The first settlers in the area now generally considered to be "Troy" who built the small walled village (diameter 100 yards) now called Troy Ia in around 3,000 BC was an Anatolian early bronze-age tribe whose name is unknown.
I think anthropologists have settled on the Summarians as the first actual civilization.
The first civilization was the Kingdom of Sumer, which was settled between 4500 and 4001 BC, in the region of Mesopotamia, which is now Iraq.
Because the first settled agricultural cultures first emerged there.
That would be the Olmec, the Teotihuacan and the Maya, who settled in central and southern Mexico 4000 years before first contact with Europeans. They even pre-date the rise of the Aztec civilization (1325 AD).
The Mayans, who appeared on the Yucatan Peninsula some 3000 years ago, are considered the first civilization to have settled on such region.
The Aztec civilization.
The civilization believed to have defeated Troy in Homer's epic poem the Iliad is the Achaean or Greek civilization led by King Agamemnon. They waged the Trojan War against Troy.
The Minoans, Ancient Greece, Troy and the Etruscan civilization.
Mycenaean Greeks
It isn't. It is known as the cradle of the Aztec civilization, which settled in the Texcoco valley on March 13, 1325. The first civilization to appear in Mexico was the Olmec civilization, which was distributed along the lowlands of the Gulf of Mexico, as early as 1500 BC.
Helen of Troy was born in ancient Sparta, a princess and daughter of King Tyndareus and Queen Leda.
The Mayan Civilization qualifies as such.