As mentioned above, however, it is most likely that the Homeric tradition contains elements of historical fact and elements of fiction interwoven. Homer describes a location, presumably in the
Bronze Age, with a city. This city was near
Mount Ida in northwest
Turkey. Such a city did exist, at the mound of
Hisarlık.
Hittite evidence Hittite texts provide evidence that Late Bronze Age Troy was indeed a regionally important city, that it was already known by variants of its later names, and that it was of political interest to Mycenaean Greeks (
Ahhiyawans). Some stray details appearing in these records have been speculatively linked to mythic characters and events. However, the texts provide no concrete evidence for the Trojan War having occurred or for any particular historical kernel in the myths. The Hittite placenames
Wilusa and
Taruisa occurring in these texts are generally regarded as corresponding to the later Greek terms
(W)ilios and
Troia. These correspondences were first proposed by the Swiss scholar
Emil Forrer on the basis of linguistic similarities, but are now supported by geographical evidence as well. Notably, a treaty was drawn up about 1280 BCE between the Hittite king
Muwatalli II and
Alaksandu of Wilusa (
Alexander of
Ilios), guaranteed by the Wilusan patron deity
Apaliunas (Apollo). From the texts, one can infer Wilusa's location relative to other identified places such as the
Seha River, and combining these data points places Wilusa in the
Troad—a region in which Hisarlik is the only major Bronze Age city attested in the archaeological record. However, despite the strength of this argument, it is still grounded in circumstantial evidence, and scholars do not regard it as beyond question. A number of Hittite documents attest to ongoing political turmoil in Western Anatolia which affected Wilusa on occasion. Notable among these documents are the
Manapa-Tarhunda letter and
Tawagalawa letter, which concern the anti-Hittite activities of a warlord named
Piyamaradu. Since Piyamaradu appears to have been supported by the
Ahhiyawa and these letters also mention Wilusa, these events have sometimes been interpreted as a historical basis for the Trojan War, particularly in popular literature. Although this interpretation remains a viable hypothesis, it is not favored by current scholarship. For instance, a section divider in the Manapa-Tarhunta letter seems to suggest that Piyamaradu's activities were not related to Wilusa. Similarly, although the Tawagalawa letter alludes to a previous disagreement between the Hittites and Ahhiyawa concerning Wilusa, it gives no indication that tensions escalated beyond strongly worded cuneiform tablets. Noted Hittiteologist
Trevor Bryce cautions that our current understanding of Wilusa's history does not provide evidence for there having been an actual Trojan War since "the less material one has, the more easily it can be manipulated to fit whatever conclusion one wishes to come up with".
Homeric evidence Greece as described in
Homer's
Iliad The
Catalogue of Ships mentions a great variety of cities, some of which, including
Athens, were inhabited both in the Bronze Age and in Homer's time, and some of which, such as
Pylos, were not rebuilt after the Bronze Age. This suggests that the names of no-longer-existing towns were remembered from an older time, because it is unlikely that Homer would have managed to name successfully a diverse list of important Bronze Age cities that were, in his time, only a few blocks of rubble on the surface, often without even names. Furthermore, the cities enumerated in the
Catalogue are given in geographical clusters, this revealing a sound knowledge of Aegean topography. Some evidence is equivocal: locating the Bronze Age palace of
Sparta, the traditional home of
Menelaus, under the modern city has been challenging, though archaeologists have uncovered at least two
Mycenaean era palatial center sites close to ancient Sparta, located at
Agios Vasileios and
Menelaion.
Mycenaean evidence Likewise, in the Mycenaean Greek
Linear B tablets, some Homeric names appear, including
Achilles (Linear B: ,
a-ki-re-u), a name which was also common in the classical period, noted on tablets from both
Knossos and
Pylos. The Achilles of the Linear B tablet is a shepherd, not a king or warrior, but the very fact that the name is an authentic Bronze Age name is significant. These names in the Homeric poems presumably remember, if not necessarily specific people, at least an older time when people's names were not the same as they were when the Homeric epics were written down. Some story elements from the tablets appear in the
Iliad.
Geological evidence In November 2001, geologist John C. Kraft from the
University of Delaware presented the results of investigations into the geology of the region that had started in 1977. The geologists compared the present geology with the landscapes and coastal features described in the
Iliad and other classical sources, notably
Strabo's
Geographia. Their conclusion was that there is regularly a consistency between the location of Troy as Hisarlik (and other locations such as the Greek camp), the geological evidence, and descriptions of the
topography and accounts of the battle in the
Iliad. ==See also==