evidence from geographers
A German Illiad enthusist believed he found the site base on description
It got its name from where it actually happened, which was near a place called Waterloo in Belgium.It got its name from where it actually happened, which was near a place called Waterloo in Belgium.It got its name from where it actually happened, which was near a place called Waterloo in Belgium.It got its name from where it actually happened, which was near a place called Waterloo in Belgium.It got its name from where it actually happened, which was near a place called Waterloo in Belgium.It got its name from where it actually happened, which was near a place called Waterloo in Belgium.It got its name from where it actually happened, which was near a place called Waterloo in Belgium.It got its name from where it actually happened, which was near a place called Waterloo in Belgium.It got its name from where it actually happened, which was near a place called Waterloo in Belgium.It got its name from where it actually happened, which was near a place called Waterloo in Belgium.It got its name from where it actually happened, which was near a place called Waterloo in Belgium.
No, the volcano that wiped Pompeii off the map took place long after when the Trojan War is thought to have happened.
It wasn't, seeing as it did not actually take place.
The Trojan War is reputed to have happened in the following century.
It got burned to nothing but ashes blown by the wind because of the trojan war
The Odyssey takes place immediately following the Trojan war.
the Trojan War was said to have taken place around 1200 BC
The Odyssey takes place immediately following the Trojan war.
The story of the war (having actually taken place or not) was a glorious thing for the Greeks.
Because there is archeological evidence of the city and it's destruction which may have been caused by a war.
The ancient Greeks thought the Trojan War had taken place in the 13th or 12th century BC, and believed that Troy was located in modern day Turkey near the Dardanelles. Eratostheries dated the Trojan War to 1194-1184 BC, which roughly corresponds with archaeological evidence of a catastrophic burning of Troy VIIa. In 1870, a German archaeologist excavated a site in this area which he identified as Troy; this claim is now accepted by most scholars.