The History of Antiquity (Vol. 1-6). Duncker Max

The History of Antiquity (Vol. 1-6) - Duncker Max


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and the climate of Lycia, this idea would hardly have taken root had not the Lycians at Patara, and probably at other places in Lycia, worshipped a god in whom the Greeks could recognise their own god of light. The Homeric poems place the Lycians in the closest connection with the Teucrians. There is a Xanthus in Lycia and in the Troad, and the name Tros seems to be identical with the name of the Lycian city of Tlos, which lies high up in the valley of the Xanthus under Taurus. In any case, from this close combination of the Teucrians and Lycians in Homer, we may conclude that with the Greeks of the coast the Lycians passed for a tribe who had already been for a long time in possession of their settlements. None but native Asiatic tribes could be represented as fighting beside the native Teucrians as their closest confederates.

      FOOTNOTES:

      [688] Strabo, pp. 525, 530, 532, 559.

      [689] Kiepert, "Monatsberichte der B. Akad.," 1869, s. 238.


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