A minor episode in the
Trojan War cycle in
Greek mythology has the Greek fleet land at Mysia, mistaking it for
Troy.
Achilles wounds their king,
Telephus, after he slays a Greek; Telephus later pleads with Achilles to heal the wound. This coastal region ruled by Telephus is alternatively named "Teuthrania" in Greek mythology, as it was previously ruled by King
Teuthras. In the
Iliad,
Homer represents the Mysians as allies of Troy, with the Mysian forces led by
Ennomus (a prophet) and
Chromius, sons of
Arsinous. Homeric Mysia appears to have been much smaller in extent than historical Mysia, and did not extend north to the Hellespont or the Propontis.
Homer does not mention any cities or landmarks in Mysia, and it is not clear exactly where Homeric Mysia was situated, although it was probably located somewhere between the
Troad (to the northwest of Mysia) and Lydia/Maeonia (to its south). A number of Mysian inscriptions have survived in a dialect of the
Phrygian language, written using a variant of the
Phrygian alphabet. There are also a small number of references to a
Lutescan language indigenous to Mysia in
Aeolic Greek sources. as
Satrap of Mysia, Adramyteion – 357–352 BC , Mysia. Mid-4th century BC Under the Persian
Achaemenid Empire, the northwest corner of Asia Minor, still occupied by Phrygians but mainly by
Aeolians, was called "Phrygia Minor" – and by the Greeks "Hellespontos". After Rome's defeat of
Antiochus the Great in the
Roman-Syrian War of 192 to 188 BC, the area, which had been held by the
Diadoch Seleucid Empire, passed to Rome's ally, the
Attalid kingdom, and, on the death of King
Attalus III in 133 BC, to Rome itself, which made it part of the
province of Asia According to the
Acts of the Apostles, the apostles
Paul,
Silas and
Timothy came to (or passed by) Mysia during
Paul's second missionary journey. The narrative suggests that they were uncertain where to travel during this part of the journey, being "forbidden by the Holy Spirit to preach the word in
Asia". Shortly afterwards Paul had a vision of a "
man of Macedonia" who invited the apostles to travel westwards to
Macedonia. == Ancient bridges ==