Odyssey Glossary
Every Name, Place, and Term You Need

50 essential entries, alphabetical, with pronunciation hints and book references

The Odyssey is full of names, places, and concepts that can feel unfamiliar the first time through. This glossary covers the major characters (see also our full character guide), the key locations, the Greek ideas that drive the poem, and the monsters and objects that make it unforgettable. Each entry tells you how to say the name, what it means, and where to find it in the text. Use it alongside our book-by-book guide as you read.

A

Achilles

ah-KILL-eez
The greatest Greek warrior at Troy and the central hero of Homer's Iliad. In the Odyssey, Achilles is already dead. Odysseus meets his shade in the underworld in Book 11, where Achilles delivers one of the poem's most famous lines: he would rather be a living servant than king of all the dead. His ghost reappears briefly in Book 24.
Books 11, 24

Aeaea

ee-EE-ah
The island home of the enchantress Circe. Odysseus and his crew spend a year there after Circe turns some of his men into pigs and Odysseus, with Hermes's help, forces her to restore them. Circe becomes Odysseus's lover and advisor, eventually sending him to the underworld and warning him about the Sirens, Scylla, and Charybdis.
Books 10, 11, 12

Aeolus

EE-oh-lus
The keeper of the winds. He lives on a floating island and gives Odysseus a leather bag containing all the adverse winds, leaving only the favorable west wind free to blow them home. When Odysseus's men open the bag out of curiosity (thinking it contains gold), the winds escape and blow the fleet all the way back to Aeolus's island. Aeolus refuses to help them a second time.
Book 10

Agamemnon

ag-ah-MEM-non
King of Mycenae and commander of the Greek forces at Troy. His homecoming is the dark mirror of Odysseus's story: he came home to find his wife Clytemnestra had taken a lover, and they murdered him at a banquet. His ghost appears in the underworld in Books 11 and 24, warning Odysseus about trusting anyone and praising Penelope's faithfulness.
Books 1, 3, 4, 11, 24

Alcinous

al-SIN-oh-us
King of the Phaeacians on the island of Scheria. He and his wife Arete host Odysseus, provide him with a feast and games, listen to his entire tale of wanderings, and ultimately send him home to Ithaca on one of their magical ships. Alcinous is the model of generous hospitality in the poem.
Books 6, 7, 8, 13

Antinous

an-TIN-oh-us
The most arrogant and aggressive of the suitors. He is the ringleader who plots to ambush and kill Telemachus, throws a footstool at the disguised Odysseus, and generally embodies the worst abuses of the suitors' occupation. He is the first suitor Odysseus kills, shot through the throat with an arrow during the contest of the bow.
Books 1, 2, 4, 16, 17, 21, 22

Arete

ah-REE-tee (the Greek concept: ah-reh-TAY)
Two things share this word. Queen Arete is the wife of Alcinous and queen of the Phaeacians; she is wise, influential, and the person Nausicaa tells Odysseus to appeal to first (Books 7-8). Separately, arete (ah-reh-TAY) is the Greek concept of excellence or virtue, meaning the fulfillment of one's highest potential. It applies to warriors, athletes, leaders, and anyone striving to be the best version of themselves.
Queen Arete: Books 7, 8, 11. The concept: throughout.

Athena

ah-THEE-nah
Goddess of wisdom, strategic warfare, and crafts. She is Odysseus's most powerful ally, guiding him from the divine council in Book 1 to the final peace in Book 24. She appears in multiple disguises (Mentes, Mentor, a young girl) and is drawn to Odysseus because they share the same kind of intelligence. She also guides Telemachus, giving him the courage and direction to search for his father.
Books 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8, 13, 15, 16, 20, 22, 24

B

Bow of Odysseus

(object)
Odysseus's great composite bow, left behind in Ithaca when he sailed for Troy. Penelope proposes a contest: whoever can string the bow and shoot an arrow through twelve axe-heads in a row will become her new husband. None of the suitors can even bend it. Odysseus, still disguised as a beggar, strings it effortlessly and uses it to begin the slaughter.
Books 19, 21, 22

C

Calypso

kah-LIP-so
A nymph or minor goddess who lives alone on the island of Ogygia. She rescues the shipwrecked Odysseus, falls in love with him, and keeps him on her island for seven years, offering him immortality if he will stay. He refuses, preferring to return to his mortal wife Penelope. Zeus eventually orders Calypso to release him.
Books 1, 5, 7

Charybdis

kah-RIB-dis
A deadly whirlpool in a narrow strait, paired with the sea monster Scylla on the opposite side. Three times a day Charybdis swallows the sea and spits it back up. Circe warns Odysseus that sailing too close means losing the entire ship. Odysseus chooses to pass closer to Scylla, losing six men rather than risking everyone to the whirlpool.
Book 12

Circe

SUR-see
A goddess and enchantress, daughter of the sun god Helios, living on the island of Aeaea. She turns Odysseus's advance party into pigs, but Odysseus resists her magic with the help of the herb moly (given by Hermes) and forces her to restore his men. She becomes his lover and advisor, and they stay on Aeaea for a full year. She later gives him critical instructions for surviving the Sirens, Scylla, and Charybdis.
Books 10, 11, 12

Cyclops (Cyclopes)

SY-klops (sy-KLOH-peez, plural)
A race of one-eyed giants who live without laws, agriculture, or civilization. They dwell in caves and tend sheep. The most famous is Polyphemus, son of Poseidon, who traps Odysseus and his men in his cave and eats several of them before Odysseus blinds him with a sharpened stake. The name means "round-eyed."
Book 9

D

Demodocus

deh-MOD-oh-kus
The blind bard (poet-singer) of the Phaeacian court. He sings three songs during Odysseus's stay: one about a quarrel between Odysseus and Achilles, one about the love affair of Ares and Aphrodite, and one about the Trojan Horse. The last song makes Odysseus weep openly, which prompts Alcinous to ask who he really is. Demodocus is sometimes seen as a stand-in for Homer himself.
Book 8

E

Eumaeus

yoo-MAY-us
Odysseus's loyal swineherd, who tends the pigs on a remote part of the Ithaca estate. He is the first person Odysseus visits upon returning home, still in disguise. Eumaeus is honest, faithful, and devoted to his absent master. He later fights alongside Odysseus and Telemachus against the suitors. Homer addresses him directly in the second person ("you, Eumaeus"), a unique mark of affection.
Books 14, 15, 16, 17, 20, 21, 22

Eurycleia

yoo-rih-KLAY-ah
The old nurse who raised Odysseus from infancy. She recognizes him by the scar on his thigh (from a childhood boar hunt) when she washes his feet in Book 19. Odysseus grabs her by the throat and swears her to secrecy. She is fiercely loyal and is the first to tell Penelope that Odysseus has returned and killed the suitors.
Books 1, 2, 19, 22, 23

Eurymachus

yoo-RIM-ah-kus
The second most prominent suitor after Antinous. He is smoother and more politically cunning than Antinous, using charm and bribery rather than blunt aggression. When the slaughter begins, he tries to bargain with Odysseus, offering restitution. Odysseus refuses and kills him.
Books 1, 2, 15, 16, 18, 22

H

Helen

HEL-en
Queen of Sparta, wife of Menelaus, and the woman whose abduction (or elopement) with the Trojan prince Paris caused the Trojan War. In the Odyssey, she has returned to Sparta and lives with Menelaus. When Telemachus visits in Book 4, she shares stories of Odysseus's cunning at Troy, including his infiltration of the city disguised as a beggar.
Book 4

Hermes

HUR-meez
The messenger god, guide of travelers, and conductor of souls to the underworld. He appears twice at critical moments: in Book 5, he delivers Zeus's order to Calypso to release Odysseus; in Book 10, he gives Odysseus the magical herb moly and instructions for dealing with Circe. In Book 24, he leads the ghosts of the slain suitors to Hades.
Books 5, 10, 24

I

Ithaca

ITH-ah-kah
A small, rocky island in the Ionian Sea off the western coast of Greece. It is Odysseus's homeland and kingdom, the place he has been trying to reach for twenty years. Despite being rough and unsuitable for horses, Odysseus loves it above all other places, even rejecting immortality on Calypso's perfect island to return there. The real island of Ithaki in modern Greece is traditionally identified as Homer's Ithaca.
Throughout the poem

K

Kleos

KLAY-oss
The Greek concept of glory or fame, especially the kind that survives after death through stories and songs. For Greek heroes, kleos was the closest thing to immortality: if bards sang your deeds, you lived on. The tension between kleos (the desire for glory) and nostos (the desire to go home) drives the Odyssey. Odysseus wants to be famous, but he also wants to be alive and home with his family. The Cyclops scene shows the conflict perfectly: the Nobody trick is brilliant, but Odysseus throws it away because anonymity is intolerable to a man who craves kleos.
Throughout the poem

L

Laertes

lay-AIR-teez
Odysseus's elderly father. Once king of Ithaca, he has retired to a country estate where he lives in grief, working the soil like a laborer, wasting away from sorrow over his missing son. In Book 24, Odysseus visits him and proves his identity by describing the trees Laertes planted for him as a boy. Their reunion is the last great recognition scene in the poem.
Books 1, 2, 11, 15, 16, 24

Lotus-Eaters

LOH-tus EE-ters
A people who eat the fruit of the lotus plant, which causes anyone who tastes it to forget their home and want nothing but to stay and eat more lotus forever. When some of Odysseus's men eat the fruit, they have to be dragged back to the ships by force. The episode is a brief but potent metaphor for the temptation to give up the hard journey home in favor of comfortable oblivion.
Book 9

M

Menelaus

men-eh-LAY-us
King of Sparta, husband of Helen, and brother of Agamemnon. He fought at Troy and had his own difficult voyage home. When Telemachus visits Sparta in Book 4, Menelaus shares stories of Odysseus's bravery and tells of his own encounter with the shape-shifting sea god Proteus, who revealed that Odysseus was alive but trapped on Calypso's island.
Books 3, 4, 15

Metis

MAY-tis
The Greek concept of cunning intelligence, strategic thinking, and practical wisdom. It is the defining quality of both Odysseus and Penelope. Metis is not raw cleverness or book learning; it is the ability to assess a situation, devise a plan, adapt when things change, and use deception when force will not work. The Trojan Horse, the Nobody trick, and Penelope's weaving scheme are all acts of metis.
Throughout the poem

Moly

MOH-lee
A magical herb with a black root and a white flower, given to Odysseus by Hermes to protect him from Circe's enchantments. With moly in his system, Circe's drugs and wand have no effect on him. The plant has never been conclusively identified with any real herb, though scholars have suggested snowdrop (galanthus) and other plants. It remains one of the most famous magical plants in Western literature.
Book 10

N

Nausicaa

naw-SIK-ah-ah
The young princess of the Phaeacians, daughter of King Alcinous and Queen Arete. Athena sends her a dream telling her to go wash clothes at the river, where she finds the shipwrecked, naked Odysseus. She is brave, poised, and kind, and she guides him to her father's palace. There is a subtle romantic undertone to her encounter with Odysseus, though nothing comes of it. She is one of the most charming characters in the poem.
Books 6, 8

Nestor

NESS-tor
The aged king of Pylos, the oldest and wisest of the Greek warriors who fought at Troy. Telemachus visits him in Book 3, hoping for news of Odysseus. Nestor has no direct information but tells of the disastrous returns of other Greek heroes and sends Telemachus onward to Sparta with his own son Pisistratus as a companion. Nestor embodies the Greek ideal of the wise elder.
Books 3, 15

Nostos

NOSS-toss
The Greek word for homecoming or return. The Odyssey is the greatest nostos story ever told. The word encompasses not just the physical journey home but the emotional and spiritual restoration that comes with it: being recognized, reclaiming your identity, and being restored to the people who define you. Nostos is the root of "nostalgia," which literally means "the pain of return." For Odysseus, nostos means reaching Ithaca, proving who he is, and being reunited with Penelope and Telemachus.
Throughout the poem

O

Odysseus

oh-DIS-ee-us
King of Ithaca, son of Laertes, husband of Penelope, father of Telemachus. The hero of the poem and one of the most complex characters in all literature. Known for his cunning intelligence (metis), his eloquence, his endurance, and his fierce determination to get home. He devised the Trojan Horse, outwitted the Cyclops, and survived encounters with gods, monsters, and enchantresses. His name may derive from the Greek word for "trouble" or "pain," and he lives up to it in both directions: he suffers greatly and causes suffering to others.
Throughout the poem

Ogygia

oh-JIJ-ee-ah
The remote island where the nymph Calypso lives. Odysseus is stranded here for seven of his ten years of wandering. Ogygia is described as a beautiful, lush paradise with meadows, caves, and forests, but for Odysseus it is a gilded prison because he is there against his will. Its location is unknown and possibly imaginary.
Books 1, 5, 7

Olive-Tree Bed

(object)
The marriage bed of Odysseus and Penelope, which Odysseus built with his own hands around a living olive tree still rooted in the ground. It cannot be moved without cutting the tree or tearing apart the room. Penelope uses it as the ultimate test of identity: she tells the servant to move the bed, and Odysseus's angry, detailed response proves he is the man who built it. The bed symbolizes their marriage, rooted and immovable.
Book 23

P

Penelope

peh-NEL-oh-pee
Queen of Ithaca, wife of Odysseus, mother of Telemachus. Famous for her faithfulness, her intelligence, and her weaving trick (unraveling by night the funeral shroud she wove by day to delay the suitors). She is Odysseus's match in cunning and the fixed point around which the entire poem revolves. Her test of the olive-tree bed in Book 23 is the poem's great recognition scene.
Books 1, 2, 4, 17, 18, 19, 21, 23, 24

Phaeacians

fee-AY-shuns
A seafaring people who live on the island of Scheria, ruled by King Alcinous and Queen Arete. They are described as close to the gods and possess ships that navigate by thought alone. They represent the ideal of xenia (hospitality), taking Odysseus in, feasting him, giving him gifts, and transporting him home to Ithaca. After delivering Odysseus, Poseidon punishes them by turning their ship to stone.
Books 6, 7, 8, 13

Polyphemus

pol-ih-FEE-mus
The Cyclops, son of Poseidon. A one-eyed giant who traps Odysseus and twelve of his men in a cave, eats six of them, and is blinded by Odysseus using a sharpened olive-wood stake. Odysseus escapes by hiding under the bellies of the giant's rams. Polyphemus's prayer to Poseidon for revenge against Odysseus sets the entire conflict of the poem in motion.
Book 9

Poseidon

poh-SY-dun
God of the sea, earthquakes, and horses. He is Odysseus's primary divine antagonist, holding a grudge because Odysseus blinded his son Polyphemus. He cannot kill Odysseus (fate decrees his return), but he makes the voyage as long and painful as possible, wrecking ships and stirring storms. The poem begins on a day when Poseidon is absent from Olympus, giving Athena a window to set the homecoming in motion.
Books 1, 5, 9, 13

S

Scheria

SKEH-ree-ah
The island home of the Phaeacians, where Odysseus washes ashore after Poseidon destroys his raft. It is a prosperous, civilized land with lush gardens, a grand palace, and a culture that values hospitality, athletics, and storytelling. Its location is unknown; some ancient commentators identified it with the real island of Corfu.
Books 5, 6, 7, 8, 13

Scylla

SIL-ah
A six-headed sea monster who lives in a cliff overlooking a narrow strait, opposite the whirlpool Charybdis. Each of her six heads snatches a sailor from any ship that passes too close. Circe warns Odysseus that losing six men to Scylla is better than losing the entire ship to Charybdis. Odysseus follows this advice, but the scene is one of the most harrowing in the poem.
Book 12

Shroud of Laertes

(object)
The funeral shroud Penelope promised to weave for Odysseus's elderly father Laertes. She told the suitors she could not remarry until it was finished, then secretly unraveled her work each night. The trick bought her three years of freedom before a disloyal maid exposed her. The shroud is the emblem of Penelope's cunning, a weapon made of thread and patience.
Books 2, 19, 24

Sirens

SY-rens
Creatures (their exact form is not described by Homer) who sit on an island and sing so beautifully that any sailor who hears them is compelled to steer toward the sound and is destroyed. Circe tells Odysseus to plug his crew's ears with beeswax. Odysseus, wanting to hear the song, has his men tie him to the mast so he can listen without being able to steer toward them. He is the only mortal to hear the Sirens' song and survive.
Book 12

Suitors

SOO-tors
More than a hundred young men from Ithaca and the surrounding islands who have occupied Odysseus's palace, eating his food, drinking his wine, and pressuring Penelope to remarry. They represent the violation of xenia: instead of being guests, they have become parasites. The most prominent are Antinous (aggressive, scheming) and Eurymachus (smooth, political). Odysseus kills them all in Book 22.
Throughout the poem

T

Teiresias

ty-REE-see-us
The blind prophet of Thebes whose ghost Odysseus must consult in the underworld. Circe sends Odysseus to Hades specifically to hear Teiresias's prophecy. The prophet tells Odysseus about the dangers ahead (the cattle of the sun), predicts that he will reach home and kill the suitors, and reveals that after all of this, Odysseus must undertake one final journey inland, carrying an oar, until he reaches people who have never seen the sea.
Books 10, 11, 23

Telemachus

teh-LEM-ah-kus
The son of Odysseus and Penelope. He was an infant when his father left for Troy and is now about twenty years old. The first four books of the Odyssey (the "Telemachy") follow his journey from frustrated youth to decisive young man. Athena guides him to Pylos and Sparta in search of news about his father. He fights alongside Odysseus in the final battle and is the one who brings weapons to his father and helps bar the doors against the suitors.
Books 1, 2, 3, 4, 15, 16, 17, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24

Thrinacia

thrih-NAY-shee-ah
The island where the sun god Helios keeps his sacred cattle. Both Teiresias and Circe warn Odysseus not to touch them. His crew, starving after a month of contrary winds, slaughters the cattle while Odysseus sleeps. Zeus punishes them by destroying their ship with a thunderbolt, killing everyone except Odysseus. Often identified with ancient Sicily.
Books 11, 12

Troy

troy
The city in northwestern Anatolia (modern Turkey) that the Greeks besieged for ten years in the Trojan War. The war ended when Odysseus devised the Trojan Horse, a hollow wooden horse filled with Greek soldiers that the Trojans brought inside their walls. Troy is the starting point of Odysseus's long journey home. The Iliad tells the story of the war; the Odyssey tells what happened after.
Referenced throughout

X

Xenia

KSEN-ee-ah
The ancient Greek concept of guest-friendship or hospitality, considered a sacred obligation enforced by Zeus himself. The host was required to welcome strangers, offer food and drink, provide shelter, give gifts, and only then ask the visitor's name and business. The guest, in turn, was expected to be respectful, not overstay their welcome, and offer gifts in return. Xenia is arguably the central moral concept of the Odyssey. See our deep dive into hospitality and xenia for more: the suitors violate it by abusing Odysseus's household, Polyphemus violates it by eating his guests, and the Phaeacians embody it perfectly. Almost every encounter in the poem can be read through the lens of whether xenia is being honored or broken.
Throughout the poem

Z

Zeus

zyoos
King of the Olympian gods, god of the sky, thunder, and justice. In the Odyssey, he acts as the ultimate arbiter. He grants Athena permission to help Odysseus, sends Hermes to order Calypso to release him, and punishes the crew for eating the cattle of the sun with a thunderbolt. He also establishes the poem's philosophical framework in Book 1 by observing that mortals often blame the gods for suffering they bring on themselves through their own recklessness.
Books 1, 5, 12, 13, 24

Related Pages

Character Guide
In-depth profiles of every major character in the Odyssey.
Themes of the Odyssey
Homecoming, identity, hospitality, and the other big ideas.
Book-by-Book Guide
Summaries and analysis for all 24 books.

Go Deeper

Mythology (Edith Hamilton)The definitive guide to Greek, Roman, and Norse myths, illustrated 75th anniversary edition The Odyssey: Norton Critical EditionWilson translation plus critical essays, notes, and scholarly analysis Classical Mythology (The Great Courses)24 lectures covering the full sweep of Greek and Roman mythology

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