According to
Thucydides, the Elymians were refugees coming from the destroyed
Troy. Instead, for
Hellanicus of Lesbos, they arrived in Sicily coming from Italy, driven out by the
Oenotrians. Furthermore, for the Greek historian, the Elymians would also have contributed to the formation of the
Sicels. The
Elymian language is considered to have been a part of the
Indo-European language family. While an ancient tradition that the Elymians came from
Troy – and were originally an
Anatolian people – is corroborated by archeological data, the more generally supported opinion is that Elymian was an
Italic language, with similarities to
Latin. Hence an
Italic origin for the Elymians is considered to be more likely. The Greek historian
Philistus refers to the presence of a people of
Ligurian origin, although he does not identify it with the Elymians. In modern times, historians such as
Heinrich Nissen and
Karl Julius Beloch investigated the possibilities of a Ligurian origin following the numerous common
epigraphic and
toponymic references, still found in the cities of
Lerici,
Segesta and
Entella. Apart from mythological tales, there is little known about the identity and culture of the Elymians. They are indistinguishable from their Sicani neighbours in the archaeological record of the early
Iron Age (c. 1100–c. 700 BC). Thereafter, they appear to have adopted many aspects of the culture of the Greek colonists of Sicily, erecting the temple at
Segesta and using the
Greek alphabet to write their own language. As yet, no one has succeeded in deciphering the
Elymian language. ,
Sicily. ==History==