1997
DOI: 10.1017/s0068245400016683
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J. G. Von Hahn's report of his excavations at Balli Dağ in 1864: The Finlay translation

Abstract: In May 1864, J. G. von Hahn sought to prove by excavation that the summit of Balli Dağ behind Pinarbasi was the citadel of Homeric Troy. This was the first systematic attempt to identify the site of Troy by archaeological rather than merely topographical evidence. Assisted by J. F. Julius Schmidt and Ernst Ziller, von Hahn excavated stretches of walling, including parts of the perimeter wall. These appeared to range in date from very early (‘Cyclopian’) to the second century BC. But he found no evidence that t… Show more

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“…A philhellene, historian, and a man of political affairs, Finlay was resident in Athens from 1823 until his death in 1875 (Traill 1997). Remembered chiefly as the historian of medieval and modern Greece and the Greek War of Independence, Finlay was a polymath with wide interests in archaeology and natural history.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A philhellene, historian, and a man of political affairs, Finlay was resident in Athens from 1823 until his death in 1875 (Traill 1997). Remembered chiefly as the historian of medieval and modern Greece and the Greek War of Independence, Finlay was a polymath with wide interests in archaeology and natural history.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%