[tied] Ilios

From: Piotr Gasiorowski
Message: 4269
Date: 2000-10-12

----- Original Message -----
From: Piotr Gasiorowski
To: cybalist@egroups.com
Sent: Tuesday, October 10, 2000 8:19 PM
Subject: Re: [tied] Ilios
 
One more thing:

King Mutatallis (the first decades of the 13th c. BC) entered into a treaty with the Hittite vassal Prince Alaksandus of Wilusiya, whose identification with Alexander a.k.a. Paris of Troy, is difficult to resist.
 
 
 
Yves asks:
 
In Homer's Iliad there is usually a hiate before the word Ilios. Why?
According to a Greek dictionary there has never excisted such a thing as
(w)Ilios.
 
 
The dictionary is wrong. The Homeric formula (W)ilios aipeine^ 'steep Ilios' is, as Calvert Watkins has shown, parallelled by Luvian alati Wilusati 'from steep Wilusa' (occurring twice in a song from the 16th c. BC dealing with the city of Wilusa = Gk. *Wilios = Ilios).
 
Piotr