The site of the contest is
Chalcis, in
Euboea. Hesiod tells (
Works and Days lines 650–662) that the only time he took passage in a ship was when he went from
Aulis to Chalcis, to take part in the
funeral games for
Amphidamas, a noble of Chalcis. Hesiod was victorious; he dedicated the prize, a bronze tripod, to the Muses at Helicon. There is no mention of Homer. In
Certamen Homeri et Hesiodi the winning passage that Hesiod selects is the passage from
Works and Days that begins, "When the
Pleiades arise..." The judge, who is the brother of the late Amphidamas, awards the prize to Hesiod. The relative value of Homer and Hesiod is established in the poem by the relative value of their subject matter to the
polis, the community: Hesiod's work on agriculture and peace is pronounced of more value than Homer's tales of war and slaughter. The work also preserves 17
epigrams attributed to Homer. Three of these epigrams (epigrams III, XIII and XVII) are also preserved in the Contest of Homer and Hesiod and epigram I is found in a few manuscripts of the
Homeric Hymns. The short text begins with brief sketches of the poets' lives, including their parentage and birth. It then describes the contest itself, which consists of challenges and riddles that Hesiod poses, to which Homer improvises masterfully, to the applause of the on-lookers, followed by their recitation of what they considered their best passage and the awarding of the tripod to Hesiod; this takes up about half the text and is followed by accounts of the circumstances of their deaths. ==Modern editions==