Aeneas, the son of Aphrodite. Throughout the war, his mother, Apollo, and Zeus took care of him.
The Greeks were victorious and the city of Troy was burned.
No-one, because the city of Troy was burned to the ground by Agamenon and the Greeks.
None. The Greeks burned Troy, killed most of the people and took the rest as slaves. They didn't compromise.
Troy was burned to the ground after the Trojan War.
We probably wont find an answer to this question because some bodies could have been burned or destroyed. Also people could have fled the fight. xD
The Greeks actually burned the city of Troy. After sneaking into the city in a large horse, the Greeks opened the gates and Troy was destroyed.
Troy was finally captured by the Greeks. Odysseus, a famous Greek warrior, built a giant horse which could fit 30 fully armed men inside. The Greeks made the horse beautiful and sent a 'pretend traitor' to the Trojans saying that the Greeks had sailed off and given up. there were mass celebrations and everyone got very drunk. The Trojans feel asleep then the Greek creeped out of the trapdoor of the horse and started killing every Trojan in sight. They were merciful and in some cases let some families go. (This is a very summarised answer hope it's okay)
Troy, or so the legend says.
Sacked and burned, yes.
yes it was a real city that got burned to ashes in the Trojan war
The war was catastrophic for both sides. Troy was sacked and burned, and the ground was sown with salt, so that no one would resettle there. The refugees escaped and sailed across the Mediterranean and eventually landed in Italy (and became the forebears to the Romans). For the Greeks, the war was a tremendous drain on resources and manpower, and it left them open to invasion from other people. The "Greeks" of the Trojan War were part of the Mycenaean Culture (Agamemnon was the king of Mycenae), which disappeared not long after their return from Troy. That began the Greek Dark Age, which lasted for about 300 years.
No one. Troy has not been proven to have existed.