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TROY:THE LAND WHERE LEGEND CAME TRUE
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2001 / JUNE
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| First
there was a book, the Iliad, written approximately
2720 years ago by Homer, one of the greatest poets
the world has ever known. This epic work told
of a war, inescapable fate, the destruction of
a city, and tragic defeat. This splendid city
lying southeast of the Dardanelles Strait was
known as Wilusa, Taruisa, (W)ilios or Troia. When
Homer began to write his epic poem about the ten-year
war between the Achaeans, as he called the Greeks,
and the Trojans, he was also laying the foundations
of European literature. From that time on he and
the legend he created were to be a central element
in the history of European thought and culture.
European peoples and aristocratic families attributed
their origins to Troy and its heroes. Rome traced
its foundation to Aeneas the Trojan, and chivalric
romances of the 12th and 13th centuries considered
the Britons, Franks, and Normans to be of Trojan
ancestry. For a time the Turks (Turci), too, were
regarded as descendants of another Trojan, Turcus
or Turkoy, who had fled from the city. |
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