The Ancients - Cassandra: Priestess of Troy

Episode Date: April 13, 2025

*This episode discusses sexual assault*Cursed by Apollo to always speak the truth but never be believed; what makes Cassandra's story so timeless and compelling?Tristan Hughes is joined by Dr Emily Ha...user to explore the mythological and historical connections of Cassandra, the tragic prophetess of Troy. They discuss how Cassandra's story and appalling treatment at the hands of both gods and men intertwined with themes of prophecy, tragedy, and misogyny, has fascinated generations. From Agamemnon, the Iliad and Clytemnestra, Tristan and Emily discuss Cassandra's role in ancient texts and possible real-life inspirations.Hear related episodes:Elektra:https://open.spotify.com/episode/3K3WyCkTIA4X8PxTgNC3KyTroy:https://open.spotify.com/episode/3K3WyCkTIA4X8PxTgNC3KyPresented by Tristan Hughes. Produced and edited by Joseph Knight. The senior producer is Anne-Marie Luff.All music courtesy of Epidemic SoundsThe Ancients is a History Hit podcast.Sign up to History Hit for hundreds of hours of original documentaries, with a new release every week and ad-free podcasts. Sign up at https://www.historyhit.com/subscribe. You can take part in our listener survey here: https://insights.historyhit.com/history-hit-podcast-always-on

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hi, I'm Tristan Hughes, and if you would like the ancient ad-free, get early access and bonus episodes, sign up to History Hit. With a History Hit subscription, you can also watch hundreds of hours of original documentaries, including my recent documentary all about Petra and the Nabataeans, and enjoy a new release every week. Sign up now by visiting HistoryHit.com slash subscribe. We all have that one friend whose opinion we trust on everything. For 63% of podcast listeners, that friend is their favorite podcast host.
Starting point is 00:00:32 When Acast's podcasters endorse a brand, their audience listens and takes action. So if you want a recommendation that really sticks, put your brand in their hands. Book a HostRed sponsorship today by visiting go.acast.com. It's the entrance on History Hit. I'm Tristan Hughes your host. Today we're returning to ancient Greek mythology and one of the most well known women from the Trojan War,
Starting point is 00:01:14 Cassandra the beautiful princess and tragic prophetess of Troy. Cassandra is remembered for foretelling the fall of Troy, but she was cursed by the god Apollo so that her prophecies would never be believed. The Trojan Princess Cassandra is almost certainly fictional, however the context of her character, this Bronze Age princess who is also a priestess, well that's where things get more interesting. Joining me to talk through Cassandra's story and the fascinating archaeological links to it, I was delighted to interview Dr Emily Hauser from the University of Exeter. Emily has just released a brand new book, Mythica, that explores the real women behind the myths of Greek mythology, including the story of Cassandra.
Starting point is 00:01:57 Emily, it is a pleasure to have you on the podcast today. Thank you so much for having me, Tristan. I'm delighted to be here. And it's always fun talking about Greek mythology and this particular figure that we're going to be focusing in on, Cassandra from the Trojan War. But I mean, Homer and his epics, the Iliad and the Odyssey, Emily, the characters and the stories of these epics and the names that people come back to again and again, aren't they? Not just the men, but the women too. They absolutely are. I think this is what is one of the most fascinating things about Homer is that staying power of the myths that they transmit towards us, the kind of resonances that they have across time, across history. And you can be reading these
Starting point is 00:02:37 epics and it's like opening up a time capsule onto the past. And yet at the same time, in a lot of ways, they feel utterly new each time you read them. So to me, that's one of the things that is just so exciting about them that they can speak to an ancient world and ancient history that sometimes feels so foreign and so different. But at the same time, it's talking about things that we've all experienced. Loss, grief, love, homecoming, all these kinds of big themes that we as humans experience and go through. Masonry It's interesting, Emily. All of these characters,
Starting point is 00:03:10 they have flaws. They're not people that you'd want to aspire to be. But do you think that fact that they're not flawless is one of the reasons that we always go back to them? Emily I think it's certainly one of the reasons. I think that particularly when it comes to the women, the Homeric epics do such a brilliant job of kind of meshing complexity into their characterization in a way that, you know, Helen of Troy, just to give kind of the most famous example, has so often been flattened throughout her reception history. And when I say reception, that basically just means the afterlife of the character when artists and writers have taken her and done something with her. She often gets flattened to this kind of two-dimensional face, right? The face
Starting point is 00:03:53 that launched a thousand ships, famously in Christopher Marlowe's phrase. But what Homer does so brilliantly is actually he makes these characters so three-dimensional and investigates, even in the cases of the women who get very little airtime, but still investigates how nuanced and complicated they are. So Helen is throughout the Iliad, she's discussing whether she's to blame for the war or not. She's pushing back against Aphrodite who's telling her to go and have sex with Paris. And she says, basically, if you want to have sex with Paris so much, go and do it yourself, which I think is such a good comeback. So they're really feisty, they're really led, and I think that's what makes them really
Starting point is 00:04:31 relevant now. Mason. And with Homer's epics, how many different women feature in Homer's epics in his version of the Trojan War and the Odyssey? Stesha Well, this is the interesting thing. And I should probably just add a brief qualification here in that when we are saying Homer, we are using this kind of as a placeholder for this big poetic tradition, right? Because in fact, while the ancients believed that Homer was a real poet from a particular time, it now seems through kind of decades of research that actually
Starting point is 00:05:00 this was a tradition of oral poetry handed down over the centuries and then kind of became crystallized as a fixed text. But we'll say Homer for sure as that kind of placeholder. But yes, the Homeric epics as kind of we have them now, they have a difference between the two, between the Iliad, which is the epic of war around the Trojan War, around Achilles, and then the the Odyssey which is the epic of homecoming and Odysseus and his voyage home. And in the Iliad we don't get that many women, perhaps unsurprisingly because we're looking at the battlefield, we're looking at Achilles' wrath, we're looking at duels and kind of the final standoff between Hector and Achilles. But we get women sort of
Starting point is 00:05:41 behind the walls in the margins. In the Odyssey it's quite different. Women are foregrounded a lot more. That's for a couple of different reasons. One reason is because much of the Odyssey is taken up with Odysseus' voyage. And on his voyage, famously, he meets these kind of sex goddesses, witches, monsters, all of whom are feminized and very interesting from- Are these figures like Cersei and Calypso these names? Well-known names. They are exactly, exactly Cersei, Calypso, the Sirens, we've got Scylla and Charybdis, this monster and Whirlpool, both of them are feminine. Everything is feminized on Odysseus' return in both the kind of fantastical and the monstrous.
Starting point is 00:06:21 And that's really interesting to do something with. And then of course, we've got Odysseus coming home to Ithaca and Penelope waiting for him there. And so we get that insight into Penelope. But what's really interesting is that in the 19th century, an English critic, Samuel Butler, actually thought there were so many women in the Odyssey and it was so feminine that it must have been written by a woman. And there's interesting ways in which like actually we can unpack that and see that there are problems with that assumption. There are women in there, therefore it must be by a woman. But I just wanted to say that there are very different ways that the Iliad
Starting point is 00:06:54 and the Odyssey are working around women and people have been really interested in that over the years. I mean, given almost the timeless nature of the texts, of the poems, and they've endured down to the present day, do you think this has influenced the way that women have been written about throughout history given the fact that the Iliad and the Odyssey, the story has always been there? Absolutely, that's such a great question, Tristan. I think this really gets into the heart of why I study and write about Homer and why I think it needs to be done in a kind of public platform because Homer lies at the heart of so many discussions around gender in ways that perhaps
Starting point is 00:07:31 people don't even realise. So the Homeric epics stand at the very beginning of Greek literature. They were the first written poetry, the first things to be written down in the Greek alphabet. And as such, they stand at the head of the Western canon and have been accepted as such. They trickled through medieval manuscripts. They went into kind of the education system in Victorian education, in Britain in particular, they were at the kind of forefront of what every public school boy was being educated in. And in doing that, they have shaped the norms of gender. Now, obviously I've said already and we have said that they are preoccupied with what it means to be a man. So they have
Starting point is 00:08:14 shaped ideas, not just around women, but also around the primacy of men and the fact that histories and stories are to be told about men. So there's this really great phrase that the Homeric epics use to describe their subject matter. And in the Greek, in the ancient Greek, it's kleia andron, which means the glories of men. But kleia, glory, literally means the things that are heard. So I mentioned that this is oral poetry. So this is the oral poetry that tells the glorious deeds of men that transmits them across the generations. So that mechanism that has preserved Homer, that has made Homer important, has also at the same time, by the same measure, told us that stories and histories and epics and texts and myths need to be about men.
Starting point is 00:09:06 Toby So hence why I'm guessing for yourself and many other brilliant authors at this time in history now want to kind of balance that out a bit by also promoting the women in the story too. Yes, the stories of Achilles and Ajax and Hector are extraordinary and should keep being told, but also the women too like Cassandra that their story should also be heard. Exactly right. And I'd go further, Matt, because I would also say that looking at the women's stories and seeing them anew, giving them voice, enables us also to read the men's stories in different ways. So I'll just give you an example. The Iliad begins with, as I've mentioned, the wrath of Achilles. The word in Greek is mernes, it means like divine anger. He's the son of
Starting point is 00:09:50 a goddess, so he is capable of divine anger. And the reason he's angry is because his captive enslaved woman, Briseis, has been taken from him by Agamemnon, the king of the Greeks. Now he's angry about this, not just because he's attached to her, although actually he does later say he does have a kind of emotional attachment to her, but he's mostly angry because in this kind of economy of Homeric warfare, women represent honor.
Starting point is 00:10:18 The more enslaved captive women you have, the more honor you have. So when he loses his enslaved woman, he loses his honor. Most scholars, most readers of the epic look at the epic as the arc of Achilles' anger, Achilles' withdrawal from the war because he's annoyed that he has lost this honor. But when you turn it on its head and you realize that actually his honor is predicated on the capture, the enslavement and the rape of women. It makes you see his heroism in quotation marks there in a very different light. There are costs to this heroism and I think this is a cost
Starting point is 00:10:59 that has not been talked about enough. Very much so and it's really interesting. It's interesting, you almost have those pairs Achilles, Briseis, Hector and Dromache. Cassandra, maybe, and King Prime, I don't know, maybe that's a bit too much of a stretch, but once again you can almost link a couple of them together to understand further their characters. That's a really great point. I think that Homer does that deliberately and consciously. One reason why, and again I say consciously, I guess I'm talking about the framing of the poetic tradition here, but I think one reason why is that the gender binary is very
Starting point is 00:11:30 much at play in the Homeric epics and is exploited for really interesting reasons. But one of the best examples of this kind of binary being played out is again in the Iliad and in the sixth book where Hector and Andromache meet at the walls of Troy. And it's just, it's my favorite moment in either of the epics because you get this clash between two worlds and these two people, this husband and wife who just cannot understand each other. They just talk past each other because she is trying to say, you know, look at your infant son. She's holding him in her arms, you know, look at your people, look at your city, defend his name, Hector in Greek means holder, defender. So she says, do what your name is, do defend. And he says, I can't, he's trapped in the masculine imperative
Starting point is 00:12:18 of glory. And he says, I would get shame from my people, from the women and the men, if I didn't also go out to war, you know? And so it's just such an amazing moment of this clash of these worlds that they just talk past each other. And I think Homa is so interested in that, but I'll also pick up what you said about Cassandra, because I wonder if Cassandra is an interesting example of not having a pair. Perhaps if we did give her a pair, it might be Apollo, but I feel like Cassandra, she stands alone in a way that other women don't.
Starting point is 00:12:51 And that is precisely because she is kind of defined by her desire for virginity and her desire to stand outside the mechanisms of war through her connection to prophecy and priesthood. She is an other and a part character. Toby This then feels the perfect time to now focus in on Cassandra. So, Emily, as you've hinted at there, Homer's epic, the Iliad, it doesn't cover the entire Trojan War, has that particular focus with Achilles versus Hector, Andromache and the likes.
Starting point is 00:13:23 So how big a role does Cassandra play in the Iliad? I mean, how does she fit into the story? Well, it's really interesting because Cassandra has such a big name in the later tradition of the Trojan War. So what happens is the Homeric epics, as I said, the kind of font of Western literature, and they become canonical even in their own time. They get passed down, they get received and those myths, those stories get readapted, particularly in Greek tragedy. And the tragedians are really interested in Cassandra. They are interested in this idea of her as a prophet who was essentially cursed by Apollo because Apollo wanted to
Starting point is 00:14:08 have sex with her. She refused him and as such, he then cursed her with the fact that anything that she said, she would tell the truth and she wouldn't be believed. And the tragedians, the dramatists of Athens, they are really interested in this. So we have Euripides, Agamemnon telling that kind of story. Homer is not interested in that. So interestingly in Homer, she's not a prophet. There's no story about her prophecy of the fall of Troy. There's no story about Apollo's attempt to rape her. All we get is a couple of mentions of her. So we get her twice in the Iliad. She's mentioned as a bride. She's mentioned as being beautiful. That's kind of all we get. She's called the loveliest of all of Priam's daughters. We then get her at the moment
Starting point is 00:14:57 where Hector's body is brought back into Troy. So this is after the duel between Achilles and Hector. Hector has been killed by Achilles and Cassandra stands on the walls of Troy and she is the first one to see Hector come home. So there is perhaps a hint of her prophetic kind of ability there, but we don't see more than that. And then in the Odyssey, we only hear about her as having died. So what happens in the myth of Cassandra is that after the fall of Troy, she is raped by Ajax of Locris and that rape initiates a whole series of curses against the Greeks, which is really interesting. I know that in your book you very much, big emphasis on exploring the real figures behind
Starting point is 00:15:42 these women of Greek myth. I know it's difficult, but given that there is always that argument about the Trojan War having a basis of historicity in it about an actual Trojan War, do you think there's a possibility that Cassandra, as this beautiful princess of Troy, could have been based on an actual figure? Yeah, oh, yeah, this is where I kind of really start getting interested because yes, is the short answer. So you mentioned briefly about the kind of debate around the historicity of Troy. Essentially, the kind of short version of this story is that in the late 19th century, a city in the location where ancient legendary Troy was meant to have lain, it was discovered by this kind of Homer-obsessed German banker called Heinrich Schliemann. And we do think that that historical city
Starting point is 00:16:32 is the same as the legendary city, was the city that was being talked about in these myths. There are these amazing crossovers and overlaps between them. And I'll just give you one of the examples that kind of shakes me to my core. So the ancients were amazingly good at kind of astronomy, date calculation, and there was a geographer from the Hellenistic period. So this is kind of later on into Greek history called Eratosthenes. And he gave a date for the Trojan War. They all believed that this was a historical event and he dated it at 1184 BCE. Now wait for it. The archaeologists who had uncovered Troy, so we've got Schliemann, we've then got a series of
Starting point is 00:17:12 other archaeologists and they're all excavating, they're all debating about kind of what lair is the lair that we could attribute to like legendary Troy, Homer's Troy. And eventually in the last few decades, pottery experts have looked at the kind of pottery which is for archaeologists an amazing clue for dating because you can look at styles, you can match between sites, you can use that to date. And pottery experts have dated the fall of Troy that we think is the legendary Troy to 1190 to 1180 BCE. There is exactly the same decade as Eratosthenes said it was. And I feel like it's these kinds of overlaps that make us need to take this seriously as a possibility that this was a real Troy, there was a real Trojan war, perhaps not in the way that Homer talks about it, right? This is myth, this
Starting point is 00:18:04 is legend, it's been kind of stirred up in the cauldron of myth and turned into fantasy, but there is a historical basis. And for women, that is so interesting because for women that means that then, okay, we have this one line about Cassandra, the loveliest of all of Priam's daughters, but we can find her because there is the history behind it. I think what's really interesting is that it's so easy to jump into Cassandra as a Greek figure. It's what Homer does. In Homer, she speaks Greek. The later Greek Trinidians are writing about her in Greek, but she is Trojan in the myth. So actually, if we're trying to find the historical Cassandra, and this is a lot of what I'm doing in Mythica, I'm saying let's actually put Homer back a little bit and let's talk about
Starting point is 00:18:50 the history first. And the historical women who would have been prototypes for a priestess, a princess like Cassandra, they would have been Anatolian women. So Anatolia is what we now broadly call modern Turkey. And that landmass at the time of the kind of what we might call the historical Trojan War, that was largely taken up by the Hittite Empire. And the Hittite Empire was this amazing kind of late Bronze Age civilization. And we have evidence from them, from tablets that were discovered in their capital city, Hattusha, of real princesses, real female prophets, dream oracles, female interpreters. They have an incredibly important role in this civilisation in prophecy and in the
Starting point is 00:19:39 interpretation of omens. And I think we can see Cassandra there. Toby So that influence, the evolution in the story of Cassandra as a prophet may well have been taken from this historical evidence that royal princesses did dabble in prophecy or prophecy was part of their almost job description that you have in this Bronze Age civilisation that coexisted alongside the time of the historical Troy. Exactly. It's actually a very hit idea to combine priesthood and princesshood. That's not something that you see in Greece. I think that this is something that is coming through from this other civilisation. Which is fascinating, right? That all of these elements are trickling down and actually the women can be a great route back to this real history.
Starting point is 00:20:23 So when does that get relayed into the Greek literature following Homer? That starts to really highlight Cassandra as a prophet, as a priestess. Because I have in my notes the Kypria, but I don't know if that's before or after the tragedians that we've already mentioned. Cassandra. So you mentioned the Kypria. Sometimes people will have heard of it maybe as the Cypria. Sometimes it's said with a soft C. In Greek, it's from Kupros, Kuprias, so it would be with that hard K. But this is what I like to call, I kind of describe these epics as part of a box set of sung poems. So if you think of like the Marvel Universe, that's what epics were. So you have the Iliad and the Odyssey, those were two of them.
Starting point is 00:21:04 But then you've got loads other, you've got the sack of Troy, the Iliop and the Odyssey, those were two of them, but then you've got loads other, you've got the sack of Troy, the Iliopersis, it's called in Greek, you've got the Kipria, you've got the little Iliad. So you've got all of these different epics and we know that they existed, they just weren't written down. The Iliad and the Odyssey were the only ones that got written down. So it's a tragedy for us because it would have been amazing to have these other epics. It also I think has had the effect of inflating the Iliad and Odyssey in a way that interestingly at their time they were just one of a pool of traditional epics around the Trojan War legend. But the Kipriaya in any case is a fascinating epic. We know
Starting point is 00:21:45 a little bit about it because later historians kind of summarise it for us. So even though we don't have it, we get a summary. And Cassandra is mentioned in there. And in that epic, that's where we would have had the sort of the tale that I mentioned of Cassandra being kind of approached by Apollo, the attempted rape, her saying no, his punishment, which is that curse that she will tell the truth and never be believed. That is really what the tragedians then latch onto. That for us is really important evidence for this myth from this ancient epic. Will Barron Emily, I didn't realise that.
Starting point is 00:22:20 I love that analogy of the box set, by the way. It really makes it easy. The Iliad and the Odyssey are like Captain America and Thor, and then you've got Kipriya's WandaVision or something realise that. I love that analogy of the box set, by the way. It really makes it easy. The Iliad and the Odyssey are like Captain America and Thor, and then you've got Kiprior as one division, or something like that. As you say, they're all part of that universe. But it's interesting. Initially, in my thoughts, I'd thought that the Kiprior then came later. What you're saying, actually, it's created at a similar time to the Iliad and the Odyssey. It's just lesser known because they have stolen the limel, because those are the two that have been written down. But you still have surviving extracts from it to know what was said, or epitomes, I guess.
Starting point is 00:22:50 We have epitomes, we have little extracts, just little bits, so just fragments that survive quoted in other authors. But yeah, nothing to the extent of the Iliad and Odyssey, which are for all intents and purposes complete epics. So yeah, the way of thinking about it is to think of these as songs that were passed down from probably as early as the 14th century BCE, and they were a huge number of these different songs. And in fact, it wasn't like the Iliad and the Odyssey existed in the 14th century BCE, and then were just being like memorized and passed on. Every bard would have their own version of it. So we basically have just like one version of one poem amongst a huge pool of all of these different bardic traditions.
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Starting point is 00:24:22 And so which particular plays are we talking about that mention Cassandra in them and what are they about? Essentially, we've got some main ones and then some that are on the side. So the main tragedies that we're probably going to be talking about are Aeschylus' Agamemnon, which tells the story of Agamemnon's homecoming that was first premiered in 458 BCE. And then we've got Euripides' Trojan Women and that is from 415 BCE. And then we've got some other ones. Again, this is kind of a recurring theme of classical literature, a lot of lost literature. So we have a lost Alexander that was also by Euripides, which we don't know much about,
Starting point is 00:25:03 but we can kind of piece things together from images that are painted on vases and that. And who's Alexander meant to be? So Alexander, oh, this is a great one. Okay. This is going to take us back to the historicity of Troy. So Alexander is an alternative name in Greek epic in Homer for Paris, the Prince of Troy, who was the one who abducted Helen. And what is so cool about this, I will
Starting point is 00:25:25 just digress because this is like one of my kind of favourite points of overlap between epic and history. We have, again, this is from Hattusia, from the Hittite capital. Remember, we're back in Anatolia. This is this late Bronze Age history. And we have a tablet of a treaty that was signed between the Hittite king and the king of a city called Wielusa. Now, the Iliad, you might wonder why it's called the Iliad, it's called that because the Greek name for Troy was Ilios. But in front of it, there used to be a letter that later dropped out of Greek called the digamma, which was pronounced w. So it used to be pronounced willios. So willios we think was Willusa. And this treaty between the Cittite king and the king of Willusa we think was actually with the historical king of Troy. But it gets even cooler because that king has a name. His name is Alexandru. And we think that might be remembered in Alexandros of Ilios, which is Paris of Troy, which is
Starting point is 00:26:31 Alexandru of Wollosa. Wow. Okay, there you go. That was brilliant. And it was going to say that. I love that kind of historicity and that myth combining to tell stories like this. Well, let's go back to the story of Cassandra. You've highlighted those key sources we have for that, which give more to the character of Cassandra built
Starting point is 00:26:48 upon from Homer. So what do these sources, what do they reveal about how Cassandra fares during the Trojan War? What are her main prophecies, the main acts in which she features before the ultimate fall of Troy? It's so interesting because we've got that gap in the Iliad, right? We've got that gap of her just being this kind of bride waiting to get married and then her just kind of spotting Hector from the walls. But what the tragedies do is they give us Cassandra embroiled in the Trojan War legend. So maybe one of the first places that we see her chronologically in her story is when Hecuba, her mother, queen of Troy, has a dream while she is pregnant with Paris. That's Paris we've been talking
Starting point is 00:27:31 about, the one who abducted Helen of Sparta and Hecuba dreams of giving birth to a torch of fire, a firebrand. And Cassandra is the one who says this predicts the fall of Troy in flames. Of course, nobody believes her. We then get the next kind of step of this unfolding tragedy. You can see why the tragedians love this because it is like that ultimate feeling of inevitable tragedy coming. Paris gets exiled because they are afraid that this prophecy might come true, but then he's brought back from exile. And again, Cassandra says, you shouldn't be doing this. This will be the destruction of the city. And then kind of the final bit before Taurius act is that as the wooden horse is
Starting point is 00:28:12 being dragged into Troy, that is Odysseus' stratagem to get the Greeks in through the gates, as it's being dragged into Troy, the Trojans are dancing around it. They're chanting, they are clothing the temples, they are rejoicing that they've won the war, and Cassandra is the only one who is shouting the truth. Mason- Interesting. So Cassandra is closely entwined with arguably one of the most famous images from the Trojan War today, the Trojan Whore story. She is that lone voice, like, don't do this, don't bring it in. You're absolutely nutters for doing this, but as you say, part of her fate, no one listens to her.
Starting point is 00:28:45 Absolutely. And I think that, you know, I mean, we can talk about this later, but there is a real kind of broader theme here to be talked about women's voices and the power of women's speech and the danger of kind of not listening. I think this is a real theme in Cassandra. And obviously, the Trojedians are really interested in that too. So, evidently, they bring the Trojan horse in, and Troy does fall. And Cassandra being a princess, what happens to her? How is she affected? What are the stories surrounding her when Troy ultimately falls and the Greeks start pillaging, looting, searching for war booty, which can be in the form of high-ranking women. And that's exactly what the Greeks do. As I had mentioned, the economy of war in the
Starting point is 00:29:28 Iliad is centred around the idea of booty ranging from tripods, which are basically kind of glorified, casserole-ish stands, all the way to women. And those are itemised in the same way in the epic. So there is a single word, geras, which means like a prize of honour and that can apply to either of those objects to women. And if you're thinking about this in this way of women equals honour, you can see how a higher status woman will mean more honour. So the real danger for the women of Troy when Troy is sacked is that all of them, the high ranking ones particularly, are going to be enslaved by the Greeks and they're going to be taken back to Greece. That is their fate. And Cassandra is one of those. So, Cassandra
Starting point is 00:30:16 gets picked by Agamemnon. We've got other examples. So, we mentioned Andromache already. Andromache, the wife of Hector, she gets taken by Neoptolomus, who is Achilles' son. Hecuba gets taken by Odysseus. So the Greeks parcel out the Trojan royal family and Cassandra is one of those. So given that the earlier description of Cassandra is the most beautiful of Priam's daughters, I guess you can understand why the leader of the Greek army, Agamemnon, goes for Cassandra compared to another because perhaps she was seen as the most valuable, you know, as kind of the leading princess of the Greek army, Agamemnon, goes for Cassandra compared to another because perhaps she was seen as the most valuable, you know, as kind of the leading princess
Starting point is 00:30:48 of the city. Absolutely. So the way that Homeric thought kind of articulates value, particularly value of women, is around two axes. One is beauty and the other is skill, skill in particularly weaving. And you see this again and again, there's one particular example where Agamemnon himself demonstrates that this is how he's thinking about women. This is when at the very beginning of the Iliad, he is forced to give up his enslaved woman, Criseas, which by the way is why he takes Achilles' woman Criseas. And he says, I don't want to give her up. And he gives a list of her qualities, basically like a shopping list.
Starting point is 00:31:27 Like she's beautiful, she's tall and she's good at weaving. And he essentially itemises what he's looking for in an enslaved woman. So you're absolutely right. Cassandra as a princess, as a beautiful young woman is definitely in the firing line. Now, we must highlight as horrific as it, that other part of the story that affects Cassandra at this moment of time, because it feels important to the events of the myth at this particular moment of what happens next. What is this infamous fate that befalls Cassandra before she's taken away by Agamemnon?
Starting point is 00:31:59 During the Sack of Troy, Cassandra is clinging for safety to the statue of Athena, who ironically is the patron goddess of Troy in Homer. And that's ironic, obviously, because she's a Greek goddess. But she's clinging to Athena's statue in her temple. And nevertheless, she is raped by Ajax. Now, I mentioned earlier, this is Ajax of Locris, he sometimes calls, sometimes also called the Lesser Ajax. That's because there are actually two Ajaxes in the Greek army. The better known one, who is the one who tries to get Achilles armor after the war and then eventually ends up killing himself. That's Ajax of Salamis. But we're talking about Ajax of Locris and he rapes Cassandra. It is a terrible moment. It's sort of one of those climactic moments
Starting point is 00:32:46 of horror in The Fall of Troy. The other climactic moment I'd say is when they throw Hector's young son off the walls. Also kind of just, it shows the Greek hubris, the level of horror that they are descending to. And Athena responds to this, the goddess Athena responds to this. It's important to note that she's not actually responding to the rape of a woman. She is not troubled by that. She is troubled by the desecration of her temple. But nevertheless, what Athena does is she gets her own wrath, essentially like a counterpart to Achilles' wrath.
Starting point is 00:33:19 And she then stops the Greeks from getting back to Troy. She sends a massive storm. And that is what kind of initiates and moves into the events then of the Odyssey. There was again this kind of group of poems that were telling the stories of the returns of the Greeks called the Nostoi. That word means homecoming, return home. And the Odyssey is one of those. So it's Cassandra who moves us essentially from the ruins of Troy into the wrath of Athena and the Greeks failure to return because of Ajax's impiety. We all have that one friend whose opinion we trust on everything. For 63% of podcast
Starting point is 00:34:01 listeners that friend is their favorite podcast host. When Acast's podcasters endorse a brand, their audience listens and takes action. So if you want a recommendation that really sticks, put your brand in their hands. Book a HostRed sponsorship today by visiting go.acast.com slash ads. Let's keep going on with the story before kind of exploring the character and the influences and the legacy of Cassandra and her figure. So what is that next part of Cassandra's story when she is taken away from Troy by Agamemnon? Because this is Cassandra leaving her homeland, as you say, maybe based on an Anatolian priestess slash prophetess and going to a foreign land, which is mainland Greece. Absolutely.
Starting point is 00:34:56 And do you know what? I'm going to tangent once more and I'm going to talk about some of the historicity for this because this, I think think is so tantalising. So as I said, there's a whole group of Trojan women who in the myth get carted off to Greece. Well, in the Late Bronze Age, we've talked about Late Bronze Age Hittite Anatolia. In Greece, what was happening at that time was we had a civilisation that we now call the Mycenaeans, that's the Bronze Age civilization and that is the civilization broadly that matches up with kind of the heroes that Homer is talking about. Now again we have tablets from their palaces, now we are in Greece and the tablets are bureaucratic lists of the palace holdings. One of the things that to me
Starting point is 00:35:42 as a historian of women is so interesting is that women are often mentioned. They are often mentioned as probably equivalent to like Castle Holdings essentially. They are numbered, they are identified with their children and they are given rations. We think that they were probably enslaved from this evidence. But what's so interesting is that they are given ethnics as well. That means they are given titles that tell us where they were from. And there is one enslaved woman in the tablets of Pilos, one of the palaces of Bronze Age Greece, that is said to be Toroia, a Trojan woman. So we have actual evidence of an enslaved Trojan woman. She's been brought from Troy, she's been brought to a Greek palace, exactly like Cassandra.
Starting point is 00:36:24 Cassandra, of course, goes to Mycenae. We also have a Bronze Age palace at Mycenae. But I love, again, this is a moment where we've got interweaving between myth and history in women's stories. Toby But it is evidence of that historical context that Mycenaeans were raiding the Anatolian coast or whatever and bringing people back. Exactly. And I'm always emphatic in the book and also just sort of in my work that
Starting point is 00:36:51 we're not looking for the real Cassandra. I give an analogy, which is actually one that Emily Wilson, when I was talking to her about this project, very kindly kind of helped me out with articulating, which is that these women that we're talking about, they're not real women, just like Wonder Woman isn't a real Amazon. But we're talking about constructs when we're talking about the figure of Cassandra in myth. But what we can do is we can look at the kind of prototypes, we can look at the real historical women who then trickle down to generate these kinds of myths. And that's the kind of work we're doing. Mason- So let's then go back to the story of Cassandra. What is the fate that befalls Cassandra in
Starting point is 00:37:28 Mycenae? Yeah. This is the most famous part of Cassandra's story, in part because it's told in Aeschylus' play, the Agamemnon, and one of the most famous tragedies of all Greek literature. What happens is Agamemnon and his war prize, Cassandra, arrive back in Mycena happens is Agamemnon and his war prize Cassandra arrive back in Mycenae. Agamemnon expects the royal treatment, he expects his wife Clytemnestra to be waiting dutifully for him at home, just like Penelope is waiting for Odysseus. But in fact, Clytemnestra, while he's away, has of course come up with a plan of her own and she wants to kill Agamemnon as in part revenge for his sacrifice
Starting point is 00:38:07 of her daughter Iphigenaea. So in the Agamemnon we get Agamemnon arriving, she rolls out this purple carpet for him and he treads it like a king, like an emperor and Cassandra behind him is kind of shrieking that she can already see the blood, she can see the axe falling. They go inside the palace and then of course in the tragedy they both get killed. And so this is this kind of moment where the line for Cassandra, this is the moment where the line ends. She already knew it was coming all along. And actually we see her in some of the tragedies rejoicing because this will bring Agamemnon's house down. So she sees it very much as revenge, as revenge for his plunder and
Starting point is 00:38:45 destruction of her city. And I think in the tragedies we're meant to see her going forward quite willingly to sacrifice and bring him down, essentially. I know it's a tragedy and it does end in her death, but it's a nice ending for Cassandra in that revenge arc story. It absolutely is. And also, it's quite a nice ending at this point anyway for Clytemnestra because Clytemnestra has also got her revenge against a man who murdered her child and went off to war and sacked another city on account of, by the way, Clytemnestra's sister, Helen of Troy. So at least the point of the end of the Agamemnon, we are in a good place for
Starting point is 00:39:21 women. I will add, because you did mention that Mycenae is the kind of historical namesake of this real historical Bronze Age civilization of the Greeks, the Mycenaeans. Mycenae as a Bronze Age site was excavated in the late 19th century around the same time as Troy and by the same man, by Schliemann. And when Schliemann was excavating, he actually found what he thought was a king buried with a very famous kind of gold mask, because he called the mask of Agamemnon. But he also found a woman buried with two infants. And in the myth, Cassandra had two infant children with Agamemnon. So Schliemann immediately said, this is Agamemnon and Cassandra buried in the site of Mycenae. Now it's not going to be literally them. In fact, the date doesn't work out. It's a little bit too early. But again, I love this interweaving
Starting point is 00:40:09 of history and myth that we're getting here. And also, as you mentioned earlier, with that actual evidence that was discovered, it's not too far-fetched to imagine maybe a Trojan captive or an Anatolian captive in the royal palace at Mycenae at some stage in the Late Bronze Age. If, as you said, they were being brought back, and I'm guessing if they were a highly prized captive, maybe they could have been in the royal palace or close at hand. It's almost a show of their prize. So, the women we have listed at Pelos, they are certainly in the royal palace. There are some of them who are sent out to villages around the palace, but most of them are clustered
Starting point is 00:40:41 in the palace. They're doing very low-level work like weaving or grinding flour or pouring baths. What's interesting is, again, we see these tasks, those are exactly the tasks that in Homer we get told that enslaved captive women are going to be doing. It's matching up very well with the expectations that the Homeric epic sets up for what will happen to an enslaved woman. Just before we completely wrap up, going back to Cassandra and her prophecies. Cassandra prophesying the destruction of her city, the death of her family, her brother, her father and so on, and then ultimately her own death. Is it quite interesting that all of her prophecies are never any small prophecies? They're all major apocalyptic prophecies of Cassandra. Do you think
Starting point is 00:41:26 this was done on purpose? Does it reflect a wider trend of other women divine female figures who could prophesise that they prophesise apocalyptic things? I think once we're getting to this point, we've talked about Hittite oracles. We've talked about the women who were involved in divining and interpreting dreams in the Hittite empire. In Greece, we get quite a different model and we get the oracle at Delphi, this really famous figure who inspires in this kind of mantic frenzy possessed by the god talking sort of in nonsense. And I think Cassandra, by the time we're looking at tragedy is very much on that level. And of course, these oracles became very famous for giving some of the
Starting point is 00:42:11 biggest prophecies in history that kind of turned Greek history around, like the prophecy to Croesus. So yes, I think Cassandra is very much modeled on these historical women. One other thing, and this kind of brings us back nicely to Homer, because I find it really interesting that Homer doesn't mention Cassandra's prophecy. And to me, that seems a little bit of the pattern of men kind of appropriating women's speech and women's kind of foreknowledge. And what's so interesting is that there was actually an ancient tradition that Homer stole his verses from the first Delphic oracle, Daphne was her name, and the ancients believed
Starting point is 00:42:52 that at least some of Homer's poetry was stolen from a prophet. So it was kind of nice if we were putting Cassandra in a place of power, that these women uttering these prophetic oracles actually had a huge amount of power, and that later traditions said that Homer stole from them. ALICE Lastly, let's briefly talk about the legacy, and this feels like it could be a podcast episode in its own right. I mean, Cassandra's story is, it endures. I think there's a famous fresco showing Cassandra dragged away by Ajax the Lesser. Does Cassandra's story hit a chord with the Romans too, and it endures
Starting point is 00:43:27 like many of the other key figures in the Iliad, well, in the Trojan War story? Forrestine It absolutely does. Yeah. And that's a good example of that fresco. Those frescos are copied from, I mentioned, those Greek vases where Greek vase painters were obsessed with this image of Cassandra clinging to the statue and being dragged away and that artistic legacy goes into the Roman period. I think Cassandra, we can also kind of trace that beyond Rome because what's happening there is, you know, Cassandra is kind of decorative. She's there for kind of the elite to talk about during their dinner parties. Like that's operating on a very certain function that's kind of demonstrating this villa owner's knowledge of the Trojan War.
Starting point is 00:44:09 What happens particularly as we look into kind of recent history and we look into the 20th and 21st centuries is that Cassandra becomes appropriated by women writers who were really interested in seeing her as a kind of victim of the patriarchy, as someone who is not afraid to kind of speak out and expose power. And women writers, women artists, right? We've got Taylor Swift's song, Cassandra, that came out in tortured poets department. We've got Florence and the Machine writing Cassandra. So women are really interested in how Cassandra's voice speaks out against misogyny and a kind of warning against attempts to take away women's agency, both over their voice and, of course,
Starting point is 00:44:52 their bodies as well. Mason. Well, Emily, this has been a fantastic chat. Is there anything that you'd like listeners to take away? I mean, is there a main message for Cassandra? Emily. I think it's, don't underestimate Cassandra and the women of Homer. It is so easy to see them all as these kinds of either a two-dimensional tragic figure like Cassandra or two-dimensional reason for the Trojan War like Helen. And I hope that what we've just discussed demonstrates that you can dive so much deeper. You can find the threads of the ways that their stories have been sung and reworked and reshaped. You can also use it as an invitation
Starting point is 00:45:30 to look to the real history of women in the past, which is absolutely what I am trying to do. And I guess I would say if you're interested in learning more about not just Cassandra, but also the other women of the Trojan War and the Homeric epics, Penelope, Briseis, Criseis, Andromache, all of the women we've mentioned. My book, Mythica, A New History of Homer's World through the Women Written Out of It, is coming out April the 17th and I would love to share it with you all. I hope you can tell how excited I am about it and it would just be so interesting to hear what you all think. Cheraway, Mythiga coming out in April in Spring 2025. Emily, it just goes to me to say thank you so much for taking the time to come to the podcast today.
Starting point is 00:46:14 Thank you so much for having me. Well there you go. There was Dr. Emily Hauser talking all of things Cassandra, the priestess and prophetess of Troy. I hope you enjoyed today's episode. Please do check out Emily's new book, Mythica. Thank you once again for listening to this episode. In the meantime, please follow The Ancients on Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts. It really helps us and you'll be doing us a big favour. Don't forget, you can also listen to us and all of History Hits podcasts at free and watch hundreds of TV documentaries when you subscribe at historyhit.com slash
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