In Greek mythology, Andromaco is an acheous deployment fighter at the time of the Troy War, which he participated in following the Idomeneo. It is mentioned by Quinto Smirneo in the posthomerique XI book, a late epic poem that tells the aftermath of Homer's Homeland (datable between III and IV century AD).

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Andromacho was an oriundo warrior of Knossos, a prestigious site of the island of Crete and home to the real apartments of the monk Idomeneo, niece of Minosse. He enlisted in the Army of the latter when the Cretan king promised to join forces with King Agamemnon in order to avenge Elena's wife Menelao. Mortemodifica wikitesto

Andromaches lost their lives in the final clashes that took place under the walls of Troy. Fighting from the top of his chariot, towed by splendid hunters, he first saw the death of Comrade Bremone by Aeneas; struck in the temple by the hero's sword, Andromaco rolled dead from the chariot, embarrassing the horses that ran along the battlefield by crushing the dead under the hooves. The servants of Aeneas managed to retrieve them and carried them home as a trophy of war. Bibliografiamodifica wikitesto

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