Troy<\/h3>
Troy (Ancient Greek: \u03a4\u03c1\u03bf\u03af\u03b1, Troia or \u03a4\u03c1\u03bf\u03af\u03b1\u03c2, Troias and \u1f3c\u03bb\u03b9\u03bf\u03bd, Ilion or \u1f3c\u03bb\u03b9\u03bf\u03c2, Ilios; Latin: Troia and Ilium;[note 1]Hittite: Wilusha or Truwisha;[1][2]Turkish: Truva or Troya) was a city in the far northwest of the region known in late Classical antiquity as Asia Minor, now known as Anatolia in modern Turkey, just south of the southwest mouth of the Dardanelles strait and northwest of Mount Ida. The present-day location is known as Hisarlik. It was the setting of the Trojan War described in the Greek Epic Cycle, in particular in the Iliad, one of the two epic poems attributed to Homer. Metrical evidence from the Iliad and the Odyssey suggests that the name \u1f3c\u03bb\u03b9\u03bf\u03bd (Ilion) formerly began with a digamma: \u03dc\u03af\u03bb\u03b9\u03bf\u03bd (Wilion); this is also supported by the Hittite name for what is thought to be the same city, Wilusa.\n<\/p>
A new capital called Ilium (from Greek: \u1f3c\u03bb\u03b9\u03bf\u03bd, Ilion) was founded on the site in the reign of the Roman Emperor Augustus. It flourished until the establishment of Constantinople, became a bishopric and declined gradually in the Byzantine era, but is now a Latin Catholic titular see.\n<\/p>
In 1865, English archaeologist Frank Calvert excavated trial trenches in a field he had bought from a local farmer at Hisarlik, and in 1868, Heinrich Schliemann, a wealthy German businessman and archaeologist, also began excavating in the area after a chance meeting with Calvert in \u00c7anakkale.[3][4] These excavations revealed several cities built in succession. Schliemann was at first skeptical about the identification of Hisarlik with Troy, but was persuaded by Calvert[5] and took over Calvert's excavations on the eastern half of the Hisarlik site, which was on Calvert's property. Troy VII has been identified with the city called Wilusa by the Hittites (the probable origin of the Greek \u1f3c\u03bb\u03b9\u03bf\u03bd) and is generally (but not conclusively) identified with Homeric Troy.\n<\/p><\/div>\n
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