The Story of Troy | Page 4

Michael Clarke

BRYANT, Iliad, Book III.
[Illustration: OFFERING TO MINERVA.
Painting by Gaudemaris.]

THE STORY OF TROY.

I. TROY BEFORE THE SIEGE.
[Illustration: Design by Burne-Jones.]
That part of Asia Minor which borders the narrow channel now known
as the Dar-da-nellesʹ, was in ancient times called Troʹas. Its capital
was the city of Troy, which stood about three miles from the shore of
the Æ-geʹan Sea, at the foot of Mount Ida, near the junction of two
rivers, the Simʹo-is, and the Sca-manʹder or Xanʹthus. The people
of Troy and Troas were called Trojans.
Some of the first settlers in northwestern Asia Minor, before it was
called Troas, came from Thrace, a country lying to the north of Greece.

The king of these Thraʹcian colonists was Teuʹcer. During his reign
a prince named Darʹdanus arrived in the new settlement. He was a son
of Jupiter, and he came from Samʹo-thrace, one of the many islands of
the Ægean Sea. It is said that he escaped from a great flood which
swept over his native island, and that he was carried on a raft of wood
to the coast of the kingdom of Teucer. Soon afterwards he married
Teucer's daughter. He then built a city for himself amongst the hills of
Mount Ida, and called it Dar-daʹni-a; and on the death of Teucer he
became king of the whole country, to which he gave the same name,
Dardania.
Jove was the father, cloud-compelling Jove, Of Dardanus, by whom
Dardania first Was peopled, ere our sacred Troy was built On the great
plain,--a populous town; for men Dwelt still upon the roots of Ida fresh
With Qiany springs.
BRYANT, Iliad, Book XX.
Dardanus was the ancestor of the Trojan line of kings. He had a
grandson named Tros, and from him the city Troy, as well as the
country Troas, took its name. The successor of King Tros was his son
Iʹlus. By him Troy was built, and it was therefore also called Ilʹi-um
or Ilʹi-on; hence the title of Homer's great poem,--the Iliad. From the
names Dardanus and Teucer the city of Troy has also been sometimes
called Dardania and Teuʹcri-a, and the Trojans are often referred to as
Dardanians and Teucrians. Ilus was succeeded by his son
La-omʹe-don, and Laomedon's son Priʹam was king of Troy during
the famous siege.
The story of the founding of Troy is a very interesting one. Ilus went
forth from his father's city of Dardania, in search of adventures, as was
the custom of young princes and heroes in those days; and he traveled
on until he arrived at the court of the king of Phrygʹi-a, a country
lying east of Troas. Here he found the people engaged in athletic games,
at which the king gave valuable prizes for competition. Ilus took part in
a wrestling match, and he won fifty young men and fifty maidens,--a
strange sort of prize we may well think, but not at all strange or unusual
in ancient times, when there were many slaves everywhere. During his

stay in Phrygia the young Dardanian prince was hospitably entertained
at the royal palace. When he was about to depart, the king gave him a
spotted heifer, telling him to follow the animal, and to build a city for
himself at the place where she should first lie down to rest.
Ilus did as he was directed. With his fifty youths and fifty maidens he
set out to follow the heifer, leaving her free to go along at her pleasure.
She marched on for many miles, and at last lay down at the foot of
Mount Ida on a beautiful plain watered by two rivers, and here Ilus
encamped for the night. Before going to sleep he prayed to Jupiter to
send him a sign that that was the site meant for his city. In the morning
he found standing in front of his tent a wooden statue of the goddess
Minerva, also called Pallas. The figure was three cubits high. In its
right hand it held a spear, and in the left, a distaff and spindle.
This was the Pal-laʹdi-um of Troy, which afterwards became very
famous. The Trojans believed that it had been sent down from heaven,
and that the safety of their city depended upon its preservation. Hence it
was guarded with the greatest care in a temple specially built for the
purpose.
Ilus, being satisfied that the statue was the sign for which he had prayed,
immediately set about building his city, and thus Troy was founded. It
soon became the capital of Troas and the richest and most powerful city
in that part of the world. During the reign of Laomedon, son of Ilus, its
mighty walls were erected, which in the next reign withstood for ten
years all
Continue reading on your phone by scaning this QR Code

 / 65
Tip: The current page has been bookmarked automatically. If you wish to continue reading later, just open the Dertz Homepage, and click on the 'continue reading' link at the bottom of the page.