The
Lesbian city of
Mytilene controlled extensive parts of the
Troad in the
Archaic period, and so
Alcaeus' reference to Antandrus may suggest interest in or control over the city by Mytilene at the turn of the 7th century. Alternatively, the persistent early tradition of the city's Anatolian origins (e.g. in
Alcaeus,
Herodotus,
Demetrius of Scepsis) may indicate that its
Anatolian population remained independent of Mytilene until later in the 6th century BC; the little archaeology which has been done on the site suggests Greek occupation at no earlier a date than this. In 424 BC during the
Peloponnesian War when the city had been captured by exiles from
Mytilene, the historian
Thucydides explains that: This importance is likewise attested by
Xenophon later in the
Peloponnesian War in 409 and 205 BC, and is perhaps reflected in
Virgil's choice of the city as the place where
Aeneas builds his fleet before setting off to Italy. As late as the 14th century we hear of Antandrus being used by an Ottoman admiral to construct a large fleet of several hundred ships. Having joined the
Delian League in 427 BC, when Antandrus first appears in the Athenian tribute lists in 425/42BC, it has an assessment of 8
talents, again indicating the city's relative prosperity. ''' female head (
Artemis Astyrene?)
R: lion head within incuse square, ANTAN this silver diobol was struck in Antandrus in the late 5th century BC ref.: CNG E-369, 113; Gitbud & Naumann 24, 170 In 411/10 BC Antandrus expelled its
Persian garrison with the help of
Peloponnesian troops who were stationed at
Abydos on the
Hellespont. Having briefly won its freedom, it quickly returned to Persian control, and in 409 BC the
Pharnabazus constructed a fleet for the Peloponnesians here using the abundant timber of Mount Ida. We do not know how the Persians regained Antandrus, but in 409 BC the
Syracusans gained the Antandrians' friendship by helping to rebuild their fortifications, suggesting that a siege had taken place in the previous year. In the summer of 399 BC
Xenophon's Ten Thousand passed through on their way home from Persia, and he later wrote in his
Hellenica of the city's continuing strategic importance during the
Corinthian War (395-387 BC). After the
Classical period, references to Antandrus become scarce in surviving sources. The next reference to events at Antandrus comes several centuries later c. 200 BC, when Antandrus was on the route of
Delphic
thearodokoi, and in the 2nd century BC an inscription from Antandrus tells us that the city sent judges to
Peltai in Phrygia to arbitrate a dispute. From c. 440 - c. 284 BC, Antandrus had minted its own coinage; this began again in the reign of the Emperor
Titus (AD 79-81) and continued until the reign of
Elagabalus (AD 218-222). In the
Byzantine period Antandrus was an
episcopal see in the
metropolis of
Ephesus. == Archaeology ==