On the southern shore of the Dardanelles strait in Turkey.
A Warrior at Troy would be called a Trojan.
The first settlement of Troy, known as Troy I, is believed to have been established around 3000 BCE. This early settlement was part of a series of layers that would later become the famous city of Troy, located in what is now northwestern Turkey. The site is significant for its archaeological and historical importance, particularly in relation to the Trojan War legends.
Troy was located in northwest Anatolia in what is now Turkey, southeast of the Dardanelles and beside Mount Ida.
The Troy most remembered was the tenth level down. This means that ten cities were built on this site and each faced destruction. Homer's Troy was an active and prosperous seaport. Now it is located fifty miles inland. This Troy was destroyed in an earthquake.
According to Wikipedia Troy was located, and I quote, "in northwest Anatolia in what is now Turkey, southeast of the Dardanelles and beside Mount Ida."
Troy was in what is now the Republic of Turkey.
Well, Troy is gay now. So you tell me
Your price is cca. 367 US $ but it is not correct; the price of iridium now is 970 US $/troy ounce.
Troy was located in what is now present day Turkey on the Dardanelles Strait.
If you are referring to the last name "Troy", the name is spelled Ó Troighthigh, which was first anglicized as O'Trehy but is now Troy.
A Warrior at Troy would be called a Trojan.
no
Troy, or Ilium (whence comes the Iliad) was supposedly located on the coast of what is now Turkey in Asia Minor. The Greeks would have sailed east across the Aegean and Mediterranean Seas to land there on the western shore of the peninsula.
To find the value of a pennyweight, you would divide the value of a troy ounce by 20 (since there are 20 pennyweights in a troy ounce). Therefore, if a troy ounce is worth $1100.00, a pennyweight would be worth $55.00.
troy was the most conquered city in ancient Greece
Right now its troy Polamalu
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.