Priam and Aphrodite did not have a son. Anchises who was related to Priam had a relationship with Aphrodite. His sons by her were Aeneas and Lyrus.
Priam has many sons but 2 of the most famous would be Hector who was his eldest son and Paris who started the Trojan War
Paris and Hector were sons of King of Troy Priam and therefore they were brothers.
At the time of the Trojan expedition the king of Troy was Priam. Priam had fifty sons and nineteen daughters - including Hector, Paris, Troilus, Polyxena, Cassandra and Creusa - and had originally borne the name Podarces. When Troy falls Priam is butchered by Neoptolemus, the son of Achilles. The story is told in all its brutality by both Vergil and Shakespeare. Shakespeare also presents an old and infirm Priam in his play Troilus and Cressida.
Details aren't given for every member of the family, since Priam had over 50 sons and daughters. Hector was killed by Achilles, Paris was killed by Philoctetes, and Priam himself was killed by Neoptolemus, Achilles' son. The women were all taken into slavery and their children either killed or made slaves as well.
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Priam and Aphrodite did not have a son. Anchises who was related to Priam had a relationship with Aphrodite. His sons by her were Aeneas and Lyrus.
Priam has many sons but 2 of the most famous would be Hector who was his eldest son and Paris who started the Trojan War
Priam
There were over fifty sons of priam, but the main ones were Hector and Paris
Paris and Hector were sons of King of Troy Priam and therefore they were brothers.
King Priam of Troy was the father of Hector and Paris; taking into account all of his wives and concubines, Priam was the father of 50 sons and many daughters. Hector was his oldest son by his wife, Hecuba, and therefore the heir to the throne; Paris, another son, was the cause of the Trojan War. All three were killed in the Trojan War.
Hector did not survive the war, he was killed by Achilles. Technically, Aeneas was the only Trojan male member of the royal family to survive. All of the sons of Priam, as well as Priam himself, we killed.
At the time of the Trojan expedition the king of Troy was Priam. Priam had fifty sons and nineteen daughters - including Hector, Paris, Troilus, Polyxena, Cassandra and Creusa - and had originally borne the name Podarces. When Troy falls Priam is butchered by Neoptolemus, the son of Achilles. The story is told in all its brutality by both Vergil and Shakespeare. Shakespeare also presents an old and infirm Priam in his play Troilus and Cressida.
Details aren't given for every member of the family, since Priam had over 50 sons and daughters. Hector was killed by Achilles, Paris was killed by Philoctetes, and Priam himself was killed by Neoptolemus, Achilles' son. The women were all taken into slavery and their children either killed or made slaves as well.
Heracles and his allies put Troy to siege, killing Laomedon and all his sons save Podarces, who saved his own life by giving Heracles a golden veil Hesione had made (and therefore was afterwards called Priam, from priamai 'to buy').
There are a lot of great names: Greeks - Agamemnon, Menelaus, Achilles, Philoctetes, Ajax, Odysseus ..... Trojans - Priam, Paris, Hector, Aeneas .....