Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- MAPS AND PLANS
- DIAGRAM
- COMPARATIVE TABLE OF FRENCH AND ENGLISH MEASURES, EXACT AND APPROXIMATE
- PREFACE
- INTRODUCTION.—AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF THE AUTHOR, AND NARRATIVE OF HIS WORK AT TROY
- CHAPTER I THE COUNTRY OF THE TROJANS (οἱ Τρῶες)
- CHAPTER II ETHNOGRAPHY OF THE TROJANS: THEIR SEVERAL DOMINIONS IN THE TROAD: TOPOGRAPHY OF TROY
- CHAPTER III THE HISTORY OF TROY
- CHAPTER IV THE TRUE SITE OF HOMER'S ILIUM
- CHAPTER V THE FIRST PRE-HISTORIC CITY ON THE HILL OF HISSARLIK
- CHAPTER VI THE SECOND PRE-HISTORIC CITY ON THE SITE OF TROY
- CHAPTER VII THE THIRD, THE BURNT CITY, Page 305 to 357
- THE THIRD, THE BURNT CITY, Page 358 to 413
- THE THIRD, THE BURNT CITY, Page 414 to 465
- THE THIRD, THE BURNT CITY, Page 466 to 517
- CHAPTER VIII THE FOURTH PRE-HISTORIC CITY ON THE SITE OF TROY
- CHAPTER IX THE FIFTH PRE-HISTORIC CITY OF TROY
- CHAPTER X THE SIXTH CITY, MOST PROBABLY A LYDIAN SETTLEMENT
- CHAPTER XI THE SEVENTH CITY: THE GREEK ILIUM; OR NOVUM ILIUM
- CHAPTER XII THE CONICAL MOUNDS IN THE TROAD CALLED THE HEROIC TUMULI
- APPENDIX I TROY AND HISSARLIK
- APPENDIX II ON THE RELATION OF NOVUM ILIUM TO THE ILIOS OF HOMER
- APPENDIX III THE INSCRIPTIONS FOUND AT HISSARLIK
- APPENDIX IV THYMBRA, HANAÏ TEPEH
- APPENDIX V MEDICAL PRACTICE IN THE TROAD IN 1869
- APPENDIX VI CATALOGUE OF THE PLANTS HITHERTO KNOWN OF THE TROAD, COMPILED ACCORDING TO THE COLLECTIONS OF PROFESSOR RUDOLF VIRCHOW AND DR. JULIUS SCHMIDT, AND FROM THE LITERARY SOURCES BY PROFESSOR PAUL ASCHERSON OF BERLIN, PROFESSOR THEODOR VON HELDREICH OF ATHENS, AND DOCTOR F. KURTZ OF BERLIN
- APPENDIX VII ON THE LOST ART OF HARDENING COPPER
- APPENDIX VIII ON HERA BOÖPIS
- APPENDIX IX TROY AND EGYPT
- INDEX
- Plate section
APPENDIX I - TROY AND HISSARLIK
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- MAPS AND PLANS
- DIAGRAM
- COMPARATIVE TABLE OF FRENCH AND ENGLISH MEASURES, EXACT AND APPROXIMATE
- PREFACE
- INTRODUCTION.—AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF THE AUTHOR, AND NARRATIVE OF HIS WORK AT TROY
- CHAPTER I THE COUNTRY OF THE TROJANS (οἱ Τρῶες)
- CHAPTER II ETHNOGRAPHY OF THE TROJANS: THEIR SEVERAL DOMINIONS IN THE TROAD: TOPOGRAPHY OF TROY
- CHAPTER III THE HISTORY OF TROY
- CHAPTER IV THE TRUE SITE OF HOMER'S ILIUM
- CHAPTER V THE FIRST PRE-HISTORIC CITY ON THE HILL OF HISSARLIK
- CHAPTER VI THE SECOND PRE-HISTORIC CITY ON THE SITE OF TROY
- CHAPTER VII THE THIRD, THE BURNT CITY, Page 305 to 357
- THE THIRD, THE BURNT CITY, Page 358 to 413
- THE THIRD, THE BURNT CITY, Page 414 to 465
- THE THIRD, THE BURNT CITY, Page 466 to 517
- CHAPTER VIII THE FOURTH PRE-HISTORIC CITY ON THE SITE OF TROY
- CHAPTER IX THE FIFTH PRE-HISTORIC CITY OF TROY
- CHAPTER X THE SIXTH CITY, MOST PROBABLY A LYDIAN SETTLEMENT
- CHAPTER XI THE SEVENTH CITY: THE GREEK ILIUM; OR NOVUM ILIUM
- CHAPTER XII THE CONICAL MOUNDS IN THE TROAD CALLED THE HEROIC TUMULI
- APPENDIX I TROY AND HISSARLIK
- APPENDIX II ON THE RELATION OF NOVUM ILIUM TO THE ILIOS OF HOMER
- APPENDIX III THE INSCRIPTIONS FOUND AT HISSARLIK
- APPENDIX IV THYMBRA, HANAÏ TEPEH
- APPENDIX V MEDICAL PRACTICE IN THE TROAD IN 1869
- APPENDIX VI CATALOGUE OF THE PLANTS HITHERTO KNOWN OF THE TROAD, COMPILED ACCORDING TO THE COLLECTIONS OF PROFESSOR RUDOLF VIRCHOW AND DR. JULIUS SCHMIDT, AND FROM THE LITERARY SOURCES BY PROFESSOR PAUL ASCHERSON OF BERLIN, PROFESSOR THEODOR VON HELDREICH OF ATHENS, AND DOCTOR F. KURTZ OF BERLIN
- APPENDIX VII ON THE LOST ART OF HARDENING COPPER
- APPENDIX VIII ON HERA BOÖPIS
- APPENDIX IX TROY AND EGYPT
- INDEX
- Plate section
Summary
At the beginning of last year Dr. Schliemann asked my help in his explorations at Hissarlik and in the Trojan plain. The journey to Troy was a considerable one, but, after a good deal of hesitation, I resolved to make it. In fact, I could not refuse.
A journey to Troy—how many heads would be turned by the thought of it! Men of the most various callings offered me their company, when it was known that I meant to visit so rare a spot. And yet this was no Swiss tour, where the attraction is in the scenery, though an occasional visit may be paid to the Rütli and Küsznacht, Sempach and Laupen, Murten and St. Jacob an der Birs. It is the Iliad which takes us to Troy. The forms conjured up by the poet fill the traveller's fancy from the first. He wants to see the spots where the long struggle for Helen was fought, the graves where the heroes lie who lost their lives in it. Achilles and Hector stand in the foreground of the vivid picture, which is still engraven, as it was thousands of years ago, on the mind of every educated boy. This picture, it is true, cannot have now all the moving power it had in antiquity. Even Xerxes, as he marched against Greece in the fulness of his might, could not withstand the fascination of these memories.
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- IliosThe City and Country of the Trojans, pp. 673 - 685Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1880