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
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.
There is some evidence of a city with similar names in actual, historic Anatolia.
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).
[21] Travellers in Anatolia looked for possible locations.
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".
Troy VI was a large and significant city, home to at least 5,000 people with foreign contacts in Anatolia and the Aegean.
The ethnic names show that western Anatolia and the islands off it were favored.
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).
Most of the former Achaean inhabitants escaped to the now depopulated coast of Anatolia as Ionians and Aeolians.
They were fairly isolated from their former homeland by the spread of Dorians to Crete, the southern Cyclades, and southern Anatolia.
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.
A small minority of contemporary writers argue that Homeric Troy was not at the Hisarlik site, but elsewhere in Anatolia or outside itxe2x80x94e.g.
Its extensive remains are the most significant and substantial evidence of the first contact between the civilizations of Anatolia and the burgeoning Mediterranean world.
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.
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.