds, such as defeating Fenris Wolf and battling giants for Thor’s hammer, Mjolnir. Now Magnus faces his most dangerous trial yet. 

Loki is free from his chains. He’s readying Naglfar, the Ship of the Dead, complete with a host of giants and zombies, to sail against the Asgardian gods and begin the final battle of Ragnarok. It’s up to Magnus and his friends to stop him, but to do so they will have to sail across the oceans of Midgard, Jotunheim, and Niflheim in a desperate race to reach Naglfar before it’s ready to sail. Along the way, they will face angry sea gods, hostile giants, and an evil fire-breathing dragon. But Magnus’s biggest challenge will be facing his own inner demons. Does he have what it takes to outwit the wily trickster god?”

MasterKAF did some further research on Naglfar which is thought to mean Ship of Nails but some call it the Ship of The Damned. It turns out that the etymology of Naglfar has long been a point of discussion and certainly the fact that Riordan refers to both The Ship of Nails and The Ship of The Dead supports this.

MasterKAF also watched an episode or two from Overly Sarcastic Productions which is a really useful and funny YouTube source of information that provides “…summaries of classic and not-so-classic literature and mythology, as well as major historical events!”

Its fair to say that this is not our last post on the topic as we have barely scratched the surface, so keep checking back for more updates.