Is Troy the Hittite Wilusa? About name associations and their role in the historization of Hisarlık

The widely accepted link of Homer’s town with the land of Taruwisa and/or the land of Wilusa in Hittite sources is based on little other than name associations: firstly that of Alaksandu, king of Wilusa, with Alexandros or Paris, the Trojan prince (1911), then of Wilusa with Ilios, another name for...

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Main Author: Diether Schürr
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Akdeniz University 2019-11-01
Series:Gephyra
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dergipark.org.tr/en/pub/gephyra/issue/49781/623455?publisher=nalan-eda-akyurek-sahin
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spelling doaj-737232d3c84a4d2b95f20cbea6fbd2482020-11-25T01:24:53ZdeuAkdeniz UniversityGephyra1309-39242651-50592019-11-0118335710.37095/gephyra.623455324Is Troy the Hittite Wilusa? About name associations and their role in the historization of HisarlıkDiether SchürrThe widely accepted link of Homer’s town with the land of Taruwisa and/or the land of Wilusa in Hittite sources is based on little other than name associations: firstly that of Alaksandu, king of Wilusa, with Alexandros or Paris, the Trojan prince (1911), then of Wilusa with Ilios, another name for Troy, and, independently, of Taruwisa with Troy itself (both 1924). Also ]appaliunas, in a list of Wilusian gods, was identified with Apollo (1931). None of these equations is cogent, and if a Wilusian king and a Wilusian god really had Greek names, it would not strengthen the localization of Wilusa in the Troad. Homer’s town was indeed localized there, but the efforts to prove the existence of a town around the stronghold on the hill of Hisarlık have failed. This stronghold was neither Troy nor the capital of Wilusa, and there is no connection with Hittite history or culture. Monuments and inscriptions in Hittite style exist in West Anatolia, but farther to the south, and until now none of the western kingdoms attested primarily in Hittite sources has been confirmed by excavation. The equation of Ephesos with Abāsa, the town of Uhhazidi, the last king of Arzawa, is phonetically even worse, and Ephesos is probably a genuine Greek name.https://dergipark.org.tr/en/pub/gephyra/issue/49781/623455?publisher=nalan-eda-akyurek-sahinhomeroshitit coğrafyasıbronz çağı batı anadolusufonetik benzerlik sirenlerihomerhittite geographybronze age western anatoliasirene des gleichlauts
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Diether Schürr
spellingShingle Diether Schürr
Is Troy the Hittite Wilusa? About name associations and their role in the historization of Hisarlık
Gephyra
homeros
hitit coğrafyası
bronz çağı batı anadolusu
fonetik benzerlik sirenleri
homer
hittite geography
bronze age western anatolia
sirene des gleichlauts
author_facet Diether Schürr
author_sort Diether Schürr
title Is Troy the Hittite Wilusa? About name associations and their role in the historization of Hisarlık
title_short Is Troy the Hittite Wilusa? About name associations and their role in the historization of Hisarlık
title_full Is Troy the Hittite Wilusa? About name associations and their role in the historization of Hisarlık
title_fullStr Is Troy the Hittite Wilusa? About name associations and their role in the historization of Hisarlık
title_full_unstemmed Is Troy the Hittite Wilusa? About name associations and their role in the historization of Hisarlık
title_sort is troy the hittite wilusa? about name associations and their role in the historization of hisarlık
publisher Akdeniz University
series Gephyra
issn 1309-3924
2651-5059
publishDate 2019-11-01
description The widely accepted link of Homer’s town with the land of Taruwisa and/or the land of Wilusa in Hittite sources is based on little other than name associations: firstly that of Alaksandu, king of Wilusa, with Alexandros or Paris, the Trojan prince (1911), then of Wilusa with Ilios, another name for Troy, and, independently, of Taruwisa with Troy itself (both 1924). Also ]appaliunas, in a list of Wilusian gods, was identified with Apollo (1931). None of these equations is cogent, and if a Wilusian king and a Wilusian god really had Greek names, it would not strengthen the localization of Wilusa in the Troad. Homer’s town was indeed localized there, but the efforts to prove the existence of a town around the stronghold on the hill of Hisarlık have failed. This stronghold was neither Troy nor the capital of Wilusa, and there is no connection with Hittite history or culture. Monuments and inscriptions in Hittite style exist in West Anatolia, but farther to the south, and until now none of the western kingdoms attested primarily in Hittite sources has been confirmed by excavation. The equation of Ephesos with Abāsa, the town of Uhhazidi, the last king of Arzawa, is phonetically even worse, and Ephesos is probably a genuine Greek name.
topic homeros
hitit coğrafyası
bronz çağı batı anadolusu
fonetik benzerlik sirenleri
homer
hittite geography
bronze age western anatolia
sirene des gleichlauts
url https://dergipark.org.tr/en/pub/gephyra/issue/49781/623455?publisher=nalan-eda-akyurek-sahin
work_keys_str_mv AT dietherschurr istroythehittitewilusaaboutnameassociationsandtheirroleinthehistorizationofhisarlık
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