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ANCIENT ANATOLIA
There
is abundant archaeological evidence of a thriving neolithic culture
in Anatolia at least as early as the seventh millennium B.C. What
may have been the world's first urban settlement (dated ca. 6500
B.C.) has been uncovered at Çatalhüyük in the Konya
Ovasi (Konya Basin). Introduced early in the third millennium B.C.,
metallurgy made possible a flourishing "copper age" (ca.
2500-2000 B.C.) during which cultural patterns throughout the region
were remarkably uniform. The use of bronze weapons and implements
was widespread by 2000 B.C. Colonies of Assyrian merchants, who
settled in Anatolia during the copper age, provided metal for the
military empires of Mesopotamia, and their accounts and business
correspondence are the earliest written records found in Anatolia.
From about 1500 B.C., southern Anatolia, which had plentiful sources
of ore and numerous furnace sites, developed as a center of iron
production. Two of the area's most celebrated archaeological excavations
are the sites at Troy and Hattusas
(Bogazköy. The cape projecting into the Aegean between the
Dardanelles and the Gulf of Edremit was known in antiquity as Troas.
There, a thirty-meter-high mound called Hisarlik was identified
as the site of ancient Troy in diggings begun by (German) Heinrich
Schliemann in the 1870s. The first five levels of the nine discovered
at Hisarlik contained remains of cities from the third millennium
B.C. that controlled access to the shortest crossing of the Dardanelles
and that probably derived their prosperity from tolls. Artifacts
give evidence of 1,000 years of cultural continuity in the cities
built on these levels. A sharp break with the past occurred on the
sixth level, settled about 1900 B.C. by newcomers, believed to have
been related to the early Greeks. Built after an earthquake devastated
the previous city about 1300 B.C., the seventh level was clearly
the victim of sacking and burning about 1150 B.C., and it is recognized
as having been the Troy of Homer's Iliad. Hisarlik subsequently
was the site of a Greek city, Ilion, and a Roman one, Ilium.
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