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Phrygia

In classical antiquity, Phrygia (/ˈfrɪiə/ FRIJ-ee-ə; Phrygian: 𐊩𐌏𐌛𐊅𐊄𐌌,[6] romanized: Gordum; Ancient Greek: Φρυγία, Phrygía) was a kingdom in the west-central part of Anatolia, in what is now Asian Turkey, centered on the Sangarios River. After its conquest, it became a region of the great empires of the time.

Kingdom of Phrygia
𐊩𐌏𐌛𐊅𐊄𐌌
Gordum
1200–675 BC
Map of the Phrygian Kingdom at its greatest extent, c. 700 BC.
CapitalGordion
Common languagesPhrygian
Religion
Phrygian religion
GovernmentMonarchy
Kings[a] 
• 8th Century–740 BC[1][2]
Gordias
• 740–675 BC[3][4][5]
Midas
Historical eraIron Age
1200 BC
675 BC
Preceded by
Succeeded by

Stories of the heroic age of Greek mythology tell of several legendary Phrygian kings:

According to Homer's Iliad, the Phrygians participated in the Trojan War as close allies of the Trojans, fighting against the Achaeans. Phrygian power reached its peak in the late 8th century BC under another historical king, Midas, who dominated most of western and central Anatolia and rivaled Assyria and Urartu for power in eastern Anatolia. This later Midas was, however, also the last independent king of Phrygia before Cimmerians sacked the Phrygian capital, Gordium, around 695 BC. Phrygia then became subject to Lydia, and then successively to Persia, Alexander and his Hellenistic successors, Pergamon, the Roman Empire and the Byzantine Empire. Over this time Phrygians became Christian and Greek-speaking, assimilating into the Byzantine state; after the Turkish conquest of Byzantine Anatolia in the late Middle Ages, the name "Phrygia" passed out of usage as a territorial designation.

Geography edit

 
Location of Phrygia in Anatolia

Phrygia describes an area on the western end of the high Anatolian plateau, an arid region quite unlike the forested lands to the north and west of it. Phrygia begins in the northwest where an area of dry steppe is diluted by the Sakarya and Porsuk river system and is home to the settlements of Dorylaeum near modern Eskişehir, and the Phrygian capital Gordion. The climate is harsh with hot summers and cold winters. Therefore, olives will not easily grow here so the land is mostly used for livestock grazing and barley production.

 
Gordion archeological site

South of Dorylaeum an important Phrygian settlement, Midas City (Yazılıkaya, Eskişehir), is situated in an area of hills and columns of volcanic tuff. To the south again, central Phrygia includes the cities of Afyonkarahisar (ancient Akroinon) with its marble quarries at nearby Docimium (İscehisar), and the town of Synnada. At the western end of Phrygia stood the towns of Aizanoi (modern Çavdarhisar) and Acmonia. From here to the southwest lies the hilly area of Phrygia that contrasts to the bare plains of the region's heartland.

The region of southwestern Phrygia is irrigated by the Maeander, also known as the Büyük Menderes River, along with its tributary, the Lycus. Within its boundaries lie the towns of Laodicea on the Lycus and Hierapolis.[7]

Origins edit

 
Zeus Temple in ancient city of Aizanoi belongs to Phrygia. It is a UNESCO World Heritage Site
 
Theatre complex of Aizanoi in Phrygia

Legendary ancient migrations edit

According to ancient tradition among Greek historians, the Phrygians migrated to Anatolia from the Balkans. Herodotus says that the Phrygians were called Bryges when they lived in Europe.[8] He and other Greek writers also recorded legends about King Midas that associated him with or put his origin in Macedonia; Herodotus, for example, says a wild rose garden in Macedonia was named after Midas.[9]

Some classical writers[which?] also connected the Phrygians with the Mygdones, the name of two groups of people, one of which lived in northern Macedonia and another in Mysia. Likewise, the Phrygians have been identified[by whom?] with the Bebryces, a people said to have warred with Mysia before the Trojan War and who had a king named Mygdon at roughly the same time as the Phrygians were said to have had a king named Mygdon.

The classical historian Strabo groups Phrygians, Mygdones, Mysians, Bebryces and Bithynians together as peoples that migrated to Anatolia from the Balkans.[10] This image of Phrygians as part of a related group of northwest Anatolian cultures seems the most likely explanation for the confusion over whether Phrygians, Bebryces and Anatolian Mygdones were or were not the same people.

Phrygian language edit

Phrygian continued to be spoken until the 6th century AD, though its distinctive alphabet was lost earlier than those of most Anatolian cultures.[7] One of the Homeric Hymns describes the Phrygian language as not mutually intelligible with that of Troy,[11] and inscriptions found at Gordium make clear that Phrygians spoke an Indo-European language with at least some vocabulary similar to Greek. Phrygian clearly did not belong to the family of Anatolian languages spoken in most of the adjacent countries, such as Hittite.[12][13] The apparent similarity of the Phrygian language to Greek and its dissimilarity with the Anatolian languages spoken by most of their neighbors is also taken as support for a European origin of the Phrygians.[7]

From what is available, it is evident that Phrygian shares important features with Greek and Armenian. Phrygian is part of the centum group of Indo-European languages. However, between the 19th and the first half of the 20th century Phrygian was mostly considered a satəm language, and thus closer to Armenian and Thracian, while today it is commonly considered to be a centum language and thus closer to Greek.[14] The reason that in the past Phrygian had the guise of a satəm language was due to two secondary processes that affected it. Namely, Phrygian merged the old labiovelar with the plain velar, and secondly, when in contact with palatal vowels /e/ and /i/, especially in initial position, some consonants became palatalized. Furthermore, Kortlandt (1988) presented common sound changes of Thracian and Armenian and their separation from Phrygian and the rest of the palaeo-Balkan languages from an early stage.[15][16]

Modern consensus regards Greek as the closest relative of Phrygian, a position that is supported by Brixhe, Neumann, Matzinger, Woodhouse, Ligorio, Lubotsky, and Obrador-Cursach. Furthermore, 34 out of the 36 Phrygian isoglosses that are recorded are shared with Greek, with 22 being exclusive between them. The last 50 years of Phrygian scholarship developed a hypothesis that proposes a proto-Graeco-Phrygian stage out of which Greek and Phrygian originated, and if Phrygian was more sufficiently attested, that stage could perhaps be reconstructed.[15][17][18][19][20]

Recent migration hypotheses edit

 
Phrygian soldiers. Detail from a reconstruction of a Phrygian building at Pazarlı, Çorum, Turkey, 7th–6th centuries BC.

Some scholars dismiss the claim of a Phrygian migration as a mere legend, likely arising from the coincidental similarity of their name to the Bryges, and have theorized that migration into Phrygia could have occurred more recently than classical sources suggest. They have sought to fit the Phrygian arrival into a narrative explaining the downfall of the Hittite Empire and the end of the high Bronze Age in Anatolia.[21]

According to the "recent migration" theory, the Phrygians invaded just before or after the collapse of the Hittite Empire at the beginning of the 12th century BC, filling the political vacuum in central-western Anatolia, and may have been counted among the "Sea Peoples" that Egyptian records credit with bringing about the Hittite collapse. The so-called Handmade Knobbed Ware found in Western Anatolia during this period has been tentatively identified as an import connected to this invasion.

Relation to their Hittite predecessors edit

Some scholars accept as factual the Iliad's account that the Phrygians were established on the Sakarya River before the Trojan War, and thus must have been there during the later stages of the Hittite Empire, and probably earlier, and consequently dismiss proposals of recent immigration to Phrygia. These scholars seek instead to trace the Phrygians' origins among the many nations of western Anatolia who were subject to the Hittites.[22] This interpretation also gets support from Greek legends about the founding of Phrygia's main city Gordium by Gordias and of Ancyra by Midas,[23] which suggest that Gordium and Ancyra were believed to date from the distant past before the Trojan War.

 
Ruins of the Lycus

No one has conclusively identified which of the many subjects of the Hittites might have represented early Phrygians. According to a classical tradition, popularized by Josephus, Phrygia can be equated with the country called Togarmah by the ancient Hebrews, which has in turn been identified as the Tegarama of Hittite texts and Til-Garimmu of Assyrian records. Josephus called Togarmah "the Thrugrammeans, who, as the Greeks resolved, were named Phrygians". However, the Greek source cited by Josephus is unknown, and it is unclear if there was any basis for the identification other than name similarity.

Scholars of the Hittites believe Tegarama was in eastern Anatolia – some locate it at Gurun – far to the east of Phrygia. Some scholars have identified Phrygia with the Assuwa league, and noted that the Iliad mentions a Phrygian (Queen Hecuba's brother) named Asios.[24] Another possible early name of Phrygia could be Hapalla, the name of the easternmost province that emerged from the splintering of the Bronze Age western Anatolian empire Arzawa. However, scholars are unsure if Hapalla corresponds to Phrygia or to Pisidia, further south.

Relation to Armenians edit

Ancient Greek historian Herodotus (writing circa 440 BC), suggested that Armenians migrated from Phrygia, which at the time encompassed much of western and central Anatolia: "the Armenians were equipped like Phrygians, being Phrygian colonists" (7.73) (Ἀρμένιοι δὲ κατά περ Φρύγες ἐσεσάχατο, ἐόντες Φρυγῶν ἄποικοι.) According to Herotodus, the Phrygians had originated in the Balkans, in an area adjoining Macedonia, from where they had emigrated to Anatolia during the Bronze Age collapse. This led later scholars, such as Igor Diakonoff, to theorize that Armenians also originated in the Balkans and moved east with the Phrygians.[25] However, an Armenian origin in the Balkans, although once widely accepted, has been facing increased scrutiny in recent years due to discrepancies in the timeline and lack of genetic and archeological evidence.[26][27][28] In fact, some scholars have suggested that the Phrygians and/or the apparently related Mushki people were originally from Armenia and moved westward.[29]

A number of linguists have rejected a close relationship between Armenian and Phrygian, despite saying that the two languages do share some features.[30][31][32][33][34] Phrygian is now classified as a centum language more closely related to Greek than Armenian, whereas Armenian is mostly satem.[35]

History edit

Around the time of the Trojan war edit

According to the Iliad, the homeland of the Phrygians was on the Sangarius River, which would remain the centre of Phrygia throughout its history. Phrygia was famous for its wine and had "brave and expert" horsemen.

According to the Iliad, before the Trojan War, a young king Priam of Troy had taken an army to Phrygia to support it in a war against the Amazons. Homer calls the Phrygians "the people of Otreus and godlike Mygdon".[36] According to Euripides, Quintus Smyrnaeus and others, this Mygdon's son, Coroebus, fought and died in the Trojan War; he had sued for the hand of the Trojan princess Cassandra in marriage. The name Otreus could be an eponym for Otroea, a place on Lake Ascania in the vicinity of the later Nicaea, and the name Mygdon is clearly an eponym for the Mygdones, a people said by Strabo to live in northwest Asia Minor, and who appear to have sometimes been considered distinct from the Phrygians.[37] However, Pausanias believed that Mygdon's tomb was located at Stectorium in the southern Phrygian highlands, near modern Sandikli.[38]

 
Horseman and griffin, Phrygia, 600–550 BC.

According to the Bibliotheca, the Greek hero Heracles slew a king Mygdon of the Bebryces in a battle in northwest Anatolia that if historical would have taken place about a generation before the Trojan War. According to the story, while traveling from Minoa to the Amazons, Heracles stopped in Mysia and supported the Mysians in a battle with the Bebryces.[39] According to some interpretations, Bebryces is an alternate name for Phrygians and this Mygdon is the same person mentioned in the Iliad.

King Priam married the Phrygian princess Hecabe (or Hecuba[40]) and maintained a close alliance with the Phrygians, who repaid him by fighting "ardently" in the Trojan War against the Greeks. Hecabe was a daughter of the Phrygian king Dymas, son of Eioneus, son of Proteus. According to the Iliad, Hecabe's younger brother Asius also fought at Troy (see above); and Quintus Smyrnaeus mentions two grandsons of Dymas that fell at the hands of Neoptolemus at the end of the Trojan War: "Two sons he slew of Meges rich in gold, Scion of Dymas – sons of high renown, cunning to hurl the dart, to drive the steed in war, and deftly cast the lance afar, born at one birth beside Sangarius' banks of Periboea to him, Celtus one, and Eubius the other." Teleutas, father of the maiden Tecmessa, is mentioned as another mythical Phrygian king.

There are indications in the Iliad that the heart of the Phrygian country was further north and downriver than it would be in later history. The Phrygian contingent arrives to aid Troy coming from Lake Ascania in northwest Anatolia, and is led by Phorcys and Ascanius, both sons of Aretaon.

In one of the so-called Homeric Hymns, Phrygia is said to be "rich in fortresses" and ruled by "famous Otreus".[11]

Peak and destruction of the Phrygian kingdom edit

 
Detail from a reconstruction of a Phrygian building at Pararli, Turkey, 7th–6th centuries BC: Museum of Anatolian Civilisations, Ankara. A griffin, sphinx and two centaurs are shown.

During the 8th century BC, the Phrygian kingdom with its capital at Gordium in the upper Sakarya River valley expanded into an empire dominating most of central and western Anatolia and encroaching upon the larger Assyrian Empire to its southeast and the kingdom of Urartu to the northeast.[41]

 
The Midas Mound Tumulus at Gordion, dated c. 740 BC

According to the classical historians Strabo,[42] Eusebius and Julius Africanus, the king of Phrygia during this time was another Midas. This historical Midas is believed to be the same person named as Mita in Assyrian texts from the period and identified as king of the Mushki. Scholars figure that Assyrians called Phrygians "Mushki" because the Phrygians and Mushki, an eastern Anatolian people, were at that time campaigning in a joint army.[43] This Midas is thought to have reigned Phrygia at the peak of its power from about 720 BC to about 695 BC (according to Eusebius) or 676 BC (according to Julius Africanus). An Assyrian inscription mentioning "Mita", dated to 709 BC, during the reign of Sargon of Assyria, suggests Phrygia and Assyria had struck a truce by that time. This Midas appears to have had good relations and close trade ties with the Greeks, and reputedly married an Aeolian Greek princess.

A system of writing in the Phrygian language developed and flourished in Gordium during this period, using a Phoenician-derived alphabet similar to the Greek one. A distinctive Phrygian pottery called Polished Ware appears during this period.

However, the Phrygian Kingdom was then overwhelmed by Cimmerian invaders, and Gordium was sacked and destroyed. According to Strabo and others, Midas committed suicide by drinking bulls' blood.

 
Tomb at Midas City (6th century BC), near Eskişehir

A series of digs have opened Gordium as one of Turkey's most revealing archeological sites. Excavations confirm a violent destruction of Gordium around 675 BC. A tomb from the period, popularly identified as the "Tomb of Midas", revealed a wooden structure deeply buried under a vast tumulus, containing grave goods, a coffin, furniture, and food offerings (Archaeological Museum, Ankara).

As a Lydian province edit

After their destruction of Gordium, the Cimmerians remained in western Anatolia and warred with Lydia, which eventually expelled them by around 620 BC, and then expanded to incorporate Phrygia, which became the Lydian empire's eastern frontier. The Gordium site reveals a considerable building program during the 6th century BC, under the domination of Lydian kings including the proverbially rich King Croesus. Meanwhile, Phrygia's former eastern subjects fell to Assyria and later to the Medes.

There may be an echo of strife with Lydia and perhaps a veiled reference to royal hostages, in the legend of the twice-unlucky Phrygian prince Adrastus, who accidentally killed his brother and exiled himself to Lydia, where King Croesus welcomed him. Once again, Adrastus accidentally killed Croesus' son and then committed suicide.

As Persian province(s) edit

 
The location of Hellespontine Phrygia, and the provincial capital of Dascylium, in the Achaemenid Empire, c. 500 BC.

Some time in the 540s BC, Phrygia passed to the Achaemenid (Great Persian) Empire when Cyrus the Great conquered Lydia.

After Darius the Great became Persian Emperor in 521 BC, he remade the ancient trade route into the Persian "Royal Road" and instituted administrative reforms that included setting up satrapies. The Phrygian satrapy (province) lay west of the Halys River (now Kızıl River) and east of Mysia and Lydia. Its capital was established at Dascylium, modern Ergili.

In the course of the 5th century, the region was divided in two administrative satrapies: Hellespontine Phrygia and Greater Phrygia.[44]

Under Alexander and his successors edit

The Macedonian Greek conqueror Alexander the Great passed through Gordium in 333 BC and severed the Gordian Knot in the temple of Sabazios ("Zeus"). According to a legend, possibly promulgated by Alexander's publicists, whoever untied the knot would be master of Asia. With Gordium sited on the Persian Royal Road that led through the heart of Anatolia, the prophecy had some geographical plausibility. With Alexander, Phrygia became part of the wider Hellenistic world. Upon Alexander's death in 323 BC, the Battle of Ipsus took place in 301 BC.[45]

Celts and Attalids edit

In the chaotic period after Alexander's death, northern Phrygia was overrun by Celts, eventually to become the province of Galatia. The former capital of Gordium was captured and destroyed by the Gauls soon afterwards and disappeared from history.

In 188 BC, the southern remnant of Phrygia came under the control of the Attalids of Pergamon. However, the Phrygian language survived, although now written in the Greek alphabet.

Under Rome and Byzantium edit

 
The two Phrygian provinces within the Diocese of Asia, c. 400 AD.

In 133 BC, the remnants of Phrygia passed to Rome. For purposes of provincial administration, the Romans maintained a divided Phrygia, attaching the northeastern part to the province of Galatia and the western portion to the province of Asia. There is some evidence that western Phrygia and Caria were separated from Asia in 254–259 to become the new province of Phrygia and Caria.[46] During the reforms of Diocletian, Phrygia was divided anew into two provinces: "Phrygia I", or Phrygia Salutaris (meaning "healthy" in Latin), and Phrygia II, or Pacatiana (Greek Πακατιανή, Pakatiane, unknown etymology, but translated as "peaceful"), both under the Diocese of Asia. Salutaris with Synnada as its capital comprised the eastern portion of the region and Pacatiana with Laodicea on the Lycus as capital of the western portion. The provinces survived up to the end of the 7th century, when they were replaced by the Theme system. In the Late Roman, early "Byzantine" period, most of Phrygia belonged to the Anatolic theme. It was overrun by the Turks in the aftermath of the Battle of Manzikert (1071).[47] The Turks had taken complete control in the 13th century, but the ancient name of Phrygia remained in use until the last remnant of the Byzantine Empire was conquered by the Ottoman Empire in 1453.

Culture edit

Religion edit

The Phrygian religion in antiquity was polytheistic and was distinct from the earlier religions of the Anatolian peoples and whose pantheon was composed of deities who were reflexes of earlier Aegean-Balkan ones.[48]

Matar Kubeleya edit

Unlike the Hittite and Luwian religions, the Phrygian pantheon was headed by a feminine deity,[49] a goddess Matar who was associated with mountains and wild animals and was given the epithet of Kubeleya or Kubileya[50] with the full name Matar Kubeleya thus meaning lit.'Mother of the Mountain Peaks'.[51] As the "Mountain Mother" (Ancient Greek: Μητηρ ορεια, romanizedMētēr oreia), Matar was the mistress of wild mountainous landscapes and the protectress and nurturer of the wild animals living there.[49]

Matar Kubeleya was the Phrygian reflex of an earlier Aegean-Balkan goddess whose Lydian variant was the goddess Kufaws.[52]

The cult of Matar Kubeleya was performed by priests named Corybantes (meaning lit.'head-shakers'), likely in mountainous locations,[53] and through orgiastic rites featuring pipe and cymbal music and ecstatic dancing,[54] with her name also characterising her as the goddess of head-shaking and the ecstatic state caused by it.[55] Therefore, the goddess was also given a Phrygian epithet meaning "frantic" in reference to the divine frenzy she inspired in her worshipers and recorded in Greek as kubēbos (κυβηβος).[56]

Due to the prominence of the cult of Matar Kubeleya in Central Anatolia during the Iron Age, her cult spread to Pisidia and later to the Greco-Roman world under the name of Kybele (Ancient Greek: Κυβέλη; Latin: Cybele).[50]

Other deities edit

The storm god Tiws held an important place in the Phrygian pantheon and his cult was widespread in Phrygia.[50] Tiws was not connected to the earlier Anatolian storm god Tarḫuntas and was instead the Phrygian variant of an earlier Aegean-Balkan god whose Lydian and Greek reflexes were Lefs and Zeus,[57] also cognate with the Italic Jovis.[49]

The Phrygian moon god was Mas who was known in Greek as Men. Mas was the Phrygian reflex of an earlier Aegean-Balkan god whose Lydian variant was Qaλiyañs.[54]

The identity and gender of the Phrygian deity Bas are still unclear.[49]

Artimis was a Potnia Theron-type Phrygian goddess who was the reflex of an older Aegean-Balkan goddess whose Lydian and Greek variants were respectively the goddesses Artimus and Artemis.[49][57]

Music edit

The earliest traditions of Greek music derived from Phrygia, transmitted through the Greek colonies in Anatolia and included the Phrygian mode, which was considered to be the warlike mode in ancient Greek music. Phrygian Midas, the king of the "golden touch", was tutored in music by Orpheus himself according to the myth. Another musical invention that came from Phrygia was the aulos, a reed instrument with two pipes.

Phrygian cap edit

Classical Greek iconography identifies the Trojan Paris as non-Greek by his Phrygian cap, which was worn by Mithras and survived into modern imagery as the "Liberty cap" of the American and French revolutionaries.

 
The Flaying of Marsyas by Titian, 1570s, with King Midas at right and the man with a knife in a Phrygian cap

.

Mythic past edit

The name of the earliest known mythical king was Nannacus (aka Annacus).[58] This king resided at Iconium, the most eastern city of the kingdom of Phrygia at that time; and after his death, at the age of 300 years, a great flood overwhelmed the country, as had been foretold by an ancient oracle. The next king mentioned in extant classical sources was called Manis or Masdes. According to Plutarch, because of his splendid exploits, great things were called "manic" in Phrygia.[59] Thereafter, the kingdom of Phrygia seems to have become fragmented among various kings. One of the kings was Tantalus, who ruled over the north western region of Phrygia around Mount Sipylus. Tantalus was endlessly punished in Tartarus, because he allegedly killed his son Pelops and sacrificially offered him to the Olympians, a reference to the suppression of human sacrifice. Tantalus was also falsely accused of stealing from the lotteries he had invented. In the mythic age before the Trojan war, during a time of an interregnum, Gordius (or Gordias), a Phrygian farmer, became king, fulfilling an oracular prophecy. The kingless Phrygians had turned for guidance to the oracle of Sabazios ("Zeus" to the Greeks) at Telmissus, in the part of Phrygia that later became part of Galatia. They had been instructed by the oracle to acclaim as their king the first man who rode up to the god's temple in a cart. That man was Gordias (Gordios, Gordius), a farmer, who dedicated the ox-cart in question, tied to its shaft with the "Gordian Knot". Gordias refounded a capital at Gordium in west central Anatolia, situated on the old trackway through the heart of Anatolia that became Darius's Persian "Royal Road" from Pessinus to Ancyra, and not far from the River Sangarius.

 
Man in Phrygian costume, Hellenistic period (3rd–1st century BC), Cyprus

The Phrygians are associated in Greek mythology with the Dactyls, minor gods credited with the invention of iron smelting, who in most versions of the legend lived at Mount Ida in Phrygia.

Gordias's son (adopted in some versions) was Midas. A large body of myths and legends surround this first king Midas.[60] connecting him with a mythological tale concerning Attis.[61] This shadowy figure resided at Pessinus and attempted to marry his daughter to the young Attis in spite of the opposition of his lover Agdestis and his mother, the goddess Cybele. When Agdestis and/or Cybele appear and cast madness upon the members of the wedding feast. Midas is said to have died in the ensuing chaos.

King Midas is said to have associated himself with Silenus and other satyrs and with Dionysus, who granted him a "golden touch".

In one version of his story, Midas travels from Thrace accompanied by a band of his people to Asia Minor to wash away the taint of his unwelcome "golden touch" in the river Pactolus. Leaving the gold in the river's sands, Midas found himself in Phrygia, where he was adopted by the childless king Gordias and taken under the protection of Cybele. Acting as the visible representative of Cybele, and under her authority, it would seem, a Phrygian king could designate his successor.

The Phrygian Sibyl was the priestess presiding over the Apollonian oracle at Phrygia.

According to Herodotus,[62] the Egyptian pharaoh Psammetichus II had two children raised in isolation in order to find the original language. The children were reported to have uttered bekos, which is Phrygian for "bread", so Psammetichus admitted that the Phrygians were a nation older than the Egyptians.

Jews of Phrygia edit

During the Roman imperial period, Jews in Phrygia, like elsewhere in Asia Minor, formed a prosperous and established minority. Centuries earlier, Seleucid king Antiochus III (r. 228–187 BC) resettled 2,000 Jewish families from Mesopotamia and Babylon in Lydia and Phrygia, aiming to strengthen Seleucid control in the region. This likely meant relocating more than 10,000 individuals to Antiochus' territories in western Asia Minor. The Jews received land, tax exemptions, and grain until they could sustain themselves from their own harvests. Antiochus specifically allocated land for vineyards, indicating a focus on viticulture, consistent with later references in the Talmud about Jewish Phrygia's wine production.[63]

Evidence suggests the existence of synagogues in various cities, including Iconium, which had an ethnically mixed population but was sometimes considered Phrygian. At Synnada (Şuhut), a ruler of the synagogue is mentioned, indicating the presence of a synagogue. In Hierapolis (Pamukkale), a third-century sarcophagus inscription highlights the importance of the holy synagogue in burial practices. The most well-documented Phrygian synagogue was in Acmonia (Ahat), where in Nero's reign, Ioulia Severa, a descendant of Galatian royalty, funded its construction. While her patronage may not indicate personal sympathy towards Judaism, it suggests support from influential circles. Though conditions for Jews in Acmonia seemed favorable in Severa's time, their continuity is unclear. By the third century, evidence of Jewish presence in Acmonia increased, including gravestones invoking biblical curses against grave violators, indicating the integration of Jewish practices and influential positions within the community.[63]

Christian period edit

Visitors from Phrygia were reported to have been among the crowds present in Jerusalem on the occasion of Pentecost as recorded in Acts 2:10. In Acts 16:6 the Apostle Paul and his companion Silas travelled through Phrygia and the region of Galatia proclaiming the Christian gospel. Their plans appear to have been to go to Asia but circumstances or guidance, "in ways which we are not told, by inner promptings, or by visions of the night, or by the inspired utterances of those among their converts who had received the gift of prophecy" [64] prevented them from doing so and instead they travelled westwards towards the coast.[65]

The Christian heresy known as Montanism, and still known in Orthodoxy as "the Phrygian heresy", arose in the unidentified village of Ardabau in the 2nd century AD, and was distinguished by ecstatic spirituality and women priests. Originally described as a rural movement, it is now thought to have been of urban origin like other Christian developments. The new Jerusalem its adherents founded in the village of Pepouza has now been identified in a remote valley that later held a monastery.[7]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ balén

References edit

  1. ^ Rose, C. Brian; Darbyshire, Gareth, eds. (2011). The New Chronology of Iron Age Gordion. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Museum.
  2. ^ Liebhart, Richard; Darbyshire, Gareth; Erder, Evin; Marsh, Ben (2016). "A Fresh Look at the Tumuli of Gordion". In Henry, Olivier; Kelp, Ute (eds.). Tumulus as Sema: Space, Politics, Culture and Religion in the First Millennium BC. De Gruyter. pp. 627–636.
  3. ^ Sulimirski & Taylor 1991, p. 559.
  4. ^ Ivantchik 1993, p. 57-94.
  5. ^ Olbrycht 2000a.
  6. ^ Obrador Cursach, Bartomeu (2018). Lexicon of the Phrygian Inscriptions (PDF). Doctoral dissertation, Universitat de Barcelona. pp. 31–50. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  7. ^ a b c d Peter Thonemann (ed), 2013, Roman Phrygia: culture and society, Cambridge University Press
  8. ^ Herodotus VII.73.
  9. ^ Herodotus VII.73, VIII.138.
  10. ^ Strabo 7.3.3.
  11. ^ a b Homeric Hymns number 5, To Aphrodite.
  12. ^ Claude Brixhe, Phrygian, in Roger D. Woodard (editor), The ancient Languages of Asia Minor, Cambridge University Press, 2008, p. 72
  13. ^ Bolaris, Miltiades E. (2010). "Midas and the Phrygians".
  14. ^ Obrador-Cursach, Bartomeu (2018). Lexicon of the Phrygian Inscriptions (PDF). University of Barcelona. p. 101. Scholars have long debated the exact position of Phrygian in the Indo-European language family. Although this position is not a closed question because of the fragmentary nature of our current knowledge, Phrygian has many important features which show that it is somehow related to Greek and Armenian.…Indeed, between the 19th and the first half of the 20th c. BC Phrygian was mostly considered a satəm language (a feature once considered important to establishing the position of a language) and, especially after Alf Torp's study, closer to Armenian (and Thracian), whereas it is now commonly considered to be closer to Greek.…Brixhe (1968), Neumann (1988) and, through an accurate analysis, Matzinger (2005) showed the inconsistency of the Phrygo-Armenian assumption and argued that Phrygian was a language closely related to Greek.
  15. ^ a b Woodhouse, Robert (2009). "An overview of research on Phrygian from the nineteenth century to the present day". Studia Linguistica Universitatis Iagellonicae Cracoviensis. 126 (1): 171. doi:10.2478/v10148-010-0013-x. ISSN 2083-4624. This question is of course only just separable from the question of which languages within Indo-European are most closely related to Phrygian, which has also been hotly debated. A turning point in this debate was Kortlandt's (1988) demonstration on the basis of shared sound changes that Thraco-Armenian had separated from Phrygian and other originally Balkan languages at an early stage. The consensus has now returned to regarding Greek as the closest relative.
  16. ^ Obrador-Cursach, Bartomeu (2019). "On the place of Phrygian among the Indo-European languages". Journal of Language Relationship. 17 (3–4). Gorgias Press: 234. doi:10.31826/jlr-2019-173-407. ISSN 2219-4029. 2.1.4. Phrygian belongs to the centum group of IE languages (Ligorio and Lubotsky 2018: 1824). Together with Greek, Celtic, Italic, Germanic, Hittite and Tocharian, Phrygian merged the old palatovelars with plain velars in a first step: NPhr. (τιτ-)τετικμενος 'condemned' < PIE *deiḱ-; NPhr. γεγαριτμενος 'devoted, at the mercy of' < PIE *ǵhr̥Hit-; NPhr. γλουρεος 'golden' < PIE *ǵhl̥h3-ro-. However, two shifts affected this language. Phrygian merged the old labiovelar with the plain velar (the etymological and the resulting ones): OPhr. ke(y), NPhr. κε (passim) 'and' < PIE *ku̯e; OPhr. knais (B-07), NPhr. κ̣ναικαν 'wife' (16.1 = 116) < *gu̯neh2i-. Secondly, in contact with palatal vowels (/e/ and /i/, see de Lamberterie 2013: 25–26), and especially in initial position, some consonants became palatalised:PIE *ǵhes-r- 'hand' > OPhr. ↑iray (B-05),7NPhr. ζειρα (40.1 = 12) 'id.' (Hämmig 2013: 150–151). It also occurs in glosses: *ǵheu̯-mn̻ >ζευμαν 'fount, source' (Hesychius ζ 128). These two secondary processes, as happened in Tocharian and the Romance languages, lend Phrygian the guise of a satəm language.
  17. ^ Brixhe, Claude (2008). Woodard, Roger D. (ed.). The Ancient Languages of Asia Minor. Cambridge University Press. p. 72. ISBN 978-0-521-68496-5. Unquestionably, however, Phrygian is most closely linked with Greek.
  18. ^ Obrador-Cursach, Bartomeu (2018). Lexicon of the Phrygian Inscriptions (PDF). University of Barcelona. p. 102. Furthermore, if Phrygian were not so-poorly attested perhaps we could reconstruct a Proto-Greco-Phrygian stage of both languages.
  19. ^ Obrador-Cursach, Bartomeu (2019). "On the place of Phrygian among the Indo-European languages". Journal of Language Relationship. 17 (3–4). Gorgias Press: 243. doi:10.31826/jlr-2019-173-407. ISSN 2219-4029. With the current state of our knowledge, we can affirm that Phrygian is closely related to Greek. This is not a surprising conclusion: ancient sources and modern scholars agree that Phrygians did not live far from Greece in pre-historic times. Moreover, the last half century of scientific study of Phrygian has approached both languages and developed the hypothesis of a Proto-Greco-Phrygian language, to the detriment to other theories like Phrygio-Armenian or Thraco-Phrygian.
  20. ^ Obrador-Cursach, Bartomeu (2019). "On the place of Phrygian among the Indo-European languages". Journal of Language Relationship. 17 (3–4). Gorgias Press: 238–239. doi:10.31826/jlr-2019-173-407. ISSN 2219-4029. To the best of our current knowledge, Phrygian was closely related to Greek. This affirmation is consistent with the vision offered by Neumann (1988: 23), Brixhe (2006) and Ligorio and Lubotsky (2018: 1816) and with many observations given by ancient authors. Both languages share 34 of the 36 features considered in this paper, some of them of great significance:…The available data suggest that Phrygian and Greek coexisted broadly from pre-historic to historic times, and both belong to a common linguistic area (Brixhe 2006: 39–44).
  21. ^ See for example Encyclopædia Britannica.
  22. ^ Phillip Clapham, "Hittites and Phrygians", C&AH IV:2, pp.71–121.
  23. ^ Pausanias 1.4.5.
  24. ^ CAH, Vol 2, Part 2, p. 418.
  25. ^ I. M. Diakonoff, The Pre-History of the Armenian People (revised, trans. Lori Jennings), Caravan Books, New York (1984), ISBN 0-88206-039-2.
  26. ^ Hamp, Eric P. (August 2013). "The Expansion of the Indo-European Languages: An Indo-Europeanist's Evolving View" (PDF). Sino-Platonic Papers. 239: 8, 10, 13. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2 August 2019.
  27. ^ Armen Petrosyan (1 January 2007). The Problem Of Identification Of The Proto-Armenians: A Critical Review. Society For Armenian Studies. pp. 49–54. from the original on 4 October 2020. Retrieved 23 November 2018.
  28. ^ Martirosyan, Hrach (2014). "Origins and Historical Development of the Armenian Language" (PDF). Leiden University. pp. 1–23. (PDF) from the original on 4 August 2019. Retrieved 5 August 2019.
  29. ^ "The Mushki Problem Reconsidered". from the original on 28 August 2020. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
  30. ^ Bartomeu Obrador Cursach. "On the place of Phrygian among the Indo-European languages." Journal of Language Relationship. 2019. https://www.academia.edu/42660767/On_the_place_of_Phrygian_among_the_Indo_European_languages
  31. ^ Clackson, J. P. T., 2008, "Classical Armenian", in Woodard,R. D., The Ancient Languages of Asia Minor, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 124–143
  32. ^ Martirosyan, H., 2013, "The place of Armenian in the Indo-European language family: the relationship with Greek and Indo-Iranian", Journal of Language Relationship10, 85—13
  33. ^ Hamp, Eric P. (August 2013). "The Expansion of the Indo-European Languages: An Indo-Europeanist's Evolving View" (PDF). Sino-Platonic Papers.
  34. ^ Kim, Ronald (2018). "Greco-Armenian: The persistence of a myth". Indogermanische Forschungen. The University of British Columbia Library.
  35. ^ "On the place of Phrygian among the Indo-European languages." Journal of Language Relationship. 2019. https://www.academia.edu/42660767/On_the_place_of_Phrygian_among_the_Indo_European_languages
  36. ^ Homer, Iliad III.216–225.
  37. ^ Homer, Iliad II.1055–1057; Smith, William (1878). A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography. London: J. Murray. p. 230.
  38. ^ Pausanias 10.27
  39. ^ Bibliotheca 2.5.10.
  40. ^ Homer, Iliad XVI.873–875.
  41. ^ Waters, Matt (2014). Ancient Persia: A Concise History of the Achaemenid Empire, 550–330 BCE. Cambridge University Press. p. 29. ISBN 978-0521253697.
  42. ^ Strabo, I.3.21.
  43. ^ Encyclopædia Britannica.
  44. ^ Scott 1995, p. 183.
  45. ^ "Kingdoms of the Successors of Alexander: After the Battle of Ipsus, B.C. 301". World Digital Library. 1800–1884. Retrieved 27 July 2013.
  46. ^ van Kuijck, Joey (2016). Shaping the Dioceses of Asiana and Africa in Late Antiquity (PDF). p. 27. Retrieved 29 May 2021.
  47. ^ Swain, Simon; Adams, J. Maxwell; Janse, Mark (2002). Bilingualism in ancient society: language contact and the written word. Oxford [Oxfordshire]: Oxford University Press. pp. 246–266. ISBN 0-19-924506-1.
  48. ^ Oreshko 2021, p. 137.
  49. ^ a b c d e Oreshko 2021, p. 136.
  50. ^ a b c Oreshko 2021, p. 135.
  51. ^ Oreshko 2021, p. 146.
  52. ^ Oreshko 2021, p. 158.
  53. ^ Oreshko 2021, p. 147.
  54. ^ a b Oreshko 2021, p. 135-136.
  55. ^ Oreshko 2021, p. 148.
  56. ^ Oreshko 2021, p. 152-153.
  57. ^ a b Oreshko 2021, p. 138.
  58. ^ Suidas s. v. Νάννακος; Stephanus of Byzantium s.v. Ἰκόνιον; Both passages are translated in: A new system: or, An analysis of ancient mythology by Jacob Bryant (1807) pp. 12–14
  59. ^ Plutarch, On Isis and Osiris, Chapter 24
  60. ^ There were seven all together
  61. ^ Pausanias Description of Greece 7:17; Arnobius Against the Pagans 5.5
  62. ^ Histories 2.9
  63. ^ a b McKechnie, Paul R. (2019). Christianizing Asia Minor: conversion, communities, and social change in the pre-Constantinian era. New York (N.Y.): Cambridge University Press. pp. 37–41. ISBN 978-1-108-48146-5.
  64. ^ Ellicott's Commentary for English Readers, accessed 18 September 2015
  65. ^ Acts 16:7–8

Bibliography edit

  • Oreshko, Rostyslav (2021). "In Search of the Holy Cube Roots: Kubaba—Kubeleya—Κύβεβος—Kufaws and the Problem of Ethnocultural Contact in Early Iron Age Anatolia". In Bianconi, Michele (ed.). Linguistic and Cultural Interactions between Greece and Anatolia: In Search of the Golden Fleece. Leiden, Netherlands: Brill Publishers. pp. 131–166. ISBN 978-9-004-46159-8.
  • Scott, James M. (1995). Paul and the Nations: The Old Testament and Jewish Background of Paul's Mission to the Nations with Special Reference to the Destination of Galatians. Mohr Siebeck. ISBN 978-3161463778.
  • Thonemann, Peter, ed. (2013). Roman Phrygia: culture and society. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-107-03128-9.
  • Tamsü, Rahşan; Polat, Yusuf (19–24 February 2007). "The Phrygian rock cut altars and their restoration and conservation proposals". International Conference on Environment: Survival and Sustainability (EES 2007). 3. Nicosia, Northern Cyprus (published 2009): 1005–1014. ISBN 978-975-8359-55-4.
  • Tamsü, Rahşan (24–26 February 2005). "Observations on the Phrygian rock-cut altars". Symposium on Mediterranean Archaeology (SOMA 2005). Chieti-Pescara, Italy: Chieti University (published 2008): 439–445. ISBN 978-1-4073-0181-5.
  • Tamsü, Rahşan; Polat, Yusuf (2010). "Yeni Buluntular Işığında Phryg Kaya Altarları Ve Bir Tipoloji Önerisi". Anadolu Üniversitesi Sosyal Bilimler Dergisi (in Turkish). 10 (1). Eskişehir: 203–222. ISSN 1303-0876.

External links edit

  • . Ancient History Encyclopedia. Archived from the original on 19 November 2010. Retrieved 10 June 2010.
  • . Ancient Anatolia. Archived from the original on 6 December 2006.
  • Ramsay, William Mitchell (1911). "Phrygia" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 21 (11th ed.). pp. 541–544.
  • . Archived from the original on 20 July 2010.

39°N 31°E / 39°N 31°E / 39; 31

phrygia, other, uses, name, classical, antiquity, frij, 𐊩𐌏𐌛𐊅𐊄𐌌, romanized, gordum, ancient, greek, Φρυγία, phrygía, kingdom, west, central, part, anatolia, what, asian, turkey, centered, sangarios, river, after, conquest, became, region, great, empires, time, . For other uses see Phrygia name In classical antiquity Phrygia ˈ f r ɪ dʒ i e FRIJ ee e Phrygian 𐊩𐌏𐌛𐊅𐊄𐌌 6 romanized Gordum Ancient Greek Frygia Phrygia was a kingdom in the west central part of Anatolia in what is now Asian Turkey centered on the Sangarios River After its conquest it became a region of the great empires of the time Kingdom of Phrygia𐊩𐌏𐌛𐊅𐊄𐌌 Gordum1200 675 BCMap of the Phrygian Kingdom at its greatest extent c 700 BC CapitalGordionCommon languagesPhrygianReligionPhrygian religionGovernmentMonarchyKings a 8th Century 740 BC 1 2 Gordias 740 675 BC 3 4 5 MidasHistorical eraIron Age Bronze Age Collapse1200 BC Fall to the Cimmerians675 BCPreceded by Succeeded by Bryges Mushki Hittites Cimmerians Lydia Stories of the heroic age of Greek mythology tell of several legendary Phrygian kings Gordias whose Gordian Knot would later be cut by Alexander the Great Midas who turned whatever he touched to gold Mygdon who warred with the Amazons According to Homer s Iliad the Phrygians participated in the Trojan War as close allies of the Trojans fighting against the Achaeans Phrygian power reached its peak in the late 8th century BC under another historical king Midas who dominated most of western and central Anatolia and rivaled Assyria and Urartu for power in eastern Anatolia This later Midas was however also the last independent king of Phrygia before Cimmerians sacked the Phrygian capital Gordium around 695 BC Phrygia then became subject to Lydia and then successively to Persia Alexander and his Hellenistic successors Pergamon the Roman Empire and the Byzantine Empire Over this time Phrygians became Christian and Greek speaking assimilating into the Byzantine state after the Turkish conquest of Byzantine Anatolia in the late Middle Ages the name Phrygia passed out of usage as a territorial designation Contents 1 Geography 2 Origins 2 1 Legendary ancient migrations 2 2 Phrygian language 2 3 Recent migration hypotheses 2 4 Relation to their Hittite predecessors 2 5 Relation to Armenians 3 History 3 1 Around the time of the Trojan war 3 2 Peak and destruction of the Phrygian kingdom 3 3 As a Lydian province 3 4 As Persian province s 3 5 Under Alexander and his successors 3 6 Celts and Attalids 3 7 Under Rome and Byzantium 4 Culture 4 1 Religion 4 1 1 Matar Kubeleya 4 1 2 Other deities 4 2 Music 4 3 Phrygian cap 5 Mythic past 6 Jews of Phrygia 7 Christian period 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 External linksGeography edit nbsp Location of Phrygia in Anatolia Phrygia describes an area on the western end of the high Anatolian plateau an arid region quite unlike the forested lands to the north and west of it Phrygia begins in the northwest where an area of dry steppe is diluted by the Sakarya and Porsuk river system and is home to the settlements of Dorylaeum near modern Eskisehir and the Phrygian capital Gordion The climate is harsh with hot summers and cold winters Therefore olives will not easily grow here so the land is mostly used for livestock grazing and barley production nbsp Gordion archeological site South of Dorylaeum an important Phrygian settlement Midas City Yazilikaya Eskisehir is situated in an area of hills and columns of volcanic tuff To the south again central Phrygia includes the cities of Afyonkarahisar ancient Akroinon with its marble quarries at nearby Docimium Iscehisar and the town of Synnada At the western end of Phrygia stood the towns of Aizanoi modern Cavdarhisar and Acmonia From here to the southwest lies the hilly area of Phrygia that contrasts to the bare plains of the region s heartland The region of southwestern Phrygia is irrigated by the Maeander also known as the Buyuk Menderes River along with its tributary the Lycus Within its boundaries lie the towns of Laodicea on the Lycus and Hierapolis 7 Origins edit nbsp Zeus Temple in ancient city of Aizanoi belongs to Phrygia It is a UNESCO World Heritage Site nbsp Theatre complex of Aizanoi in Phrygia Legendary ancient migrations edit According to ancient tradition among Greek historians the Phrygians migrated to Anatolia from the Balkans Herodotus says that the Phrygians were called Bryges when they lived in Europe 8 He and other Greek writers also recorded legends about King Midas that associated him with or put his origin in Macedonia Herodotus for example says a wild rose garden in Macedonia was named after Midas 9 Some classical writers which also connected the Phrygians with the Mygdones the name of two groups of people one of which lived in northern Macedonia and another in Mysia Likewise the Phrygians have been identified by whom with the Bebryces a people said to have warred with Mysia before the Trojan War and who had a king named Mygdon at roughly the same time as the Phrygians were said to have had a king named Mygdon The classical historian Strabo groups Phrygians Mygdones Mysians Bebryces and Bithynians together as peoples that migrated to Anatolia from the Balkans 10 This image of Phrygians as part of a related group of northwest Anatolian cultures seems the most likely explanation for the confusion over whether Phrygians Bebryces and Anatolian Mygdones were or were not the same people Phrygian language edit Phrygian continued to be spoken until the 6th century AD though its distinctive alphabet was lost earlier than those of most Anatolian cultures 7 One of the Homeric Hymns describes the Phrygian language as not mutually intelligible with that of Troy 11 and inscriptions found at Gordium make clear that Phrygians spoke an Indo European language with at least some vocabulary similar to Greek Phrygian clearly did not belong to the family of Anatolian languages spoken in most of the adjacent countries such as Hittite 12 13 The apparent similarity of the Phrygian language to Greek and its dissimilarity with the Anatolian languages spoken by most of their neighbors is also taken as support for a European origin of the Phrygians 7 From what is available it is evident that Phrygian shares important features with Greek and Armenian Phrygian is part of the centum group of Indo European languages However between the 19th and the first half of the 20th century Phrygian was mostly considered a satem language and thus closer to Armenian and Thracian while today it is commonly considered to be a centum language and thus closer to Greek 14 The reason that in the past Phrygian had the guise of a satem language was due to two secondary processes that affected it Namely Phrygian merged the old labiovelar with the plain velar and secondly when in contact with palatal vowels e and i especially in initial position some consonants became palatalized Furthermore Kortlandt 1988 presented common sound changes of Thracian and Armenian and their separation from Phrygian and the rest of the palaeo Balkan languages from an early stage 15 16 Modern consensus regards Greek as the closest relative of Phrygian a position that is supported by Brixhe Neumann Matzinger Woodhouse Ligorio Lubotsky and Obrador Cursach Furthermore 34 out of the 36 Phrygian isoglosses that are recorded are shared with Greek with 22 being exclusive between them The last 50 years of Phrygian scholarship developed a hypothesis that proposes a proto Graeco Phrygian stage out of which Greek and Phrygian originated and if Phrygian was more sufficiently attested that stage could perhaps be reconstructed 15 17 18 19 20 Recent migration hypotheses edit nbsp Phrygian soldiers Detail from a reconstruction of a Phrygian building at Pazarli Corum Turkey 7th 6th centuries BC Some scholars dismiss the claim of a Phrygian migration as a mere legend likely arising from the coincidental similarity of their name to the Bryges and have theorized that migration into Phrygia could have occurred more recently than classical sources suggest They have sought to fit the Phrygian arrival into a narrative explaining the downfall of the Hittite Empire and the end of the high Bronze Age in Anatolia 21 According to the recent migration theory the Phrygians invaded just before or after the collapse of the Hittite Empire at the beginning of the 12th century BC filling the political vacuum in central western Anatolia and may have been counted among the Sea Peoples that Egyptian records credit with bringing about the Hittite collapse The so called Handmade Knobbed Ware found in Western Anatolia during this period has been tentatively identified as an import connected to this invasion Relation to their Hittite predecessors edit Some scholars accept as factual the Iliad s account that the Phrygians were established on the Sakarya River before the Trojan War and thus must have been there during the later stages of the Hittite Empire and probably earlier and consequently dismiss proposals of recent immigration to Phrygia These scholars seek instead to trace the Phrygians origins among the many nations of western Anatolia who were subject to the Hittites 22 This interpretation also gets support from Greek legends about the founding of Phrygia s main city Gordium by Gordias and of Ancyra by Midas 23 which suggest that Gordium and Ancyra were believed to date from the distant past before the Trojan War nbsp Ruins of the Lycus No one has conclusively identified which of the many subjects of the Hittites might have represented early Phrygians According to a classical tradition popularized by Josephus Phrygia can be equated with the country called Togarmah by the ancient Hebrews which has in turn been identified as the Tegarama of Hittite texts and Til Garimmu of Assyrian records Josephus called Togarmah the Thrugrammeans who as the Greeks resolved were named Phrygians However the Greek source cited by Josephus is unknown and it is unclear if there was any basis for the identification other than name similarity Scholars of the Hittites believe Tegarama was in eastern Anatolia some locate it at Gurun far to the east of Phrygia Some scholars have identified Phrygia with the Assuwa league and noted that the Iliad mentions a Phrygian Queen Hecuba s brother named Asios 24 Another possible early name of Phrygia could be Hapalla the name of the easternmost province that emerged from the splintering of the Bronze Age western Anatolian empire Arzawa However scholars are unsure if Hapalla corresponds to Phrygia or to Pisidia further south Relation to Armenians edit Ancient Greek historian Herodotus writing circa 440 BC suggested that Armenians migrated from Phrygia which at the time encompassed much of western and central Anatolia the Armenians were equipped like Phrygians being Phrygian colonists 7 73 Ἀrmenioi dὲ kata per Fryges ἐsesaxato ἐontes Frygῶn ἄpoikoi According to Herotodus the Phrygians had originated in the Balkans in an area adjoining Macedonia from where they had emigrated to Anatolia during the Bronze Age collapse This led later scholars such as Igor Diakonoff to theorize that Armenians also originated in the Balkans and moved east with the Phrygians 25 However an Armenian origin in the Balkans although once widely accepted has been facing increased scrutiny in recent years due to discrepancies in the timeline and lack of genetic and archeological evidence 26 27 28 In fact some scholars have suggested that the Phrygians and or the apparently related Mushki people were originally from Armenia and moved westward 29 A number of linguists have rejected a close relationship between Armenian and Phrygian despite saying that the two languages do share some features 30 31 32 33 34 Phrygian is now classified as a centum language more closely related to Greek than Armenian whereas Armenian is mostly satem 35 History editAround the time of the Trojan war edit According to the Iliad the homeland of the Phrygians was on the Sangarius River which would remain the centre of Phrygia throughout its history Phrygia was famous for its wine and had brave and expert horsemen According to the Iliad before the Trojan War a young king Priam of Troy had taken an army to Phrygia to support it in a war against the Amazons Homer calls the Phrygians the people of Otreus and godlike Mygdon 36 According to Euripides Quintus Smyrnaeus and others this Mygdon s son Coroebus fought and died in the Trojan War he had sued for the hand of the Trojan princess Cassandra in marriage The name Otreus could be an eponym for Otroea a place on Lake Ascania in the vicinity of the later Nicaea and the name Mygdon is clearly an eponym for the Mygdones a people said by Strabo to live in northwest Asia Minor and who appear to have sometimes been considered distinct from the Phrygians 37 However Pausanias believed that Mygdon s tomb was located at Stectorium in the southern Phrygian highlands near modern Sandikli 38 nbsp Horseman and griffin Phrygia 600 550 BC According to the Bibliotheca the Greek hero Heracles slew a king Mygdon of the Bebryces in a battle in northwest Anatolia that if historical would have taken place about a generation before the Trojan War According to the story while traveling from Minoa to the Amazons Heracles stopped in Mysia and supported the Mysians in a battle with the Bebryces 39 According to some interpretations Bebryces is an alternate name for Phrygians and this Mygdon is the same person mentioned in the Iliad King Priam married the Phrygian princess Hecabe or Hecuba 40 and maintained a close alliance with the Phrygians who repaid him by fighting ardently in the Trojan War against the Greeks Hecabe was a daughter of the Phrygian king Dymas son of Eioneus son of Proteus According to the Iliad Hecabe s younger brother Asius also fought at Troy see above and Quintus Smyrnaeus mentions two grandsons of Dymas that fell at the hands of Neoptolemus at the end of the Trojan War Two sons he slew of Meges rich in gold Scion of Dymas sons of high renown cunning to hurl the dart to drive the steed in war and deftly cast the lance afar born at one birth beside Sangarius banks of Periboea to him Celtus one and Eubius the other Teleutas father of the maiden Tecmessa is mentioned as another mythical Phrygian king There are indications in the Iliad that the heart of the Phrygian country was further north and downriver than it would be in later history The Phrygian contingent arrives to aid Troy coming from Lake Ascania in northwest Anatolia and is led by Phorcys and Ascanius both sons of Aretaon In one of the so called Homeric Hymns Phrygia is said to be rich in fortresses and ruled by famous Otreus 11 Peak and destruction of the Phrygian kingdom edit nbsp Detail from a reconstruction of a Phrygian building at Pararli Turkey 7th 6th centuries BC Museum of Anatolian Civilisations Ankara A griffin sphinx and two centaurs are shown During the 8th century BC the Phrygian kingdom with its capital at Gordium in the upper Sakarya River valley expanded into an empire dominating most of central and western Anatolia and encroaching upon the larger Assyrian Empire to its southeast and the kingdom of Urartu to the northeast 41 nbsp The Midas Mound Tumulus at Gordion dated c 740 BC According to the classical historians Strabo 42 Eusebius and Julius Africanus the king of Phrygia during this time was another Midas This historical Midas is believed to be the same person named as Mita in Assyrian texts from the period and identified as king of the Mushki Scholars figure that Assyrians called Phrygians Mushki because the Phrygians and Mushki an eastern Anatolian people were at that time campaigning in a joint army 43 This Midas is thought to have reigned Phrygia at the peak of its power from about 720 BC to about 695 BC according to Eusebius or 676 BC according to Julius Africanus An Assyrian inscription mentioning Mita dated to 709 BC during the reign of Sargon of Assyria suggests Phrygia and Assyria had struck a truce by that time This Midas appears to have had good relations and close trade ties with the Greeks and reputedly married an Aeolian Greek princess A system of writing in the Phrygian language developed and flourished in Gordium during this period using a Phoenician derived alphabet similar to the Greek one A distinctive Phrygian pottery called Polished Ware appears during this period However the Phrygian Kingdom was then overwhelmed by Cimmerian invaders and Gordium was sacked and destroyed According to Strabo and others Midas committed suicide by drinking bulls blood nbsp Tomb at Midas City 6th century BC near Eskisehir A series of digs have opened Gordium as one of Turkey s most revealing archeological sites Excavations confirm a violent destruction of Gordium around 675 BC A tomb from the period popularly identified as the Tomb of Midas revealed a wooden structure deeply buried under a vast tumulus containing grave goods a coffin furniture and food offerings Archaeological Museum Ankara As a Lydian province edit After their destruction of Gordium the Cimmerians remained in western Anatolia and warred with Lydia which eventually expelled them by around 620 BC and then expanded to incorporate Phrygia which became the Lydian empire s eastern frontier The Gordium site reveals a considerable building program during the 6th century BC under the domination of Lydian kings including the proverbially rich King Croesus Meanwhile Phrygia s former eastern subjects fell to Assyria and later to the Medes There may be an echo of strife with Lydia and perhaps a veiled reference to royal hostages in the legend of the twice unlucky Phrygian prince Adrastus who accidentally killed his brother and exiled himself to Lydia where King Croesus welcomed him Once again Adrastus accidentally killed Croesus son and then committed suicide As Persian province s edit nbsp The location of Hellespontine Phrygia and the provincial capital of Dascylium in the Achaemenid Empire c 500 BC Some time in the 540s BC Phrygia passed to the Achaemenid Great Persian Empire when Cyrus the Great conquered Lydia After Darius the Great became Persian Emperor in 521 BC he remade the ancient trade route into the Persian Royal Road and instituted administrative reforms that included setting up satrapies The Phrygian satrapy province lay west of the Halys River now Kizil River and east of Mysia and Lydia Its capital was established at Dascylium modern Ergili In the course of the 5th century the region was divided in two administrative satrapies Hellespontine Phrygia and Greater Phrygia 44 Under Alexander and his successors edit The Macedonian Greek conqueror Alexander the Great passed through Gordium in 333 BC and severed the Gordian Knot in the temple of Sabazios Zeus According to a legend possibly promulgated by Alexander s publicists whoever untied the knot would be master of Asia With Gordium sited on the Persian Royal Road that led through the heart of Anatolia the prophecy had some geographical plausibility With Alexander Phrygia became part of the wider Hellenistic world Upon Alexander s death in 323 BC the Battle of Ipsus took place in 301 BC 45 Celts and Attalids edit In the chaotic period after Alexander s death northern Phrygia was overrun by Celts eventually to become the province of Galatia The former capital of Gordium was captured and destroyed by the Gauls soon afterwards and disappeared from history In 188 BC the southern remnant of Phrygia came under the control of the Attalids of Pergamon However the Phrygian language survived although now written in the Greek alphabet Under Rome and Byzantium edit nbsp The two Phrygian provinces within the Diocese of Asia c 400 AD In 133 BC the remnants of Phrygia passed to Rome For purposes of provincial administration the Romans maintained a divided Phrygia attaching the northeastern part to the province of Galatia and the western portion to the province of Asia There is some evidence that western Phrygia and Caria were separated from Asia in 254 259 to become the new province of Phrygia and Caria 46 During the reforms of Diocletian Phrygia was divided anew into two provinces Phrygia I or Phrygia Salutaris meaning healthy in Latin and Phrygia II or Pacatiana Greek Pakatianh Pakatiane unknown etymology but translated as peaceful both under the Diocese of Asia Salutaris with Synnada as its capital comprised the eastern portion of the region and Pacatiana with Laodicea on the Lycus as capital of the western portion The provinces survived up to the end of the 7th century when they were replaced by the Theme system In the Late Roman early Byzantine period most of Phrygia belonged to the Anatolic theme It was overrun by the Turks in the aftermath of the Battle of Manzikert 1071 47 The Turks had taken complete control in the 13th century but the ancient name of Phrygia remained in use until the last remnant of the Byzantine Empire was conquered by the Ottoman Empire in 1453 Culture editReligion edit The Phrygian religion in antiquity was polytheistic and was distinct from the earlier religions of the Anatolian peoples and whose pantheon was composed of deities who were reflexes of earlier Aegean Balkan ones 48 Matar Kubeleya edit Main article Cybele Unlike the Hittite and Luwian religions the Phrygian pantheon was headed by a feminine deity 49 a goddess Matar who was associated with mountains and wild animals and was given the epithet of Kubeleya or Kubileya 50 with the full name Matar Kubeleya thus meaning lit Mother of the Mountain Peaks 51 As the Mountain Mother Ancient Greek Mhthr oreia romanized Meter oreia Matar was the mistress of wild mountainous landscapes and the protectress and nurturer of the wild animals living there 49 Matar Kubeleya was the Phrygian reflex of an earlier Aegean Balkan goddess whose Lydian variant was the goddess Kufaws 52 The cult of Matar Kubeleya was performed by priests named Corybantes meaning lit head shakers likely in mountainous locations 53 and through orgiastic rites featuring pipe and cymbal music and ecstatic dancing 54 with her name also characterising her as the goddess of head shaking and the ecstatic state caused by it 55 Therefore the goddess was also given a Phrygian epithet meaning frantic in reference to the divine frenzy she inspired in her worshipers and recorded in Greek as kubebos kybhbos 56 Due to the prominence of the cult of Matar Kubeleya in Central Anatolia during the Iron Age her cult spread to Pisidia and later to the Greco Roman world under the name of Kybele Ancient Greek Kybelh Latin Cybele 50 Other deities edit The storm god Tiws held an important place in the Phrygian pantheon and his cult was widespread in Phrygia 50 Tiws was not connected to the earlier Anatolian storm god Tarḫuntas and was instead the Phrygian variant of an earlier Aegean Balkan god whose Lydian and Greek reflexes were Lefs and Zeus 57 also cognate with the Italic Jovis 49 The Phrygian moon god was Mas who was known in Greek as Men Mas was the Phrygian reflex of an earlier Aegean Balkan god whose Lydian variant was Qaliyans 54 The identity and gender of the Phrygian deity Bas are still unclear 49 Artimis was a Potnia Theron type Phrygian goddess who was the reflex of an older Aegean Balkan goddess whose Lydian and Greek variants were respectively the goddesses Artimus and Artemis 49 57 Music edit The earliest traditions of Greek music derived from Phrygia transmitted through the Greek colonies in Anatolia and included the Phrygian mode which was considered to be the warlike mode in ancient Greek music Phrygian Midas the king of the golden touch was tutored in music by Orpheus himself according to the myth Another musical invention that came from Phrygia was the aulos a reed instrument with two pipes Phrygian cap edit Classical Greek iconography identifies the Trojan Paris as non Greek by his Phrygian cap which was worn by Mithras and survived into modern imagery as the Liberty cap of the American and French revolutionaries nbsp The Flaying of Marsyas by Titian 1570s with King Midas at right and the man with a knife in a Phrygian cap Mythic past editThe name of the earliest known mythical king was Nannacus aka Annacus 58 This king resided at Iconium the most eastern city of the kingdom of Phrygia at that time and after his death at the age of 300 years a great flood overwhelmed the country as had been foretold by an ancient oracle The next king mentioned in extant classical sources was called Manis or Masdes According to Plutarch because of his splendid exploits great things were called manic in Phrygia 59 Thereafter the kingdom of Phrygia seems to have become fragmented among various kings One of the kings was Tantalus who ruled over the north western region of Phrygia around Mount Sipylus Tantalus was endlessly punished in Tartarus because he allegedly killed his son Pelops and sacrificially offered him to the Olympians a reference to the suppression of human sacrifice Tantalus was also falsely accused of stealing from the lotteries he had invented In the mythic age before the Trojan war during a time of an interregnum Gordius or Gordias a Phrygian farmer became king fulfilling an oracular prophecy The kingless Phrygians had turned for guidance to the oracle of Sabazios Zeus to the Greeks at Telmissus in the part of Phrygia that later became part of Galatia They had been instructed by the oracle to acclaim as their king the first man who rode up to the god s temple in a cart That man was Gordias Gordios Gordius a farmer who dedicated the ox cart in question tied to its shaft with the Gordian Knot Gordias refounded a capital at Gordium in west central Anatolia situated on the old trackway through the heart of Anatolia that became Darius s Persian Royal Road from Pessinus to Ancyra and not far from the River Sangarius nbsp Man in Phrygian costume Hellenistic period 3rd 1st century BC Cyprus The Phrygians are associated in Greek mythology with the Dactyls minor gods credited with the invention of iron smelting who in most versions of the legend lived at Mount Ida in Phrygia Gordias s son adopted in some versions was Midas A large body of myths and legends surround this first king Midas 60 connecting him with a mythological tale concerning Attis 61 This shadowy figure resided at Pessinus and attempted to marry his daughter to the young Attis in spite of the opposition of his lover Agdestis and his mother the goddess Cybele When Agdestis and or Cybele appear and cast madness upon the members of the wedding feast Midas is said to have died in the ensuing chaos King Midas is said to have associated himself with Silenus and other satyrs and with Dionysus who granted him a golden touch In one version of his story Midas travels from Thrace accompanied by a band of his people to Asia Minor to wash away the taint of his unwelcome golden touch in the river Pactolus Leaving the gold in the river s sands Midas found himself in Phrygia where he was adopted by the childless king Gordias and taken under the protection of Cybele Acting as the visible representative of Cybele and under her authority it would seem a Phrygian king could designate his successor The Phrygian Sibyl was the priestess presiding over the Apollonian oracle at Phrygia According to Herodotus 62 the Egyptian pharaoh Psammetichus II had two children raised in isolation in order to find the original language The children were reported to have uttered bekos which is Phrygian for bread so Psammetichus admitted that the Phrygians were a nation older than the Egyptians Jews of Phrygia editDuring the Roman imperial period Jews in Phrygia like elsewhere in Asia Minor formed a prosperous and established minority Centuries earlier Seleucid king Antiochus III r 228 187 BC resettled 2 000 Jewish families from Mesopotamia and Babylon in Lydia and Phrygia aiming to strengthen Seleucid control in the region This likely meant relocating more than 10 000 individuals to Antiochus territories in western Asia Minor The Jews received land tax exemptions and grain until they could sustain themselves from their own harvests Antiochus specifically allocated land for vineyards indicating a focus on viticulture consistent with later references in the Talmud about Jewish Phrygia s wine production 63 Evidence suggests the existence of synagogues in various cities including Iconium which had an ethnically mixed population but was sometimes considered Phrygian At Synnada Suhut a ruler of the synagogue is mentioned indicating the presence of a synagogue In Hierapolis Pamukkale a third century sarcophagus inscription highlights the importance of the holy synagogue in burial practices The most well documented Phrygian synagogue was in Acmonia Ahat where in Nero s reign Ioulia Severa a descendant of Galatian royalty funded its construction While her patronage may not indicate personal sympathy towards Judaism it suggests support from influential circles Though conditions for Jews in Acmonia seemed favorable in Severa s time their continuity is unclear By the third century evidence of Jewish presence in Acmonia increased including gravestones invoking biblical curses against grave violators indicating the integration of Jewish practices and influential positions within the community 63 Christian period editVisitors from Phrygia were reported to have been among the crowds present in Jerusalem on the occasion of Pentecost as recorded in Acts 2 10 In Acts 16 6 the Apostle Paul and his companion Silas travelled through Phrygia and the region of Galatia proclaiming the Christian gospel Their plans appear to have been to go to Asia but circumstances or guidance in ways which we are not told by inner promptings or by visions of the night or by the inspired utterances of those among their converts who had received the gift of prophecy 64 prevented them from doing so and instead they travelled westwards towards the coast 65 The Christian heresy known as Montanism and still known in Orthodoxy as the Phrygian heresy arose in the unidentified village of Ardabau in the 2nd century AD and was distinguished by ecstatic spirituality and women priests Originally described as a rural movement it is now thought to have been of urban origin like other Christian developments The new Jerusalem its adherents founded in the village of Pepouza has now been identified in a remote valley that later held a monastery 7 See also editAncient regions of AnatoliaNotes edit balenReferences edit Rose C Brian Darbyshire Gareth eds 2011 The New Chronology of Iron Age Gordion Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Museum Liebhart Richard Darbyshire Gareth Erder Evin Marsh Ben 2016 A Fresh Look at the Tumuli of Gordion In Henry Olivier Kelp Ute eds Tumulus as Sema Space Politics Culture and Religion in the First Millennium BC De Gruyter pp 627 636 Sulimirski amp Taylor 1991 p 559 sfn error no target CITEREFSulimirskiTaylor1991 help Ivantchik 1993 p 57 94 sfn error no target CITEREFIvantchik1993 help Olbrycht 2000a sfn error no target CITEREFOlbrycht2000a help Obrador Cursach Bartomeu 2018 Lexicon of the Phrygian Inscriptions PDF Doctoral dissertation Universitat de Barcelona pp 31 50 Retrieved 6 July 2021 a b c d Peter Thonemann ed 2013 Roman Phrygia culture and society Cambridge University Press Herodotus VII 73 Herodotus VII 73 VIII 138 Strabo 7 3 3 a b Homeric Hymns number 5 To Aphrodite Claude Brixhe Phrygian in Roger D Woodard editor The ancient Languages of Asia Minor Cambridge University Press 2008 p 72 Bolaris Miltiades E 2010 Midas and the Phrygians Obrador Cursach Bartomeu 2018 Lexicon of the Phrygian Inscriptions PDF University of Barcelona p 101 Scholars have long debated the exact position of Phrygian in the Indo European language family Although this position is not a closed question because of the fragmentary nature of our current knowledge Phrygian has many important features which show that it is somehow related to Greek and Armenian Indeed between the 19th and the first half of the 20th c BC Phrygian was mostly considered a satem language a feature once considered important to establishing the position of a language and especially after Alf Torp s study closer to Armenian and Thracian whereas it is now commonly considered to be closer to Greek Brixhe 1968 Neumann 1988 and through an accurate analysis Matzinger 2005 showed the inconsistency of the Phrygo Armenian assumption and argued that Phrygian was a language closely related to Greek a b Woodhouse Robert 2009 An overview of research on Phrygian from the nineteenth century to the present day Studia Linguistica Universitatis Iagellonicae Cracoviensis 126 1 171 doi 10 2478 v10148 010 0013 x ISSN 2083 4624 This question is of course only just separable from the question of which languages within Indo European are most closely related to Phrygian which has also been hotly debated A turning point in this debate was Kortlandt s 1988 demonstration on the basis of shared sound changes that Thraco Armenian had separated from Phrygian and other originally Balkan languages at an early stage The consensus has now returned to regarding Greek as the closest relative Obrador Cursach Bartomeu 2019 On the place of Phrygian among the Indo European languages Journal of Language Relationship 17 3 4 Gorgias Press 234 doi 10 31826 jlr 2019 173 407 ISSN 2219 4029 2 1 4 Phrygian belongs to the centum group of IE languages Ligorio and Lubotsky 2018 1824 Together with Greek Celtic Italic Germanic Hittite and Tocharian Phrygian merged the old palatovelars with plain velars in a first step NPhr tit tetikmenos condemned lt PIE deiḱ NPhr gegaritmenos devoted at the mercy of lt PIE ǵhr Hit NPhr gloyreos golden lt PIE ǵhl h3 ro However two shifts affected this language Phrygian merged the old labiovelar with the plain velar the etymological and the resulting ones OPhr ke y NPhr ke passim and lt PIE ku e OPhr knais B 07 NPhr k naikan wife 16 1 116 lt gu neh2i Secondly in contact with palatal vowels e and i see de Lamberterie 2013 25 26 and especially in initial position some consonants became palatalised PIE ǵhes r hand gt OPhr iray B 05 7NPhr zeira 40 1 12 id Hammig 2013 150 151 It also occurs in glosses ǵheu mn gt zeyman fount source Hesychius z 128 These two secondary processes as happened in Tocharian and the Romance languages lend Phrygian the guise of a satem language Brixhe Claude 2008 Woodard Roger D ed The Ancient Languages of Asia Minor Cambridge University Press p 72 ISBN 978 0 521 68496 5 Unquestionably however Phrygian is most closely linked with Greek Obrador Cursach Bartomeu 2018 Lexicon of the Phrygian Inscriptions PDF University of Barcelona p 102 Furthermore if Phrygian were not so poorly attested perhaps we could reconstruct a Proto Greco Phrygian stage of both languages Obrador Cursach Bartomeu 2019 On the place of Phrygian among the Indo European languages Journal of Language Relationship 17 3 4 Gorgias Press 243 doi 10 31826 jlr 2019 173 407 ISSN 2219 4029 With the current state of our knowledge we can affirm that Phrygian is closely related to Greek This is not a surprising conclusion ancient sources and modern scholars agree that Phrygians did not live far from Greece in pre historic times Moreover the last half century of scientific study of Phrygian has approached both languages and developed the hypothesis of a Proto Greco Phrygian language to the detriment to other theories like Phrygio Armenian or Thraco Phrygian Obrador Cursach Bartomeu 2019 On the place of Phrygian among the Indo European languages Journal of Language Relationship 17 3 4 Gorgias Press 238 239 doi 10 31826 jlr 2019 173 407 ISSN 2219 4029 To the best of our current knowledge Phrygian was closely related to Greek This affirmation is consistent with the vision offered by Neumann 1988 23 Brixhe 2006 and Ligorio and Lubotsky 2018 1816 and with many observations given by ancient authors Both languages share 34 of the 36 features considered in this paper some of them of great significance The available data suggest that Phrygian and Greek coexisted broadly from pre historic to historic times and both belong to a common linguistic area Brixhe 2006 39 44 See for example Encyclopaedia Britannica Phillip Clapham Hittites and Phrygians C amp AH IV 2 pp 71 121 Pausanias 1 4 5 CAH Vol 2 Part 2 p 418 I M Diakonoff The Pre History of the Armenian People revised trans Lori Jennings Caravan Books New York 1984 ISBN 0 88206 039 2 Hamp Eric P August 2013 The Expansion of the Indo European Languages An Indo Europeanist s Evolving View PDF Sino Platonic Papers 239 8 10 13 Archived PDF from the original on 2 August 2019 Armen Petrosyan 1 January 2007 The Problem Of Identification Of The Proto Armenians A Critical Review Society For Armenian Studies pp 49 54 Archived from the original on 4 October 2020 Retrieved 23 November 2018 Martirosyan Hrach 2014 Origins and Historical Development of the Armenian Language PDF Leiden University pp 1 23 Archived PDF from the original on 4 August 2019 Retrieved 5 August 2019 The Mushki Problem Reconsidered Archived from the original on 28 August 2020 Retrieved 24 March 2021 Bartomeu Obrador Cursach On the place of Phrygian among the Indo European languages Journal of Language Relationship 2019 https www academia edu 42660767 On the place of Phrygian among the Indo European languages Clackson J P T 2008 Classical Armenian in Woodard R D The Ancient Languages of Asia Minor Cambridge Cambridge University Press 124 143 Martirosyan H 2013 The place of Armenian in the Indo European language family the relationship with Greek and Indo Iranian Journal of Language Relationship10 85 13 Hamp Eric P August 2013 The Expansion of the Indo European Languages An Indo Europeanist s Evolving View PDF Sino Platonic Papers Kim Ronald 2018 Greco Armenian The persistence of a myth Indogermanische Forschungen The University of British Columbia Library On the place of Phrygian among the Indo European languages Journal of Language Relationship 2019 https www academia edu 42660767 On the place of Phrygian among the Indo European languages Homer Iliad III 216 225 Homer Iliad II 1055 1057 Smith William 1878 A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography London J Murray p 230 Pausanias 10 27 Bibliotheca 2 5 10 Homer Iliad XVI 873 875 Waters Matt 2014 Ancient Persia A Concise History of the Achaemenid Empire 550 330 BCE Cambridge University Press p 29 ISBN 978 0521253697 Strabo I 3 21 Encyclopaedia Britannica Scott 1995 p 183 Kingdoms of the Successors of Alexander After the Battle of Ipsus B C 301 World Digital Library 1800 1884 Retrieved 27 July 2013 van Kuijck Joey 2016 Shaping the Dioceses of Asiana and Africa in Late Antiquity PDF p 27 Retrieved 29 May 2021 Swain Simon Adams J Maxwell Janse Mark 2002 Bilingualism in ancient society language contact and the written word Oxford Oxfordshire Oxford University Press pp 246 266 ISBN 0 19 924506 1 Oreshko 2021 p 137 a b c d e Oreshko 2021 p 136 a b c Oreshko 2021 p 135 Oreshko 2021 p 146 Oreshko 2021 p 158 Oreshko 2021 p 147 a b Oreshko 2021 p 135 136 Oreshko 2021 p 148 Oreshko 2021 p 152 153 a b Oreshko 2021 p 138 Suidas s v Nannakos Stephanus of Byzantium s v Ἰkonion Both passages are translated in A new system or An analysis of ancient mythology by Jacob Bryant 1807 pp 12 14 Plutarch On Isis and Osiris Chapter 24 There were seven all together Pausanias Description of Greece 7 17 Arnobius Against the Pagans 5 5 Histories 2 9 a b McKechnie Paul R 2019 Christianizing Asia Minor conversion communities and social change in the pre Constantinian era New York N Y Cambridge University Press pp 37 41 ISBN 978 1 108 48146 5 Ellicott s Commentary for English Readers accessed 18 September 2015 Acts 16 7 8Bibliography editOreshko Rostyslav 2021 In Search of the Holy Cube Roots Kubaba Kubeleya Kybebos Kufaws and the Problem of Ethnocultural Contact in Early Iron Age Anatolia In Bianconi Michele ed Linguistic and Cultural Interactions between Greece and Anatolia In Search of the Golden Fleece Leiden Netherlands Brill Publishers pp 131 166 ISBN 978 9 004 46159 8 Scott James M 1995 Paul and the Nations The Old Testament and Jewish Background of Paul s Mission to the Nations with Special Reference to the Destination of Galatians Mohr Siebeck ISBN 978 3161463778 Thonemann Peter ed 2013 Roman Phrygia culture and society Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 03128 9 Tamsu Rahsan Polat Yusuf 19 24 February 2007 The Phrygian rock cut altars and their restoration and conservation proposals International Conference on Environment Survival and Sustainability EES 2007 3 Nicosia Northern Cyprus published 2009 1005 1014 ISBN 978 975 8359 55 4 Tamsu Rahsan 24 26 February 2005 Observations on the Phrygian rock cut altars Symposium on Mediterranean Archaeology SOMA 2005 Chieti Pescara Italy Chieti University published 2008 439 445 ISBN 978 1 4073 0181 5 Tamsu Rahsan Polat Yusuf 2010 Yeni Buluntular Isiginda Phryg Kaya Altarlari Ve Bir Tipoloji Onerisi Anadolu Universitesi Sosyal Bilimler Dergisi in Turkish 10 1 Eskisehir 203 222 ISSN 1303 0876 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Phrygia Phrygia Ancient History Encyclopedia Archived from the original on 19 November 2010 Retrieved 10 June 2010 Phrygian Period in Anatolia Ancient Anatolia Archived from the original on 6 December 2006 Ramsay William Mitchell 1911 Phrygia Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 21 11th ed pp 541 544 King Midas and Phrygia Cultural Center Archived from the original on 20 July 2010 39 N 31 E 39 N 31 E 39 31 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Phrygia amp oldid 1212234244, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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