Troy Ancient Greek: Truva or Troya, also Ilium, was a city in the northwest of Asia Minor modern Turkey, southwest of the Ãâ¡anakkale Strait, south of the mouth of the Dardanelles and northwest of Mount Ida.The location in the present day is the hill of Hisarlik and its immediate vicinity. In modern scholarly nomenclature, the Ridge of Troy including Hisarlik borders the Plain of Troy, flat agricultural land, which conducts the lower Scamander River to the strait. Troy 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 Ἴûùÿý Ilion formerly began with a digamma: ÃÅïûùÿý Wilion;[note 3] this is also supported by the Hittite name for what is thought to be the same city, Wilusa. According to archaeologist Manfred Korfmann, Troy`s location near the Aegean Sea, as well as the Sea of Marmara and the Black Sea, made it a hub for military activities and trade, and the chief site of a culture that Korfmann calls the `Maritime Troja Culture`, which extended over the region between these seas
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