The Legend of Troy
Troy is famous as the setting for Homer’s Iliad, which tells of a turbulent fortnight in the Trojan War – a ten-year Greek siege of Troy, which ultimately led to the sacking and destruction of the city. The expedition, which occurred sometime in the 13th century BCE, consisted of a coalition of Greek forces led by King Agamemnon of Argos or Mycenae. Its purpose was to recover Helen, wife of Menelaus (the king of Sparta and brother of Agamemnon). The goddess Aphrodite had granted Helen to the Trojan prince Paris as a prize, after Paris had chosen the goddess as the most beautiful in a competition with the other goddesses Athena and Hera. The Iliad centres around the Greek hero Achilles and his dispute with Agamemnon, which leads to Achilles’ withdrawal from the battlefield, creating a series of events which profoundly impacts the course of the Trojan War.
In the Iliad, Troy is portrayed as the capital of a wealthy and powerful kingdom. The city appears as magnificent and well-fortified, with a rich history and culture. Homer’s epic emphasises its beautify and splendour through descriptions of its grand temples, streets, and royal citadel. Its strength is also highlighted, described as ‘well-founded’, ‘strong-built’ and ‘well-walled’ – unusually strong in its ability to withstand the ten-year siege. In fact, the city only eventually falls as a result of the trickery of the Trojan horse ruse, rather then through any failure of its defences.
References to Troy, particularly the Trojan War, the fall of the city, and its aftermath, also reoccur frequently as popular themes in other works of Greek and Latin literature. It is briefly mentioned in Homer’s other major epic, the Odyssey, as well as other major works, such as Virgil’s Aeneid, Aeschylus’s Oresteia, the plays of Euripides, Quintus of Smyrna’s Posthomerica, and the collection of ancient Greek epic poems in the Epic Cycle.
Archaeological Troy
Troy today is the name of an archaeological site, located in Hisarlik in Anatolia, Turkey. The site demonstrates 4,000 years of occupation, separated into nine clearly distinguishable layers, each representing a different period of the city’s history.
These layers are a result of Troy being repeatedly destroyed (usually by fire or earthquake) during its history. Each time, rather than removing the ruins of the old city, the new settlers simply levelled the debris and built the new on top of it. Archaeologists have labelled these layers Troy I to IX, with Troy I referring to the earliest settlement and Troy IX the latest.
Early Troys (I-V)
The first humans to settle on the site of Troy did so in the early Bronze Age, from c. 3000 BCE. They chose the western end of a ridge on a fertile plain between two rivers, which are known today as the Karamenderes and the Dümruk Su. This was around the time that the first city-states were getting organized in Mesopotamia, and when Egypt had only just become a single state from an untidy collection of minor kingdoms.
Troy I was a small, fortified settlement, with some 20 houses enclosed by a defensive wall of unworked stone. Doubtless the total population was larger than this would suggest, for ‘Troy’ was a citadel to which the rural population who lived and worked on the plain would flee in times of peril. Little is known of these first Trojans, except that their pottery and metalwork was similar to that of contemporary peoples in northern Anatolia and the islands just off the coast.
How and why this first settlement was abandoned or destroyed is uncertain, but the site was almost immediately reoccupied. From around 2550-2300 BCE, Troy II grew into a major city of the Mediterranean-wise Bronze Age civilisation. At this point the city’s defences had been substantially upgraded, and the citadel now possessed a wall consisting of large blocks of dressed stone bulked up with clay bricks. The city itself was remarkably prosperous, with the archaeological ruins suggesting grand wealth and imposing architecture.
Its prosperity came due to its geographical position, well placed to become a commercial centre. Situated at the entrance to the Dardanelles strait, it became an important stop on the overland trade route from Anatolia to the European side of the Dardenelles. Also, much nearer to the sea than it is today, its location gave it command of the sea route through which every mercantile ship had to pass travelling between the Aegean Sea and what we now call the Black Sea.
Troy continued to be occupied between c. 2300 -1750 BCE, the periods corresponding to Troy III – Troy V. However, little is known about these periods, as many of the remains were damaged during hasty early archaeological excavations trying to reach the lower levels. Generally, though, the settlements appear to be smaller and less prosperous than previous ones. Still, foreign contact is evidenced by the presence of Anatolian-styles dome ovens and ‘red-cross bowls’, as well as Minoan pottery.
Peak Troy (VI – VII)
Troy reached the peak of its prosperity during the Middle and Late Bronze Age, in the period of Troys VI and VII (c. 1750-1180 BCE). During this time, a larger citadel was enclosed behind impressive sloping limestone walls, with brick ramparts and watchtowers. Inside the citadel, great houses were laid out on ascending, concentric terraces. A large settlement was also located in the lower town.
Troy’s prosperity may have also in part grown from the practice of horse-breeding, with the Trojans of this period famous as horse-breeders, responsible for the introduction of domesticated horses to the Aegean area. Hector in the Illiad is often called ‘horse-taming’ Hector, and archaeology has supported the myth through the discovery of a substantial number of equine bones in and around Troy. Sheep farming must have also been particularly important, with evidence of extensive textile production.
The only evidence we have of people living in Troy at this time, however, is a single bit of writing upon a 5cm-wide (2 inch) seal. The language is Luwian, which connects Troy with a people of the Hittite empire that flourished in what is modern-day Turkey around 1750 BC.
Hittite records refer to the city of Wilusa, which is almost certainly Troy, with clear etymological links to the Greek Illios/Ilion (Homer’s other name for Troy). Furthermore, the defensive towers of the fortress were square built to a pattern familiar to archaeologists who have excavated other Hittite cities. Towards the end of the Late Bronze Age, Wilusa served as a small vassal state of the Hittite Empire.
Troy VI is probably closest to the fabled Troy of myth. Certainly, the archaeological remains fit Homer’s description of the ‘strongly built’ and ‘well-walled’ Troy. While we have no contemporary account of the framed siege of Troy (Homer’s epic was written half a millennium later), the written record does speak of considerable tension and sometimes open warfare between the Greeks and Hittites at this time.
Curiously, bronze spearheads, arrowheads, and slingshot pellets have been found in this layer, some embedded in the mud-brick walls of Troy, which could suggest some sort of conflict. They date to around 1250 BCE, the same time that the city was destroyed – dates correlating to Hereodotus’ dates for the Trojan War.
Furthermore, large clay pots buried up to the neck in the ground were evidently meant to contain grain, perhaps showing that the fortress was braced for a siege. Skeletons unburied in the streets suggest that this defence was unsuccessful. In short, there are indications that not only the location of Troy but also the story of the Iliad is founded upon fact.
Troy VII was rebuilt soon after this latest conclusion. There is then evidence that the city was attacked again around 1200BCE, most likely by the same attackers that destroyed Mycenae and cities in Anatolia. These were peoples disposed by the tumult of the Bronze Age collapse who were looking to share the pain with anyone who had something worth looting. By about 1000 BCE, Troy had been completely deserted.
Greek and Roman Troys (VIII – IX)
Troy remained uninhabited until the revival of civilisation in the Archaic era of Greece, the city once again established around 700 BCE – the settlement now known as Troy VIII. Settlers renamed their city Ilion, but for centuries it was little more than a village. However, the name of Troy loomed large in the consciousness of the Greeks, becoming one of the world’s first tourist-based economies. For a while it flourished as never before, with visitors seeking to pay their respects to the heroes of the past.
The Romans eventually sacked Greek Ilion in 85 BCE. They, however, held Troy in high regard, even referring to the city as ‘Sacred Ilium’. Indeed, in Roman tradition, they were said to have descended from the Trojan hero Aeneas, son of Venus, who had fled Troy and settled in Italy, thus giving the Romans a divine ancestry.
A new city (Troy IX) was thus built at the site as the Roman Ilium during the reigns of Emperor Augustus (reign 27 -14 BCE) and his immediate successors. The city included fine civic buildings and was endowed with wealth and privileges.
In the later Roman empire Troy was considered as the site for a ‘New Rome’, but Roman engineers looked dubiously at the decaying harbour and opted for Constantinople instead. Wisely, as it turned out, as the coastline changed. Troy’s harbour continued to silt up, and the city is now 5km (3 miles) from the sea. A series of earthquakes then demolished much that remained of the city.
Troy became a village in the early medieval era, then an abandoned ruin, a legend and finally a myth – all that remained was the mound upon which successive generations had raised their walls. The locals called this Hisarlik.
Troy in Modern Times
Troy was rediscovered by a local farmer who knew his myths. References in works by ancient Greek and Latin authors pointed to the approximate location of Troy, but the exact site of the city had remained unknown until modern times. That was until Frank Calvert, who owned land next to the mound of Hissarlik, noted that Mount Ida overlooked Hisarlik just as the mountain was said to overlook Troy. He also observed that the site lay between two rivers which may once have been the Scamander and Simoeis of the Iliad.
These observations were enough for noted amateur archaeologist Heinrich Schliemann to investigate the site in 1870. Plunging straight through to what is now the Troy II layer, Schliemann found a cache of weapons, gold, and jewellery, which he proclaimed to be ‘the treasure of Priam’, claiming to have found the Troy of the Trojan War. The treasures, however, have since been dated to a thousand years earlier than a probable date for the Trojan War.
Schliemann continued excavations at the site on a large scale between 1870 and 1890, exposing the remains of the walled citadel in the central area of the Hisarlik mound. His efforts helped to add 2000 years to Western history, previously only going as far back as the first Olympiad of 776 BCE.
Intensive archaeological excavations by various international teams have continued at Troy after Schliemann. The estimated size of the city has since been greatly increased by the discovery of a lower town on the landward side of the fortress. This housed the majority of the population and was surrounded by a deep defensive ditch – just as Homer reported.
Today the site is still active, important from an archaeological perspective for its rich history that is continuously being uncovered. Now a UNESCO World Heritage Site, Troy also boasts a museum opened in 2018 to accommodate hundreds of visiting tourists to the ruins every day. A (slightly kitschy) 12 metre (40 ft) wooden horse also stands just outside the site.
Tour of Troy
Odyssey Traveller visits Troy on a day trip as part of our 21-day Small Group Ancient Turkey Tour Package. During this tour, we visit some of the most spectacular, varied, and historically important sites in the ancient world. This small group Turkey tour begins and ends in Istanbul, Turkey’s largest city and seaport, and the place where east meets the west on the Bosphorus strait. Discover Turkey with Odyssey on this amazing guided tour through the ancient world linking the Black sea, Egypt, Syria and Europe. Our tour packages are especially designed to be suitable for mature-aged and senior travellers, whether joining as a couple or as solo travellers.
Odyssey Traveller has been serving global travellers since 1983 with educational tours of the history, culture, and architecture of our destinations. We specialise in offering small group tours partnering with a local tour guide at each destination to provide a relaxed and comfortable pace and atmosphere that sets us apart from larger tour groups. Tours consist of small groups of between 6 and 12 people and are cost inclusive of all entrances, tipping and majority of meals. For more information, click here, and head to this page to make a booking.
Articles about Turkey published by Odyssey Traveller.
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