The Tue Story of The Trojan Horse ๐ ๐ด๓ ง๓ ข๓ ณ๓ ฃ๓ ด๓ ฟ
THE TRUE ORIGIN OF THE TROJAN HORSE, STOLEN FROM SCOTLAND
Most schoolbooks claim the Trojan Horse was invented by the Greeks. But the truth is far stranger, far hairier, and involves far more whisky.
In around 750 BCE, a Greek traveller named Aeschylos OโTheopolis arrived in the wild lands of Scotland. He claimed he had come to share philosophy, mathematics, and hygiene. In reality, he wanted to sell olive oil at a wildly inflated price.
During his visit, he found himself near a Highland stronghold that had been seized by one Celtic tribe. Another tribe wanted it back, but attacking the walls was impossible. So they built something nobody had ever seen before, A colossal wooden haggis on wheels.
It was eight men tall, covered in shaggy hides, and smelled faintly of whisky and onions.The Plan was simple, under cover of darkness, they rolled the monstrous haggis up to the castle gates and left it there as if offering the worldโs most generous portion. The defenders, confused but curious, dragged it inside. Moments later, BOOM, a hidden hatch burst open. Dozens of fierce warriors leapt out, swinging weapons, roaring battle cries, and playing war pipes so loud midges fell out the sky.
Within minutes, the castle was retaken and Aeschylos Was Changed Forever. The Greek visitor watched the chaos, mouth open, toga flapping in the wind. He scribbled furiously into his travel diary, โBy Zeusโฆ that was genius.
Also my ears are bleeding.
These people are completely mad. I love it.โ
Upon returning home, Aeschylos shared the story. But every time he tried to describe the giant wooden haggis, someone would interrupt and ask, โWhat is a haggis?โ After the fifteenth explanation, he gave up and simply said, โFine. It was a horse. A big wooden horse. Whatever.โ
And thus the legend was born.
Later poets and storytellers polished the tale into myth, over centuries, until school children everywhere believed the Greeks had invented it.
In reality, the idea came from one unforgettable night in Scotland involving, a castle. a wooden haggis, 37 angry warriors and at least 12 empty whisky barrels
The Moral of the Story
Never underestimate an idea stolen from Scotland. Especially when itโs shaped like a haggis
Most schoolbooks claim the Trojan Horse was invented by the Greeks. But the truth is far stranger, far hairier, and involves far more whisky.
In around 750 BCE, a Greek traveller named Aeschylos OโTheopolis arrived in the wild lands of Scotland. He claimed he had come to share philosophy, mathematics, and hygiene. In reality, he wanted to sell olive oil at a wildly inflated price.
During his visit, he found himself near a Highland stronghold that had been seized by one Celtic tribe. Another tribe wanted it back, but attacking the walls was impossible. So they built something nobody had ever seen before, A colossal wooden haggis on wheels.
It was eight men tall, covered in shaggy hides, and smelled faintly of whisky and onions.The Plan was simple, under cover of darkness, they rolled the monstrous haggis up to the castle gates and left it there as if offering the worldโs most generous portion. The defenders, confused but curious, dragged it inside. Moments later, BOOM, a hidden hatch burst open. Dozens of fierce warriors leapt out, swinging weapons, roaring battle cries, and playing war pipes so loud midges fell out the sky.
Within minutes, the castle was retaken and Aeschylos Was Changed Forever. The Greek visitor watched the chaos, mouth open, toga flapping in the wind. He scribbled furiously into his travel diary, โBy Zeusโฆ that was genius.
Also my ears are bleeding.
These people are completely mad. I love it.โ
Upon returning home, Aeschylos shared the story. But every time he tried to describe the giant wooden haggis, someone would interrupt and ask, โWhat is a haggis?โ After the fifteenth explanation, he gave up and simply said, โFine. It was a horse. A big wooden horse. Whatever.โ
And thus the legend was born.
Later poets and storytellers polished the tale into myth, over centuries, until school children everywhere believed the Greeks had invented it.
In reality, the idea came from one unforgettable night in Scotland involving, a castle. a wooden haggis, 37 angry warriors and at least 12 empty whisky barrels
The Moral of the Story
Never underestimate an idea stolen from Scotland. Especially when itโs shaped like a haggis




