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Dick Osseman | all galleries >> Troy >> East tower > Troy_006_2608.jpg
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14-DEC-2006

Troy_006_2608.jpg

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You are now standing on the remains of the outer wall of the Greek and Roman temple precinct from the period of Troia VIII/IX (third century BCE- c. CE 500). In front of you lie the fortifications of Troia/Ilios. You will recognize the East Tower, the East Wall (with its gate) and behind them the palaces – all of the Troia VI period (c. 1700-1250 BCE). On the fortification-wall you can see the remains of Troia VII houses. Troia VI was probably destroyed c. 1250 by an earthquake. Troia VIIa and VIIb by fire.

Behind you lay the lower town of Greek and Roman Ilion. To the north are the Dardanelles and the plain of Kara Menderes (the ancient Scamander) extends to the west. To the southeast you can see on a clear day the peaks of the Kaz Daglari (the Ida Mountains); to the southwest, one of the burial mounds (Üvecik Tepe)) and the harbour/bay on the Aegean coast (Besik Bay), visible as a depression with the island of Bozcaada (Tenedos) in the distance.

The total circumference of the fortification-wall around the citadel amounts to 550 metres of which approximately 330 are still preserved.

The section in front of you displays a highly refined technique of construction, with careful working of the rectangular limestone blocks. This wall is subdivided by vertical offsets placed at regular intervals. These continued the lines of the corners of the timber-framed superstructure which probably once stood on the wall, so providing (as it were) a visual foundation. The slightly inward-sloping substructure of the wall is 6 metres high and 4,5-5 metres thick. The superstructure, no longer preserved, reached up a further 3-4 metres. Besides timber beams, this was initially built of sundered mudbrick, but in time the whole superstructure was replaced by a narrow stone wall. The overlapping sections of wall constitute the entrance to the citadel. Already in the Hellenistic period, the eastern wall of this gateway was deeply cut into the retaining and foundation wall of the temple precinct.

The massive tower, built outside the wall only in a later phase of Troia VI, is very carefully worked. It is eleven metres wide and projects eight metres from the face of the wall. Its eastern wall is three metres thick. The tower consisted of two storeys, with a wooden floor in between. Access to the tower was only possible at the second-storey level.

The palaces VIE and VIF each have only one interior room of 64 and 98 sq.m. respectively. Their outer walls are one metre thick and are oriented radially towards a point at the centre of the citadel, producing buildings that are trapezoidal in plan. Within the west wall of Palace VIF are recesses which once held wooden beams. On the floor are some stone bases for pillars. The room had two entrances. The retaining-wall of VIF displays an advanced technique of construction which dates it to the end of the Troia VI period (c. 1400-1250 BCE). This wall, too, exhibits the “offset” technique. Buildings VIE and VIF were separated by a passageway approximately one metre wide.

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