When
Jacob Bryant argued that no such city as
Troy had existed, Morritt's local knowledge of Turkey led him publish
A Vindication of Homer and of the Ancient Poets and Historians who have recorded the Siege and Fall of Troy (1798). This produced from Bryant
Some Observations in 1799, and when
William Vincent reviewed Morritt's work in the
British Critic early in 1799, and issued the criticisms in a separate form, Bryant rushed into print with
Expostulation addressed to the "British Critic" (1799). Morritt retaliated with ''Additional Remarks on the Topography of Troy, in answer to Mr. Bryant's last Publications
(1800). An account of his expedition to Troy was given by Dallaway in Constantinople, with Excursions to the Shores and Islands of the Archipelago, and to the Troad
(1797), and his opinions were supported in Remarks and Observations on the Plain of Troy, made during an Excursion in June 1799'', by
William Francklin. An essay by Morritt on the
History and Principles of Antient Sculpture formed the introduction to the second volume of
Specimens of Antient Sculpture preserved in Great Britain issued by the Dilettanti Society in 1835. A volume of
Miscellaneous Translations and Imitations of the Minor Greek Poets was published by him in 1802. He composed the inscription on the monument in York Minster to
William Burgh. His widow left him a miniature of
John Thurloe (but then thought to be of
John Milton), painted by
Samuel Cooper. ==Notes==