Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Archaeological Site of Troy' has mentioned 'Iliad' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Troy was the setting of the Trojan War described in the Greek Epic Cycle, in particular in the Iliad, one of the two epic poems attributed to Homer.
Metrical evidence from the Iliad and the Odyssey suggests that the name xe1xbcxbcxcexbbxcexb9xcexbfxcexbd (Ilion) formerly began with a digamma: xcfx9cxcexafxcexbbxcexb9xcexbfxcexbd (Wilion);[note 3] this is also supported by the Hittite name for what is thought to be the same city, Wilusa.
Homeric Troy refers primarily to the city described in the Iliad, one of the earliest literary works of the Western Canon.
The Iliad is a long originally oral poem composed in its own dialect of ancient Greek in dactylic hexameter, traditionally believed to have been composed by a blind poet of the Anatolian Greek coast, Homer.
Besides the Iliad, there are references to Troy in the other major work attributed to Homer, the Odyssey, as well as in other ancient Greek literature (such as Aeschylus's Oresteia).
In the Iliad, the Achaeans set up their camp near the mouth of the River Scamander (modern Karamenderes),[15] where they beached their ships.
[18] They compared the present geology with the landscapes and coastal features described in the Iliad and other classical sources, notably Strabo's Geographia, and concluded that there is a regular consistency between the location of Schliemann's Troy and other locations such as the Greek camp, the geological evidence, descriptions of the topography and accounts of the battle in the Iliad.
Dissidents believing the Iliad, Odyssey, and other Greek texts recounting the Trojan War to be historical records were to become the first archaeologists at Troy.
As the Iliad is taught in every Greek language curriculum in the world, interest in the site has been unflagging.
Subsequent archaeologists at the site were to revise the date upward; nevertheless, the main identification of Troy as the city of the Iliad, and the scheme of the layers, have been kept.
That agrees with metrical evidence in the Iliad that the name xe1xbexbdxcex99xcexbbxcexb9xcexbfxcexbd (Ilion) for Troy was formerly xcfx9cxcexb9xcexbbxcexb9xcexbfxcexbd (Wilion) with a digamma.
Passages from the Iliad suggested that, not only were the Trojans not Greek, but the army defending Troy was composed of different language speakers arrayed by nationality.
[127] The majority of the females were textile workers, a development foreshadowed in the initial scene of the Iliad, in which the priest Chryses entreats Agamemnon to ransom his daughter Chryseis, only to be refused with the statement that she would be frequenting his bed and working his loom far away in Argos.
Moreover, the siege of Troy by Mycenaean warriors from Greece in the 13th century B.C., immortalized by Homer in The Iliad, has inspired great artists throughout the world ever since.