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Troy

Troy (Turkish: Troya, Greek: Τροία, Hittite: 𒋫𒊒𒄿𒊭 Truwiša/Taruiša) or Ilion (Greek: Ίλιον, Hittite: 𒌷𒃾𒇻𒊭 Wiluša)[1][2][3][4] was an ancient country located in present-day Hisarlık, Turkey. The place was first settled around 3600 BC and grew into a small fortified city around 3000 BC. During its four thousand years of existence, Troy was repeatedly destroyed and rebuilt. As a result, the archeological site that has been left is divided into nine layers, each corresponding to a city built on the ruins of the previous. Archaeologists refer to these layers using Roman numerals. Among the early layers, Troy II is notable for its wealth and imposing architecture. During the Late Bronze Age, Troy was called Wilusa and was a vassal of the Hittite Empire. The final layers (Troy VIII-IX) were Greek and Roman cities which in their days served as tourist attractions and religious centers because of their link to mythic tradition.

Troy
Ἴλιον
𒌷𒃾𒇻𒊭 Wiluša
Shown within Marmara
Troy (Turkey)
Troy (Europe)
Troy (Asia)
LocationHisarlık, Çanakkale Province, Turkey
RegionTroad
Coordinates39°57′27″N 26°14′20″E / 39.95750°N 26.23889°E / 39.95750; 26.23889
Part ofHistorical National Park of Troia
Site notes
Websitehttps://whc.unesco.org/en/list/849/
TypeCultural
Designated1998 (22nd session)
Reference no.849
UNESCO RegionEurope and North America

The archaeological site is open to the public as a tourist destination, and was added to the UNESCO World Heritage list in 1998. The site was excavated by Heinrich Schliemann and Frank Calvert starting in 1871. Under the ruins of the classical city, they found the remains of numerous earlier settlements. Several of these layers resemble literary depictions of Troy, leading some scholars to conclude that there is a kernel of truth underlying the legends. Subsequent excavations by others have added to the modern understanding of the site, though the exact relationship between myth and reality remains unclear and there is no definitive evidence for a Greek attack on the city.[5][6](ppxiv, 180–182)

Name edit

In Classical Greek, the city was referred to as both Troia (Τροία) and Ilion (Ἴλιον) or Ilios (Ἴλιος). Metrical evidence from the Iliad and the Odyssey suggests that the latter was originally pronounced Wilios. These names seem to date back to the Bronze Age, as suggested by Hittite records which refer to a city in northwest Anatolia called 𒌷𒃾𒇻𒊭 Wilusa or 𒋫𒊒𒄿𒊭 Truwisa which is generally identified with the site of Hisarlık.[1][a][2][3][4] In Greek myth, these names were held to originate from the names of the kingdom's founders, Tros and his son Ilus.[7][8]

In Latin, the city was referred to as Troia or Ilium. In Turkish, it is generally known as Troya or Truva.

The site: what the archaeological layers tell edit

 
Schematic of the site.[9][b]

The archaeological site of Troy consists of the hill of Hisarlık and the fields below it to the south. The hill is a tell, composed of strata containing the remains left behind by more than three millennia of human occupation.

The primary divisions among layers are designated with Roman numerals, Troy I representing the oldest layer and Troy IX representing the most recent. Sublayers are distinguished with lowercase letters (e.g. VIIa and VIIb) and further subdivisions with numbers (e.g. VIIb1 and VIIb2). An additional major layer known as Troy 0 predates the layers which were initially given Roman numeral designations.

The layers have been given relative dates by comparing artifacts found in them to those found at other sites. However, precise absolute dates are not always possible due to limitations in the accuracy of C14 dating.[10]

Layer Dates Period[c]
Troy 0 3600–3000 BC Neolithic and Early Bronze Age
Troy I 3000–2550 BC Early Bronze Age
Troy II 2500–2300 BC Early Bronze Age
Troy III 2300–2200 BC Early Bronze Age
Troy IV 2200–2000 BC Early Bronze Age
Troy V 2000–1750 BC Early Bronze Age
Troy VI 1750–1300 BC Middle Bronze Age and Late Bronze Age
Troy VIIa 1300–1180 BC Late Bronze Age
Troy VIIb 1180–950 BC Late Bronze Age and Dark Age
Troy VIII 950–85 BC Classical and Hellenistic
Troy IX 85 BC–500 AD Roman

Troy 0 edit

Troy 0 is a pre-Bronze Age layer known from limited finds of pottery shards and wooden beams. It is tentatively dated to c. 3600–3500 BC but little is known about it.[11][12][better source needed]

Troy I edit

 
Troy I's fortifications were the most elaborate in northwestern Anatolia at the time.[13][14](pp9–12)

Troy I was founded around 3000 BC on what was then the eastern shore of a shallow lagoon. It was significantly smaller than later settlements at the site, with a citadel covering less than 1 ha. However, it stood out from its neighbours in particular for its massive limestone fortifications which were regularly renovated and strengthened. Defensive architecture would continue to be a distinctive characteristic in later periods, reflecting perennial security concerns at the vulnerable coastal site.[15][14](pp9–12)

Residents lived in attached houses made of stone and mudbrick. Some houses had a megaron layout, among which one is notably larger than the others. Although the city plan is not entirely clear from its limited remains, the houses appear to have been oriented in parallel to the southern walls. Artifacts from this era include dark colored handmade pottery, objects made of copper, as well as a monumental stone stele with a relief depicting an armed warrior.[15][14]

Troy I was founded as part of a consolidation of settlement in the area. Its founders came from nearby towns such as Kumtepe and Gülpınar, which had been part of an earlier network that had cultural and economic ties to the eastern Aegean and southeastern Europe. Troy itself appears to have maintained these connections, showing similarities to sites in Thessaly and southeastern Europe, as well as Aegean sites such as Poliochni in Lemnos and Thermi in Lesbos. Despite some connections to Anatolian sites including Bademağacı, it did not yet have the close ties with central Anatolia seen later.[15][14]

Troy I was destroyed by fire around 2550 BC.[15][14]

Troy II edit

Troy II was built around 2550 BC. Although there is no evidence of a cultural break after the previous settlement, the new city had a very different character. It was twice the size of the preceding city, featuring a lower town as well as an expanded citadel divided into two precincts. These precincts, divided by colonnades, suggest growing socio-political stratification in Trojan society. At the center were large megaron-style buildings around a courtyard which was likely used for public events. One of these buildings, Megaron IIA, is the biggest known building of its kind in the Aegean-Anatolian region.[15][14](pp11–19)

The citadel was protected by massive stone walls and towers topped with mudbrick superstructures. It was accessed through two ramps, one of which is well preserved and attracts attention from modern day tourists. Because the city was not large enough to require two gates for practical purposes, some archaeologists have speculated that one of the gates was intended for ceremonial processions. The lower city was protected by a wooden palisade unlike any other known in that era. It was a complex structure nearly 3 meters wide, with interior buttresses and columns and beams secured in notches cut into the bedrock.[15][14](pp11–19)

Wheel-made pottery appears at the site for the first time, along with caches of treasures that attest to Trojan participation in networks of aristocratic competition. These items were made from amber imported from the Baltic region, carnelian imported from India, and lapis imported from Afghanistan. Some of these items are strikingly similar to those found at sites such as Poliochni and Ur, leading some scholars to speculate that they may have been made by itinerant jewelers who worked routes covering much of the Ancient Near East.[15][14](pp11–19)

Troy II was destroyed twice. After the first destruction, the citadel was rebuilt with a dense cluster of small houses on an irregular plan. The final destruction took place around 2300 BC. While some scholars have linked this destruction to a broader crisis that affected other Near Eastern sites, there is no definitive evidence for the city having been destroyed by an attack.[15][16][14]

Troy II is notable for having been misidentified as Homeric Troy, during initial excavations, because of its massive architecture, treasure hoards, and catastrophic destruction. In particular Schliemann saw Homer's description of Troy's Scaean Gate reflected in Troy II's imposing western gate. However, later excavations demonstrated that the site was a thousand years too old to have coexisted with Mycenaean Greeks.[15][16][17][18]

Troy III–V edit

 
"Schliemann's Trench". Layers are marked with Roman numerals.

Troy continued to be occupied between 2300 BC and 1750 BC. However, little is known about these several layers due to Schliemann's careless excavation practices. In order to fully excavate the citadel of Troy II, he destroyed most remains from this period without first documenting them. These settlements appear to have been smaller and poorer than previous ones, though this interpretation could be merely the result of gaps in the surviving evidence. The settlements included a dense residential neighborhood in the citadel. Walls from Troy II may have been reused as part of Troy III. By the period of Troy V, the city had once again expanded outside the citadel to the west. Troy IV sees the introduction of domed ovens. In Troy V, artifacts include Anatolian-style "red-cross bowls" as well as imported Minoan objects.[15]

Troy VI–VII edit

Troy VI–VII was a major Late Bronze Age city consisting of a steep fortified citadel and a sprawling lower town below it. It was a thriving coastal city with a considerable population, equal in size to second-tier Hittite settlements. It had a distinct Northwest Anatolian culture and extensive foreign contacts, including with Mycenaean Greece, and its position at the mouth of the Dardanelles has been argued to have given it the function of regional capital, its status protected by treaties.[20] Aspects of its architecture are consistent with the Iliad's description of mythic Troy, and several of its sublayers (VIh and VIIa) show potential signs of violent destruction. Thus, these sublayers are among the candidates for a potential historical setting of those myths.[6](p59)

Troy VI and VII were given separate labels by early excavators, but current research has shown that the first several sublayers of Troy VII were in fact continuations of the earlier city. Although some scholars have proposed revising the nomenclature to reflect this consensus, the original terms are typically used to avoid confusion.[21][5][6](p198)

Troy VI edit

Troy VI existed from around 1750 BC to 1300 BC. Its citadel was divided into a series of rising terraces, of which only the outermost is reasonably well-preserved. On this terrace, archaeologists have found the remains of freestanding multistory houses where Trojan elites would have lived. These houses lacked ground-floor windows, and their stone exterior walls mirrored the architecture of the citadel fortifications. However, they otherwise display an eclectic mix of architectural styles, some following the classic megaron design, others even having irregular floorplans. Some of these houses show potential Aegean influence, one in particular resembling the megaron at Midea in the Argolid. Archaeologists believe there may have been a royal palace on the highest terrace, but most Bronze Age remains from the top of the hill were cleared away by classical era building projects.[6](pp 58–59)[5][14](pp20, 24)

 
Artist's representation of House VI M, part of the palatial complex

The citadel was enclosed by a massive wall whose limestone base is visible to modern day visitors. These walls were periodically renovated, expanding from an initial width of 1.2 metres (3.9 ft) to 5 metres (16 ft) around 1400 BC. During the Bronze Age they would have been overlaid with wood and mudbrick superstructures, reaching a height over 9 metres (30 ft). The walls were built in a "sawtooth" style made of 7 metres (23 ft)-10 metres (33 ft) segments which joined at shallow angles. This characteristic is common in the walls of Mycenaean citadels, though at Troy it is also found in other buildings, suggesting that it may have been decorative. The walls also have a notable slope, similar to those at other sites including Hattusa. However, the walls differ from contemporary Aegean and Anatolian sites both in their lack of figural sculpture and in their masonry. While Troy VI's walls were made entirely of close-fitting ashlars, contemporary sites typically used ashlars around a rubble core.[6](pp 58–59)[5][15][14](pp20–21)

Troy VI's walls were overlooked by several rectangular watchtowers, which would also have provided a clear view of Trojan plain and the sea beyond it. The citadel was accessed by five gates, which led into paved and drained cobblestone streets. Some of these gates featured enormous pillars which serve no structural purpose and have been interpreted as religious symbols. The halls were built in megaron style, resembling Mycenaean architecture.[6](pp 58–59)[5][22][15][14](pp20–21, 24)

The lower town was built to the south of the citadel, covering an area of roughly 30 hectares. Remains of a dense neighborhood have been found just outside the citadel walls, and traces of Bronze Age occupation have been found further away. These include huts, stone paving, threshing floors, pithoi, and waste left behind by Bronze Age industry such as murex shells associated with the manufacture of purple dye. The extent of the lower town is evidenced by a defensive ditch cut 1-2 into the bedrock. A wall or palisade may have stood several meters behind the ditch, as in the outer defenses of other cities such as Qadesh and Carchemish. However, material evidence for such a wall is limited to postholes and cuts in the bedrock.[5][23][14](pp22–23)

The lower city was only discovered in the late 1980s, earlier excavators having assumed that Troy VI occupied only the hill of Hisarlık. Its discovery led to a dramatic reassessment of Troy VI, showing that it was over 16 times larger than had been assumed, and thus a major city with a large population rather than a mere aristocratic residence. However, only 2–3% of the lower city had been excavated as of 2013, and few architectural features are likely to exist. Almost 2m of the surface has eroded, likely removing much of the evidence that hadn't already decomposed, been built over, or reused in later construction.[5][23][6](pp 61–64)[14](pp22–23)

The material culture of Troy VI appears to belong to a distinct Northwest Anatolian cultural group, with influences from the Aegean and the Balkans. The primary local pottery styles were wheel-made Tan Ware and Anatolian Gray Ware. Both styles were offshoots of an earlier Middle Helladic tradition related to Minyan Ware. The earliest gray ware at Troy was made in Aegean shapes, though by 1700 BC it had been replaced by Anatolian shapes. Foreign pottery found at the site includes Minoan, Mycenaean, Cypriot, and Levantine items. Local potters also made their own imitations of foreign styles, including Gray Ware and Tan Ware pots made in Mycenaean-style shapes, particularly after 1500 BC. Although the city appears to have been within the Hittite sphere of influence, no Hittite artifacts have been found in Troy VI. Also notably absent are sculptures and wall paintings, otherwise common features of Bronze Age cities. Troy VI is also notable for its architectural innovations as well as its cultural developments, which included the first evidence of horses at the site.[24][15][14](pp25)[5][23]

The language spoken in Troy VI is unknown. One candidate is Luwian, an Anatolian language believed to have been spoken in the general area. Potential evidence comes from a biconvex seal inscribed with the name of a person using Anatolian hieroglyphs often used to write Luwian. However, available evidence is not sufficient to establish that Luwian was actually spoken by the city's population, and a number of alternatives, such as Greek and Lemnian-Etruscan, have been proposed. Hittite documents found at Hattusa suggest that literacy existed at Troy and that the city may have had a written archive. The Alaksandu Treaty required King Alaksandu to read its text publicly three times a year, while the Milawata letter mentions that the deposed King Walmu was still in possession of wooden investiture tablets. The archive would likely have been housed in the citadel's innermost precinct, whose remains were pushed over the northern side of the hill during 3rd century construction. Despite attempts to sift through the rubble, no documents have been found.[6](pp 117–122)[25][26][14](pp34–35)

Troy VI was destroyed around 1300 BC, corresponding with the sublayer known as Troy VIh. Damage in the Troy VIh layer includes extensive collapsed masonry and subsidence in the southeast of the citadel, indicative of an earthquake. Alternative hypotheses include an internal uprising as well as a foreign attack, though the city was not burned and no victims were found in the debris.[5][6](pp 64–66)[14](p30)

Troy VIIa edit

Troy VIIa was the final layer of the Late Bronze Age city. It was built soon after the destruction of Troy VI, seemingly by its previous inhabitants. The builders reused many of the earlier city's surviving structures, notably its citadel wall, which they renovated with additional stone towers and mudbrick breastworks. Numerous small houses were added inside the citadel, filling in formerly open areas. New houses were also built in the lower city, whose area appears to have been greater in Troy VIIa than in Troy VI. In many of these houses, archaeologists found enormous storage jars called pithoi buried in the ground. Troy VIIa seems to have been built by survivors of Troy VI's destruction, as evidenced by continuity in material culture. However, the character of the city appears to have changed, the citadel growing crowded and foreign imports declining.[5][6](p 59)

The city was destroyed around 1180 BC, roughly contemporary with the Late Bronze Age collapse but subsequent to the destruction of the Mycenaean palaces. The destruction layer shows evidence of enemy attack, including scorch marks.[5][15][6](p 59)

Troy VIIb edit

 
Anatolian Grey Ware

After the destruction of Troy VIIa around 1180 BC, the city was rebuilt as Troy VIIb. Older structures were again reused, including Troy VI's citadel walls. Its first phase, Troy VIIb1, appears to be largely a continuation of Troy VIIa. Residents continued using wheel-made Grey Ware pottery alongside a new handmade style sometimes known as "barbarian ware". Imported Mycenaean-style pottery attests to some continuing foreign trade. However, the city's population appears to have dropped, and rebuilding seems to be confined to the citadel.[5][15][6](pp 66–67)

One of the most striking finds from Troy VIIb1 is a bronze biconvex hieroglyphic Luwian seal giving the name of a woman on one side and the name of a man who worked as a scribe on the other.[27] The seal is important since it is the only example of preclassical writing found at the site, and provides potential evidence that Troy VIIb1 had a Luwian-speaking population. However, the find is puzzling since palace bureaucracies had largely disappeared by this era. Proposed explanations include the possibility that it belonged to an itinerant freelance scribe and alternatively that it dates from an earlier era than its find context would suggest.[5][15][6](p 118)

Troy VIIb2 is marked by dramatic cultural changes including walls made of upright stones and a handmade knobbed pottery style known as Buckelkeramik. These practices, which existed alongside older local traditions, have been argued to reflect immigrant populations arriving from southwest Europe. These newcomers may have shared an origin with the Phrygians who initiated similar cultural shifts at sites such as Gordion. This layer was destroyed around 1050 BC after an apparent earthquake.[5][15][6](pp 66–67)[14](pp38–40)

Troy VIIb3 dates from the Protogeometric era. No new builds were constructed, so its existence is known primarily from artifacts found in the West Sanctuary and terraces on south side of mound. These areas were excavated in the 1990s, surprising the archaeologists who had assumed that the site was abandoned until the Archaic Era. Locally made neck-handled amphoras shows that Troy still had a pottery industry, possibly associated with a wine or oil industry. The style of these pots shows stylistic similarities to other North Aegean sites, suggesting cultural contact. (Because other artifacts do not show these links, archaeologists believe that Greek settlement of Troy did not begin until later.) Both the Troy VI walls and the Troy VIIa Terrace House were reused for worship and communal feasting, as evidenced by animal bones, pottery assemblages, and traces of burned incense. Strikingly, the Terrace House was not renovated when it was adopted as a cult center and thus must have been used in a ruined state, potentially suggesting that the occupants of Troy VIIb3 were deliberately re-engaging with their past.[5][15][6](pp 66–67)[14](pp45–50)

Troy VIIb was destroyed by fire around 950 BC. However, some houses in the citadel were left intact and the site continued to be occupied, if only sparsely.[5][15]

Troy VIII–IX edit

Troy VIII was founded during the Greek Dark Ages and lasted until the Roman era. Though the site had never been entirely abandoned, its redevelopment as a major city was spurred by Greek immigrants who began building around 700 BC. During the Archaic period, the city's defenses once again included the reused citadel wall of Troy VI. Later on, the walls became tourist attractions and sites of worship. Other remains of the Bronze Age city were destroyed by the Greeks' building projects, notably the peak of the citadel where the Troy VI palace is likely to have stood. By the classical era, the city had numerous temples, a theater, among other public buildings, and was once again expanding to the south of the citadel. Troy VIII was destroyed in 85 BC, and subsequently rebuilt as Troy IX. A series of earthquakes devastated the city around 500 AD, though finds from the Late Byzantine era attest to continued habitation at a small scale.[5][15]

Excavation history edit

The search for Troy edit

 
Alexandria Troas

Early modern travellers in the 16th and 17th centuries, including Pierre Belon and Pietro Della Valle, had mistakenly identified Troy with Alexandria Troas, a ruined Hellenistic town approximately 20 kilometres (12 mi) south of Hisarlık.[30] In the late 18th century, Jean Baptiste LeChevalier identified a location near the village of Pınarbaşı, Ezine, a mound approximately 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) south of the currently accepted location. Published in his Voyage de la Troade, it was the most commonly proposed location for almost a century.[31]

In 1822, the Scottish journalist Charles Maclaren was the first to identify with confidence the position of the city as it is now known.[32][33] The first excavations at the site were trenches by British civil engineer John Brunton in 1855.[34]

Frank Calvert edit

The next excavation at Hisarlık was conducted in 1865 by Frank Calvert, a Turkish Levantine man of English descent who owned a farm nearby. Calvert made extensive surveys of the site and correctly identified it with classical-era Ilion.[35] This identification convinced Heinrich Schliemann that Homeric Troy should be sought beneath the classical-era remains and led to their subsequent partnership.[d][37]

Heinrich Schliemann edit

 
Heinrich Schliemann

In 1868, German businessman Heinrich Schliemann visited Calvert, and secured permission to excavate Hisarlık. At this point in time, the mound was about 200 meters long and somewhat less than 150 meters wide. It rose 31.2 meters above the plain and 38.5 meters above sea level.

As with Calvert and others, in April 1870 Schliemann began by excavating a trench across the mound of Hisarlık to the depth of the settlements, today called "Schliemann's Trench".[38] In 1871–1873 and 1878–1879, 1882 and 1890 (the later two joined by Wilhelm Dörpfeld), he discovered the ruins of a series of ancient cities dating from the Bronze Age to the Roman period.[39][40] Schliemann was planning for another excavation season in 1891 when he died in December 1890. He proposed that the second layer, Troy II, corresponded to the city of legend, though later research has shown that it predated the Mycenaean era by several hundred years. Significant finds included many "owl-headed idols" and stone axes from the lower levels.[41][42]

 
Golden bottle and goblets from Priam's Treasure. Pushkin Museum

Some of the most notable artifacts found by Schliemann are known as Priam's Treasure, after the legendary Trojan king. Many of these ended up in the Istanbul Archaeology Museum. Almost all the precious metal objects that went to Berlin were confiscated by the Soviet Union in 1945 and are now in Pushkin Museum in Moscow.[43] Even in his own time Schliemann's legacy was controversial because of his excavation methods which included removing features he considered insignificant without first studying and documenting them.[38]

 
Artifacts which Schliemann dubbed Priam's Treasure.
 
Hisarlık, pictured in 1880. The notch at the top is "Schliemann's Trench".

Wilhelm Dörpfeld edit

Wilhelm Dörpfeld (1893–1894) began working the site alongside Schliemann and later inherited excavation at the site and published his own independent work.[44] His chief contributions were to the study of Troy VI and VII, which Schliemann had overlooked due to his focus on Troy II. Dörpfeld's interest in these layers was triggered by the need to close a hole in the initial excavators' chronology known as "Calvert's Thousand Year Gap".[45] During his excavation, Dörpfeld came across a section of the Troy VI wall which was weaker than the rest. Since the mythic city had likewise had a weak section of its walls, Dörpfeld became convinced that this layer corresponded to Homeric Troy.[46] Schliemann himself privately agreed that Troy VI was more likely to be the Homeric city, but he never published anything stating so.[47]

Carl Blegen edit

Carl Blegen, professor at the University of Cincinnati, managed the site 1932–38. Wilhelm Dörpfeld collaborated with Blegen.[48] These archaeologists, though following Schliemann's lead, added a professional approach not available to Schliemann. He showed that there were at least nine cities. In his research, Blegen came to a conclusion that Troy's nine levels could be further divided into forty-six sublevels,[49] which he published in his main report.[50] A post hoc Correspondence Analysis of Blegen's pottery sequence showed a 100-year gap between Troy III and Troy IV. Combined with a similar analysis of the pottery sequences of Korfmann and Schliemann this suggests that for a time in the late Early Bronze Age occupation contracted to the western end of the citadel mound.[51]

Korfmann edit

From 1988 to 2005, excavations were conducted by a team from the University of Tübingen and the University of Cincinnati under the direction of Professor Manfred Korfmann, with Professor Brian Rose overseeing Post-Bronze Age (Greek, Roman, Byzantine) excavation along the coast of the Aegean Sea at the Bay of Troy. Possible evidence of a battle was found in the form of bronze arrowheads and fire-damaged human remains buried in layers dated to the early 12th century BC. The question of Troy VI's status in the Bronze-Age world was the subject of a sometimes acerbic debate between Korfmann and the Tübingen historian Frank Kolb in 2001–2002.[52][53][54]

One of the major discoveries of these excavations was the Troy VI–VII lower city. This lower town had a wide anti-chariot defensive ditch backed by a wooden palisade. Added to the citadel this lower town would have brought Troy up to an area of around 200,000 square meters. This discovery led to a major reinterpretation of the site, which had previously been regarded as a small aristocratic residence rather than a major settlement.[55]

A number of radiocarbon dates, from charcoal samples, were obtained from various phases of the Troy I level.[56]

From 2006 until 2012, these excavations continued under the direction of Korfmann's colleague Ernst Pernicka, with a new digging permit.[57]

Recent developments edit

In 2013, an international team made up of cross-disciplinary experts led by William Aylward, an archaeologist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, was to carry out new excavations. This activity was to be conducted under the auspices of Çanakkale Onsekiz Mart University and was to use the new technique of "molecular archaeology".[58] A few days before the Wisconsin team was to leave, the Turkish government cancelled about 100 excavation permits throughout Turkey, including Wisconsin's.[59]

Since 2014 excavations have been conducted by a Çanakkale Onsekiz Mart University team led by Rüstem Aslan.[60] The excavators claim to have found a "Level 0" at Troy near the entrance of Troy-II with the new level pushing the city's history back 600 years.[61][62] Since 2016 the University of Amsterdam has conducted a project to examine the 150-year history of excavation at the site.[63]

Historical Troy edit

Troy I–V predate writing and thus study of them falls into the category of prehistoric archaeology. However, Troy emerges into protohistory in the Late Bronze Age, as records mentioning the city begin to appear at other sites. Troy VIII and Troy IX are dated to the historical period and thus are part of history proper.

Troy VI–VII in Hittite records edit

Troy VI–VII is thought to correspond to the placenames Wilusa and Taruisa known from Hittite records. These correspondences were first proposed in 1924 by E. Forrer, who also suggested that the name Ahhiyawa corresponds to the Homeric term for the Greeks, Achaeans. These proposals were primarily motivated by linguistic similarities, since "Taruisa" is a plausible match for the Greek name "Troia" and "Wilusa" likewise for the Greek "Wilios" (later "Ilios"). Subsequent research on Hittite geography has made these identifications more secure, though not all scholars regard them as firmly established.[64](pp 1–6)[6](pp 86, 181–182)

Wilusa first appears in Hittite records around 1400 BC, when it was one of the twenty-two states of the Assuwa Confederation which unsuccessfully attempted to oppose the Hittite Empire. Circumstantial evidence raises the possibility that the rebellion was supported by the Ahhiyawa.[5][6](p 59)[65][66] By the late 1300s BC, Wilusa had become politically aligned with the Hittites. Texts from this period mention two kings named Kukkunni and Alaksandu who maintained peaceful relations with the Hittites even as other states in the area did not. Wilusan soldiers may have served in the Hittite army during the Battle of Kadesh. A bit later, Wilusa seems to have experienced the political turmoil suffered by many of its neighbors. References in the Manapa-Tarhunta letter and Tawagalawa letter suggest that a Wilusan king either rebelled or was deposed. This turmoil may have been related to the exploits of Piyamaradu, a Western Anatolian warlord who toppled other pro-Hittite rulers while acting on behalf the Ahhiyawa. However, Piyamaradu is never explicitly identified as the culprit and certain features of the text suggest that he was not.[6](pp 107–111, 182–185)[64](pp 133–134, 174–177) The final reference to Wilusa in the historical record appears in the Milawata letter, in which the Hittite king Tudhaliya IV expresses his intention to reinstall a deposed Wilusan king named Walmu.[6](pp 112, 183)[64](pp 278–279, 123, 131–133)

In popular writing, these anecdotes have been interpreted as evidence for a historical kernel in myths of the Trojan War. However, some scholars do not see historical evidence for any particular event from the legends, and argue that the Hittite documents do not suggest that Wilusa-Troy was ever attacked by Greeks-Ahhiyawa themselves. Other scholars dispute this. Eric C. Cline has written, "It is now accepted by most knowledgeable authorities that Forrer was correct in identifying Ahhiyawa as the Achaeans (Mycenaeans), most likely those from the mainland of Greece. If so, we can say that we have textual evidence for Mycenaeans involved in fighting and conflicts on the western coast of Anatolia as early as the fifteenth century BCE."[67]

Noted Hittiteologist T. Bryce cautions that our current understanding of Wilusa's history does not provide evidence for there having been an actual Trojan War since "the less material one has, the more easily it can be manipulated to fit whatever conclusion one wishes to come up with".[6](pp 183–184, 186)

Classical and Hellenistic Troy (Troy VIII) edit

In 480 BC, the Persian king Xerxes sacrificed 1,000 cattle at the sanctuary of Athena Ilias while marching through the Hellespontine region towards Greece.[68] Following the Persian defeat in 480–479, Ilion and its territory became part of the continental possessions of Mytilene and remained under Mytilenaean control until the unsuccessful Mytilenean revolt in 428–427. Athens liberated the so-called Actaean cities (called 'Actaean' cities because they were located on the ἀκτή (aktē) or promontory of the mainland north of Lesbos.[69]) including Ilion and enrolled these communities in the Delian League. Athenian influence in the Hellespont waned following the oligarchic coup of 411, and in that year the Spartan general Mindaros emulated Xerxes by likewise sacrificing to Athena Ilias. From c. 410–399, Ilion was within the sphere of influence of the local dynasts at Lampsacus (Zenis, his wife Mania, and the usurper Meidias) who administered the region on behalf of the Persian satrap Pharnabazus.

In 399, the Spartan general Dercylidas expelled the Greek garrison at Ilion who were controlling the city on behalf of the Lampsacene dynasts during a campaign which rolled back Persian influence throughout the Troad. Ilion remained outside the control of the Persian satrapal administration at Dascylium until the Peace of Antalcidas in 387–386. In this period of renewed Persian control c. 387–367, a statue of Ariobarzanes, the satrap of Hellespontine Phrygia, was erected in front of the temple of Athena Ilias.[70] In 360–359 the city was briefly controlled by Charidemus of Oreus, a Euboean mercenary leader who occasionally worked for the Athenians.[71] In 359, he was expelled by the Athenian Menelaos son of Arrabaios, whom the Ilians honoured with a grant of proxeny—this is recorded in the earliest civic decree to survive from Ilion.[72] In May 334 Alexander the Great crossed the Hellespont and came to the city, where he visited the temple of Athena Ilias, made sacrifices at the tombs of the Homeric heroes, and made the city free and exempt from taxes.[73] According to the so-called 'Last Plans' of Alexander which became known after his death in June 323, he had planned to rebuild the temple of Athena Ilias on a scale that would have surpassed every other temple in the known world.[74]

Antigonus Monophthalmus took control of the Troad in 311 and created the new city of Antigoneia Troas which was a synoikism of the cities of Skepsis, Kebren, Neandreia, Hamaxitos, Larisa, and Kolonai. In c. 311–306 the koinon of Athena Ilias was founded from the remaining cities in the Troad and along the Asian coast of the Dardanelles and soon after succeeded in securing a guarantee from Antigonus that he would respect their autonomy and freedom (he had not respected the autonomy of the cities which were synoikized to create Antigoneia).[75] The koinon continued to function until at least the 1st century AD and primarily consisted of cities from the Troad, although for a time in the second half of the 3rd century it also included Myrlea and Chalcedon from the eastern Propontis.[76] The governing body of the koinon was the synedrion on which each city was represented by two delegates. The day-to-day running of the synedrion, especially in relation to its finances, was left to a college of five agonothetai, on which no city ever had more than one representative. This system of equal (rather than proportional) representation ensured that no one city could politically dominate the koinon.[77] The primary purpose of the koinon was to organize the annual Panathenaia festival which was held at the sanctuary of Athena Ilias. The festival brought huge numbers of pilgrims to Ilion for the duration of the festival as well as creating an enormous market (the panegyris) which attracted traders from across the region.[78] In addition, the koinon financed new building projects at Ilion, for example a new theatre c. 306 and the expansion of the sanctuary and temple of Athena Ilias in the 3rd century, in order to make the city a suitable venue for such a large festival.[79]

In the period 302–281, Ilion and the Troad were part of the kingdom of Lysimachus, who during this time helped Ilion synoikize several nearby communities, thus expanding the city's population and territory.[e] Lysimachus was defeated at the Battle of Corupedium in February 281 by Seleucus I Nikator, thus handing the Seleucid kingdom control of Asia Minor, and in August or September 281 when Seleucus passed through the Troad on his way to Lysimachia in the nearby Thracian Chersonese Ilion passed a decree in honour of him, indicating the city's new loyalties.[84] In September Seleucus was assassinated at Lysimachia by Ptolemy Keraunos, making his successor, Antiochus I Soter, the new king. In 280 or soon after Ilion passed a long decree lavishly honouring Antiochus in order to cement their relationship with him.[f] During this period Ilion still lacked proper city walls except for the crumbling Troy VI fortifications around the citadel, and in 278 during the Gallic invasion the city was easily sacked.[86] Ilion enjoyed a close relationship with Antiochus for the rest of his reign: for example, in 274 Antiochus granted land to his friend Aristodikides of Assos which for tax purposes was to be attached to the territory of Ilion, and c. 275–269 Ilion passed a decree in honour of Metrodoros of Amphipolis who had successfully treated the king for a wound he received in battle.[87]

Roman Troy (Troy IX) edit

The city was destroyed by Sulla's rival, the Roman general Fimbria, in 85 BC following an eleven-day siege.[88] Later that year when Sulla had defeated Fimbria, he bestowed benefactions on Ilion for its loyalty which helped rebuilding the city. Ilion reciprocated this act of generosity by instituting a new civic calendar which took 85 BC as its first year.[89] However, the city remained in financial distress for several decades despite its favoured status with Rome. In the 80s BC, Roman publicani illegally levied taxes on the sacred estates of Athena Ilias, and the city was required to call on L. Julius Caesar for restitution; while in 80 BC, the city suffered an attack by pirates.[90] In 77 BC the costs of running the annual festival of the koinon of Athena Ilias became too pressing for both Ilion and the other members of the koinon and L. Julius Caesar was once again required to arbitrate, this time reforming the festival so that it would be less of a financial burden.[91] In 74 BC the Ilians once again demonstrated their loyalty to Rome by siding with the Roman general Lucullus against Mithridates VI.[92] Following the final defeat of Mithridates in 63–62, Pompey rewarded the city's loyalty by becoming the benefactor of Ilion and patron of Athena Ilias.[93]

In 48 BC, Gaius Julius Caesar likewise bestowed benefactions on the city, recalling the city's loyalty during the Mithridatic Wars, the city's connection with his cousin Lucius, and the family's claim that they were ultimately descended from Venus through the Trojan prince Aeneas and therefore shared kinship with the Ilians.[94] In 20 BC, the emperor Augustus (Gaius Octavian Julius Caesar Augustus) visited Ilion and stayed in the house of a leading citizen, Melanippides son of Euthydikos.[95] As a result of his visit, he also financed the restoration and rebuilding of the sanctuary of Athena Ilias, the bouleuterion (council house) and the theatre. Soon after work on the theatre was completed in 12–11 BC, Melanippides dedicated a statue of Augustus in the theatre to record this benefaction.[96]

A new city called Ilium (from Greek Ilion) was founded on the site in the reign of the Roman emperor Augustus. It flourished until the establishment of Constantinople, which became a bishopric in the Roman province Hellespontus (civil Diocese of Asia), but declined gradually in the Byzantine era.

Christian bishopric edit

From the 4th century AD until the Byzantine era, perhaps as late as the 10th century, Ilion was the seat of a Christian bishop.

Troy in legend edit

 
An 18th-century depiction of the legendary sack of Troy.

The main literary work set at Troy is the Iliad, an Archaic-era epic poem which tells the story of the final year of the Trojan War. The Iliad portrays Troy as the capital of a rich and powerful kingdom. In the poem, the city appears to be a major regional power capable of summoning numerous allies to defend it.[g] The city itself is described as sitting on a steep hill, protected by enormous sloping stone walls, rectangular towers, and massive gates whose wooden doors can be bolted shut. According to Dares Phrygius, there were 6 of such gates – the Antenorean, the Dardanian, the Ilian, the Scaean, the Thymbraean, and the Trojan.[98] The city's streets are broad and well-planned. At the top of the hill is the Temple of Athena as well as King Priam's palace, an enormous structure with numerous rooms around an inner courtyard.[6](pp 59–61)[99]

In the Iliad, the Achaeans set up their camp near the mouth of the Scamander river,[100] where they beached their ships. The city itself stood on a hill across the plain of Scamander, where much of the fighting takes place.

Besides the Iliad, there are references to Troy in the other major work attributed to Homer, the Odyssey, as well as in other ancient Greek literature (such as Aeschylus's Oresteia). The Homeric legend of Troy was elaborated by the Roman poet Virgil in his Aeneid. The fall of Troy with the story of the Trojan Horse and the sacrifice of Polyxena, Priam's youngest daughter, is the subject of a later Greek epic by Quintus Smyrnaeus ("Quintus of Smyrna").

The Greeks and Romans took for a fact the historicity of the Trojan War and the identity of Homeric Troy with a site in Anatolia on a peninsula called the Troad (Biga Peninsula). Alexander the Great, for example, visited the site in 334 BC and there made sacrifices at tombs associated with the Homeric heroes Achilles and Patroclus.[6](pp158, 191)[5](p724)

Current status edit

 
The west side of Troy Ridge. The road from Tevfikiye enters from the right.

The Turkish government created the Historical National Park at Troy on September 30, 1996. It contains 136 square kilometres (53 sq mi) to include Troy and its vicinity, centered on Troy.[101] The purpose of the park is to protect the historical sites and monuments within it, as well as the environment of the region. In 1998 the park was accepted as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

 
Wooden Trojan Horse monument in the plaza before the modern gate to the ancient city

Public access to the ancient site is along the road from the vicinity of the museum in Tevfikiye to the east side of Hisarlık. In its square is a large wooden horse monument, with a ladder and internal chambers for use of the public. Bordering the square is the gate to the site. The public passes through turnstiles. Admission is usually not free. Within the site, the visitors tour the features on dirt roads or for access to more precipitous features on railed boardwalks. There are many overlooks with multilingual boards explaining the feature. Most are outdoors, but a permanent canopy covers the site of an early megaron and wall.

 
Troy Museum subterranean interior.
 
Troy Museum aboveground. Most of the entire field in which it sits roofs the underground galleries, work, and storage spaces. These are accessed via ramps not shown. There are also outdoor display spaces.

In 2018 the Troy Museum (Turkish Troya Müzesi) was opened at Tevfikiye village 800 metres (870 yd) east of the excavation. A design contest for the architecture had been won by Yalin Mimarlik in 2011. The cube-shaped building with extensive underground galleries holds more than 40,000 portable artifacts, 2000 of which are on display. Artifacts were moved here from a few other former museums in the region. The range is the entire prehistoric Troad.

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ "Troy or Ilios (or Wilios) is most probably identical with Wilusa or Truwisa ... mentioned in the Hittite sources[1]
  2. ^ 1: Gate 2: City Wall 3: Megarons 4: FN Gate 5: FO Gate 6: FM Gate and Ramp 7: FJ Gate 8: City Wall 9: Megarons 10: City Wall 11: VI. S Gate 12: VI. H Tower 13: VI. R Gate 14: VI. G Tower 15: Well-Cistern 16: VI. T Dardanos Gate 17: VI. I Tower 18: VI. U Gate 19: VI. A House 20: VI. M Palace-Storage House 21: Pillar House 22: VI. F House with columns 23: VI. C House 24: VI. E House 25: VII. Storage 26: Temple of Athena 27: Propylaeum 28: Outer Court Wall 29: Inner Court Wall 30: Holy Place 31: Water Work 32: Bouleuterion 33: Odeon 34: Bath
  3. ^ The periodization of the Western Anatolian Bronze Age differs from divisions used in other areas.
  4. ^ "... by his generosity and constant assistance to Schliemann, enabled him to transform himself with such spectacular success from a businessman into an archaeologist."[36]
  5. ^ In a description of the region, Strabo reports that
    "[Lysimachus] adds to this circle the cities of antiquity already destroyed".
    [Λυσίμαχος] συνῴκισέ τε εἰς αὐτὴν τὰς κύκλῳ πόλεις ἀρχαίας ἤδη κεκακωμένας.[80]
    These probably included Birytis, Gentinos, and Sigeion.[81]
    Birytis and Gentinos are not securely located, but recent excavations at Sigeion appear to independently confirm Strabo's account by indicating an abandonment date soon after c. 300.[82] This may have been punishment for Sigeion resisting Lysimachus in 302.[83]
  6. ^ A minority of scholars instead attempt to date this inscription to the reign of Antiochus III (222–187 BC).[85]
  7. ^ "And Troy prevails by armies not her own".[97](line 160)
    "Assemble all the united bands of Troy; / In just array let every leader call / The foreign troops: this day demands them all."[97](lines 974–976)

References edit

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  2. ^ a b Burney, Charles (2004). "Wilusa". Historical dictionary of the Hittites. Metuchen, NJ: Scarecrow Press. p. 311. ISBN 978-0-8108-4936-5.
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  70. ^ Diodorus Siculus. Bibliotheca historica. 17.17.6.
  71. ^ Demosthenes. [no title cited]. 23.154–157;
    Aeneas Tacticus. Περὶ τοῦ πῶς χρὴ πολιορκουμένους ἀντέχειν [How to Survive a Siege] (in Greek). 24.3–14.
  72. ^ Inschriften von Ilion 23.
  73. ^ Arrian. Anabasis. 1.11–12.
    Diodorus Siculus. Bibliotheca historica. 17.17–18.
    Plutarch. Life of Alexander. 15.
    Marcus Junianus Justinus Frontinus. Historia Philippicae (et Totius Mundi). 9.5.12.
    Strabo. Geographica. 13.1.26, 32.
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    • Inschriften von Ilion 1.
    Re. temple:
    • Rose, C.B. (2003). "The temple of Athena at Ilion". Studia Troica. 13: 27–88.
    See contra:
    • Hertel, D. (2004). "Zum Heiligtum der Athena Ilias von Troia IX und zur frühhellenistischen Stadtanlage von Ilion". Arch. Anz. (in German): 177–205.
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  84. ^ Inschriften von Ilion 31.
  85. ^ Inschriften von Ilion 32.
  86. ^ Strabo. Geographica. 13.1.27.
  87. ^ Inschriften von Ilion 33 (Aristodikides), 34 (Metrodoros).
  88. ^ Strabo. Geographica. 13.1.27.
    Livy. Periochae. 83.
  89. ^ Inschriften von Ilion 10.2–3.
  90. ^ Inchriften von Ilion 71 (publicani), 73 (pirates).
  91. ^ Inschriften von Ilion 10.
  92. ^ Plutarch. Lucullus. 10.3, 12.2.
  93. ^ Supplementum Epigraphicum Graecum 46.1565.
  94. ^ Lucan. Pharsalia. 9.964–999.
    Suetonius. Divus Julius. 79.3.
  95. ^ Dio Cassius. Ῥωμαϊκὴ Ἱστορία [Roman History] (in Greek). 54.7.
    Inschriften von Ilion 83.
  96. ^ Inschriften von Ilion 83.
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Further reading edit

General edit

  • Easton, D.F.; Hawkins, J.D.; Sherratt, A.G.; Sherratt, E.S. (2002). "Troy in Recent Perspective". Anatolian Studies. 52: 75–109. doi:10.2307/3643078. JSTOR 3643078. S2CID 162226134.

Archaeological edit

  • Troia Project (2004). . Troia VR. University of Tübingen. Archived from the original on 30 August 2013. Retrieved 8 August 2013.
  • Heath, Sebastian; Tekkök, Billur, eds. (2007–2009). "Greek, Roman, and Byzantine pottery at Ilion (Troia)". Classics Department. University of Cincinnati. Retrieved 10 August 2013.
  • Heath, Sebastian; Mannsperger, Dietrich; Rose, C. Brian; Wallrodt, John (2013). "Coins from Ilion (Troia)". Classics Department. University of Cincinnati. Retrieved 10 August 2013.

Ecclesiastical history edit

  • Pius Bonifacius Gams (1931). Series episcoporum Ecclesiae Catholicae (in Latin). Leipzig. p. 445.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Lequien, Michel (1740). Oriens christianus in quatuor Patriarchatus digestus (in Latin). Vol. I. Paris, FR. coll. 775–778.

Mythology and literature edit

  • Shepard, Alan; Powell, Stephen D., eds. (2004). Fantasies of Troy: Classical tales and the social imaginary in Medieval and early modern Europe. Toronto, Canada: Centre for Reformation and Renaissance Studies.

External links edit

  • "Uncovering Troy". Archaeological Institute of America. Retrieved 24 January 2020.
  • Troia Projekt and CERHAS (2013). . Troy. University of Cincinnati. Archived from the original on 14 May 2008. Retrieved 8 August 2013.
  • Institut für Ur, Frühgeschichte und Archäologie des Mittelalters, Universität Tübingen; Department of Classics, University of Cincinnati (2010). . Project Troia. Institut für Ur – u. Frühgeschichte. Archived from the original on 19 May 2005. Retrieved 8 August 2013.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Miszczak, Izabela (23 March 2016). "Troy". Turkish Archaeological News.
  • Miszczak, Izabela (13 December 2019). "Troy Museum". Turkish Archaeological News.
  • Rutter, Jeremy B. (2013). . Aegean Prehistoric Archaeology. Dartmouth College. Archived from the original on 12 January 2014. Retrieved 10 August 2013.
    • . Dartmouth College. Archived from the original on 17 August 2016. Retrieved 10 August 2013.
    • . Dartmouth College. Archived from the original on 7 April 2014. Retrieved 10 August 2013.
  • "Hellenistic inscriptions of Ilion, in English translation". attalus.org. Retrieved 3 September 2022.
  • "The Many Myths of the Man Who 'Discovered' – and Nearly Destroyed – Troy", Smithsonian Magazine, Meilan Solly, May 17, 2022

troy, other, uses, disambiguation, turkish, greek, Τροία, hittite, 𒋫𒊒𒄿𒊭, truwiša, taruiša, ilion, greek, Ίλιον, hittite, 𒌷𒃾𒇻𒊭, wiluša, ancient, country, located, present, hisarlık, turkey, place, first, settled, around, 3600, grew, into, small, fortified, city. For other uses see Troy disambiguation Troy Turkish Troya Greek Troia Hittite 𒋫𒊒𒄿𒊭 Truwisa Taruisa or Ilion Greek Ilion Hittite 𒌷𒃾𒇻𒊭 Wilusa 1 2 3 4 was an ancient country located in present day Hisarlik Turkey The place was first settled around 3600 BC and grew into a small fortified city around 3000 BC During its four thousand years of existence Troy was repeatedly destroyed and rebuilt As a result the archeological site that has been left is divided into nine layers each corresponding to a city built on the ruins of the previous Archaeologists refer to these layers using Roman numerals Among the early layers Troy II is notable for its wealth and imposing architecture During the Late Bronze Age Troy was called Wilusa and was a vassal of the Hittite Empire The final layers Troy VIII IX were Greek and Roman cities which in their days served as tourist attractions and religious centers because of their link to mythic tradition TroyἼlion 𒌷𒃾𒇻𒊭 WilusaWalls of Late Bronze Age TroyShown within MarmaraShow map of MarmaraTroy Turkey Show map of TurkeyTroy Europe Show map of EuropeTroy Asia Show map of AsiaLocationHisarlik Canakkale Province TurkeyRegionTroadCoordinates39 57 27 N 26 14 20 E 39 95750 N 26 23889 E 39 95750 26 23889Part ofHistorical National Park of TroiaSite notesWebsitehttps whc unesco org en list 849 UNESCO World Heritage SiteTypeCulturalDesignated1998 22nd session Reference no 849UNESCO RegionEurope and North America The archaeological site is open to the public as a tourist destination and was added to the UNESCO World Heritage list in 1998 The site was excavated by Heinrich Schliemann and Frank Calvert starting in 1871 Under the ruins of the classical city they found the remains of numerous earlier settlements Several of these layers resemble literary depictions of Troy leading some scholars to conclude that there is a kernel of truth underlying the legends Subsequent excavations by others have added to the modern understanding of the site though the exact relationship between myth and reality remains unclear and there is no definitive evidence for a Greek attack on the city 5 6 ppxiv 180 182 Contents 1 Name 2 The site what the archaeological layers tell 2 1 Troy 0 2 2 Troy I 2 3 Troy II 2 4 Troy III V 2 5 Troy VI VII 2 5 1 Troy VI 2 5 2 Troy VIIa 2 5 3 Troy VIIb 2 6 Troy VIII IX 3 Excavation history 3 1 The search for Troy 3 1 1 Frank Calvert 3 1 2 Heinrich Schliemann 3 1 3 Wilhelm Dorpfeld 3 1 4 Carl Blegen 3 1 5 Korfmann 3 1 6 Recent developments 4 Historical Troy 4 1 Troy VI VII in Hittite records 4 2 Classical and Hellenistic Troy Troy VIII 4 3 Roman Troy Troy IX 4 4 Christian bishopric 5 Troy in legend 6 Current status 7 See also 8 Footnotes 9 References 10 Further reading 10 1 General 10 2 Archaeological 10 3 Ecclesiastical history 10 4 Mythology and literature 11 External linksName editIn Classical Greek the city was referred to as both Troia Troia and Ilion Ἴlion or Ilios Ἴlios Metrical evidence from the Iliad and the Odyssey suggests that the latter was originally pronounced Wilios These names seem to date back to the Bronze Age as suggested by Hittite records which refer to a city in northwest Anatolia called 𒌷𒃾𒇻𒊭 Wilusa or 𒋫𒊒𒄿𒊭 Truwisa which is generally identified with the site of Hisarlik 1 a 2 3 4 In Greek myth these names were held to originate from the names of the kingdom s founders Tros and his son Ilus 7 8 In Latin the city was referred to as Troia or Ilium In Turkish it is generally known as Troya or Truva The site what the archaeological layers tell edit nbsp Schematic of the site 9 b The archaeological site of Troy consists of the hill of Hisarlik and the fields below it to the south The hill is a tell composed of strata containing the remains left behind by more than three millennia of human occupation The primary divisions among layers are designated with Roman numerals Troy I representing the oldest layer and Troy IX representing the most recent Sublayers are distinguished with lowercase letters e g VIIa and VIIb and further subdivisions with numbers e g VIIb1 and VIIb2 An additional major layer known as Troy 0 predates the layers which were initially given Roman numeral designations The layers have been given relative dates by comparing artifacts found in them to those found at other sites However precise absolute dates are not always possible due to limitations in the accuracy of C14 dating 10 Layer Dates Period c Troy 0 3600 3000 BC Neolithic and Early Bronze Age Troy I 3000 2550 BC Early Bronze Age Troy II 2500 2300 BC Early Bronze Age Troy III 2300 2200 BC Early Bronze Age Troy IV 2200 2000 BC Early Bronze Age Troy V 2000 1750 BC Early Bronze Age Troy VI 1750 1300 BC Middle Bronze Age and Late Bronze Age Troy VIIa 1300 1180 BC Late Bronze Age Troy VIIb 1180 950 BC Late Bronze Age and Dark Age Troy VIII 950 85 BC Classical and Hellenistic Troy IX 85 BC 500 AD Roman Troy 0 edit Troy 0 is a pre Bronze Age layer known from limited finds of pottery shards and wooden beams It is tentatively dated to c 3600 3500 BC but little is known about it 11 12 better source needed Troy I edit nbsp Troy I s fortifications were the most elaborate in northwestern Anatolia at the time 13 14 pp9 12 Troy I was founded around 3000 BC on what was then the eastern shore of a shallow lagoon It was significantly smaller than later settlements at the site with a citadel covering less than 1 ha However it stood out from its neighbours in particular for its massive limestone fortifications which were regularly renovated and strengthened Defensive architecture would continue to be a distinctive characteristic in later periods reflecting perennial security concerns at the vulnerable coastal site 15 14 pp9 12 Residents lived in attached houses made of stone and mudbrick Some houses had a megaron layout among which one is notably larger than the others Although the city plan is not entirely clear from its limited remains the houses appear to have been oriented in parallel to the southern walls Artifacts from this era include dark colored handmade pottery objects made of copper as well as a monumental stone stele with a relief depicting an armed warrior 15 14 Troy I was founded as part of a consolidation of settlement in the area Its founders came from nearby towns such as Kumtepe and Gulpinar which had been part of an earlier network that had cultural and economic ties to the eastern Aegean and southeastern Europe Troy itself appears to have maintained these connections showing similarities to sites in Thessaly and southeastern Europe as well as Aegean sites such as Poliochni in Lemnos and Thermi in Lesbos Despite some connections to Anatolian sites including Bademagaci it did not yet have the close ties with central Anatolia seen later 15 14 Troy I was destroyed by fire around 2550 BC 15 14 Troy II edit Troy II was built around 2550 BC Although there is no evidence of a cultural break after the previous settlement the new city had a very different character It was twice the size of the preceding city featuring a lower town as well as an expanded citadel divided into two precincts These precincts divided by colonnades suggest growing socio political stratification in Trojan society At the center were large megaron style buildings around a courtyard which was likely used for public events One of these buildings Megaron IIA is the biggest known building of its kind in the Aegean Anatolian region 15 14 pp11 19 The citadel was protected by massive stone walls and towers topped with mudbrick superstructures It was accessed through two ramps one of which is well preserved and attracts attention from modern day tourists Because the city was not large enough to require two gates for practical purposes some archaeologists have speculated that one of the gates was intended for ceremonial processions The lower city was protected by a wooden palisade unlike any other known in that era It was a complex structure nearly 3 meters wide with interior buttresses and columns and beams secured in notches cut into the bedrock 15 14 pp11 19 Wheel made pottery appears at the site for the first time along with caches of treasures that attest to Trojan participation in networks of aristocratic competition These items were made from amber imported from the Baltic region carnelian imported from India and lapis imported from Afghanistan Some of these items are strikingly similar to those found at sites such as Poliochni and Ur leading some scholars to speculate that they may have been made by itinerant jewelers who worked routes covering much of the Ancient Near East 15 14 pp11 19 Troy II was destroyed twice After the first destruction the citadel was rebuilt with a dense cluster of small houses on an irregular plan The final destruction took place around 2300 BC While some scholars have linked this destruction to a broader crisis that affected other Near Eastern sites there is no definitive evidence for the city having been destroyed by an attack 15 16 14 Troy II is notable for having been misidentified as Homeric Troy during initial excavations because of its massive architecture treasure hoards and catastrophic destruction In particular Schliemann saw Homer s description of Troy s Scaean Gate reflected in Troy II s imposing western gate However later excavations demonstrated that the site was a thousand years too old to have coexisted with Mycenaean Greeks 15 16 17 18 Troy II nbsp Southwest ramp of Troy II nbsp Side view of southwest ramp nbsp Troy II walls with modern reconstructed mudbrick 19 nbsp Troy II fortifications with modern reconstructed mudbrick Troy III V edit nbsp Schliemann s Trench Layers are marked with Roman numerals Troy continued to be occupied between 2300 BC and 1750 BC However little is known about these several layers due to Schliemann s careless excavation practices In order to fully excavate the citadel of Troy II he destroyed most remains from this period without first documenting them These settlements appear to have been smaller and poorer than previous ones though this interpretation could be merely the result of gaps in the surviving evidence The settlements included a dense residential neighborhood in the citadel Walls from Troy II may have been reused as part of Troy III By the period of Troy V the city had once again expanded outside the citadel to the west Troy IV sees the introduction of domed ovens In Troy V artifacts include Anatolian style red cross bowls as well as imported Minoan objects 15 Troy VI VII edit Main article Late Bronze Age Troy Troy VI VII was a major Late Bronze Age city consisting of a steep fortified citadel and a sprawling lower town below it It was a thriving coastal city with a considerable population equal in size to second tier Hittite settlements It had a distinct Northwest Anatolian culture and extensive foreign contacts including with Mycenaean Greece and its position at the mouth of the Dardanelles has been argued to have given it the function of regional capital its status protected by treaties 20 Aspects of its architecture are consistent with the Iliad s description of mythic Troy and several of its sublayers VIh and VIIa show potential signs of violent destruction Thus these sublayers are among the candidates for a potential historical setting of those myths 6 p59 Troy VI and VII were given separate labels by early excavators but current research has shown that the first several sublayers of Troy VII were in fact continuations of the earlier city Although some scholars have proposed revising the nomenclature to reflect this consensus the original terms are typically used to avoid confusion 21 5 6 p198 Troy VI edit Troy VI existed from around 1750 BC to 1300 BC Its citadel was divided into a series of rising terraces of which only the outermost is reasonably well preserved On this terrace archaeologists have found the remains of freestanding multistory houses where Trojan elites would have lived These houses lacked ground floor windows and their stone exterior walls mirrored the architecture of the citadel fortifications However they otherwise display an eclectic mix of architectural styles some following the classic megaron design others even having irregular floorplans Some of these houses show potential Aegean influence one in particular resembling the megaron at Midea in the Argolid Archaeologists believe there may have been a royal palace on the highest terrace but most Bronze Age remains from the top of the hill were cleared away by classical era building projects 6 pp 58 59 5 14 pp20 24 nbsp Artist s representation of House VI M part of the palatial complex The citadel was enclosed by a massive wall whose limestone base is visible to modern day visitors These walls were periodically renovated expanding from an initial width of 1 2 metres 3 9 ft to 5 metres 16 ft around 1400 BC During the Bronze Age they would have been overlaid with wood and mudbrick superstructures reaching a height over 9 metres 30 ft The walls were built in a sawtooth style made of 7 metres 23 ft 10 metres 33 ft segments which joined at shallow angles This characteristic is common in the walls of Mycenaean citadels though at Troy it is also found in other buildings suggesting that it may have been decorative The walls also have a notable slope similar to those at other sites including Hattusa However the walls differ from contemporary Aegean and Anatolian sites both in their lack of figural sculpture and in their masonry While Troy VI s walls were made entirely of close fitting ashlars contemporary sites typically used ashlars around a rubble core 6 pp 58 59 5 15 14 pp20 21 Troy VI s walls were overlooked by several rectangular watchtowers which would also have provided a clear view of Trojan plain and the sea beyond it The citadel was accessed by five gates which led into paved and drained cobblestone streets Some of these gates featured enormous pillars which serve no structural purpose and have been interpreted as religious symbols The halls were built in megaron style resembling Mycenaean architecture 6 pp 58 59 5 22 15 14 pp20 21 24 The lower town was built to the south of the citadel covering an area of roughly 30 hectares Remains of a dense neighborhood have been found just outside the citadel walls and traces of Bronze Age occupation have been found further away These include huts stone paving threshing floors pithoi and waste left behind by Bronze Age industry such as murex shells associated with the manufacture of purple dye The extent of the lower town is evidenced by a defensive ditch cut 1 2 into the bedrock A wall or palisade may have stood several meters behind the ditch as in the outer defenses of other cities such as Qadesh and Carchemish However material evidence for such a wall is limited to postholes and cuts in the bedrock 5 23 14 pp22 23 The lower city was only discovered in the late 1980s earlier excavators having assumed that Troy VI occupied only the hill of Hisarlik Its discovery led to a dramatic reassessment of Troy VI showing that it was over 16 times larger than had been assumed and thus a major city with a large population rather than a mere aristocratic residence However only 2 3 of the lower city had been excavated as of 2013 and few architectural features are likely to exist Almost 2m of the surface has eroded likely removing much of the evidence that hadn t already decomposed been built over or reused in later construction 5 23 6 pp 61 64 14 pp22 23 The material culture of Troy VI appears to belong to a distinct Northwest Anatolian cultural group with influences from the Aegean and the Balkans The primary local pottery styles were wheel made Tan Ware and Anatolian Gray Ware Both styles were offshoots of an earlier Middle Helladic tradition related to Minyan Ware The earliest gray ware at Troy was made in Aegean shapes though by 1700 BC it had been replaced by Anatolian shapes Foreign pottery found at the site includes Minoan Mycenaean Cypriot and Levantine items Local potters also made their own imitations of foreign styles including Gray Ware and Tan Ware pots made in Mycenaean style shapes particularly after 1500 BC Although the city appears to have been within the Hittite sphere of influence no Hittite artifacts have been found in Troy VI Also notably absent are sculptures and wall paintings otherwise common features of Bronze Age cities Troy VI is also notable for its architectural innovations as well as its cultural developments which included the first evidence of horses at the site 24 15 14 pp25 5 23 The language spoken in Troy VI is unknown One candidate is Luwian an Anatolian language believed to have been spoken in the general area Potential evidence comes from a biconvex seal inscribed with the name of a person using Anatolian hieroglyphs often used to write Luwian However available evidence is not sufficient to establish that Luwian was actually spoken by the city s population and a number of alternatives such as Greek and Lemnian Etruscan have been proposed Hittite documents found at Hattusa suggest that literacy existed at Troy and that the city may have had a written archive The Alaksandu Treaty required King Alaksandu to read its text publicly three times a year while the Milawata letter mentions that the deposed King Walmu was still in possession of wooden investiture tablets The archive would likely have been housed in the citadel s innermost precinct whose remains were pushed over the northern side of the hill during 3rd century construction Despite attempts to sift through the rubble no documents have been found 6 pp 117 122 25 26 14 pp34 35 Troy VI was destroyed around 1300 BC corresponding with the sublayer known as Troy VIh Damage in the Troy VIh layer includes extensive collapsed masonry and subsidence in the southeast of the citadel indicative of an earthquake Alternative hypotheses include an internal uprising as well as a foreign attack though the city was not burned and no victims were found in the debris 5 6 pp 64 66 14 p30 Troy VI VII citadel walls nbsp Troy VI East Gate and Troy VI houses on the terrace immediately above nbsp Tower at the East Gate Complex nbsp East Gate cul de sac Troy IX walls on the right nbsp Wall segment near the East Gate nbsp Side view of wall nbsp South Gate nbsp Non structural pillar at the South Gate Troy VIIa edit Troy VIIa was the final layer of the Late Bronze Age city It was built soon after the destruction of Troy VI seemingly by its previous inhabitants The builders reused many of the earlier city s surviving structures notably its citadel wall which they renovated with additional stone towers and mudbrick breastworks Numerous small houses were added inside the citadel filling in formerly open areas New houses were also built in the lower city whose area appears to have been greater in Troy VIIa than in Troy VI In many of these houses archaeologists found enormous storage jars called pithoi buried in the ground Troy VIIa seems to have been built by survivors of Troy VI s destruction as evidenced by continuity in material culture However the character of the city appears to have changed the citadel growing crowded and foreign imports declining 5 6 p 59 The city was destroyed around 1180 BC roughly contemporary with the Late Bronze Age collapse but subsequent to the destruction of the Mycenaean palaces The destruction layer shows evidence of enemy attack including scorch marks 5 15 6 p 59 Troy VIIb edit nbsp Anatolian Grey Ware After the destruction of Troy VIIa around 1180 BC the city was rebuilt as Troy VIIb Older structures were again reused including Troy VI s citadel walls Its first phase Troy VIIb1 appears to be largely a continuation of Troy VIIa Residents continued using wheel made Grey Ware pottery alongside a new handmade style sometimes known as barbarian ware Imported Mycenaean style pottery attests to some continuing foreign trade However the city s population appears to have dropped and rebuilding seems to be confined to the citadel 5 15 6 pp 66 67 One of the most striking finds from Troy VIIb1 is a bronze biconvex hieroglyphic Luwian seal giving the name of a woman on one side and the name of a man who worked as a scribe on the other 27 The seal is important since it is the only example of preclassical writing found at the site and provides potential evidence that Troy VIIb1 had a Luwian speaking population However the find is puzzling since palace bureaucracies had largely disappeared by this era Proposed explanations include the possibility that it belonged to an itinerant freelance scribe and alternatively that it dates from an earlier era than its find context would suggest 5 15 6 p 118 Troy VIIb2 is marked by dramatic cultural changes including walls made of upright stones and a handmade knobbed pottery style known as Buckelkeramik These practices which existed alongside older local traditions have been argued to reflect immigrant populations arriving from southwest Europe These newcomers may have shared an origin with the Phrygians who initiated similar cultural shifts at sites such as Gordion This layer was destroyed around 1050 BC after an apparent earthquake 5 15 6 pp 66 67 14 pp38 40 Troy VIIb3 dates from the Protogeometric era No new builds were constructed so its existence is known primarily from artifacts found in the West Sanctuary and terraces on south side of mound These areas were excavated in the 1990s surprising the archaeologists who had assumed that the site was abandoned until the Archaic Era Locally made neck handled amphoras shows that Troy still had a pottery industry possibly associated with a wine or oil industry The style of these pots shows stylistic similarities to other North Aegean sites suggesting cultural contact Because other artifacts do not show these links archaeologists believe that Greek settlement of Troy did not begin until later Both the Troy VI walls and the Troy VIIa Terrace House were reused for worship and communal feasting as evidenced by animal bones pottery assemblages and traces of burned incense Strikingly the Terrace House was not renovated when it was adopted as a cult center and thus must have been used in a ruined state potentially suggesting that the occupants of Troy VIIb3 were deliberately re engaging with their past 5 15 6 pp 66 67 14 pp45 50 Troy VIIb was destroyed by fire around 950 BC However some houses in the citadel were left intact and the site continued to be occupied if only sparsely 5 15 Troy VIII IX edit Troy VIII was founded during the Greek Dark Ages and lasted until the Roman era Though the site had never been entirely abandoned its redevelopment as a major city was spurred by Greek immigrants who began building around 700 BC During the Archaic period the city s defenses once again included the reused citadel wall of Troy VI Later on the walls became tourist attractions and sites of worship Other remains of the Bronze Age city were destroyed by the Greeks building projects notably the peak of the citadel where the Troy VI palace is likely to have stood By the classical era the city had numerous temples a theater among other public buildings and was once again expanding to the south of the citadel Troy VIII was destroyed in 85 BC and subsequently rebuilt as Troy IX A series of earthquakes devastated the city around 500 AD though finds from the Late Byzantine era attest to continued habitation at a small scale 5 15 Troy VIII IX nbsp Troy VIII Temple of Athena built over the ruins of the Bronze Age palatial complex nbsp Troy IX Odeon 28 nbsp Troy IX Roman bath 29 Excavation history editThe search for Troy edit nbsp Alexandria Troas Early modern travellers in the 16th and 17th centuries including Pierre Belon and Pietro Della Valle had mistakenly identified Troy with Alexandria Troas a ruined Hellenistic town approximately 20 kilometres 12 mi south of Hisarlik 30 In the late 18th century Jean Baptiste LeChevalier identified a location near the village of Pinarbasi Ezine a mound approximately 5 kilometres 3 1 mi south of the currently accepted location Published in his Voyage de la Troade it was the most commonly proposed location for almost a century 31 In 1822 the Scottish journalist Charles Maclaren was the first to identify with confidence the position of the city as it is now known 32 33 The first excavations at the site were trenches by British civil engineer John Brunton in 1855 34 Frank Calvert edit The next excavation at Hisarlik was conducted in 1865 by Frank Calvert a Turkish Levantine man of English descent who owned a farm nearby Calvert made extensive surveys of the site and correctly identified it with classical era Ilion 35 This identification convinced Heinrich Schliemann that Homeric Troy should be sought beneath the classical era remains and led to their subsequent partnership d 37 Heinrich Schliemann edit nbsp Heinrich Schliemann In 1868 German businessman Heinrich Schliemann visited Calvert and secured permission to excavate Hisarlik At this point in time the mound was about 200 meters long and somewhat less than 150 meters wide It rose 31 2 meters above the plain and 38 5 meters above sea level As with Calvert and others in April 1870 Schliemann began by excavating a trench across the mound of Hisarlik to the depth of the settlements today called Schliemann s Trench 38 In 1871 1873 and 1878 1879 1882 and 1890 the later two joined by Wilhelm Dorpfeld he discovered the ruins of a series of ancient cities dating from the Bronze Age to the Roman period 39 40 Schliemann was planning for another excavation season in 1891 when he died in December 1890 He proposed that the second layer Troy II corresponded to the city of legend though later research has shown that it predated the Mycenaean era by several hundred years Significant finds included many owl headed idols and stone axes from the lower levels 41 42 nbsp Golden bottle and goblets from Priam s Treasure Pushkin Museum Some of the most notable artifacts found by Schliemann are known as Priam s Treasure after the legendary Trojan king Many of these ended up in the Istanbul Archaeology Museum Almost all the precious metal objects that went to Berlin were confiscated by the Soviet Union in 1945 and are now in Pushkin Museum in Moscow 43 Even in his own time Schliemann s legacy was controversial because of his excavation methods which included removing features he considered insignificant without first studying and documenting them 38 nbsp Artifacts which Schliemann dubbed Priam s Treasure nbsp Hisarlik pictured in 1880 The notch at the top is Schliemann s Trench Wilhelm Dorpfeld edit Wilhelm Dorpfeld 1893 1894 began working the site alongside Schliemann and later inherited excavation at the site and published his own independent work 44 His chief contributions were to the study of Troy VI and VII which Schliemann had overlooked due to his focus on Troy II Dorpfeld s interest in these layers was triggered by the need to close a hole in the initial excavators chronology known as Calvert s Thousand Year Gap 45 During his excavation Dorpfeld came across a section of the Troy VI wall which was weaker than the rest Since the mythic city had likewise had a weak section of its walls Dorpfeld became convinced that this layer corresponded to Homeric Troy 46 Schliemann himself privately agreed that Troy VI was more likely to be the Homeric city but he never published anything stating so 47 Carl Blegen edit Carl Blegen professor at the University of Cincinnati managed the site 1932 38 Wilhelm Dorpfeld collaborated with Blegen 48 These archaeologists though following Schliemann s lead added a professional approach not available to Schliemann He showed that there were at least nine cities In his research Blegen came to a conclusion that Troy s nine levels could be further divided into forty six sublevels 49 which he published in his main report 50 A post hoc Correspondence Analysis of Blegen s pottery sequence showed a 100 year gap between Troy III and Troy IV Combined with a similar analysis of the pottery sequences of Korfmann and Schliemann this suggests that for a time in the late Early Bronze Age occupation contracted to the western end of the citadel mound 51 Korfmann edit From 1988 to 2005 excavations were conducted by a team from the University of Tubingen and the University of Cincinnati under the direction of Professor Manfred Korfmann with Professor Brian Rose overseeing Post Bronze Age Greek Roman Byzantine excavation along the coast of the Aegean Sea at the Bay of Troy Possible evidence of a battle was found in the form of bronze arrowheads and fire damaged human remains buried in layers dated to the early 12th century BC The question of Troy VI s status in the Bronze Age world was the subject of a sometimes acerbic debate between Korfmann and the Tubingen historian Frank Kolb in 2001 2002 52 53 54 One of the major discoveries of these excavations was the Troy VI VII lower city This lower town had a wide anti chariot defensive ditch backed by a wooden palisade Added to the citadel this lower town would have brought Troy up to an area of around 200 000 square meters This discovery led to a major reinterpretation of the site which had previously been regarded as a small aristocratic residence rather than a major settlement 55 A number of radiocarbon dates from charcoal samples were obtained from various phases of the Troy I level 56 From 2006 until 2012 these excavations continued under the direction of Korfmann s colleague Ernst Pernicka with a new digging permit 57 Recent developments edit In 2013 an international team made up of cross disciplinary experts led by William Aylward an archaeologist at the University of Wisconsin Madison was to carry out new excavations This activity was to be conducted under the auspices of Canakkale Onsekiz Mart University and was to use the new technique of molecular archaeology 58 A few days before the Wisconsin team was to leave the Turkish government cancelled about 100 excavation permits throughout Turkey including Wisconsin s 59 Since 2014 excavations have been conducted by a Canakkale Onsekiz Mart University team led by Rustem Aslan 60 The excavators claim to have found a Level 0 at Troy near the entrance of Troy II with the new level pushing the city s history back 600 years 61 62 Since 2016 the University of Amsterdam has conducted a project to examine the 150 year history of excavation at the site 63 Historical Troy editTroy I V predate writing and thus study of them falls into the category of prehistoric archaeology However Troy emerges into protohistory in the Late Bronze Age as records mentioning the city begin to appear at other sites Troy VIII and Troy IX are dated to the historical period and thus are part of history proper Troy VI VII in Hittite records edit Further information Wilusa and Ahhiyawa Troy VI VII is thought to correspond to the placenames Wilusa and Taruisa known from Hittite records These correspondences were first proposed in 1924 by E Forrer who also suggested that the name Ahhiyawa corresponds to the Homeric term for the Greeks Achaeans These proposals were primarily motivated by linguistic similarities since Taruisa is a plausible match for the Greek name Troia and Wilusa likewise for the Greek Wilios later Ilios Subsequent research on Hittite geography has made these identifications more secure though not all scholars regard them as firmly established 64 pp 1 6 6 pp 86 181 182 Wilusa first appears in Hittite records around 1400 BC when it was one of the twenty two states of the Assuwa Confederation which unsuccessfully attempted to oppose the Hittite Empire Circumstantial evidence raises the possibility that the rebellion was supported by the Ahhiyawa 5 6 p 59 65 66 By the late 1300s BC Wilusa had become politically aligned with the Hittites Texts from this period mention two kings named Kukkunni and Alaksandu who maintained peaceful relations with the Hittites even as other states in the area did not Wilusan soldiers may have served in the Hittite army during the Battle of Kadesh A bit later Wilusa seems to have experienced the political turmoil suffered by many of its neighbors References in the Manapa Tarhunta letter and Tawagalawa letter suggest that a Wilusan king either rebelled or was deposed This turmoil may have been related to the exploits of Piyamaradu a Western Anatolian warlord who toppled other pro Hittite rulers while acting on behalf the Ahhiyawa However Piyamaradu is never explicitly identified as the culprit and certain features of the text suggest that he was not 6 pp 107 111 182 185 64 pp 133 134 174 177 The final reference to Wilusa in the historical record appears in the Milawata letter in which the Hittite king Tudhaliya IV expresses his intention to reinstall a deposed Wilusan king named Walmu 6 pp 112 183 64 pp 278 279 123 131 133 In popular writing these anecdotes have been interpreted as evidence for a historical kernel in myths of the Trojan War However some scholars do not see historical evidence for any particular event from the legends and argue that the Hittite documents do not suggest that Wilusa Troy was ever attacked by Greeks Ahhiyawa themselves Other scholars dispute this Eric C Cline has written It is now accepted by most knowledgeable authorities that Forrer was correct in identifying Ahhiyawa as the Achaeans Mycenaeans most likely those from the mainland of Greece If so we can say that we have textual evidence for Mycenaeans involved in fighting and conflicts on the western coast of Anatolia as early as the fifteenth century BCE 67 Noted Hittiteologist T Bryce cautions that our current understanding of Wilusa s history does not provide evidence for there having been an actual Trojan War since the less material one has the more easily it can be manipulated to fit whatever conclusion one wishes to come up with 6 pp 183 184 186 Classical and Hellenistic Troy Troy VIII edit In 480 BC the Persian king Xerxes sacrificed 1 000 cattle at the sanctuary of Athena Ilias while marching through the Hellespontine region towards Greece 68 Following the Persian defeat in 480 479 Ilion and its territory became part of the continental possessions of Mytilene and remained under Mytilenaean control until the unsuccessful Mytilenean revolt in 428 427 Athens liberated the so called Actaean cities called Actaean cities because they were located on the ἀkth akte or promontory of the mainland north of Lesbos 69 including Ilion and enrolled these communities in the Delian League Athenian influence in the Hellespont waned following the oligarchic coup of 411 and in that year the Spartan general Mindaros emulated Xerxes by likewise sacrificing to Athena Ilias From c 410 399 Ilion was within the sphere of influence of the local dynasts at Lampsacus Zenis his wife Mania and the usurper Meidias who administered the region on behalf of the Persian satrap Pharnabazus In 399 the Spartan general Dercylidas expelled the Greek garrison at Ilion who were controlling the city on behalf of the Lampsacene dynasts during a campaign which rolled back Persian influence throughout the Troad Ilion remained outside the control of the Persian satrapal administration at Dascylium until the Peace of Antalcidas in 387 386 In this period of renewed Persian control c 387 367 a statue of Ariobarzanes the satrap of Hellespontine Phrygia was erected in front of the temple of Athena Ilias 70 In 360 359 the city was briefly controlled by Charidemus of Oreus a Euboean mercenary leader who occasionally worked for the Athenians 71 In 359 he was expelled by the Athenian Menelaos son of Arrabaios whom the Ilians honoured with a grant of proxeny this is recorded in the earliest civic decree to survive from Ilion 72 In May 334 Alexander the Great crossed the Hellespont and came to the city where he visited the temple of Athena Ilias made sacrifices at the tombs of the Homeric heroes and made the city free and exempt from taxes 73 According to the so called Last Plans of Alexander which became known after his death in June 323 he had planned to rebuild the temple of Athena Ilias on a scale that would have surpassed every other temple in the known world 74 Antigonus Monophthalmus took control of the Troad in 311 and created the new city of Antigoneia Troas which was a synoikism of the cities of Skepsis Kebren Neandreia Hamaxitos Larisa and Kolonai In c 311 306 the koinon of Athena Ilias was founded from the remaining cities in the Troad and along the Asian coast of the Dardanelles and soon after succeeded in securing a guarantee from Antigonus that he would respect their autonomy and freedom he had not respected the autonomy of the cities which were synoikized to create Antigoneia 75 The koinon continued to function until at least the 1st century AD and primarily consisted of cities from the Troad although for a time in the second half of the 3rd century it also included Myrlea and Chalcedon from the eastern Propontis 76 The governing body of the koinon was the synedrion on which each city was represented by two delegates The day to day running of the synedrion especially in relation to its finances was left to a college of five agonothetai on which no city ever had more than one representative This system of equal rather than proportional representation ensured that no one city could politically dominate the koinon 77 The primary purpose of the koinon was to organize the annual Panathenaia festival which was held at the sanctuary of Athena Ilias The festival brought huge numbers of pilgrims to Ilion for the duration of the festival as well as creating an enormous market the panegyris which attracted traders from across the region 78 In addition the koinonfinanced new building projects at Ilion for example a new theatre c 306 and the expansion of the sanctuary and temple of Athena Ilias in the 3rd century in order to make the city a suitable venue for such a large festival 79 In the period 302 281 Ilion and the Troad were part of the kingdom of Lysimachus who during this time helped Ilion synoikize several nearby communities thus expanding the city s population and territory e Lysimachus was defeated at the Battle of Corupedium in February 281 by Seleucus I Nikator thus handing the Seleucid kingdom control of Asia Minor and in August or September 281 when Seleucus passed through the Troad on his way to Lysimachia in the nearby Thracian Chersonese Ilion passed a decree in honour of him indicating the city s new loyalties 84 In September Seleucus was assassinated at Lysimachia by Ptolemy Keraunos making his successor Antiochus I Soter the new king In 280 or soon after Ilion passed a long decree lavishly honouring Antiochus in order to cement their relationship with him f During this period Ilion still lacked proper city walls except for the crumbling Troy VI fortifications around the citadel and in 278 during the Gallic invasion the city was easily sacked 86 Ilion enjoyed a close relationship with Antiochus for the rest of his reign for example in 274 Antiochus granted land to his friend Aristodikides of Assos which for tax purposes was to be attached to the territory of Ilion and c 275 269 Ilion passed a decree in honour of Metrodoros of Amphipolis who had successfully treated the king for a wound he received in battle 87 Roman Troy Troy IX edit The city was destroyed by Sulla s rival the Roman general Fimbria in 85 BC following an eleven day siege 88 Later that year when Sulla had defeated Fimbria he bestowed benefactions on Ilion for its loyalty which helped rebuilding the city Ilion reciprocated this act of generosity by instituting a new civic calendar which took 85 BC as its first year 89 However the city remained in financial distress for several decades despite its favoured status with Rome In the 80s BC Roman publicani illegally levied taxes on the sacred estates of Athena Ilias and the city was required to call on L Julius Caesar for restitution while in 80 BC the city suffered an attack by pirates 90 In 77 BC the costs of running the annual festival of the koinon of Athena Ilias became too pressing for both Ilion and the other members of the koinon and L Julius Caesar was once again required to arbitrate this time reforming the festival so that it would be less of a financial burden 91 In 74 BC the Ilians once again demonstrated their loyalty to Rome by siding with the Roman general Lucullus against Mithridates VI 92 Following the final defeat of Mithridates in 63 62 Pompey rewarded the city s loyalty by becoming the benefactor of Ilion and patron of Athena Ilias 93 In 48 BC Gaius Julius Caesar likewise bestowed benefactions on the city recalling the city s loyalty during the Mithridatic Wars the city s connection with his cousin Lucius and the family s claim that they were ultimately descended from Venus through the Trojan prince Aeneas and therefore shared kinship with the Ilians 94 In 20 BC the emperor Augustus Gaius Octavian Julius Caesar Augustus visited Ilion and stayed in the house of a leading citizen Melanippides son of Euthydikos 95 As a result of his visit he also financed the restoration and rebuilding of the sanctuary of Athena Ilias the bouleuterion council house and the theatre Soon after work on the theatre was completed in 12 11 BC Melanippides dedicated a statue of Augustus in the theatre to record this benefaction 96 A new city called Ilium from Greek Ilion was founded on the site in the reign of the Roman emperor Augustus It flourished until the establishment of Constantinople which became a bishopric in the Roman province Hellespontus civil Diocese of Asia but declined gradually in the Byzantine era Christian bishopric edit Main article Diocese of Ilion From the 4th century AD until the Byzantine era perhaps as late as the 10th century Ilion was the seat of a Christian bishop Troy in legend editFurther information Homeric Question and Historicity of the Iliad nbsp An 18th century depiction of the legendary sack of Troy The main literary work set at Troy is the Iliad an Archaic era epic poem which tells the story of the final year of the Trojan War The Iliad portrays Troy as the capital of a rich and powerful kingdom In the poem the city appears to be a major regional power capable of summoning numerous allies to defend it g The city itself is described as sitting on a steep hill protected by enormous sloping stone walls rectangular towers and massive gates whose wooden doors can be bolted shut According to Dares Phrygius there were 6 of such gates the Antenorean the Dardanian the Ilian the Scaean the Thymbraean and the Trojan 98 The city s streets are broad and well planned At the top of the hill is the Temple of Athena as well as King Priam s palace an enormous structure with numerous rooms around an inner courtyard 6 pp 59 61 99 In the Iliad the Achaeans set up their camp near the mouth of the Scamander river 100 where they beached their ships The city itself stood on a hill across the plain of Scamander where much of the fighting takes place Besides the Iliad there are references to Troy in the other major work attributed to Homer the Odyssey as well as in other ancient Greek literature such as Aeschylus s Oresteia The Homeric legend of Troy was elaborated by the Roman poet Virgil in his Aeneid The fall of Troy with the story of the Trojan Horse and the sacrifice of Polyxena Priam s youngest daughter is the subject of a later Greek epic by Quintus Smyrnaeus Quintus of Smyrna The Greeks and Romans took for a fact the historicity of the Trojan War and the identity of Homeric Troy with a site in Anatolia on a peninsula called the Troad Biga Peninsula Alexander the Great for example visited the site in 334 BC and there made sacrifices at tombs associated with the Homeric heroes Achilles and Patroclus 6 pp158 191 5 p724 Current status edit nbsp The west side of Troy Ridge The road from Tevfikiye enters from the right The Turkish government created the Historical National Park at Troy on September 30 1996 It contains 136 square kilometres 53 sq mi to include Troy and its vicinity centered on Troy 101 The purpose of the park is to protect the historical sites and monuments within it as well as the environment of the region In 1998 the park was accepted as a UNESCO World Heritage Site nbsp Wooden Trojan Horse monument in the plaza before the modern gate to the ancient city Public access to the ancient site is along the road from the vicinity of the museum in Tevfikiye to the east side of Hisarlik In its square is a large wooden horse monument with a ladder and internal chambers for use of the public Bordering the square is the gate to the site The public passes through turnstiles Admission is usually not free Within the site the visitors tour the features on dirt roads or for access to more precipitous features on railed boardwalks There are many overlooks with multilingual boards explaining the feature Most are outdoors but a permanent canopy covers the site of an early megaron and wall nbsp Troy Museum subterranean interior nbsp Troy Museum aboveground Most of the entire field in which it sits roofs the underground galleries work and storage spaces These are accessed via ramps not shown There are also outdoor display spaces In 2018 the Troy Museum Turkish Troya Muzesi was opened at Tevfikiye village 800 metres 870 yd east of the excavation A design contest for the architecture had been won by Yalin Mimarlik in 2011 The cube shaped building with extensive underground galleries holds more than 40 000 portable artifacts 2000 of which are on display Artifacts were moved here from a few other former museums in the region The range is the entire prehistoric Troad See also editAncient settlements in Turkey Cities of the ancient Near East Dardanians Trojan The Golden Bough mythology Luwians Seha River Land Stratigraphy Trojan War in popular cultureFootnotes edit Troy or Ilios or Wilios is most probably identical with Wilusa or Truwisa mentioned in the Hittite sources 1 1 Gate 2 City Wall 3 Megarons 4 FN Gate 5 FO Gate 6 FM Gate and Ramp 7 FJ Gate 8 City Wall 9 Megarons 10 City Wall 11 VI S Gate 12 VI H Tower 13 VI R Gate 14 VI G Tower 15 Well Cistern 16 VI T Dardanos Gate 17 VI I Tower 18 VI U Gate 19 VI A House 20 VI M Palace Storage House 21 Pillar House 22 VI F House with columns 23 VI C House 24 VI E House 25 VII Storage 26 Temple of Athena 27 Propylaeum 28 Outer Court Wall 29 Inner Court Wall 30 Holy Place 31 Water Work 32 Bouleuterion 33 Odeon 34 Bath The periodization of the Western Anatolian Bronze Age differs from divisions used in other areas by his generosity and constant assistance to Schliemann enabled him to transform himself with such spectacular success from a businessman into an archaeologist 36 In a description of the region Strabo reports that Lysimachus adds to this circle the cities of antiquity already destroyed Lysimaxos synῴkise te eἰs aὐtὴn tὰs kyklῳ poleis ἀrxaias ἤdh kekakwmenas 80 These probably included Birytis Gentinos and Sigeion 81 Birytis and Gentinos are not securely located but recent excavations at Sigeion appear to independently confirm Strabo s account by indicating an abandonment date soon after c 300 82 This may have been punishment for Sigeion resisting Lysimachus in 302 83 A minority of scholars instead attempt to date this inscription to the reign of Antiochus III 222 187 BC 85 And Troy prevails by armies not her own 97 line 160 Assemble all the united bands of Troy In just array let every leader call The foreign troops this day demands them all 97 lines 974 976 References edit a b c Korfmann Manfred O 2007 Winkler Martin M ed Troy From Homer s Iliad to Hollywood epic Oxford England Blackwell Publishing Limited p 25 ISBN 978 1 4051 3183 4 Troy or Ilios or Wilios is most probably identical with Wilusa or Truwisa mentioned in the Hittite sources a b Burney Charles 2004 Wilusa Historical dictionary of the Hittites Metuchen NJ Scarecrow Press p 311 ISBN 978 0 8108 4936 5 a b Beekes R S P 2009 Etymological Dictionary of Greek Brill p 588 a b Said Suzanne Webb Ruth 2011 Homer and the Odyssey Oxford University Press p 77 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Jablonka Peter 2011 Troy in regional and international context In Steadman Sharon McMahon Gregory eds The Oxford Handbook of Ancient Anatolia Oxford University Press p 725 doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780195376142 013 0032 Since neither inscriptions confirming the Iliad nor definite proof for a violent destruction by invaders from Greece have been discovered at Troy a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Bryce T 2005 The Trojans and their Neighbours Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 415 34959 8 Diodorus Siculus Bibliotheca historica 4 75 3 Virgil Aeneid 6 637 678 This Archeological plan of the Hisarlik citadel was created by user Bibi Saint Pol and contributed to Commons in 2007 Yakar Jak 1979 Troy and Anatolia early Bronze Age chronology Anatolian Studies 29 52 doi 10 2307 3642730 JSTOR 3642730 S2CID 162340023 Ancient city of Troy likely founded 600 years earlier than thought Daily Sabah History Istanbul 9 January 2019 Archived from the original on 16 December 2019 Retrieved 23 January 2020 Joshua Hammer March 2022 In Search of Troy Smithsonian Magazine Archived from the original on 26 February 2023 Retrieved 26 February 2023 The Fortification Wall Troy Excavations 2023 Archived from the original on 28 February 2023 Retrieved 27 February 2023 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Rose Charles Brian 2013 The Archaeology of Greek and Roman Troy Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 76207 6 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Jablonka Peter 2012 Troy In Cline Eric ed The Oxford Handbook of the Bronze Age Aegean Oxford University Press pp 849 861 doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780199873609 013 0063 ISBN 978 0199873609 a b Neer Richard T 2012 Greek Art and Archaeology New York Thames amp Hudson p 21 ISBN 9780500288771 Schliemann 1881 pp 75 277harvnb error no target CITEREFSchliemann1881 help Schliemann Heinrich 1968 Troy and its Remains Benjamin Blom Citadel Wall Troy Excavations 2023 Archived from the original on 28 February 2023 Retrieved 27 February 2023 Latacz 2004 p 48harvnb error no target CITEREFLatacz2004 help Korfmann 2013 p 60harvnb error no target CITEREFKorfmann2013 help Knight W F J 1934 The pillars at the south gate of Troy VI The Journal of Hellenic Studies 54 2 210 doi 10 2307 626868 ISSN 0075 4269 JSTOR 626868 S2CID 162416526 a b c Korfmann 2003 pp 29 30harvnb error no target CITEREFKorfmann2003 help Pavuk Peter 2005 Aegeans and Anatolians A Trojan Perspective Archived 27 February 2023 at the Wayback Machine In Laffineur Robert Greco Emanuele Emporia Aegeans in the Central and Eastern Mediterranean Archived 18 March 2023 at the Wayback Machine Peeters Publishers amp Booksellers pp 269 279 Watkins C 1986 October 1984 The language of the Trojans In Mellink Machteld J ed Troy and the Trojan War Troy and the Trojan War A symposium held at Bryn Mawr College Bryn Mawr Commentaries Bryn Mawr PA Bryn Mawr College Yakubovich Ilya 2008 Sociolinguistics of the Luvian language PDF PhD thesis University of Chicago section 3 6 Archived PDF from the original on 11 August 2021 Retrieved 19 September 2021 J D Hawkins D F Easton A Hieroglyphic Seal from Troy Studia Troica 6 pp 111 118 1996 The Odeion And The Bouleuterion Troy Excavations 2023 Archived from the original on 26 March 2023 Retrieved 15 March 2023 The Bath Troy Excavations 2023 Archived from the original on 15 March 2023 Retrieved 15 March 2023 Schliemann 1881 p 184 sfn error no target CITEREFSchliemann1881 help Schliemann 1881 pp 184 191 sfn error no target CITEREFSchliemann1881 help MacLaren Charles 1822 A Dissertation On the Topography of the Plain of Troy Bibliobazaar ISBN 978 1 146 73161 4 Retrieved 28 December 2014 Including an examination of the opinions of Demetrius Chevalier Dr Clarke and Major Rennell Schliemann 1881 p 189 sfn error no target CITEREFSchliemann1881 help 1 Archived 16 March 2023 at the Wayback MachinePavel Cătălin Recording the Excavations in Troy 1855 2010 Studia Troica 19 pp 255 283 2011 Wood 1985 pp 42 44harvnb error no target CITEREFWood1985 help Robinson 1994 p 153harvnb error no target CITEREFRobinson1994 help Allen 1995 p 380harvnb error no target CITEREFAllen1995 help a b Schuchhardt 1889 Schliemann Henry Recent Discoveries at Troy The North American Review vol 135 no 311 pp 339 62 1882 Luce J FOUR TROY HOMER AND THE ARCHAEOLOGISTS Celebrating Homer s Landscapes Troy and Ithaca Revisited New Haven Yale University Press 2022 pp 81 110 Yilmaz Derya Some Thoughts on the Troy Type Owl Headed Idols of Western Anatolia Praehistorische Zeitschrift 91 2 pp 369 378 2016 2 Archived 29 March 2023 at the Wayback MachineSugaya Chikako The stone axes of Troy Pp 65 69 in Arxaiologia kai Errikos Slhman Archaeology and Heinrich Schliemann 2012 Akimova Ludmila and Vladimir Tolstikov The Troy treasures in Russia ANTIQUITY 69 pp 11 14 1995 Dorpfeld Wilhelm 1902 Troja und Ilion Ergebnisse der Ausgrabungen in den vorhistorischen und historischen Schichten von Ilion 1870 1894 Beck amp Barth Allen 1995 p 142harvnb error no target CITEREFAllen1995 help 3 Tolman Herbert Cushing and Gilbert Campbell Scoggin Mycenaean Troy Based on Dorpfeld s Excavations in the Sixth of the Nine Buried Cities at Hissarlik American Book Company 1903 Allen 1995 p 143harvnb error no target CITEREFAllen1995 help Blegen Carl W Excavations at Troy 1932 American Journal of Archaeology vol 36 no 4 pp 431 51 1932 Blegen Carl W Excavations at Troy 1933 American Journal of Archaeology vol 38 no 2 pp 223 48 1934 Blegen Carl W Excavations at Troy 1934 American Journal of Archaeology vol 39 no 1 pp 6 34 1935 Blegen Carl W Excavations at Troy 1935 American Journal of Archaeology vol 39 no 4 pp 550 87 1935 Blegen Carl W Excavations at Troy 1936 American Journal of Archaeology vol 41 no 1 pp 17 51 1937 Blegen Carl W Excavations at Troy 1937 American Journal of Archaeology vol 41 no 4 pp 553 97 1937 Blegen Carl W Excavations at Troy 1938 American Journal of Archaeology vol 43 no 2 pp 204 28 1939 Allen 1995 p 259harvnb error no target CITEREFAllen1995 help Blegen Carl W 1950 Troy Excavations conducted by the University of Cincinnati 1932 1938 PDF Princeton University Press Easton Donald and Bernhard Weninger A Possible New Bronze Age Period at Troy Anatolian Studies vol 68 pp 33 73 2018 4 Hertel Dieter and Frank Kolb Troy in clearer perspective Anatolian studies 53 pp 71 88 2003 5 Archived 18 March 2023 at the Wayback MachineKolb Frank Troy VI A trading center and commercial city American Journal of Archaeology 108 4 pp 577 613 2004 6 Archived 18 March 2023 at the Wayback MachineJablonka Peter and C Brian Rose Late Bronze Age Troy A Response to Frank Kolb American Journal of Archaeology 108 4 pp 615 630 2004 Korfmann Manfred Troia an Ancient Anatolian Palatial and Trading Center Archaeological Evidence for the Period of Troia VI VII The Classical World vol 91 no 5 pp 369 85 1998 7 Archived 18 March 2023 at the Wayback MachineWeninger Bernhard Stratified 14C dates and ceramic chronologies case studies for the Early Bronze Age at Troy Turkey and Ezero Bulgaria Radiocarbon 37 2 pp 443 456 1995 Project Troia University of Tubingen University of Cincinnati Archived from the original on 26 May 2014 Retrieved 6 March 2014 Devitt Terry 15 October 2012 UW Madison archaeologists to mount new expedition to Troy news wisc edu Press release Madison WI University of Wisconsin Simmons Dan 22 July 2013 UW Madison archaeology trip to Troy postponed until next summer Wisconsin State Journal Archived from the original on 24 August 2017 Retrieved 6 May 2014 In Search of Troy Smithsonian Magazine March 2022 Archived from the original on 26 February 2023 Retrieved 26 February 2023 Discovery takes Troy s history back 600 years Hurriyet Daily News August 23 2019 23 August 2019 Archived from the original on 15 March 2023 Retrieved 15 March 2023 A tiny 2 300 year old votive vessel presented to the gods by the poor was found in the Ancient City of Troy Arkeonews 16 March 2023 26 August 2022 Archived from the original on 26 March 2023 Retrieved 16 March 2023 Archaeology of archaeology at Troy University of Amsterdam 7 December 2020 Archived from the original on 18 March 2023 Retrieved 18 March 2023 a b c Beckman Gary Bryce Trevor Cline Eric 2012 The Ahhiyawa Texts Brill ISBN 978 1589832688 Cline Eric 2014 1177 BC The Year Civilization Collapsed Princeton University Press pp 33 35 ISBN 978 0691168388 Beckman Gary Bryce Trevor Cline Eric 2012 Epilogue Mycenaean Hittite Interconnections in the Late Bronze Age Revisited The Ahhiyawa Texts Brill ISBN 978 1589832688 Cline Eric C 2013 The Trojan War A Very Short Introduction Oxford University Press p 57 Herodotus Histories 7 43 Thucydides book IV section 52 Loeb Classic Library Vol 2 p 300 note 1 Diodorus Siculus Bibliotheca historica 17 17 6 Demosthenes no title cited 23 154 157 Aeneas Tacticus Perὶ toῦ pῶs xrὴ poliorkoymenoys ἀntexein How to Survive a Siege in Greek 24 3 14 Inschriften von Ilion 23 Arrian Anabasis 1 11 12 Diodorus Siculus Bibliotheca historica 17 17 18 Plutarch Life of Alexander 15 Marcus Junianus Justinus Frontinus Historia Philippicae et Totius Mundi 9 5 12 Strabo Geographica 13 1 26 32 Diodorus Siculus Bibliotheca historica 18 4 5 Inschriften von Ilion 1 Regarding Myrlea and Calchedon Inschriften von Ilion 5 6 Knoepfler D 2010 Les agonothetes de la Confederation d Athena Ilias une interpretation nouvelle des donnees epigraphiques et ses consequences pour la chronologie des emissions monetaires du Koinon Studi Ellenistici in French 24 33 62 Robert L 1966 Panegyris Monnaies antiques en Troade Paris FR pp 18 46 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Re theatre Inschriften von Ilion 1 Re temple Rose C B 2003 The temple of Athena at Ilion Studia Troica 13 27 88 See contra Hertel D 2004 Zum Heiligtum der Athena Ilias von Troia IX und zur fruhhellenistischen Stadtanlage von Ilion Arch Anz in German 177 205 Strabo Geographica 13 1 26 Cook J M 1973 The Troad Oxford p 364 Schafer Th 2009 Kazi Sonuclari Toplantisi 32 2 410 412 Schafer Th 2012 Kazi Sonuclari Toplantisi 33 2 248 249 Diodorus Siculus Bibliotheca historica 20 107 4 Inschriften von Ilion 31 Inschriften von Ilion 32 Strabo Geographica 13 1 27 Inschriften von Ilion 33 Aristodikides 34 Metrodoros Strabo Geographica 13 1 27 Livy Periochae 83 Inschriften von Ilion 10 2 3 Inchriften von Ilion 71 publicani 73 pirates Inschriften von Ilion 10 Plutarch Lucullus 10 3 12 2 Supplementum Epigraphicum Graecum 46 1565 Lucan Pharsalia 9 964 999 Suetonius Divus Julius 79 3 Dio Cassius Ῥwmaikὴ Ἱstoria Roman History in Greek 54 7 Inschriften von Ilion 83 Inschriften von Ilion 83 a b Book II Iliad Translated by Pope A Phrygius Dares 4 www theoi com Retrieved 13 January 2024 Smith William ed 2020 1854 Ilium Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography Perseus Digital Library Cenker Isil Cerem Thys Senocak Lucienne 2008 Shopes Linda Hamilton Paula eds Oral History and Public Memories Philadelphia PA Temple University Press p 76 ISBN 978 1 59213 141 9 The Historical National Park of Troy Ministry of Culture and Tourism 3 August 2019 Archived from the original on 9 August 2020 Retrieved 1 February 2020 Further reading editGeneral edit Easton D F Hawkins J D Sherratt A G Sherratt E S 2002 Troy in Recent Perspective Anatolian Studies 52 75 109 doi 10 2307 3643078 JSTOR 3643078 S2CID 162226134 Archaeological edit Troia Project 2004 Reconstructions Troia VR University of Tubingen Archived from the original on 30 August 2013 Retrieved 8 August 2013 Heath Sebastian Tekkok Billur eds 2007 2009 Greek Roman and Byzantine pottery at Ilion Troia Classics Department University of Cincinnati Retrieved 10 August 2013 Heath Sebastian Mannsperger Dietrich Rose C Brian Wallrodt John 2013 Coins from Ilion Troia Classics Department University of Cincinnati Retrieved 10 August 2013 Ecclesiastical history edit Pius Bonifacius Gams 1931 Series episcoporum Ecclesiae Catholicae in Latin Leipzig p 445 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Lequien Michel 1740 Oriens christianus in quatuor Patriarchatus digestus in Latin Vol I Paris FR coll 775 778 Mythology and literature edit Shepard Alan Powell Stephen D eds 2004 Fantasies of Troy Classical tales and the social imaginary in Medieval and early modern Europe Toronto Canada Centre for Reformation and Renaissance Studies External links editTroy at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Definitions from Wiktionary nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Travel information from Wikivoyage nbsp Data from Wikidata Uncovering Troy Archaeological Institute of America Retrieved 24 January 2020 Troia Projekt and CERHAS 2013 Welcome to Troy Troy University of Cincinnati Archived from the original on 14 May 2008 Retrieved 8 August 2013 Institut fur Ur Fruhgeschichte und Archaologie des Mittelalters Universitat Tubingen Department of Classics University of Cincinnati 2010 Troia and the Troad Archaeology of a Region The new excavations at Troy Project Troia Institut fur Ur u Fruhgeschichte Archived from the original on 19 May 2005 Retrieved 8 August 2013 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Miszczak Izabela 23 March 2016 Troy Turkish Archaeological News Miszczak Izabela 13 December 2019 Troy Museum Turkish Archaeological News Rutter Jeremy B 2013 Welcome Aegean Prehistoric Archaeology Dartmouth College Archived from the original on 12 January 2014 Retrieved 10 August 2013 Lesson 23 Troy VI Dartmouth College Archived from the original on 17 August 2016 Retrieved 10 August 2013 Lesson 27 Troy VII and the historicity of the Trojan War Dartmouth College Archived from the original on 7 April 2014 Retrieved 10 August 2013 Hellenistic inscriptions of Ilion in English translation attalus org Retrieved 3 September 2022 The Many Myths of the Man Who Discovered and Nearly Destroyed Troy Smithsonian Magazine Meilan Solly May 17 2022 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Troy amp oldid 1224395762, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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