Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text
The text related to the cultural heritage 'Archaeological Site of Troy' has mentioned 'Anatolia' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence | Text Source |
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After this, the site acquired a new, Greek-speaking population, and the city became, along with the rest of Anatolia, a part of the Persian Empire. | WIKI |
There is some evidence of a city with similar names in actual, historic Anatolia. | WIKI |
The Greeks and Romans took for a fact the historicity of the Trojan War and the identity of Homeric Troy with a site in Anatolia on a peninsula called the Troad (Biga Peninsula). | WIKI |
[21] Travellers in Anatolia looked for possible locations. | WIKI |
According to the UNESCO site on Troy, its historical significance was gained because the site displays some of the "first contact between...Anatolia and the Mediterranean world". | WIKI |
Troy VI was a large and significant city, home to at least 5,000 people with foreign contacts in Anatolia and the Aegean. | WIKI |
The ethnic names show that western Anatolia and the islands off it were favored. | WIKI |
In the Linear B tablets, the coasts of Anatolia and Greece were under attack by Mycenaean centers of the Achaeans, especially the center at Pylos (pu-ro). | WIKI |
Most of the former Achaean inhabitants escaped to the now depopulated coast of Anatolia as Ionians and Aeolians. | WIKI |
They were fairly isolated from their former homeland by the spread of Dorians to Crete, the southern Cyclades, and southern Anatolia. | WIKI |
They leveled the top of the mound to construct a temple to Athena, thus identifying themselves as being in the Attic-Ionic culture, as opposed to the Aeolic Greeks (Boeotia) who had previously been settling the north coast of Anatolia. | WIKI |
A small minority of contemporary writers argue that Homeric Troy was not at the Hisarlik site, but elsewhere in Anatolia or outside itxe2x80x94e.g. | WIKI |
Its extensive remains are the most significant and substantial evidence of the first contact between the civilizations of Anatolia and the burgeoning Mediterranean world. | UNESCO |
Throughout the centuries, Troy has acted as a cultural bridge between the Troas region and the Balkans, Anatolia, the Aegean and Black Sea regions through migration, occupation, trade and the transmission of knowledge. | UNESCO |
The role of Troy is of particular importance in documenting the relations between Anatolia, the Aegean, and the Balkans, given its location at a point where the three cultures met. | UNESCO |