Homer is the name of the person 
					traditionally credited with the authorship of two major epic 
					poems, the 
					
					Iliad and the 
					
					Odyssey, each consisting of twenty-four book of 
					hexameter verse in an ancient Greek dialect. The first deals 
					with some very famous incidents in the tenth year of the 
					Trojan War, with special attention to the greatest warrior 
					in the Greek forces, Achilles, and the second deals with the 
					ten-year return from that war of a prominent leader of the 
					Greek force, Odysseus, King of Ithaca. In addition to these 
					two works, to Homer are attributed a number of short poems 
					addressed to the gods, the so-called Homeric hymns.
					
					There has been a very long debate about the identity of 
					Homer. From the material in the poems, it is estimated that 
					the works which bear his name were composed in the middle of 
					the eighth century BC, around 750 BC. The stories that he 
					tells are about a time well before that, probably around 
					1100 BC (about the time of the historical events narrated in
					Exodus). Particular details of Homer's life, his 
					identity, and his times are all totally obscure, except what 
					we can glean from the poems themselves or from 
					archaeological clues. There are virtually no other reliable 
					sources of information.
					
					The Greeks themselves believed that Homer was a single 
					person, by tradition a blind poet, who composed and sang his 
					songs to entertain the nobles. Many believed and still 
					believe that the bard Demodocus in the Odyssey 
					is a self-portrait. A number of cities, particularly ones on 
					the coast of Asia Minor, claimed him as a native of their 
					communities.
					
					It seems clear that these poems were composed before the 
					introduction of writing into Greece. Hence, Homer, whoever 
					he was, composed the works orally, committed them to memory, 
					and recited them on demand, perhaps with a certain amount of 
					improvisation to take into account the particular 
					preferences of his audience. The poems were not written down 
					in anything like the form we know about them until the sixth 
					century BC, when the Athenian tyrant Pisistratus, as part of 
					his attempt to boost Athenian culture, committed the poems 
					to writing.
					
					For the past two hundred years at least, since the rise of 
					modern Homer scholarship, there has been considerable 
					argument whether this traditional account of Homer is 
					correct. Some have held that no single poet could have 
					written two such different poems as the 
					
					Iliad and the
					
					Odyssey, that the latter poem has such a feminine 
					sensibility, especially by contrast to the very tough 
					warrior ethic of the Iliad, that it might well have been 
					written by a woman. At any rate, it seems a much later 
					composition by a very different sensibility. Others have 
					claimed that the term Homer refers to a family of bards 
					entrusted with memorizing, embellishing, performing, and 
					passing on these ancient poems over a period of many 
					centuries. Still others have maintained that the name Homer 
					refers to the person or persons who put together a number of 
					different traditional poems to create these two epics 
					(hence, the author was more an editor or compiler than the 
					original source of both poems). Since there is no strong 
					independent evidence (i.e., material outside the texts 
					themselves) to support or refute any of these conflicting 
					ideas, no consensus has emerged about the author's identity.
					
					
					The ancient Greeks certainly had no doubts about the 
					historical events of the Trojan War, which they dated at 
					roughly 1200 BC. Early modern scholarship tended to write 
					off any historical basis for the two poems, claiming that 
					the Trojan War was simply a marvelous fiction invented by 
					Homer. That view was challenged very abruptly by the 
					excavations by a rich German merchant Heinrich Schliemann of 
					Hissarlik in Turkey (1870-1890). Schliemann based his search 
					for the site on the geographical details provided in the 
					
					
					Iliad. There he uncovered the remains of a 
					settlement which had clearly suffered violent destruction at 
					approximately the traditional dates of the Trojan expedition 
					(i.e., c. 1200 BC). One should note, however, that the site 
					also raised a number of questions about the validity of 
					identifying the unearthed city with Troy, so the old 
					controversy has not entirely disappeared, but the number of 
					those prepared to concede a historical basis for the Trojan 
					War has substantially increased. The most recent 
					contribution to the scholarly debate offers a specific date 
					for Odysseus’ triumph over the suitors: April 16, 1178 BC 
					(for details click
					
					here)
					
					What is indisputable is that these two poems acquired in 
					ancient Greece, and especially in Athens, an extraordinary 
					authority, forming the closest thing to a sacred text which 
					the Greeks shared. Homer's poetry became not simply a 
					treasury of ancient history but also a vital source of moral 
					instruction, and Achilles and Odysseus, the two heroes, 
					become the great role models in traditional Greek thinking 
					about how one should live one's life. It is the closest 
					thing the Ancient Greeks had to a bible (although one should 
					not push this comparison too hard, for among the Greeks 
					there were many stringent critics of Homer).
Grateful acknowledgement is made to Classics Professor Ian C. Johnston for permission to use this biography from his extensive works.