1/ The association of Homeric Troy with the layers of destruction throughout the 13th century BC on the hill of Hisarlik always attracts interest. But what followed the final destruction of Troy VIIi (formerly VIIa) around 1210 BC, and perhaps a little later?
2/ As i have already pointed out, Troy VIi was already a ghost of the magnificent Troy VIh. Although a cultural continuity is visible, the Troy of the end of the 13th century BC is a degraded community, ➡️
➡️ where there is an attempt to hastily repair the walls and usage of rebuilt or new low-quality, smaller and narrower houses, in an environment of impoverishment and generalized insecurity.
3/The fall of the city must be considered the determinist outcome of a faltering society, exposed in the general context of rearrangements and destructions of the LBA Collapse. However, the destruction of Troy VIi marks a transition to a culturally differential habitation horizon
4/ After the destruction, the same process of repairing and reusing houses and part of the fortification walls is observed as in the past. ➡️
➡️ But now its inhabitants live under conditions of increased impoverishment, in a small-scale settlement within the site of the Citadel. Most of the city was a pile of rubble.
5/ At the beginning of the 12th century BC (VIIb1 phase) the appearance of new cultural elements is observed, which indicate the presence of foreign population groups (probably of Balkan origin), ➡️
➡️ with the most typical case being the introduction of Handmade Coarse Ware (barbarian pottery), which coexists with the already used Anatolian Gray Ware and Tan Ware. The rescued old inhabitants of the city live together with the newcomers.
6/ During this transitional period, which appears to have lasted at most fifty years, a limited commercial activity with the post-palatial Aegean is attested, while some LH IIIC ceramics appear to be local copies of very early prototypes.
7/ Of particular interest is the discovery of a copper seal with Luwian hieroglyphic script that mentions the names of a man who probably worked as a scribe and a woman, probably his wife. ➡️
➡️ The find is unique, suggesting a decorative use and cannot attest to the existence of a Luwian linguistic substrate in the local population.
8/ The transition to the next phase of Troy VIIb2 was smooth, without the existence of any layer of destruction. It is a period of gradual building development for Troy ➡️
➡️ with the settlement extending outside the walls, while the existing houses being extended and the orthostates being used frequently.
9/ It is not certain that the city walls had a functional use and probably Troy VIIb2 is going through a peaceful period of social and economic reconstruction. ➡️
➡️ It is striking that the dominant pottery consists of ceramic patterns dating back to Troy VI, identifying a population that maintains strong ties to the earlier Trojan cultural tradition.
10/ Nevertheless, the appearance of Knobbed Ware, as well as a assemblage of bronze tools (axe heads) attributed to the Troy VIIb2 phase, seem to represent a new population element, which moved from the Balkans to the wider area of the Hellespont.
11/ The habitation phase VIIb2 lasted less than a century and was terminated by a layer of destruction probably by fire. However, some houses within the citadel remained intact and the site continued to be inhabited, Mycenaean pottery being replaced by Protogeometric.
12/ In 950 BC Troy receives a final blow, as a new layer of destruction suggests, and the human presence from this point on takes on a periodic and sparse character. In the 8th century BC Aeolian colonists from NE mainland Greece would colonize Troad, naming it Ilion.
13/ In conclusion, we could emphasize that Troy VIIb is a degraded city which try to stand on its own feet in a complex international environment. It is clear that Balkan populations settled in the Troad as part of a migratory movement across the Hellespont to Anatolia.
14/ Its once important geostrategic position, which had allowed the local elite (on behalf of the Hittites) to control the Dardanelles Straits and the entrance to the Black Sea, turning Troy into a major commercial center, has been lost forever.
15/ After many years, Troy lives in obscurity, in the shadow of international developments. The once powerful political and economic elite of the city no longer exists, ➡️
➡️ and no significant building has been found to indicate the existence of any powerful leadership. Everyone is fighting for a living.
16/ The relations with the Aegean are limited, but the memory of the heroic exploits of the Mycenaean warlords in Troad attract Aeolian settlers, who wish to live in the lands of Homeric Ilion and appropriate the heroic heritage.
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1/Sicily has been a major trade crossroads since the Neolithic era,through which sea routes passed, connecting the peoples of the Eastern Mediterranean with the West and vice versa. The result of this event was the long-term habitation of the Sicilian land by a mosaic of peoples.
2/ Thus, when the Greek colonists arrived on the island after the mid-8th century BC, they found three population groups: the Sicilians in the E, the Sicanians in the C-W, and the Elymians in the NW. The origin of these peoples has been a subject of controversy since antiquity.
3/ The literary tradition has handed down to us several contradictory narratives, referring to mass migrations, often in the form of mythical tales. The best-known mythological tale is Minos' pursuit of the fugitive Daedalus in Sicily and the founding of Cretan cities there.
1/ Athens has been associated since antiquity with the city's patron goddess, Athena. However, although most people believe that the city was named after the goddess, perhaps the opposite was actually the case. The two words have a common root that is likely of pre-Greek origin.
2/ But let's start from the beginning. Long before the city of Athens became the dominant center of the region, its name was Actaea and it belonged to a wider community, Att(h)is < Attica. The inhabitants of Attica at that time were not Greek-speaking (pre-Greek substrate).
3/ Several scholars argue that both the word Actaea and Attica, and the word Athéne (Ἀθήνη), derive from the word Atthis through corruption. Athéne is the common root from which the word Ἀθῆναι and the word Ἀθηνᾶ came. So both the city and the goddess have pre-Greek origins.
1/ During the same period (1250/40 BC) that the major fortification works were taking place in Mycenae and Tiryns, and the hill of Midea was being rebuilt with new palatial buildings and Cyclopean fortifications, a new fortified palatial settlement was founded on the Acropolis.
2/ But who were the ones who built the new Mycenaean citadel Athens? The answer lies in the question of what purpose its building served. In my opinion, the Athenian elites had neither the financial means nor the know-how to construct such a project.
3/ So the project was designed and financed by a powerful Mycenaean actor outside Attica and he - according to the available evidence - was in Mycenae. The stakes were the limitation of Thebes' influence in Attica and in particular the exploitation of the mines of Lavrion.
1/ The Citadel of Dymaean Wall at the NW end of the Peloponnese has a special place in Aegean prehistoric studies, as it was previously believed to be proof (along with the Isthmus Wall) of the existence of a northern threat (Dorians) to the core of the Mycenaean palatial world.
2/ Recent field study has placed its presence on a more realistic basis. First of all, the human presence on the Hill of Kalogria where the Citadel is built bears evidence of human presence, residential remains and pottery, dating back to the end of the 4th millennium BC.
3/ The choice of location is due to its great strategic importance, at the intersection of the land and the sea, constituting a significant defensive stronghold and an ideal point of surveillance of the sea routes of the Ionian Sea, already since the end of the 3rd millennium BC.
1/ The Trojan War, as presented to us by the Homeric Iliad, is nothing more than a literary text with an epic-mythological character that captures in a single narrative various memories of events of the Mycenaean past, altered by time.
#Ahhiyawa #Homer #Troy
2/The main body of the myth of Trojan War - the gathering of the Achaean warlords under the leadership of the strongest of them, the king of Mycenae, and the naval campaign in the Troad - constitutes the only connection between the historical background and the Homeric narrative.
3/ During the palatial period, the Mycenaean world was structured into powerful local houses that recognized the supremacy of the Great King of the Achaeans, who had his throne in Mycenae and was equal to the powerful rulers of the Eastern Mediterranean (Hatti, Egypt etc).
1/ One of the biggest questions of Minoan archaeology is the existence of two scripts, which accur simultaneously in the same palatial centers (Old Palaces) or even in the same rooms: Cretan Hieroglyphics (2100-1700 BC) and Linear A' (1800-1450 BC).
#Minoan_Scripts
2/ This fact is not an unusual occurrence for the Eastern Mediterranean, as in Egypt and Anatolia two or more languages were used to serve different purposes. However, in Minoan Crete the coexistence of the two scripts for a period of about a century served the same purpose: 👉
👉 the recording of administrative texts, mainly of a financial - accounting nature. What is the reason for this simultaneous presence of two different scripts in Crete? Does this fact conceal some linguistic differentiation between groups of the local population?