Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2008
Names and places
The Hellenes, ever since their great movement of renewed expansion that began in the ninth century B.C., have had different names in east and west. Westerners came to know them as Graeci, Greeks. Easterners call them Ionians. Even today, a Greek is an Ionian – a Yūnāni – in Arabic, Turkish and Persian. For the people of the Levant and Mesopotamia to name the Greeks after the Ionians was natural, for it was the Ionians who had come to be the chief inhabitants of the eastern parts of the Greek homeland: the Aegean Islands and the coastline of western Asia Minor. The peculiar form of the name ‘Ionians’ that the ancient Near East adopted is just what we should expect to have resulted from ninth- and eighth-century contacts. From the archaic Greek Iāones < * Iāwones is derived the Yawan of the Bible. The Mesopotamians probably pronounced it the same, though the convention of their syllabary resulted in the spelling Yaman. The name could only have come into use after the Ionians occupied their East Greek territories in the post-Mycenaean period. Homer looked back to an age in which there was as yet no such Ionian settlement. The ‘Iāones with trailing tunics’ only appear once in the Iliad, named together with mainland Greeks in an anachronistic-looking passage (XIII.685). The Iliad here uses the archaic form, as does the Homeric Hymn describing the Ionians' festival on the island of Delos (III. 147, 152), and it was still in use in Solon's time, c. 600 B.C.
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