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  • The Memory of the Chariot: Anachronistic Military Technology and Oral Tradition Retention in the Homeric Iliad

    This article asks a simple question with a complicated answer. Why does the war chariot in the #Iliad behave so differently from the way real war chariots behaved in the age the poem claims to remember? In the Late #Bronze_Age, the chariot was a fast, deadly weapon system used in large formations across the Near East. In Homer, it is mostly a ride to and from the fighting, a kind of high-status taxi that carries a hero to the front so that he can jump down and fight on foot. This study treats that gap as a case study in how #oral_tradition holds on to some kinds of knowledge and quietly drops others. Drawing on recent work in Aegean Bronze Age warfare, chariot studies, oral poetics, and #cultural_memory, the paper argues that later #Archaic_period singers preserved the chariot as an object and as a symbol of rank far better than they preserved the tactical know-how that once made it a weapon. The chariot survived in song because a chariot still existed in the singers' own world, now as a racing and parade vehicle for the rich. Its battlefield role did not survive, because nobody in Greece had fought that way for centuries. The result is a pattern the paper calls #differential_retention: objects and prestige meanings pass down the generations more easily than practical technique. The chariot is not simply a mistake in Homer. It is a fossil that shows how memory reshapes technology when the technology itself falls out of use. Keywords: Homer; Iliad; war chariot; oral tradition; cultural memory; Mycenaean warfare; anachronism; Archaic Greece; Linear B; heroic combat 1. Introduction Anyone who reads the Iliad after reading about ancient Near Eastern warfare notices something odd almost at once. The poem is full of chariots. Kings and champions ride them onto the plain of Troy. Grooms hold the horses. Drivers wheel the cars around. Yet when the real fighting starts, the hero climbs down and fights on foot with a thrusting spear or a pair of throwing spears, while the driver waits nearby, ready to carry him off if things go wrong or to chase a beaten enemy. The chariot almost never functions as the weapon it clearly was in the world the poem pretends to describe. Scholars have long given this pattern a nickname: the #battle_taxi. The phrase captures the strangeness neatly. In the Late Bronze Age, from Egypt to the Hittite empire to the palaces of #Mycenaean Greece, the chariot was one of the most expensive and important weapons a state could field. It carried archers or spearmen at speed, in numbers, and it could break or outflank foot soldiers who lost their nerve. At the battle of Kadesh in 1274 BCE, Egyptian and Hittite armies deployed chariots by the hundreds and possibly the thousands. That is #chariot_warfare in the proper sense. What Homer shows is something else entirely. His heroes treat the chariot as transport and as a marker of status, not as a mobile fighting platform. This article does not try to prove that Homer "got it wrong," and it does not try to prove that Homer "got it right." Both of those framings miss the more interesting point. The Iliad reached its surviving shape around the late eighth or early seventh century BCE, roughly four to five centuries after the palace world it claims to remember had collapsed. In between lay a long stretch, often called the #Greek_Dark_Age, when writing was lost, palaces were abandoned, and the whole social machine that had once paid for teams of horses and trained crews simply stopped. The poem is a product of oral tradition, carried across those centuries by singers who never used a script and who inherited their material from earlier singers, who inherited it from earlier singers still. The question worth asking is therefore not "is the chariot accurate?" but "what happened to the memory of the chariot as it passed down that chain, and why did it change in the particular way it did?" That question turns a puzzle about one weapon into a broader study of how memory handles #memory_and_technology. Some things about the Mycenaean past clearly did survive in the poems. A few objects described by Homer match real Bronze Age artefacts that had gone out of use long before his lifetime. The most famous is the #boars_tusk_helmet, a leather cap covered in rows of split boar tusks, which the poem describes in Book 10 and which archaeologists have dug up from Mycenaean tombs. Other survivals include a great body shield "like a tower" and swords studded with silver. These are not things the singers could have seen in daily use. They are memories, preserved by the machinery of song. If objects like the helmet survived, why did the correct use of the chariot not survive? That is the heart of this study. The argument, in short, is that oral tradition retains different kinds of information at different rates. Fixed descriptions of striking objects travel well, because they are locked into set phrases and set descriptive scenes that singers repeat almost word for word. Practical technique travels badly, because technique lives in the bodies and habits of people who actually do the thing, and once nobody does the thing, the technique has nothing to hold onto. The chariot is a perfect test of this idea, because the object itself did not vanish from Greek life. It survived, but with a changed job. In the Archaic period the chariot was a racing and parade vehicle for aristocrats, a sign of wealth and standing rather than a tool of battle. So the singers had a living chariot in front of them, but a chariot that meant prestige and speed, not shock combat. Memory did what memory tends to do. It kept the part that still made sense and reshaped the rest. The paper proceeds in stages. It first reviews how scholars have explained the battle taxi and sets out the two main tools this study uses: the theory of oral composition and the theory of cultural memory. It then lays out the textual evidence for how the Iliad actually handles chariots, followed by a comparison with how chariots really worked in the Bronze Age Aegean and Near East. It examines the gap in between, including what the #Linear_B tablets tell us and what the collapse of the palaces did to specialist military knowledge. Finally it brings these threads together into an argument about differential retention, tests that argument against rival explanations, and considers what the chariot case teaches us about memory, technology, and the limits of using epic poetry as history. 2. Background and State of the Question The strangeness of the Homeric chariot has been discussed for well over a century, and the discussion has produced several distinct positions rather than a single agreed answer. It helps to lay them out clearly, because the argument of this paper depends on treating them as partial truths rather than as rivals fighting to the death. The first and oldest position is the misremembering thesis. On this view, the singers of the Archaic period inherited stories about a heroic age in which chariots were central, but they no longer understood how those chariots had been used. Cut off from the reality of chariot warfare by the long silence of the Greek Dark Age, they filled the gap with a picture that made sense to them: the chariot as a splendid vehicle for a great man, driven up to the fight and then set aside. Writers who take this line often point to the derisive label battle taxi and treat Homer's chariots as a garbled shadow of Near Eastern practice. Arthur Cotterell's popular study of the chariot argued along these lines, presenting the Homeric picture as a misunderstanding produced by the Dark Age break. The second position pushes back hard against the first. It notes that the Near Eastern pattern, with massed chariots and mounted archers, was not the only way to use a chariot in the ancient world. Later Celtic warriors in Britain used chariots partly as transport, riding to the fight, dismounting, and keeping the car close for a quick escape, which is remarkably close to what Homer describes. Two of the most careful students of ancient vehicles, Mary Littauer and Joost Crouwel, argued that Mycenaean chariots themselves may have served partly as transport rather than as archery platforms, in part because the broken, hilly ground of mainland Greece is far less friendly to massed chariot charges than the flat river plains of Egypt or Syria. If that is right, then Homer's battle taxi may not be a misremembering at all. It may be a reasonably faithful memory of how Greeks actually used the vehicle, adjusted for their own landscape. Recent edited volumes on chariots in antiquity continue to stress that chariot use varied enormously by region, terrain, and period, and warn against assuming that one dominant pattern held everywhere (Raulwing et al. 2023). The third position sets the historical question aside and looks at the poem as poetry. On this view, the #Iliad fights the way it does because of what kind of story it is. The poem is built around the great single combat, the moment when one named hero faces another named hero and the whole army seems to hold its breath. This kind of #heroic_combat needs the fighters on the ground, close enough to speak, to boast, to strip armour, and to be seen. A hero who fought from a moving chariot, mixed into a mass of other chariots, could not carry that kind of scene. The chariot, in other words, is kept at the edge of the action for artistic reasons. It brings the hero on with suitable grandeur and then gets out of the way so that the duel can happen. Studies of early Greek warfare that look beyond the later hoplite phalanx have stressed how much the Iliad is shaped by this focus on the individual champion rather than on collective tactics (Konijnendijk, Kucewicz, and Lloyd 2021). The fourth position concerns the date of the society in the poem. A long line of scholars, from Moses Finley onward, argued that "Homeric society" is not the Bronze Age at all, nor any single real period, but a composite, weighted heavily toward the poet's own time. On this reading the chariot behaves like a prestige object because the whole social world of the poem is closer to the eighth and seventh centuries BCE than to the thirteenth. Hans van Wees and others have developed versions of this view, treating the epic world as a largely coherent picture assembled from the singers' own experience with a thin coating of deliberate archaism on top. The chariot then fits a world in which such vehicles meant status, not shock. These four positions are usually presented as competitors. This paper treats them as describing different parts of a single process. The misremembering thesis is right that something was lost. The Littauer and Crouwel line is right that the loss was not total and that Greek chariot use may always have leaned toward transport. The literary reading is right that the poem's needs shaped what survived and how it was presented. And the composite society view is right that the singers projected their own world backward. What ties all four together is the machinery of #oral_tradition and the workings of cultural memory, which decide, in effect, which pieces of the past are kept, which are dropped, and which are quietly repainted to match the present. That machinery is the subject of the next section. Recent scholarship gives us better tools than earlier generations had for describing this machinery. Work on Mycenaean warfare has grown far more careful about separating what the archaeological and textual evidence actually shows from what the epics assert (Kvapil and Shelton 2024). Studies of the war chariot as a technology, including its spread across Eurasia and the mechanics of how the vehicles performed, let us be much more precise about what the object could and could not do (Roy 2022; Mazzu et al. 2021). And the study of oral tradition itself has continued to refine the model of how singers compose and transmit long narrative poems (Zielinski 2023). This paper draws these strands together to look specifically at the chariot as a memory object. 3. Theoretical Framework Two bodies of theory support the analysis. The first is the theory of oral composition, usually traced to Milman Parry and Albert Lord. The second is the theory of cultural memory, associated above all with Jan Assmann. They fit together well, and together they explain why an object can outlast the knowledge of how to use it. Parry and Lord studied living singers of long oral poems, working in the Balkans in the twentieth century, and used what they found to explain features of Homer. Their central discovery was that oral singers do not memorise fixed texts. They compose as they perform, using a large stock of ready-made building blocks. The smallest of these blocks is the #formula, a set phrase that fits a particular slot in the poetic line and expresses a recurring idea. "Swift-footed Achilles" is a formula. So is "the wine-dark sea." Larger blocks are patterned scenes, often called the #type_scene, such as the arming of a warrior, the launching of a ship, or the reception of a guest. The singer builds a performance by stringing formulas and scenes together, adjusting them to the moment. This system is what allows a poet to keep a story going for hours without notes. For our purposes the key feature of this system is that it is deeply conservative in its parts and flexible in its whole. Individual formulas can be extremely old, far older than the poem that contains them, because they are handed down as fixed units. A phrase can outlive the thing it names. Singers can go on saying a formula about an object long after that object has disappeared from daily life, simply because the formula fits the metre and the tradition supplies it. This is why the Iliad still speaks of the great tower shield and the silver-studded sword, and why it can describe the boar's tusk helmet in loving detail even though such helmets had not been worn for centuries. The formula and the type-scene act like amber. They can trap and preserve a description of an object across a huge span of time. But notice what this preservation covers and what it leaves out. The tradition preserves the noun and the picture. It does not preserve the practice. A formula can carry the image of a shield through the centuries, but it cannot carry the skill of using a shield wall, because that skill was never encoded in words in the first place. It lived in training, drill, and shared bodily habit. This is the first half of the paper's mechanism. Objects that get a fixed description in the poetic tradition are strongly protected. Techniques that were never verbal, and that stopped being practised, have almost nothing to protect them. The second body of theory sharpens the point. Jan Assmann distinguished between two kinds of collective memory. The first he called communicative memory. This is the living memory of a community, carried in ordinary conversation and personal recollection, and it reaches back only about three generations, roughly eighty to a hundred years. When the last people who took part in an event or practised a craft die, and their children and grandchildren die, that living memory is gone unless something else carries it. The second kind he called cultural memory. This is the long-term, institutionalised memory of a society, carried by fixed forms such as ritual, monument, and, crucially for us, formulaic poetry. Cultural memory can reach back far further than communicative memory, across many centuries, but it does so selectively and in a stylised way. Recent surveys of memory in the ancient world have built on this distinction, including studies that begin from Homer precisely because the epics are so concerned with remembering and forgetting (Dignas 2024). Put the two theories side by side and the chariot puzzle starts to dissolve. Chariot warfare as a practised military art was carried, if it was carried at all, by communicative memory, by the specialists who actually did it. When the palace system that trained and funded those specialists collapsed, and no one practised chariot combat for generation after generation, that communicative memory ran out within a century or so of the collapse. Nothing verbal had captured the technique, so nothing survived to be handed on. Meanwhile the chariot as an object, and the chariot as a sign of high rank, passed into #cultural_memory through the fixed phrases and scenes of the singers, where it could survive for centuries. The tradition kept the splendid vehicle and lost the tactics, not by accident, but because that is exactly what these two systems of memory are built to do. This is what the paper means by differential retention. Different categories of information about a past technology survive at different rates, according to how they are stored. Fixed verbal descriptions of objects survive well. Prestige meanings survive well, especially if a version of the object still carries prestige in the present. Practical, embodied technique survives poorly once it stops being practised. The Homeric chariot is a clean example because all three categories are visible at once: the object is preserved, the prestige meaning is preserved and even amplified, and the combat technique is gone. 4. Methodology and Sources This is a study in interpretation, not in excavation or in statistics, and it is honest to say so at the start. It works by placing three kinds of evidence next to one another and asking what pattern best explains their relationship. The first kind of evidence is the Iliad itself, read for how it presents chariots. The relevant passages are gathered and grouped by function: chariots as transport to and from combat, chariots as the setting for advice about tactics, chariots as objects of prestige and sport, and the rare moments that hint at something more like massed use. Because the aim is to describe a pattern across the poem rather than to settle the meaning of a single line, the analysis leans on the overall weight of the passages rather than on any one contested reading. The second kind of evidence is the reconstructed reality of chariot warfare in the #Bronze_Age, drawn from recent synthetic studies of the chariot as a weapon and a technology, from the archaeology of the Aegean, and from the Linear B administrative tablets that record the actual chariot holdings of the Mycenaean palaces. Here the paper depends on current specialist work rather than on the epic, precisely because the epic is the thing under examination and cannot be used to prove its own accuracy. The third kind of evidence is theoretical, namely the models of oral composition and cultural memory outlined above. These models are not proof in themselves. They are lenses that let us describe how information behaves as it passes through a long chain of singers. Their value is tested by whether they make sense of the first two kinds of evidence better than the alternatives do. A word on limits is needed. The dating of the #Iliad is not fixed, and reasonable scholars place its shaping anywhere from the later eighth century into the seventh century BCE. The dating of the Trojan War as a historical event, if it was one, is even less certain, though tradition and later chronographers placed it in the thirteenth or twelfth century BCE. The paper does not depend on any precise date. It depends only on the uncontroversial claim that several centuries, including a long period without writing, separate the poem's composition from the palace world it claims to remember. Wherever exact figures appear below, they should be read as the round numbers scholars commonly use, not as settled facts. The paper also treats "Homer" as a convenient name for the tradition and its final shapers rather than as a claim about a single historical author, which is the standard cautious usage in current oral tradition studies (Zielinski 2023). 5. The Chariot in the Iliad: What the Text Actually Shows To test any theory about the Homeric chariot we first have to be clear about how the poem uses it. When the passages are gathered, a consistent picture emerges, with a few interesting exceptions that turn out to matter. The dominant pattern is transport. Again and again, a hero rides his chariot toward the fighting, then steps or leaps down to fight on foot, while the driver stays close with the horses. The fighter and the driver are a pair. The Greek terms mark the roles clearly: one man handles the reins while the other does the killing. The chariot's job is to deliver the champion to the right place, to wait, and then either to carry him to safety if he is wounded or losing, or to help him run down a fleeing enemy. This is the behaviour that earned the whole system its modern nickname, the #battle_taxi. It is not a rare or marginal feature. It is the normal way the poem imagines the vehicle working. Several details reinforce the transport reading. Heroes are repeatedly described dismounting to fight, which would make no sense if the chariot were the weapon. Wounded men are hauled up into chariots and driven off the field. When a driver is killed, the loss is treated as a serious practical problem, because the hero now has no way to leave quickly, which again frames the chariot as a mobility asset rather than a fighting platform. The horses themselves are prized and mourned, treated almost as companions, which fits an object of high value and status. None of this looks like an army that expects to win battles by charging in massed cars. The prestige dimension is just as clear. Chariots and horse teams belong to the greatest men. They are counted among a hero's treasures. To capture an enemy's horses and chariot is a coup worth boasting about. In the funeral games for Patroclus in Book 23, the chariot race is the grand event, and the prizes are rich. The old hero #Nestor gives his son detailed advice on how to take the turning post tightly and win, advice that is all about skill in driving and nothing about fighting. This scene shows the chariot in its role as a vehicle of competition and display among the elite, a role that, as we will see, matches the Archaic period world of the singers far better than it matches the mass warfare of the Bronze Age. Against this dominant picture stands one striking exception, and it deserves careful handling because it is often used to argue that the poem does remember massed chariot tactics. In Book 4, the old Nestor arranges his contingent for battle. He puts the chariots in front and the foot behind, and he instructs his charioteers to keep formation, to hold their line, and not to dash out ahead as individuals. He tells them that a man who reaches an enemy chariot should thrust with his spear, and he praises this disciplined, collective method as the way the men of old used to storm cities. The passage is remarkable precisely because it does not sound like the rest of the poem. Everywhere else the chariot is a taxi and the glory belongs to the lone champion. Here, for a moment, we hear about ranks of chariots fighting as a unit and about the superiority of the old collective way over reckless individual heroics. What are we to make of this? Several readings are possible, and the paper does not claim certainty. One reading is that Nestor's speech is a genuine splinter of ancient memory, a faint recollection of a time when chariots did fight in formation, put into the mouth of the oldest character in the poem precisely because he stands for the deep past. This is attractive but cannot be proved. A second reading is that the passage is a later addition or elaboration, since it interrupts the surrounding narrative and its instructions are never actually carried out in the fighting that follows. A third reading is that Nestor, as an old man forever praising the ways of his youth, is a character type whose speeches naturally reach for archaic-sounding material, and that the poet uses him to gesture at an older style of war without the tradition truly understanding it. On any of these readings, the Book 4 passage is the exception that highlights the rule. The poem as a whole does not know how to fight from chariots in formation. It knows only how to talk about it, once, through its most backward-looking speaker. The Book 10 description of the boar's tusk helmet belongs in this section too, because it shows the other side of the pattern. Here the tradition preserves an object with striking accuracy. The poem describes a leather cap fitted on the outside with the white tusks of a boar, set in rows, with felt inside. This matches real Mycenaean helmets recovered by archaeologists, helmets that required the tusks of dozens of boars and that had gone out of use long before the poem took shape. Recent finds near Pylos have again put this distinctive object in the spotlight and confirmed how deeply it belonged to elite Bronze Age warrior culture. The object survived in song even though the practice of wearing it did not survive in life. That is exactly the split this paper is tracing. It is worth adding, in fairness, that specialists have raised cautions about the helmet as a straightforward survival. The book in which it appears is thought by many to be a later addition, and its language is not especially archaic, so the description may reflect an heirloom that had been kept for generations, or an object seen in an opened #Mycenaean tomb, rather than an unbroken memory. But even on the most cautious reading, the point holds: the object could be preserved and described, while the living practice around it could not. So the textual picture is consistent. The Iliad keeps the chariot as transport and as prestige, keeps certain Bronze Age objects as fixed descriptions, and does not keep the technique of chariot combat. The next step is to establish just how large the gap is by looking at what chariot warfare really was. 6. The Chariot as a Weapon: Bronze Age and Near Eastern Reality To measure the distance between Homer's chariot and the real thing, we need a clear picture of the real thing. Recent studies of the war chariot across the Bronze Age world let us draw that picture with some confidence, and it looks nothing like a taxi. The light, horse-drawn, spoke-wheeled chariot emerged in the early second millennium BCE, with important early developments on the Eurasian steppe and rapid spread into the Near East. By the middle of the second millennium it had become the prestige weapon of the great states. Building and maintaining a chariot force was hugely expensive. It required skilled woodworking and leatherwork for the vehicles, a supply of specially bred and trained horses, and crews who had spent years learning to drive at speed and to fight from a moving platform. Studies of the mechanics of these vehicles show that they were engineered for speed and manoeuvre, light enough to be fast yet stable enough to shoot or throw from, a genuine feat of ancient design (Mazzu et al. 2021). The horse itself was a managed, bred resource, and the growth of horse breeding and management across Eurasia is part of the same story of investment and specialised knowledge (Klecel and Martyniuk 2021). In the Near East this investment paid off in mass. Egyptian and Hittite armies fielded chariots in large numbers as a decisive striking arm. At Kadesh the two empires committed thousands of chariots between them. The typical Egyptian crew paired a driver with an archer, so that the vehicle became a fast-moving firing platform that could pour arrows into enemy ranks and then wheel away before the enemy could close. The Hittites, who could carry a third man, sometimes used the spear from the chariot as well as the bow. Whatever the mix of weapons, the principle was the same. The chariot was a weapon of speed, shock, and firepower, used in formation, and the whole point was to fight from the vehicle, not merely to ride it to the fight. Assyrian armies of the early first millennium continued and heavied up this tradition. This is #chariot_warfare as the ancient superpowers understood it, and it is the world the Iliad claims, at least in its setting, to remember (Roy 2022). The Mycenaean case is more complicated, and honesty requires spelling out the complication rather than smoothing it over. The Greek palaces certainly had chariots, and plenty of them. The #Linear_B tablets, the palace account documents written in an early form of Greek, record chariots, chariot frames, wheels, and body armour in significant quantities. The best current synthesis of this material shows just how much administrative attention the palaces gave to their war equipment (Shelmerdine, in Kvapil and Shelton 2024). Mycenaean art also shows chariots, in hunting, in procession, and in scenes that seem military. So the object was central to palace life. What is genuinely uncertain is how the Mycenaean Greeks used chariots in actual battle. The flat plains that suited massed chariotry in Egypt and Syria are rare in mainland Greece, which is broken by hills and mountains. Some specialists have argued, on these grounds and others, that Greek chariots may have served substantially as transport for elite warriors, carrying them to the fight and providing a fast means of withdrawal, rather than as massed firing platforms. If that argument is correct, then the Homeric battle taxi is closer to Mycenaean reality than the Near Eastern comparison suggests, and the poem preserves a real, if simplified, memory of how Greeks in particular used the vehicle. Other scholars are more cautious and stress that we simply lack the direct battle evidence to be sure. The current state of research, reflected in recent overviews of Aegean warfare, is that Mycenaean military practice was its own thing, shaped by local terrain and society, and should not be assumed to copy the Near Eastern model (Kvapil and Shelton 2024). This uncertainty is important for the argument, and it is a strength rather than a weakness. It means the paper does not have to claim that Homer's chariot is a wild distortion of Mycenaean practice. The gap that needs explaining is more precise. Even if Greek chariots always leaned toward transport, the #Bronze_Age chariot, Greek or Near Eastern, sat at the centre of a whole system of specialist knowledge: breeding, training, vehicle construction, crew drill, and coordinated deployment. That system is what vanished. The poem keeps the vehicle and its glamour. It does not keep the system. Whether the lost tactics were massed Near Eastern charges or a more modest Greek pattern of coordinated transport and skirmish, the technical world around the chariot has been reduced, in Homer, to a horse-drawn car that brings a great man to a duel. The scale of the loss is the same either way. The centre of a demanding military technology has dropped out, leaving the shell. 7. The Gap: Collapse, the Dark Age, and the Loss of Specialist Knowledge Between the palace world and the poem lies the event that makes the whole puzzle possible: the collapse of the #Mycenaean palatial system around 1200 to 1150 BCE, and the long, poorly documented centuries that followed. Understanding what the collapse destroyed is the key to understanding what memory could and could not carry across the gap. The Mycenaean palaces were not just grand houses. They were administrative and economic engines. They gathered resources, managed craftsmen, stored goods, and, as the Linear B tablets show in detail, tracked their military equipment down to individual wheels and pieces of armour. A chariot arm depended entirely on this kind of centralised wealth and record-keeping. You cannot maintain teams of trained horses and skilled crews without a system that feeds, houses, breeds, trains, and pays for them. When the palaces fell, that system fell with them. The writing system fell too. Linear B was a tool of palace administration, and when the palaces vanished, so did literacy in Greece, for centuries. This is one of the striking facts of the Greek Dark Age: a society that had kept written accounts simply stopped writing, and would not write again until the alphabet arrived, adapted from the Phoenicians, around the eighth century BCE. Consider what this means for the survival of chariot warfare as knowledge. The technique of fighting from chariots in coordinated groups was never, so far as we know, written down as instruction, and even if some records touched on it, those records were lost with #Linear_B. The technique therefore had to survive, if at all, in the only remaining vessel: living human practice, passed from trained fighters to their successors. But the collapse removed the conditions for that practice. There were no more palace-funded chariot forces to train the next generation of crews. Within a few generations, in Assmann's terms, the communicative memory of how to fight from chariots simply ran out, because the people who embodied it were gone and no one had taken their place. Nothing verbal or institutional had captured the skill, so nothing carried it forward. This is not a failure of intelligence or care on anyone's part. It is the ordinary fate of embodied technique when the practice that sustains it ends. Now consider what did survive the gap, and how. Stories survived. Names survived, some of them attached to real Mycenaean centres like Mycenae, Pylos, and Knossos, which is one reason the poems preserve a rough map of the old palace world. And, through the machinery of oral tradition, certain fixed descriptions of objects survived, locked into the formulas and scenes that singers repeated. The boar's tusk helmet is the clearest case, but the great body shield and the silver-studded sword point the same way. These are objects that had a memorable, describable shape, and that shape got encoded in language that singers passed down. The poems could therefore keep a picture of the object across the very centuries in which the practice around it died. The chariot sat in an unusual position during and after the gap, and this is what makes it such a revealing case. Unlike the boar's tusk helmet, the chariot did not disappear from Greek life. It survived the #Greek_Dark_Age and re-emerged in the #Archaic_period, but with a changed role. In the eighth and seventh centuries BCE, the chariot was a vehicle of the wealthy: a racing machine and a parade car, a way for aristocrats to show off horses, money, and standing. The four-horse chariot race became a glamorous event at the great games; the tradition places its introduction at Olympia in 680 BCE. Chariots appear on painted pottery of the period as marks of status and heroism. So the singers of the Archaic period had a living chariot in front of them, but a chariot whose meaning was prestige, competition, and display, not battlefield shock. This is the crucial fact for the whole argument. The object persisted, but its meaning had shifted from weapon to status symbol. The tradition therefore had two things to work with at once: an inherited body of heroic stories in which chariots were central to war, and a present-day chariot that meant wealth and rank rather than fighting. Memory reconciled the two in the natural way. It kept the chariot in the heroic stories, because the stories demanded it and because a chariot still existed to picture, but it gave that chariot the meaning the singers actually knew, the meaning of #prestige and swift movement. The battlefield chariot of the Bronze Age quietly became the aristocratic taxi of the epic, because the aristocratic vehicle was the only kind of chariot anyone alive had ever seen. 8. Analysis: Differential Retention and the Chariot as a Memory Object We can now draw the threads together. The chariot in the Iliad is best understood not as a mistake and not as a simple survival, but as the visible result of differential retention, the uneven way #oral_tradition and cultural memory hold different kinds of information about a technology. Three categories of memory about the chariot behaved in three different ways, and the poem preserves all three states side by side. The first category is the object. A war chariot is a distinctive thing, and distinctive things get fixed descriptions in a formulaic tradition. The chariot, its horses, and its fittings all had ready-made poetic language attached to them. That language, like the language for the #boars_tusk_helmet, could travel across centuries almost unchanged, because the #formula and the #type_scene are conservative by nature. So the object survived robustly. The poem can picture a chariot with ease and pleasure, down to the horses' names and temperaments. The second category is the prestige meaning. Here memory was helped by continuity in the real world. Because the chariot went on being a marker of high rank in the Archaic period, the singers did not have to remember that meaning across a gap. They lived it. The prestige of the chariot in the poem is not a fragile survival from the Bronze Age; it is reinforced every day by the singers' own society, where the chariot still meant wealth and standing. This is why the prestige dimension in the #Iliad is so strong and so consistent. It is doubly anchored, once in the inherited tradition and once in present experience. Retention here is very high, but partly because the present kept feeding it. The third category is the practical technique of chariot warfare, and here retention essentially failed. The technique was embodied, not verbal, and the practice that sustained it ended at the collapse. Nothing in the formulaic tradition could carry a bodily skill that no one performed. So the technique dropped out, leaving a chariot that the poem does not know how to fight from. The single, isolated exception in Nestor's Book 4 speech is the exception that proves the pattern: the tradition can gesture, once, through its most archaic speaker, at an older collective method, but it cannot actually stage that method, and it never applies Nestor's advice in the fighting that follows. The genius of the tradition, if we can call it that, is what it did with the resulting mismatch. It had a chariot it could describe and a chariot that meant prestige, but no memory of chariot tactics. So it assigned the chariot the one battlefield role that fit both the surviving object-memory and the poem's artistic needs: transport. The battle taxi is not a random error. It is a solution. It lets the chariot enter the war narrative in a way that matches the only chariot the singers knew, the prestige vehicle, while clearing the field for the single combat that the poem exists to celebrate. The hero rides in like a lord, dismounts, and fights like a champion. The chariot supplies grandeur and mobility; the duel supplies glory. Both the object and the story get what they need, and the lost technique is not missed, because nothing in the singers' world reminded them that it was missing. This reading also explains why the boar's tusk helmet and the chariot end up in different states in the poem, and why that difference is so instructive. The helmet is preserved as a static object, described and admired, because that is all the tradition needed from it and all it could keep. It is a museum piece inside the poem, accurate precisely because it is inert. The chariot, by contrast, had to keep functioning inside the action, because chariots were still functional objects in the singers' world. A functioning object cannot be preserved as a fossil; it has to do something, and what it does will be shaped by what the object does in the present. So the chariot could not stay a Bronze Age weapon. It had to become the kind of chariot that made sense to fight around in the eighth and seventh centuries, which is to say a prestige vehicle used for arrival and escape. The helmet could stay ancient because it did nothing. The chariot had to modernise because it did something. #Differential_retention is not only about objects versus techniques; it is also about inert objects versus active ones. Inert objects fossilise; active objects update. We can test this analysis against the rival explanations from Section 2, and it turns out to absorb rather than defeat them. The misremembering thesis captures the failure of technical retention, the third category, but overstates it by ignoring the surviving object and prestige memories and by assuming a Near Eastern baseline that may not fit Greece. The Littauer and Crouwel line captures the possibility that Greek chariot use always leaned toward transport, which, on the present analysis, would simply mean that the surviving object-memory and the lost-technique gap point in the same direction, making the battle taxi even more natural. The literary reading captures why transport specifically was the chosen role, since transport serves the single combat, and this paper folds that in as the artistic reason the tradition settled on its solution. The composite society view captures why the prestige meaning is so strong, since it is fed by the singers' own aristocratic world. Each rival is describing one category of retention or one pressure on the outcome. The framework of differential retention lets us hold all of them at once, and it does so without having to declare Homer either a faithful historian or a confused one. Homer is neither. Homer is a tradition doing what traditions do with the passing of time and the changing use of things. It is worth drawing out the general principle, because it reaches beyond this one poem. When a technology falls out of use but its memory persists in stories, the memory does not fade evenly. The parts that were captured in fixed language survive; the parts that lived only in practice decay; and the parts that still have a living referent in the present get quietly rewritten to match that referent. A tradition is not a recording device that grows fuzzy with age. It is a living thing that keeps what it can hold, drops what it cannot, and reshapes the rest to fit the world of the people who keep telling it. The #Homeric_epic chariot is one of the clearest surviving illustrations of that principle from the ancient world, which is why it repays this kind of close attention. 9. Implications for Reading Epic as Historical Evidence If this analysis is right, it carries a practical lesson for anyone tempted to mine the Iliad for facts about the Bronze Age. The lesson is not the crude one that epic is unreliable and should be ignored. It is the more useful one that epic is reliable in specific, predictable ways and unreliable in others, and that we can often tell which is which in advance if we think about how memory works. The framework suggests a rough rule of thumb. Look for the categories that oral tradition preserves well. Fixed descriptions of distinctive objects, especially objects that no longer existed in the singers' world and so could not be updated, are the strongest candidates for genuine survival. The boar's tusk helmet is the classic case, and it earned its reputation for a reason, even with the cautions specialists rightly attach to it. By contrast, anything that depends on living technique, on tactics, on how institutions actually functioned, is far more likely to reflect the singers' own time or to be a poetic construction, because embodied and institutional knowledge decays fast once the practice stops. And anything whose real-world referent survived into the Archaic period, like the chariot, should be assumed to carry the meaning it had in the singers' present, not the meaning it had in the #Bronze_Age, unless there is strong reason to think otherwise. This has consequences for particular debates. It suggests, for instance, that we should be cautious about reading Homeric battle tactics as evidence for Mycenaean tactics, since tactics are exactly the kind of embodied knowledge that decays. It suggests that the political and social arrangements in the poems are more likely to reflect the singers' world than the palace world, which fits the long-standing composite-society position. And it suggests that the safest historical residue in the epics is found in described objects rather than in described actions, a conclusion that aligns with how archaeologists have actually used the poems, treating the odd artefact as a possible survival while treating the narrative of events with caution. There is also a wider implication for the study of cultural memory and memory and technology that reaches past the ancient world. The chariot case gives us a clean, well-documented example of how societies remember tools they no longer use. The pattern it shows, objects and prestige meanings surviving while technique decays and active objects are silently updated, is not unique to Homer. It is likely to recur wherever a technology passes out of use but stays alive in story, from medieval memories of Roman engineering to modern folk memories of crafts that have died within living memory. The Homeric epic simply gives us an unusually long baseline and an unusually rich text in which to watch the process. Studying the chariot is therefore not only a way into Homer. It is a way into the general question of how human groups carry, lose, and reshape the memory of their own technologies. 10. Limitations Several limits should be stated plainly, in the spirit of not claiming more than the evidence allows. First, the interpretation rests on reading a poem, and poems can be read in more than one way. The dominance of the transport pattern in the Iliad is not seriously in doubt, but the meaning of individual passages, above all Nestor's Book 4 speech, is genuinely contested, and a different weighting of that passage could support a stronger memory of massed tactics than this paper allows. The argument is offered as the reading that best fits the whole, not as the only possible reading of every part. Second, the Mycenaean side of the comparison is less secure than the Near Eastern side. We know a great deal about how Egyptian, Hittite, and Assyrian chariots were used, and much less about how Mycenaean chariots were used in battle. If future work shows that Greek chariots were always mainly transport, the specific claim that a combat technique was lost would need to be softened into a claim that a whole specialist support system was lost, which is the more careful formulation this paper has tried to use throughout. Third, the models of oral tradition and cultural memory are powerful but general. They describe tendencies, not laws. Real traditions are messier than any model, and there are always exceptions, such as the survival of an odd technical detail or the loss of an object that should have been preserved. The framework of differential retention should be treated as a guide to likelihoods, not as a guarantee about any single case. Fourth, the dating of both the poem and its background is uncertain, and the argument has been written to depend only on the broad, uncontroversial gap between them. Readers who prefer an earlier or later date for the Iliad, or who take a particular view of the historicity of the Trojan War, should find that the core argument still stands, since it needs only the long interval and the loss of writing, both of which are secure. 11. Conclusion The war chariot in the #Iliad has puzzled readers because it does the wrong job. In the age the poem claims to remember, the chariot was a demanding, expensive weapon at the centre of #chariot_warfare. In the poem, it is a splendid ride to the edge of a duel. This paper has argued that the puzzle dissolves once we stop asking whether Homer is accurate and start asking how memory behaves across a long chain of singers and a long break in the life of a society. The answer is that memory retains unevenly. The chariot as an object survived, locked into the fixed language of an oral tradition that preserves striking things well, just as it preserved the #boars_tusk_helmet long after such helmets had gone out of use. The chariot as a sign of prestige survived even more strongly, because the #Archaic_period world of the singers still used chariots as markers of wealth and rank, so the meaning never had to cross the gap on its own. But the practical technique of fighting from chariots, the embodied knowledge of breeding, training, driving, and coordinated deployment, decayed and vanished, because the collapse of the #Mycenaean palaces ended the practice and no verbal record survived to carry the skill. Faced with a chariot it could describe, a chariot that meant status, and no memory of chariot tactics, the tradition gave the vehicle the one role that fit both the object it knew and the story it wanted to tell. The #battle_taxi is the natural result of #differential_retention, not a blunder. Reading the chariot this way turns a small oddity into a general insight. Societies remember their tools selectively. They keep the shapes and the meanings that language and present life can support, and they lose the know-how that lived only in the hands of people who did the work. When the object itself survives with a changed job, memory updates the past to match the present without anyone deciding to lie. The Homeric epic chariot is a fossil of exactly this process, preserved in amber by the machinery of #oral_tradition and lit up by the study of #cultural_memory. It reminds us that an epic is not a faded photograph of the past but a living reshaping of it, and that the most honest way to read it is to ask, for each detail, not simply whether it is true, but what kind of memory could have carried it, and what that kind of memory tends to keep and to lose. Seen through that lens, the chariot stops being a problem in Homer and becomes one of the best lessons the poem has to teach about the fragile, creative, and deeply human work of remembering. References Dignas, B. (ed.) (2024). A Cultural History of Memory in Antiquity. London: Bloomsbury Academic. [Including Minchin, E., "Remembering and Forgetting."] Klecel, W., and Martyniuk, E. (2021). From the Eurasian Steppes to the Roman Circuses: A Review of Early Development of Horse Breeding and Management. Animals, 11(7), 1859. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani11071859 Konijnendijk, R., Kucewicz, C., and Lloyd, M. (eds.) (2021). Brill's Companion to Greek Land Warfare Beyond the Phalanx. Leiden and Boston: Brill. Kvapil, L. A., and Shelton, K. (eds.) (2024). Brill's Companion to Warfare in the Bronze Age Aegean. Brill's Companions to Classical Studies 6. Leiden and Boston: Brill. Mazzu, A., Uberti, S., Bodini, I., Paderno, D., and Danesi, A. (2021). Dynamical Behaviour of Bronze Age War Chariots. Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports, 36, 102896. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jasrep.2021.102896 Raulwing, P., Burmeister, S., Brownrigg, G., and Linduff, K. M. (eds.) (2023). Chariots in Antiquity: Essays in Honour of Joost Crouwel. BAR International Series. Oxford: BAR Publishing. Roy, K. (2022). Chariot War in the Bronze Age: 3000-800 BCE. In A Global History of Warfare and Technology (pp. 19-33). Singapore: Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-19-3478-0_3 Zielinski, K. (2023). The Iliad and the Oral Epic Tradition. Hellenic Studies 99. Washington, D.C.: Center for Hellenic Studies. #The_Memory_of_the_Chariot #Anachronistic_Military_Technology #Oral_Tradition_Retention #Homeric_Studies #Iliad_Chariots #Battle_Taxi #Mycenaean_Warfare #Bronze_Age_Aegean #Cultural_Memory #Oral_Formulaic_Theory #Archaic_Greek_Poetry #Chariot_Warfare #Boars_Tusk_Helmet #Differential_Retention #Memory_And_Technology

  • Iron vs. Bronze: Metallurgical Transitions and Technological Stratification in the Homeric Epic

    An analysis of material culture in the Iliad, identifying the overlap between the Bronze and Iron Ages Abstract The poems attributed to Homer sit on a fault line between two technological worlds. The heroes of the #Iliad fight almost entirely with #bronze, yet the same poems know #iron well enough to treat it as treasure, as a prize for athletes, and as the material of a farmer's tools. This article examines that split. It reads the metal vocabulary of the epics against what archaeology now says about the shift from the #Bronze_Age to the #Iron_Age in the Aegean and the eastern Mediterranean. Drawing on recent statistical work on the frequency of metal words in the two poems, on new regional studies of early Aegean iron technology, and on current accounts of the collapse that ended the palace economies around 1200 BCE, it argues that the Homeric text preserves a layered, or stratified, record of material culture. Older bronze-centred formulas describe the weapons of war, while iron appears mostly in contexts of value, labour, and everyday life that reflect the poet's own later age. The result is not a single snapshot of one period but a composite built over centuries of #oral_tradition. Reading the metals in this way gives students a concrete method for thinking about how ancient poetry remembers, edits, and updates the material past. It also shows how a change in raw material can carry social meaning, marking status, wealth, and the slow reorganisation of a society after crisis. Keywords: #Homeric_epic; #metallurgy; #Bronze_Age_collapse; #technological_stratification; #oral_tradition; #Aegean_archaeology; #material_culture 1. Introduction Few objects in ancient literature are described with as much loving attention as the weapons of the #Iliad. Spears fly, shields turn aside blows, and the poet returns again and again to the gleam of metal on the battlefield. Almost every one of those weapons is made of bronze. When a warrior's spear point buries itself in an enemy, the poem calls the metal pitiless bronze. This is striking, because by the time the poems reached anything like their final form, probably in the eighth century BCE, the Greek world had been using #iron for weapons and tools for roughly three hundred years. The audience listening to a performance of the Iliad would have carried iron blades. The heroes they were hearing about did not. That gap between the world of the story and the world of the audience is the subject of this article. It is a gap that can be measured, because the poems mention metals hundreds of times, and the pattern of those mentions is not random. Bronze belongs to war and to the heroic past. Iron belongs to wealth, to work, and to the ordinary present. When we line up these patterns against the archaeological record of the change from bronze-based to iron-based technology, the poems begin to look less like a photograph of one moment and more like a #palimpsest, a surface written over many times, where earlier layers still show through. The term this article uses for that layering is #technological_stratification. The idea is borrowed loosely from geology, where strata are layers of rock laid down at different times. In the Homeric poems, different kinds of material culture were laid down in the tradition at different stages, and later performers did not fully erase the older layers. A #Mycenaean detail from the thirteenth century BCE can sit a few lines away from a detail that only makes sense in the ninth or eighth century. The metals are one of the clearest places to watch this happen. The discussion proceeds in stages. Section 2 sets out the basic metallurgy of bronze and iron and explains why the change from one to the other mattered. Section 3 addresses the dating of the poems and the mechanics of #oral_tradition, since everything else depends on understanding how the text was built. Section 4 turns to the textual evidence itself, using recent frequency analysis of the metal words. Section 5 examines anachronism and the famous problem of objects that belong to more than one age at once. Section 6 reviews what archaeology says about the transition in the #Aegean. Section 7 connects that transition to the #Late_Bronze_Age collapse. Section 8 develops the idea of metal as a marker of social rank. Section 9 works through a set of short case studies from the poems. Sections 10 and 11 draw the threads together and conclude. 2. Two Metals, Two Ages: A Short Technical Background To read the metals in Homer, a student needs to know what bronze and iron actually are, because they behave very differently and their histories are not the same. #Bronze is an alloy, a mixture of metals melted together. The standard recipe is copper with a smaller amount of tin, often somewhere between five and thirteen per cent tin depending on the region and the period, though other elements such as arsenic were also used in earlier phases. Copper on its own is soft. Add tin and the metal becomes much harder, holds an edge better, and pours cleanly into a mould. This is the key point for warfare: a well-made bronze sword, and especially a work-hardened one where the edge is hammered cold to toughen it, could be an excellent weapon. Bronze also has a great practical advantage. It melts at a temperature that ordinary ancient furnaces could reach, so it can be cast into complex shapes and, just as importantly, melted down and recast. A broken bronze sword is not waste. It is raw material for the next one. There is one problem with bronze, and it shaped the whole political economy of the second millennium BCE. Copper is fairly widespread, but #tin is rare and unevenly distributed. Major sources lay far from the Aegean, in places reached only through long chains of trade. To make bronze on any scale, a society needed access to those distant supplies, which meant it needed functioning long-distance exchange networks. When those networks worked, bronze flowed. When they broke, bronze became hard to get. The dependence of bronze on the #tin_trade is one reason the metal is bound up so tightly with the fortunes of the palace states that organised that trade. #Iron is different in almost every way. It is not an alloy but an element, and its ores are common across much of the ancient world. In that sense iron is democratic: a community does not need a far-flung trade network to find the raw material. The catch is that iron is much harder to work. Its melting point is far above what ancient furnaces could reach, so early smiths could not simply pour it into moulds the way they poured bronze. Instead they produced a spongy mass called a #bloom by heating the ore with charcoal, then hammered it hot, over and over, to drive out the impurities and shape the metal. This is why early iron working is sometimes described as a craft of the hammer rather than the mould. Plain wrought iron, moreover, is not automatically better than good bronze. It can be softer unless the smith adds carbon to the surface and hardens it, turning it into an early form of steel, often followed by heating and rapid cooling in water to make it harder still. Getting this right took skill and time to develop. This technical picture explains a puzzle that has bothered readers of Homer for over a century, as Andrew Lang already noted in the early twentieth century and as recent work restates: in the poems, and in the archaeological record they draw on, #iron tools appear before iron weapons of war become common (Musso, 2025). At first glance that order seems backwards. Would people not arm their soldiers with the new metal first? But it makes sense once we remember that early iron was not clearly superior to bronze for a blade, while it was extremely useful for tools, and that iron's real advantage was its availability rather than its performance. A society could adopt iron for axes, knives, and farming gear long before its smiths had mastered iron weapons good enough to replace the trusted bronze sword. The change of material was gradual, and it ran through the workshop and the farm before it fully reached the battlefield. There is a further reason bronze held on so long as a weapon material, and it is easy to miss. Late Bronze Age smiths had reached a high level of skill with their metal. The long cut-and-thrust swords of the later second millennium, the type archaeologists call Naue II, were effective and widely copied, and their edges could be toughened by cold hammering. When iron weapons first appeared, they did not immediately outperform these good bronze blades. Early plain iron could bend or blunt where a well-worked bronze sword held firm. Only once smiths learned to add carbon to the iron surface, a process called carburisation, and then to harden the result by heating and quenching, did iron blades gain a clear advantage. In other words, iron did not win because it was instantly superior. It won because its ore was everywhere, because the skills to improve it kept developing, and because the trade system that fed bronze had broken down. The performance of the metal caught up with its availability only over time. The wider chronology is worth fixing in the mind. Iron was known and occasionally worked in the eastern Mediterranean and Anatolia far back in the Bronze Age, but it was used sparingly, and the real turn to iron as a common utilitarian metal, sometimes called the iron revolution, took place only in the #Early_Iron_Age, roughly the eleventh to the eighth centuries BCE (Mokrišová and Verčík, 2022). In the Aegean, iron did not become the preferred and widely employed metal until about the tenth century BCE (Musso, 2025, citing Blackwell, 2019). The Homeric poems, sitting where they do in time, look back across this exact threshold. 3. When Was Homer Composed, and How? The metals argument only works if we are clear about how the poems came to exist, so this section sets out the mainstream picture. It is a picture of long #oral_tradition ending in a written text, and it is now supported from several independent directions. The traditional attribution gives us a single poet, Homer, composing the Iliad and the Odyssey. The modern study of the poems has replaced that simple picture with something more interesting. The decisive work came from the study of oral poetry in the twentieth century, when scholars showed that the epics are built out of repeated, ready-made phrases called #formulas, fitted to the rhythm of the verse. A singer did not memorise a fixed text word for word. Instead the singer composed in performance, drawing on a deep stock of formulas, type-scenes, and story patterns inherited from earlier singers. This is the oral-formulaic method, and its discovery reframed the whole question of dating (Cosmopoulos, 2025). If the poems were composed in performance across many generations, then they are not the work of one moment. They are the accumulated product of a tradition. The language itself shows this: it is an artificial mixture of dialects and of older and newer word forms that no one ever actually spoke in daily life, a blend built up over time. Recent computational studies of the vocabulary and style of the two poems continue to find measurable differences between the Iliad and the Odyssey, differences consistent with distinct composition or redaction histories rather than a single seamless act of authorship (Pavlopoulos and Konstantinidou, 2023; Musso, 2025). It helps to know how scholars line up on these questions, because the debate is old and still active. Broadly, three positions can be sketched. Some hold that a single gifted poet shaped each poem, drawing on and even dictating an inherited oral tradition into a written text, a view associated with the idea of one literate composer working with the help of writing. Others, the strict followers of the oral tradition, treat the poems as the product of a long evolutionary process of performance and transmission, in which the question of how many poets there were matters less than the tradition itself, from oral roots to a text finally fixed over centuries. A third and smaller group, sometimes called the neo-Statisticians, tests these claims with numerical and computational methods, measuring vocabulary, style, and structure to detect differences within and between the poems (Musso, 2025). These camps disagree sharply, but almost all of them accept the basic premise that matters for the metals: the poems rest on a deep oral tradition and combine material of different ages. Recent quantitative work continues to find measurable stylistic and lexical differences between the two epics, which most researchers read as evidence of layered or distinct composition rather than a single uniform act of writing (Pavlopoulos and Konstantinidou, 2023). Most scholars place the final shaping of the poems, the point at which they took on roughly the form we have, in the eighth century BCE or a little later, around the time the Greek alphabet was adopted and writing became available to fix the text. But the tradition behind them reaches back much further, into the world of the #Mycenaean palaces of the Late Bronze Age and the centuries of decline and recovery that followed their fall. The poems, in other words, remember. They carry material from a distant heroic past, transmitted by singers, alongside details that belong to the singers' own more recent world. This is why the phrase used by several scholars, a #patchwork of the Late Bronze Age and the Early Iron Age, fits the evidence so well (Musso, 2025). The poems are stitched together from cloth of different ages. A useful comparison is the way medieval stories about King Arthur, supposedly set in a post-Roman Britain of the fifth or sixth century, are full of high medieval castles, armour, and manners from the twelfth or thirteenth century, the world of the writers rather than the world of the story. Homer works the same way. The past is imagined, sometimes with real inherited detail and sometimes with the poet's own present quietly filling the gaps. For the metals, this framework predicts exactly what we find. The oldest, most fixed layer of the tradition, the language of #heroic_warfare, should preserve the material of the heroic age, which is bronze. The more flexible references to wealth, tools, and daily life should more easily admit the material of the poet's own time, which is iron. That is the pattern the text shows, and the next section measures it. 4. The Textual Evidence: Bronze for War, Iron for Work The most direct way to test the claim is simply to count. A recent study did exactly that, applying a straightforward statistical test to the frequency of metal words in the original Greek of both poems (Musso, 2025). The results are worth walking through, because they turn a general impression into something concrete. Bronze is the signature metal of the #Iliad. It is by far the most frequently named metal in the poem, and it appears significantly more often in the Iliad than in the Odyssey. Part of this is obvious and expected: the Iliad is a war poem set on a battlefield, the Odyssey is a poem of homecoming set mostly after the fighting, and weapons naturally cluster in the war poem. A careful analysis has to correct for that difference, and the study did so by removing all the metal references that were tied to weapons, leaving only the metal words used in other contexts. Even after this adjustment, bronze remained significantly more common in the Iliad than in the Odyssey (Musso, 2025). The gap is not just an accident of subject matter. Something in the deeper texture of the Iliad reaches more often for #bronze. The behaviour of iron is equally telling. In both poems, and this is the central fact, weapons of war are essentially never called iron. Swords, spears, and the cutting edges that decide battles are bronze. The poems know iron, use the word freely, and treat it as valuable, yet they do not put it in the warrior's hand. There are only two exceptions in the whole corpus, and their rarity is the point: a single, unusual #iron_mace wielded by an older-generation fighter, and a lone iron arrowhead (Musso, 2025). Two exceptions across two long poems is close to a rule with the exceptions that prove it. Where iron does appear, it appears in revealing places. Iron is repeatedly treated as #treasure, listed alongside gold and bronze as a store of wealth (Musso, 2025, drawing on Bennet, 2014). It is something a hero is proud to own and to give away. In the funeral games for Patroclus, Achilles offers a lump of raw iron as a prize, and describes it as enough to supply a farmer or herdsman with tools for years, a very practical vision of the metal (Iliad, Book 23). Near the climax of the Odyssey, the great test that only Odysseus can pass involves shooting an arrow through a line of iron #axe_heads (Odyssey, Book 21). Iron, in short, is the metal of value and of work. It is wealth in the storeroom and the blade of the axe in the yard. It is not, in the imagined heroic world, the metal of the spear. Set side by side, the two metals divide the world of the poems along a clear line. Bronze is heroic, martial, and archaic. Iron is valuable, useful, domestic, and, by the poems' own logic, somewhat newer. This division is not a modern imposition read back into the text. It is the pattern the words themselves make when they are counted. It is worth adding what the poems do not do, because the silence is informative. They never describe the forging of an iron weapon of war, even though the Odyssey, as discussed below, shows detailed knowledge of iron smithing in other contexts (Musso, 2025). The tradition seems to have an unspoken sense that iron and the hero's weapon do not belong together. That sense is exactly what we would expect if the core of the heroic language was fixed before iron weapons were normal, and then carried forward without being fully updated. 5. The Anachronism Problem: Objects That Belong to Two Ages If the poems mix material from different periods, we should be able to find individual objects that give the mixture away. We can, and the metals are only part of a larger pattern. The clearest single example is not metal at all. In Book 10 of the Iliad the poet describes a helmet made from rows of #boars_tusks sewn onto a leather cap. This is a real object. Helmets of exactly this kind, built from split boar tusks, were made and worn in Mycenaean Greece in the Late Bronze Age, and they had gone completely out of use long before the poems reached their final form. No eighth-century singer had ever seen one in daily use. Yet the description is accurate in its construction. The most economical explanation is that the detail was transmitted through the oral tradition across the centuries, an inherited memory of a genuine Bronze Age artefact preserved in the fixed language of the poems (Cosmopoulos, 2025). The boar's tusk helmet is a fossil in the text, a piece of the Bronze Age surviving intact into an Iron Age poem. The same poems, in the same breath, contain features that belong to a much later world. The organisation of society, the small-scale politics, elements of religious practice, some kinds of equipment, and the general assumption of an iron-using economy in the background all point toward the Early Iron Age, the poet's own period, rather than the Mycenaean age of the story. Some scholars argue that the poet does more than passively carry forward old material. The poet also deliberately creates what has been called #epic_distance, actively pushing the heroes away from the present to make them feel grander and older, sometimes suppressing details that would seem too contemporary. On this view the heroic world is partly a poetic construction, an image of what a later age imagined the deep past ought to have looked like, rather than a straight report of any real single period. Both processes, inherited memory and deliberate archaising, point in the same direction for the metals. Bronze is kept as the heroic metal partly because it really was the metal of the Bronze Age heroes, preserved in old formulas, and partly because keeping the heroes in bronze helps set them apart from the ordinary iron-using present. The two explanations reinforce each other. Iron, meanwhile, slips into the poems wherever the tradition is looser and the poet's own world shows through, in the treasure lists, the tools, and the household. This is the sense in which the Homeric epics are #stratified. They are not a clean record of one age. They are a record of a tradition, in which a Bronze Age helmet and an Iron Age economy can appear on the same page, and in which the choice of metal for a given object tells us something about which layer of the tradition we are standing on. 5.1 Hesiod and the memory of a bronze race The Homeric poems are not the only early Greek text to remember a bronze world. Hesiod, working at roughly the same period, gives in his poem Works and Days a scheme of successive races or ages of humankind. One of them, a race of bronze, is described as having weapons, tools, and even houses of bronze, and, in a phrase that stands out, as having no black iron at all. After this bronze race comes a race of heroes, the very generation that fought at Thebes and Troy, and only after them the present iron race to which Hesiod says he himself belongs (Musso, 2025). The scheme is a myth, not a chronicle, but it preserves a cultural memory worth noticing. Early Greek tradition remembered, however dimly, that there had once been an age defined by bronze, before iron, and it placed the heroes of epic on the far side of that divide from the poet's own iron present. This independent testimony strengthens the reading of Homer. The association of the heroic past with bronze and the present with iron was not an accident of one poet's word choice. It was a shared feature of how early Greeks imagined the shape of their own past, and the metals in Homer sit inside that larger habit of memory. 6. The Archaeology of the Transition in the Aegean The literary pattern makes sense only against the archaeological history of the metals, and that history has been substantially refined by recent fieldwork. The older textbook story was simple and tidy: iron technology arrived in the Aegean from the east, above all from #Cyprus and the #Levant, spread westward, reached Crete and Euboea and then the Greek mainland, and produced a fairly uniform, fairly sudden replacement of bronze by iron at the start of the #Protogeometric period around 1050 to 900 BCE. On this account the beginning of the Early Iron Age matched a relatively abrupt switch from bronze to iron for everyday purposes, a view associated above all with the foundational work of Anthony Snodgrass (Mokrišová and Verčík, 2022). Recent regional studies complicate that neat diffusion model without overturning its core. A detailed analysis of Early Iron Age #Ionia, on the central western coast of Anatolia, argues that the spread of iron was not a single wave moving in one direction but a patchier process with several centres and routes (Mokrišová and Verčík, 2022). The evidence from western Anatolia, taken together with metallographically studied finds from sites such as Sardis, suggests that this region was itself a place of metallurgical innovation, not merely a passive receiver of technology passed on from Cyprus through the western Aegean. The authors stress the need for regional approaches, because the pace and the meaning of the change differed from place to place. In one district iron might be adopted quickly for tools; in another, bronze might hold on longer. The transition was real, but it was uneven, local, and tied to the specific social conditions of each community. Two general findings stand out for our purposes. First, iron had been known in the region for a very long time before it mattered economically. It was used sparingly and often as a prestige material in the Bronze Age, and it became a true utilitarian metal only in the Early Iron Age (Mokrišová and Verčík, 2022). Second, within the transition, the archaeological signature matches the literary one. Graves and settlements of the transitional phases typically show bronze weapons alongside a few iron tools, precisely the combination the poems describe, before the balance tips and iron becomes normal for both tools and, eventually, weapons (Musso, 2025, citing Waldbaum; Blackwell, 2019). The role of #Cyprus and the Levant deserves a closer word, because these regions were central to the early story of iron even if the simple diffusion model needs qualifying. Cyprus in particular was a major centre of copper production in the Bronze Age and became an early and important place for working iron as the transition began. From these eastern centres the knowledge and use of iron spread into the Aegean, reaching Crete, the island of Euboea, and the Greek mainland around the start of the Early Iron Age. The revised picture does not deny this eastern contribution. It adds that the receiving regions were not merely passive, that places such as western Anatolia had their own metallurgical traditions and innovations, and that the timing and character of adoption varied locally rather than following one smooth westward march (Mokrišová and Verčík, 2022). Students should hold both ideas together: iron technology had important eastern sources, and its take-up across the Aegean was regional and uneven. The grave and settlement evidence deserves emphasis because it maps so neatly onto the poems. In the transitional phases, from the later Bronze Age into the Early Iron Age, burials often contain bronze weapons together with a small number of iron tools or ornaments. Only later do assemblages shift so that iron dominates for both tools and weapons (Musso, 2025, citing Waldbaum). The archaeological order is therefore the same as the literary order: iron arrives first as a prized rarity and as tools, while bronze keeps its hold on the weapons, and the full switch comes afterward. When Homer arms his heroes in bronze but hands out iron as treasure and as farming stock, he is describing, whether he knows it or not, the very stage of the transition that the excavated graves preserve. There is also a striking piece of evidence from writing. The #Linear_B tablets, the administrative documents of the Mycenaean palaces, record copper and bronze under a term that becomes the later Greek word for the metal. They do not record iron in any secure, established way (Musso, 2025, citing Melena, 2014). For the palace bureaucracies that tracked valuable resources item by item, iron was essentially not on the books. This fits everything else: in the Bronze Age Aegean economy, iron was a rare novelty, not a staple. The metal that would define the next age barely registered in the records of the age that was ending. Put together, the archaeology gives the literary reading a firm foundation. The poems remember a bronze world because there really was a bronze world, organised around the palace economies and the tin trade. They admit iron into the margins because iron really did enter Aegean life gradually, as a treasure first and a tool soon after, and only later as the ordinary metal of everything. 7. Collapse and the Coming of Iron Why did the change happen at all, and why then? The answer runs through one of the great turning points of ancient history, the #Late_Bronze_Age_collapse around 1200 to 1150 BCE, and the recovery that followed it. Understanding that event helps explain both the fall of bronze's dominance and the rise of iron. For several centuries before the collapse, the eastern Mediterranean and the Aegean were tied together in a dense, interconnected system of kingdoms and palace states that traded, corresponded, and fought across long distances. The Mycenaean palaces of Greece were part of this world, linked to Egypt, the Hittite empire, the cities of the Levant, and Cyprus. That interconnection was the system's strength, and, as recent work emphasises, also its fatal weakness. Around 1200 BCE a combination of pressures, including movements of peoples, internal revolt, earthquakes, drought and famine, and the breakdown of the trade routes, brought the whole network down in a few decades. Palaces were destroyed, populations moved, and complex administration disappeared. In Greece the Linear B writing system was lost entirely. The period that followed is sometimes called the First Dark Age (Cline, 2024). The mechanics of that fall are worth pausing on, because they explain why the collapse hit bronze so hard. The Late Bronze Age world was, in effect, an early form of a connected international system. Groups remembered in Egyptian records as the Sea Peoples appear in the story of the crisis, but no single enemy or single disaster brought the system down. Instead, when one part of the network failed, its absence put pressure on its neighbours, which then failed in turn, so that states toppled one after another like a row of dominoes over a few decades (Cline, 2024). The very interdependence that had made the system rich and powerful became the channel through which its collapse spread. Trade routes that had carried metals, grain, and luxury goods across the eastern Mediterranean broke, and with them went the flow of the tin on which bronze depended. What followed was not the same everywhere, and this is a point recent scholarship stresses strongly. Some societies proved resilient and recovered in a form recognisably continuous with their past. Others transformed into something new. Still others vanished. In the Aegean the disruption was unusually deep and long, with the Mycenaean palace order gone and centuries passing before comparable complexity returned. Out of this uneven recovery, over roughly four centuries, came world-changing innovations, among them the widespread use of iron and, later, the adoption of the alphabet (Cline, 2024). The Early Iron Age was therefore a period of reconfiguration as much as of loss, and iron was one of the things that grew in the new conditions. The dependence of #bronze on distant tin made the metal especially vulnerable to this kind of systemic failure. When the long-distance trade that carried tin to the Aegean was disrupted, the supply of the material needed to make bronze became unreliable. A society that could no longer count on tin had a strong incentive to turn to a metal it could find closer to home. #Iron ore was widely available, and although working it was harder, the knowledge of how to work it was spreading. In this light the rise of iron looks partly like a response to scarcity: bronze became difficult, iron was there, and necessity encouraged the switch. That is one explanation, the scarcity model, and it captures something true. But recent scholarship is careful not to reduce the change to a single cause, and this is an important point for students to grasp. A period of crisis can produce technological regression, as skills and complex systems are lost. It can also, at the same time, open up space for latent local innovation, as communities freed from the demands and the monopolies of the old palace elites experiment and adapt. The turn to iron may reflect both at once: the loss of the old bronze-based order and the emergence of a new order in which iron, the alphabet, and other innovations took shape amid the reconfiguration (Cline, 2024). The Early Iron Age was not simply a poorer version of the Bronze Age. It was the start of something different. The regional studies discussed above reinforce this more nuanced view. Because the adoption of iron varied so much from place to place, and because some regions appear to have innovated locally rather than waiting to receive the technology from elsewhere, the change cannot be explained by any single mechanism working everywhere in the same way (Mokrišová and Verčík, 2022). The social context of technological change mattered as much as the raw availability of ore. Communities adopted iron for their own reasons and at their own pace, shaped by what they needed, what they could trade for, and how their societies were organised after the collapse. For the poems, this history is the missing context that makes the metals legible. The heroic world of the Iliad is, in memory, the world just before and during the collapse, the world of the great citadels and the tin-fed bronze economy. The poet's own world, several centuries later, is the recovered iron-using world that grew out of the wreckage. The poems face both directions at once, and the metals are the hinge. 8. Technological Stratification as Social Stratification The distribution of metals in the poems is not only a chronological signal. It is also a social one, and this is where the phrase #technological_stratification earns its second meaning. Different metals carried different social weight, and the way a society handled its metals reveals how it organised value, rank, and memory. In the Bronze Age, metal was wealth in a very direct sense. Because bronze depended on organised trade and skilled production, controlling metal meant controlling a scarce and convertible resource. Recent scientific study of large collections of buried metal objects, or #hoards, from Bronze Age Europe shows how deliberately communities managed metal as a store of value. These studies reconstruct the biographies of individual objects, tracing how metal was traded, mixed, recycled, and finally taken out of circulation by being buried, a practice that can seem strange to modern eyes but that made sense in a world where metal itself was a form of wealth (Orfanou et al., 2024). Metal, in that world, was not only material. It was money, status, and social power, gathered and displayed and sometimes ritually removed from use. These hoards also show that metal was constantly moved through cycles of use and reuse. Objects were traded across long distances, melted down, mixed with metal from other sources, recast, and eventually removed from circulation, sometimes by burial that looks deliberate and even ritual (Orfanou et al., 2024). A single object could carry within it metal from several origins and several earlier lives. This is a useful corrective to any simple picture of the Bronze Age. Metal was not just made and used once. It was a fluid, convertible form of wealth that societies managed with care, and the act of taking metal permanently out of use, by placing it in the ground, was itself a statement about value and status. The Homeric poems preserve this attitude, and they preserve it for iron as much as for bronze. When the poems list iron among a hero's treasures alongside gold and bronze, they are showing us a stage at which iron was still precious, still a marker of wealth rather than a cheap everyday material (Musso, 2025). This is exactly the status iron held in the Late Bronze Age Near East. There, iron circulated as a rare and valuable substance, and the diplomatic correspondence of great courts, including the well-known Amarna letters and Hittite records of the fourteenth and thirteenth centuries BCE, treats iron as a fitting gift between kings and a material worth accounting for (Musso, 2025). Iron began its career at the top of the social scale, in the treasuries and gift exchanges of rulers, not in the hands of ordinary workers. When Homer's heroes prize iron, they preserve that early, elevated status of the metal, even as other passages already show it descending into the world of everyday tools. Over time that changed, and the poems catch the change in progress. Alongside iron the treasure, the poems also show iron the tool, the practical metal of the axe and the farm implement that Achilles imagines his prize supplying (Iliad, Book 23). This double life of iron, precious and ordinary at once, is precisely what a metal looks like while it is descending the social scale, moving from a rare gift among elites to a common material available to many. The transition from bronze to iron was therefore also a transition in who could own good metal. Bronze, tied to elite-controlled trade, concentrated metal wealth. Iron, available more widely, eventually spread it. The change of raw material was, in the long run, a change in the distribution of a basic form of power. Seen this way, the metals in Homer map a society reorganising itself. The bronze of the heroes belongs to a hierarchical world of palaces and kings who commanded trade and tribute. The iron rising through the poems belongs to the smaller, more dispersed communities of the recovering Early Iron Age, where the old central powers were gone and a more local order was taking shape. The poems do not describe this social transformation directly. They register it in the quiet grammar of which metal goes with which kind of person and which kind of thing. 9. Case Studies: Reading the Metals Closely General patterns are convincing only if they hold up in specific passages. This section works through several well-known moments in the poems where metal is doing visible work, to show the argument at close range. 9.1 The shield of Achilles The most famous metal object in the Iliad is the great shield that the smith-god Hephaestus makes for Achilles in Book 18. The description is long and dazzling, a whole world of scenes worked into the metal. For our purposes the important thing is what the shield is made of and how it is made. It is a work of bronze, gold, silver, and tin, cast and worked in a divine forge. It is, in other words, a masterpiece of #Bronze_Age craft, and its splendour depends on exactly the alloying and metalworking skills that defined that age. The shield is the poem's ultimate statement of what bronze could be, and it is fitting that it belongs to the greatest of the heroes. Iron has no place in this supreme object of heroic art. The choice is consistent with everything else the poems do: the highest expression of the warrior's world is rendered in the older, martial metal. 9.2 The lump of iron as a prize In Book 23, at the funeral games for Patroclus, Achilles sets out prizes for the athletic contests, and one of them is a mass of raw #iron. He explains its value in strikingly practical terms: whoever wins it will have enough metal to keep a farmer or a shepherd supplied with tools for a long time, so that they need not go to town for iron (Iliad, Book 23; Musso, 2025). This short passage is a small window onto the poet's real world. Iron here is not a weapon and not merely a treasure. It is a working material measured by how many tools it will make, and the reference to fetching iron from a settlement assumes an economy in which iron tools are the norm. This is the Early Iron Age showing through the heroic surface. A Bronze Age hero is handing out a prize that only makes full sense in the world of the poem's own audience. 9.3 The contest of the axes Near the end of the Odyssey, in Book 21, the decisive test is the stringing of Odysseus's great bow and the shooting of a single arrow through a row of #iron axe-heads set in a line. The axes are iron, and their presence as ordinary, if fine, household objects again reflects a world where iron is the everyday metal of tools (Odyssey, Book 21; Musso, 2025). The bow and the shooting are heroic; the axes are domestic and iron. The scene quietly places the two metals in their usual Homeric roles even at a climactic moment. 9.4 The blinding of Polyphemus and the knowledge of the smith Perhaps the most technically revealing passage comes in Book 9 of the Odyssey, when Odysseus and his men drive a heated wooden stake into the single eye of the Cyclops Polyphemus. The poet reaches for a simile to describe the sound: the eye hisses around the burning point the way heated #iron hisses when a smith plunges it into cold water to harden it (Odyssey, Book 9). This is a precise piece of metallurgical observation. Plunging hot iron into water, the process of #quenching, is a real technique for hardening the metal, part of turning worked iron into something like steel. The poet expects the audience to recognise the smithy and the sound of quenching, which means the audience knew iron working intimately (Musso, 2025). The poems even seem to distinguish different qualities and treatments of iron in their language. So the tradition that will not arm its heroes with iron nonetheless describes the iron worker's craft in loving, accurate detail. The contradiction is only apparent. Heroic weapons stayed bronze in the fixed old formulas, while the poet's living knowledge of iron surfaced in a simile drawn from daily life. The two layers sit a few words apart. 9.5 The rare iron weapons Finally, the exceptions. The poems contain a very small number of iron weapons: an unusual #iron_mace associated with a fighter of an earlier generation, and a lone iron arrowhead (Musso, 2025). Rather than weakening the pattern, these exceptions sharpen it. An older-generation warrior with an odd iron weapon reads almost like a marked case, something noted because it is out of the ordinary. The overwhelming rule is bronze; the handful of iron weapons stand out precisely because they break it. In a tradition built over centuries, a few such intrusions are exactly what we would expect, occasional places where the newer metal slipped into a context normally reserved for the old. 10. Discussion: What the Metals Tell Us Taken together, the textual patterns, the archaeological history, and the close readings support a clear and useful conclusion. The metals in Homer are a record of #technological_stratification. They preserve, in the very fabric of the language, the overlap between two ages. The core of the heroic tradition, the language of #warfare, holds the material of the Bronze Age. Weapons are bronze because the deep, fixed layers of the tradition were shaped when bronze was the metal of war, and because keeping the heroes in bronze set them apart from the ordinary present. Around that core, in the more flexible references to wealth, tools, similes, and daily life, iron enters freely, because iron was the metal of the poet's own recovered world and because those parts of the tradition were looser and more open to updating. The poems therefore face two directions at once. They remember the palace world of the tin-fed bronze economy, and they live in the dispersed iron-using world that grew out of its collapse. Several strands of recent scholarship converge on this reading, which is part of why it is persuasive. Statistical frequency analysis confirms that bronze is disproportionately the metal of the Iliad even after correcting for its warlike subject, and that the two poems differ measurably in ways consistent with layered composition (Musso, 2025; Pavlopoulos and Konstantinidou, 2023). Regional archaeology shows that iron entered the Aegean gradually and unevenly, first as treasure and tool and only later as the universal metal, matching the poems' own hierarchy of uses (Mokrišová and Verčík, 2022; Blackwell, 2019). The history of the collapse explains why the change happened when it did, and warns against reducing it to any single cause (Cline, 2024). The study of Bronze Age metal management explains why metal, including early iron, carried such heavy social meaning (Orfanou et al., 2024). And the reconstruction of the poems as products of long oral tradition and social memory explains how material from such different periods could end up in one text (Cosmopoulos, 2025; Lane Fox, 2024). There are limits to what this method can prove, and honesty about them is part of doing the work well. Counting words is a blunt instrument. Translations can obscure the original Greek, so any serious analysis has to work from the Greek text, as the frequency study did. The line between an inherited memory and a deliberate archaism cannot always be drawn cleanly, and reasonable scholars disagree about how much of the heroic world is genuine tradition and how much is poetic construction. The dating of the poems, the number of poets involved, and the relationship between the Iliad and the Odyssey remain open questions, the long-running matter known as the #Homeric_Question. None of this is settled, and students should be wary of anyone who claims it is. What the metals give us, then, is not a solution to those large questions but a method and a case study. They show, concretely and measurably, that the poems are composite. They give a physical, testable example of how oral tradition preserves the old while absorbing the new. And they connect a literary text to the archaeological and historical record in a way that each side illuminates the other. For a student, that connection is the real prize: a worked example of how to read ancient poetry as evidence, carefully, with attention to both what the text says and what the ground beneath it reveals. 11. Conclusion The heroes of the #Iliad carry bronze into battle in a world whose audiences carried iron. That single fact, once examined, opens onto the whole history of the change from the #Bronze_Age to the #Iron_Age in the Aegean. The poems keep bronze as the metal of #heroic_warfare because the oldest layers of the tradition were formed in a bronze world and because bronze marked the heroes as belonging to a grander past. They let iron in wherever the tradition was flexible enough to admit the poet's own age, in treasure, tools, similes, and the ordinary business of living. The overlap of the two metals in one text is not a mistake or a muddle. It is the visible trace of a tradition built across centuries, spanning the collapse of one order and the birth of another. Reading the metals this way turns the Homeric epics into a document of #technological_stratification, layered like rock, with the Bronze Age showing through beneath the Iron Age surface. It also shows that a change of material is never only technical. The shift from tin-dependent bronze, controlled by palace elites, to widely available iron was bound up with the fall of the old centralised world and the slow spread of metal wealth into more hands. The poems register that social transformation in the quiet logic of which metal goes with which person and which thing. For students, the lesson reaches beyond Homer. It is a demonstration of how to make ancient literature and material evidence speak to each other, how to test a literary impression against a countable pattern, and how to hold open questions open while still drawing firm conclusions where the evidence allows. The bronze spear and the iron axe, lying side by side in the same poem, are a small and durable reminder that texts remember unevenly, that the past arrives to us in layers, and that reading those layers is the historian's craft. References Blackwell, N. G. (2019). Tools. In I. S. Lemos and A. Kotsonas (Eds.), A Companion to the Archaeology of Early Greece and the Mediterranean. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley-Blackwell. Bennet, J. (2014). Linear B and Homer. In Y. Duhoux and A. Morpurgo-Davies (Eds.), A Companion to Linear B: Mycenaean Texts and Their World, Vol. 3. Leuven: Peeters. Cline, E. H. (2024). After 1177 B.C.: The Survival of Civilizations. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. Cosmopoulos, M. B. (2025). The World of Homer: Archaeology, Social Memory, and the Emergence of Greek Epic Poetry. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009582834 Lane Fox, R. (2024). Homer and His Iliad. London: Penguin Books. Melena, J. L. (2014). Mycenaean writing. In Y. Duhoux and A. Morpurgo Davies (Eds.), A Companion to Linear B: Mycenaean Texts and Their World, Vol. 3. Leuven: Peeters. Mokrišová, J., and Verčík, M. (2022). Tradition and innovation in Aegean iron technologies: A view from Early Iron Age Ionia. The Annual of the British School at Athens, 117, 137-168. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0068245421000162 Musso, N. (2025). Iliad, Odyssey, and statistics. Journal of Classics Teaching, 27(53), 16-21. https://doi.org/10.1017/S205863102510024X Orfanou, V., Bruyère, C., Karydas, A. G., Jovanović, D., Franković, F., Spasić, M., Koledin, J., Jacanović, D., Cerović, M., Davidović, J., and Molloy, B. (2024). A community of practice approach to the management of metal resources, metalworking and hoarding in Bronze Age societies. Scientific Reports, 14, 16153. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-65798-4 Pavlopoulos, J., and Konstantinidou, M. (2023). Computational authorship analysis of the Homeric poems. International Journal of Digital Humanities, 5, 45-64. https://doi.org/10.1007/s42803-022-00046-7 Whitley, J. (2019). The re-emergence of political complexity. In I. S. Lemos and A. Kotsonas (Eds.), A Companion to the Archaeology of Early Greece and the Mediterranean. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley-Blackwell. Whitley, J. (2020). Homer and history. In C. O. Pache, C. Dué, S. Lupack, and R. Lamberton (Eds.), The Cambridge Guide to Homer. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. #Iron_vs_Bronze #Homeric_metallurgy #Iliad_and_Odyssey #Bronze_to_Iron_transition #Aegean_Iron_Age #Late_Bronze_Age_collapse #Mycenaean_material_culture #oral_formulaic_tradition #ancient_metalworking #Homeric_Question #classical_archaeology #Trojan_War_studies #technological_change #tin_and_bronze #heroic_age

  • The Trojan Perspective: Reconstructing the Anatolian Hittite Context of Wilusa—Cross-referencing the Iliad with Hittite Diplomatic Tablets to Reconstruct the Realities of Troy

    For most readers, the story of Troy begins and ends with Homer. Yet a second body of evidence, written on clay in central Anatolia during the same broad period, describes a city that many specialists now connect to the same place. This article looks at Troy from the eastern side of the Aegean, using the archives of the #Hittite kings rather than the Greek epic tradition as its starting point. The central argument is that the Late Bronze Age site the Hittites called #Wilusa can be studied as a real political actor with treaties, obligations, quarrels, and named rulers, and that reading this record alongside the #Iliad produces a fuller and more honest picture than either source can give on its own. The study reviews the main diplomatic documents that mention Wilusa, examines the geography that locates it in the northwest of Anatolia, and traces the naming links that connect the tablets to the poem. It then considers what the archaeology of #Hisarlik adds, including finds reported during the 2024 and 2025 excavation seasons. The conclusion is cautious but clear: the Hittite material does not confirm the war Homer describes, but it does confirm the world in which such a war would have been plausible. Troy emerges not as a Greek city that happened to be attacked, but as an Anatolian kingdom embedded in a system of #diplomacy, vassal loyalty, and great-power rivalry that the Greek tradition only dimly remembered. Keywords: Wilusa; Troy; Hittite diplomacy; Ahhiyawa; Iliad; Late Bronze Age Anatolia 1. Introduction The name Troy carries a weight that few ancient places can match. It reaches modern audiences through the #Iliad, through later Greek and Roman retellings, and through centuries of art and literature that treated the fall of the city as a fixed point in the story of the Western past. This literary fame has a cost. When a place is famous mainly for a poem, it becomes hard to see it as anything other than the setting of that poem. The people who lived there are reduced to characters, the walls become a stage, and the entire question of what the city actually was gets folded into the single question of whether the war really happened. This article takes a different route. Instead of asking first whether the #Trojan_War took place, it asks what the city looked like from the point of view of the largest political power of the age in that part of the world, the kingdom of the Hittites. During the Late Bronze Age, roughly the period from about 1650 to 1180 before the common era, the Hittites ruled a wide empire from their capital at Hattusa in central Anatolia. Their scribes kept a very large archive of tablets, and among those tablets are treaties, letters, and administrative texts that mention a land in the west called #Wilusa. A long line of scholars has argued that Wilusa is the same place the Greeks later called Wilios or Ilios, the city of the Iliad. If that identification holds, then we are not limited to the epic when we try to understand Troy. We have a second, independent, and roughly contemporary written source, produced by people who had no interest in glorifying Greek heroes. The value of this second source is easy to underestimate. Homer wrote, or the poems attached to his name took their shape, several centuries after the events they claim to describe. The gap between the fall of a Late Bronze Age city and the composition of the epic runs to something like four to five hundred years, carried across that distance by #oral_tradition rather than by continuous written record. The Hittite tablets, by contrast, are primary documents. They were written at the time, for practical purposes, by officials who needed to record real obligations between real rulers. They were not composed to entertain or to teach a moral lesson. When a Hittite treaty names a king of Wilusa and lists what he owed to his overlord, that text is closer to a modern legal contract than to a heroic song. The method here is comparison, but comparison of a specific and disciplined kind. The article does not try to match individual events in the poem to individual lines in the tablets, because that approach has repeatedly led earlier writers into wishful thinking. Instead it works at the level of structure and context. It asks what kind of place Wilusa was, who ruled it, whom it answered to, who threatened it, and what language its people are likely to have spoken. It then asks whether the world reconstructed from the tablets is compatible with the world assumed by the poem. The names that appear on both sides of this comparison, such as the ruler #Alaksandu and the land of #Ahhiyawa, are treated as important clues, but the argument does not rest on any single name. Several developments over the last few years make this a good moment to revisit the question. New syntheses of the political geography of western Anatolia have firmed up the case for placing Wilusa in the northwest, near the entrance to the Dardanelles. A large open catalogue of Bronze Age settlements in the region, published in 2025, has begun to fill in the map of the world around Troy with hundreds of sites that were previously treated as a blank space. Fresh excavation at Hisarlik has reached destruction layers and produced weapons and hastily buried remains. And ongoing debate about the languages spoken in the northwest has reopened questions about the identity of the people who lived in the city. Taken together, these strands justify a careful restatement of what the Anatolian record does and does not tell us. The structure of the article follows the logic of the problem. Section two sets out the sources and the method, and is honest about the limits of the evidence. Section three deals with geography, because none of the textual argument matters if Wilusa cannot be placed near Troy. Section four is the core of the study and walks through the main diplomatic documents one by one. Section five examines the naming links between the tablets and the poem. Section six turns to language and identity. Section seven brings in the archaeology of Hisarlik. Section eight draws the threads together and asks what a Trojan, rather than a Greek, perspective adds. Section nine states the objections and the limits as plainly as possible, and section ten offers a short discussion before the conclusion. 2. Sources and Method Two very different bodies of evidence sit at the center of this study, and it helps to describe each before putting them side by side. The first is the Greek epic tradition, above all the Iliad. The poem as we have it is a work of art, shaped over generations of performance and only later fixed in writing. Scholars of #oral_tradition have shown that a poem of this kind is not a single author's report of a single event. It is a layered object, carrying words, phrases, objects, and social assumptions from several periods at once. Recent work on the oral background of the Iliad stresses that the poem preserves memory in a selective and reshaped form, and that the figure of a single poet named Homer may itself belong to a later stage of the tradition than the material he is said to have composed. For the purposes of this article, the important point is that the Iliad can preserve genuine memory of the Late Bronze Age while also being unreliable in its details. It is a witness, but a witness whose testimony has passed through many hands. The second body of evidence is the Hittite archive. These are #cuneiform tablets, written mostly in the Hittite language on clay, recovered above all from the ruins of the capital at Hattusa. Among the many genres in this archive, three matter most for Troy. Treaties record the formal relationship between the Hittite king and a subordinate ruler, setting out oaths, obligations, and the gods who witnessed the agreement. Letters record correspondence between the Hittite court and other rulers, including complaints, demands, and reports of trouble in the provinces. Annals and related historical texts record military campaigns and the events the kings wished to remember. Wilusa appears across all three genres, which is one reason the identification with Troy has proved so durable. The comparison between these sources rests on a simple principle. Where the two kinds of evidence agree about the general shape of the world, that agreement is meaningful, because the sources are independent and were produced for unrelated reasons. Where they disagree, the primary documents generally deserve more trust on questions of fact, while the poem may still preserve atmosphere, social memory, or the outline of a story. Where only one source speaks, its claim must be weighed on its own and not smuggled into the other. A few cautions apply throughout. The Hittite texts are often broken. Many of the most quoted lines survive only in part, and their restoration involves scholarly judgment. Personal names and place names in cuneiform can be spelled in more than one way, and the sound values behind the signs are not always certain. The chronology of the western Anatolian material is debated, and dates given here are approximate. Finally, the identification of Wilusa with Troy, though widely accepted, is an inference rather than a proven fact, and the article treats it as such. None of these cautions destroys the value of the exercise. They simply set the level of confidence at which honest conclusions can be drawn. One further point of method deserves emphasis. This study deliberately resists the temptation to read the tablets as if they were a rough draft of the Iliad. The Hittite scribes were not describing a Greek war. They were managing an empire. When their documents happen to illuminate the western frontier, that illumination is a by-product of administration, not a report on events that Greek poets would later sing about. Reading the record this way keeps the two traditions honest and prevents the kind of circular reasoning that has damaged earlier attempts to reconstruct #Troy from a mixture of poetry and clay. 3. The Geographical Question: Where Was Wilusa? Everything in this article depends on a claim about a map. If #Wilusa lay somewhere far from the northwest coast of Anatolia, then its many appearances in the Hittite record would tell us nothing about Troy. So the geography must be settled first, at least to a reasonable standard. The northwest corner of Anatolia, the region later Greeks called the Troad, sits at a strategic pinch point. The narrow strait now called the Dardanelles connects the Aegean Sea to the Sea of Marmara and, beyond it, to the Black Sea. Any city controlling the land beside that strait sat astride a route that mattered for trade and for movement between two worlds. The mound of #Hisarlik, which most scholars accept as the site of ancient Troy, lies a short distance inland from the southern mouth of this strait. A kingdom based there would have been a natural gatekeeper. The Hittite documents place Wilusa in the west, and specifically in the far west, at the edge of the zone the Hittites tried to control. Wilusa is regularly associated with the group of western lands the Hittites called #Arzawa, and it appears alongside other western polities such as the Seha River Land and Mira. These names anchor a cluster of small kingdoms strung across western Anatolia. For much of the twentieth century the exact placement of these lands was uncertain, and some scholars pushed Wilusa toward the interior or even toward the south. That uncertainty is now much reduced. A rock relief and inscription in a pass south of Izmir, together with a fuller understanding of the western geography, helped to fix the positions of Mira and its neighbors. Once those anchors are set, Wilusa slides naturally into the far northwest, exactly where Troy sits. Recent scholarship has strengthened this picture rather than overturned it. A major collaborative volume on the political geography of western Anatolia, published in 2022, brought together specialists in Hittite texts, linguistics, and archaeology and treated the placement of Wilusa in the northwest as the working consensus while debating the finer details. The same volume set Wilusa within a densely settled and interconnected west, not an empty margin. That theme has since been reinforced by a large open dataset of #Bronze_Age settlements in the region, published in 2025, which catalogued 483 sites across western Anatolia and argued that this zone was a center of activity in its own right rather than a buffer between the Hittite and Mycenaean worlds. A city in the Troad, on this reading, was one node in a crowded and busy landscape. There is also a linguistic thread to the geographic argument, and it points in the same direction. The name Wilusa, written in cuneiform with the usual sign that marks a city or land, corresponds well to the older Greek form of the name of Troy, Wilios, which stands behind the later Ilios of the epic. Greek preserved traces of an initial sound that had dropped out of the classical form, and that lost sound matches the opening of Wilusa. Alongside this, the Hittite records mention a place called Taruisa in a list of western lands, and Taruisa has often been compared to Troia, the other Greek name for the city. The pairing of Wilusa with Wilios and of Taruisa with Troia, appearing in the same corner of the map, is a strong coincidence if it is a coincidence at all. Most specialists conclude that it is not. None of this proves the identification beyond any doubt. Geography in the Hittite texts is reconstructed, not simply read off the tablets, and a careful reader can still find room for disagreement about individual borders. But the weight of the argument now leans firmly toward placing #Wilusa in the northwest, at or very near the site of Troy. The rest of this article proceeds on that basis, while keeping the residual uncertainty in view. 4. The Hittite Diplomatic Record If Wilusa is Troy, then a handful of Hittite documents become, in effect, primary sources for the political life of the city. They are not many, and they are damaged, but they are far more than the Greek tradition ever preserved about the internal affairs of the Trojans. This section walks through the most important of them. 4.1 The Treaty with Alaksandu of Wilusa The single most striking document is a treaty between the Hittite great king #Muwatalli_II and a ruler of Wilusa named #Alaksandu, drawn up around 1280 before the common era. Muwatalli reigned in the early thirteenth century and is best known for leading the Hittite army against Egypt at the great battle near Kadesh. The treaty with Alaksandu belongs to a familiar Hittite genre, the #vassal_treaty, in which the great king recognizes a local ruler and binds him with oaths in exchange for protection and support. The treaty opens, as these documents usually do, with a review of past relations. It recalls that in earlier times the western lands, including Wilusa, had come under Hittite authority, that they had later broken away, and that Wilusa had nonetheless kept up peaceful contact with the Hittite kings across the intervening period. It notes that a previous ruler of Wilusa, named Kukkunni, had been on good terms with an earlier great king, Suppiluliuma, at a time when other western lands were in revolt. This historical section is valuable in itself. It shows that Wilusa had a long and specific relationship with the Hittite center, sometimes as a subject, sometimes as a friendly but independent partner, stretching back generations before Alaksandu. The heart of the treaty lays out Alaksandu's obligations. He is to remain loyal to Muwatalli and to his descendants, to report any plots or hostile movements he learns of, and to provide military support when called upon. In return the great king recognizes Alaksandu's position and undertakes to defend him. This is the ordinary machinery of Hittite #diplomacy, and its ordinariness is exactly the point. Wilusa is treated not as an exotic frontier curiosity but as one more western vassal, integrated into the same system of oaths and duties that bound many other small kingdoms to Hattusa. The treaty also lists the gods who witness the agreement, which was standard practice, since an oath had no force without divine guarantors. Among the deities named is one whose reading has drawn intense interest, because one proposed restoration of the name resembles a form that could stand behind the Greek god Apollo, sometimes rendered #Apaliunas. If that reading is correct, it would place a forerunner of a major Greek divinity in the pantheon of Bronze Age Wilusa, which is remarkable given that Apollo takes the Trojan side in the Iliad. The reading is genuinely uncertain, the sign values are debated, and responsible scholars disagree about it. It should be treated as a tantalizing possibility rather than as an established fact, and the wider argument of this article does not depend on it. What the treaty establishes securely is more than enough. Around 1280 before the common era, a city in the far west of Anatolia, most plausibly Troy, was ruled by a man whose name was written by Hittite scribes as Alaksandu, and that ruler swore a formal treaty of loyalty to the Hittite great king. This is a documented Trojan king, with a name, a treaty, and a set of obligations, recorded by an outside power at the time. No comparable document survives for any figure in the Greek tradition. 4.2 The Manapa-Tarhunta Letter A second important text is a letter sent to a Hittite king by #Manapa_Tarhunta, a ruler of the Seha River Land, one of Wilusa's western neighbors. The letter is broken, but its general situation is clear enough. It describes a period of disorder in the west, and it mentions a troublemaker named #Piyamaradu who was stirring up conflict in the region. It also refers to a Hittite military force that had been sent westward, and it mentions Wilusa in connection with these movements, along with the nearby island the Hittites called Lazpa, which is generally identified with Lesbos. Two things make this letter valuable. First, it shows that Wilusa was not a remote and isolated place but part of a connected regional theater in which armies moved, rulers appealed to the great king, and offshore islands were drawn into the action. Second, it introduces Piyamaradu, a figure who reappears in other documents and who behaves very much like a freelance warlord operating on the seam between the Hittite sphere and the world of the Aegean. His activities suggest that the western coast was a zone of raiding, shifting loyalties, and opportunistic violence, exactly the kind of environment in which stories of sieges and abductions might later take root. The letter does not describe a Greek war against Troy. It describes Hittite management of a restless frontier. But the frontier it describes is one in which Wilusa was a contested asset, worth sending troops to secure, and in which outside actors could destabilize the region. That is a meaningful piece of the reconstructed reality of #Troy. 4.3 The Tawagalawa Letter Perhaps the most discussed of all these documents is a long letter, usually attributed to the Hittite king Hattusili III, addressed to the king of #Ahhiyawa. The letter is concerned mainly with the same Piyamaradu, who by this point had been operating out of the coastal center the Hittites called #Millawanda, generally identified with Miletus, a place linked to the Ahhiyawan sphere. The Hittite king complains about Piyamaradu's raids and about the shelter he has been given, and he presses the Ahhiyawan ruler to rein him in. For the Trojan question, the letter's importance lies partly in a single, partly damaged passage in which the Hittite king appears to refer to a past disagreement or conflict with Ahhiyawa over Wilusa, something now, he says, settled or set aside. The exact wording is uncertain because the tablet is broken at a crucial point, and scholars have restored it in different ways. But on the common reading, the passage implies that at some earlier moment the Hittites and the Ahhiyawans had been at odds over Wilusa itself. If that reading holds, it is the closest thing in the entire archive to an outside reference to a quarrel between an Aegean power and Troy. This is precisely the kind of evidence that must be handled with care. It is a restored line in a damaged letter, and building too much on it would repeat the errors of earlier enthusiasts. What can be said responsibly is this: the letter shows that Ahhiyawa, a power widely identified with the #Mycenaean world, was active on the Anatolian coast, that it sheltered a warlord who raided Hittite territory, and that Wilusa was at some point a point of friction between the two great powers. The letter also addresses the Ahhiyawan king as an equal, a great king in his own right, which tells us that the Hittites regarded the Aegean power as a serious international player. All of this fits a world in which a large Aegean coalition could plausibly have taken an interest in a city near the Dardanelles. 4.4 The Milawata Letter and Other References A further document, often called the Milawata letter and usually assigned to a later thirteenth-century king, mentions a man named #Walmu who had been king of Wilusa, had been driven out, and whom the Hittite king wished to see restored to his throne. Once again the text is fragmentary, but its implication is clear. As late as the closing decades of the Hittite empire, Wilusa still had kings, still mattered to the great king, and was still subject to the disruptions of exile and restoration that ran through the whole western frontier. Beyond these named documents, Wilusa or a form of its name appears in earlier material as well, including a list of western lands connected to a rebellion in the region during the reign of a fourteenth-century king. Wilusa is thus attested across roughly two centuries of Hittite record, from the earlier appearances in the fourteenth century through the treaty with Alaksandu in the early thirteenth and on to the reference to Walmu near the end. This span is important. It shows a city with a continuous political existence over generations, repeatedly entangled with the Hittite center and with the wider struggles of western Anatolia. That is the profile of a real kingdom, not a poetic invention. Taken together, these texts give us the outline of a Trojan political history that Homer never preserved: a named dynasty, a formal treaty relationship with the dominant power of the age, recurring instability, the interference of a warlord, and a documented point of friction with an Aegean great power. This is what the #Hittite_diplomatic_tablets add to the study of Troy, and it is a great deal. 5. Names as Bridges Between the Tablets and the Poem The strongest single argument for connecting the Hittite record to the Greek tradition is the cluster of names that appear, in recognizable forms, on both sides. No one name would settle the question, but the pattern taken as a whole is difficult to explain by chance. The first bridge is the name of the place itself. #Wilusa in the Hittite texts corresponds to the older Greek Wilios, which lies behind the classical Ilios, the name used many times in the poem for the city of Troy. The correspondence is not merely a matter of similar sounds. It reflects a specific feature of early Greek, the loss of an initial consonant that had once stood at the front of the word, and the Hittite spelling preserves exactly the sound that Greek later dropped. When a name matches at this level of technical detail, coincidence becomes an unattractive explanation. The second bridge is the ruler's name, #Alaksandu. In Greek, the alternative name of the Trojan prince Paris is Alexandros. The Hittite Alaksandu and the Greek Alexandros are close enough that the match has struck observers since the connection was first proposed. It is worth being precise about what this does and does not show. It does not show that the historical Alaksandu was the Paris of the poem, nor that he abducted anyone. It shows that a distinctly Greek-sounding personal name was borne by a real king of Wilusa in the early thirteenth century, and that the same name, attached to a Trojan prince, survived into the epic tradition. The name is a thread of continuity between the two worlds, and it suggests contact, memory, or shared naming practice along the Aegean coast. The third bridge is the name of the Aegean power, #Ahhiyawa. Since this term was first compared to the Greek Achaioi, the #Achaeans, the identification has moved from a bold hypothesis to the mainstream view. Homer uses Achaeans as one of his standard words for the Greeks who fight at Troy. The Hittites use Ahhiyawa for a maritime great power active on the Anatolian coast, sheltering raiders and treating with the Hittite king as an equal. The phonetic fit is very good, and the behavior of Ahhiyawa in the tablets matches what we would expect of the Mycenaean world reflected in the poem. A minority of scholars have resisted the equation over the years, but the combination of linguistic fit and historical fit has proved persuasive to most, and recent overviews treat it as settled in its essentials. A possible fourth bridge, already discussed, is the divine name in the Alaksandu treaty that some read as a forerunner of #Apaliunas, that is, Apollo, the god who defends the Trojans in the poem. This one is genuinely uncertain and should not be leaned on. It is mentioned here only to complete the pattern and to show how the naming links, real and possible, all point in the same direction. The honest way to weigh these bridges is together and probabilistically. Any one of them, alone, might be dismissed. A Greek-sounding king's name might be borrowing or accident. A place-name match might be forced. But when the city's name, the ruler's name, and the enemy's name all line up across two independent traditions, and when they line up in the same corner of the map and the same broad period, the simplest explanation is that the Greek tradition preserved genuine memory of a real Anatolian city and its Late Bronze Age relations with an Aegean power. The names are not proof of the war. They are strong evidence of the world. 6. Language and Identity: Who Were the Trojans? If we set Homer aside and ask what language the people of Wilusa actually spoke, the answer is less certain than the confident picture in the poem, where Trojans and Greeks converse without difficulty. The real linguistic situation of the northwest is debated, and the debate is instructive because it undercuts the assumption that the Trojans were simply Greeks under another name. The dominant language across much of western and southern Anatolia in this period was #Luwian, a language related to Hittite and belonging to the same Anatolian branch of the wider Indo-European family. Luwian was spoken over a broad area, was used in the Hittite empire alongside Hittite, and eventually became the main language of a group of successor states after the empire fell. Because Luwian was so widespread in the west, and because personal and place names of Luwian type turn up across the region, many scholars have assumed that a form of Luwian, or something closely related, was spoken in and around Wilusa. Recent studies of where Luwian was actually written and spoken have refined this picture, mapping the language onto specific regions and cautioning against assuming a single uniform speech community across the whole of the west. There is, however, no long text from Troy itself in any language, and this absence is the root of the uncertainty. A single short inscribed object of Luwian type has been reported from the site, but it is not enough to settle what the population spoke day to day. Into this gap, scholars have advanced competing proposals. Some maintain the standard view that the local speech was Anatolian and Luwian in character. Others have argued for different possibilities. One recent and much-discussed hypothesis holds that the language of Wilusa may have belonged to a separate branch, an ancestor of the later Tyrsenian languages that includes Etruscan, rather than to Luwian. This proposal is a minority position and remains contested, but its very existence shows how open the question really is. The point for the present argument is not to choose a winner but to register that the identity of the Trojans is a live problem, not a solved one. What can be said with more confidence is negative but important. The people of Wilusa were embedded in the Anatolian world, not the Greek one. Their city answered, at least intermittently, to the Hittite great king. Their rulers swore Hittite-style treaties before Anatolian and Mesopotamian gods. Their neighbors were the western Anatolian kingdoms of the Arzawa group. Whatever precise language they spoke, their political and cultural center of gravity lay to the east, toward Hattusa, not to the west, toward the Mycenaean palaces. The presence of a Greek-sounding king's name and of Aegean goods in the region reflects contact across a frontier, not membership in the Greek world. This reframing matters because it changes the meaning of the whole Trojan story. In the poem, the war is a struggle between Greeks and a foreign, somewhat mysterious enemy who nonetheless shares the Greeks' gods and speech. In the reconstructed reality, Troy was a genuinely foreign city, Anatolian in its allegiances and probably in its language, that lay at the far edge of the Aegean world and at the far edge of the Hittite one. It was a border city in the fullest sense, a place where two great cultural spheres met and rubbed against each other. That location, more than any single event, is the reality that the Anatolian record recovers. 7. The Archaeology of Hisarlik and the Diplomatic Record Texts alone cannot reconstruct a city. The mound of #Hisarlik supplies the physical dimension, and its excavated remains have to be read alongside the tablets rather than in competition with them. The site is not a single city but a stack of settlements built one on top of another over thousands of years. Early excavators, working in the late nineteenth century, cut into this stack and found layer upon layer, and later, more careful work sorted these layers into a sequence. For the Late Bronze Age, the layers usually labeled Troy VI and the following phase, often called #Troy_VIIa in the older numbering, are the relevant ones. Troy VI was a substantial fortified settlement with strong walls and, in its later stages, a prosperous character. It came to an end around 1300 before the common era, and there has long been debate about whether an earthquake or human violence, or some mix of the two, brought it down. The following phase shows signs of a more crowded and defensive way of life, with storage vessels sunk into house floors, as if the population were preparing for hard times. That phase ended in destruction around 1180 before the common era, in the general period when many centers across the eastern Mediterranean collapsed. This chronology matters for the Trojan question because it means there was a large, walled, and important city on the site during exactly the centuries when the Hittite tablets speak of Wilusa. The physical Troy of the Late Bronze Age is not a village but a place worth having, worth defending, and worth writing treaties about. That match between the scale of the site and the political attention it receives in the tablets is itself a form of confirmation. A minor place would not have generated a treaty with the Hittite great king or a quarrel between great powers. Excavation has continued into the present, and recent seasons have drawn wide attention. Work reported during 2024 and 2025, directed by a team based at a university in the region, focused on reaching the Late Bronze Age destruction layers. The excavators reported a concentration of sling stones just outside a palace structure, together with arrowheads, burned building remains, and human remains that appeared to have been buried in haste. The team described these finds as consistent with close combat and a sudden, violent end rather than a slow decline. It is important to state clearly what this does and does not mean. Weapons and a burned layer show that the city suffered violence, which is not surprising for a fortified center in a turbulent age. They do not, and cannot, prove that the specific war described in the Iliad took place, or that Greeks were the attackers. Fire and weapons are compatible with many kinds of conflict. Still, the finds reinforce the broader picture of Troy as a city that repeatedly faced war, which is exactly the picture the diplomatic texts paint of a contested frontier city. The wider landscape has also come into sharper focus. The 2025 catalogue of Bronze Age settlements in western Anatolia placed Troy within a dense network of hundreds of contemporary sites, undermining the old idea of the northwest as an empty margin. A busy, settled hinterland is the natural setting for a kingdom that could field troops for a Hittite campaign and that mattered enough to be fought over. The archaeology, in short, does not contradict the textual reconstruction. It supplies the walls, the fire, the weapons, and the crowded countryside that the tablets imply but cannot show. 8. Reconstructing the Realities of Troy: The View From the East We can now draw the strands together and describe the city as it appears when the Anatolian evidence leads and the poem follows. This is the Trojan perspective promised in the title, and it differs in several ways from the familiar Greek one. First, Troy was an Anatolian kingdom, not a Greek one. Its rulers bound themselves to the Hittite great king through the same treaties and oaths that governed other western vassals. Its gods, as far as the treaty tells us, were Anatolian and Mesopotamian deities. Its neighbors and rivals were the western Anatolian lands, not the Greek mainland. When we read the Iliad, we are reading a Greek account of a foreign city, and the Anatolian record lets us see that city from the inside of its own political world. Second, Troy was a frontier city on a contested edge. It sat where the Hittite sphere reached its western limit and where the Aegean world reached its eastern one. This location made it valuable and dangerous in equal measure. The tablets show it changing hands in loyalty, defecting and returning, being fought over, and needing the protection of a distant overlord. The recurring instability of the western frontier, with its warlords, its shifting alliances, and its raids, is the true background against which any Trojan war must be understood. The single, decade-long siege of the poem is best read as a compressed and dramatized memory of a much longer and messier reality of intermittent conflict. Third, the enemy across the water was real. The power the Hittites called #Ahhiyawa, most plausibly the Mycenaean world, was active on the Anatolian coast, sheltered raiders who attacked Hittite lands, held coastal centers such as Millawanda, and treated with the Hittite king as a great power. At least once, on the common reading of the Tawagalawa letter, Ahhiyawa and Hatti were at odds over Wilusa. This does not prove the war of the poem, but it establishes that the two ingredients of that war, an Aegean coalition and a contested city near the straits, both existed and came into contact. The story the Greeks remembered had the right actors and the right stage, even if the plot was reshaped in the telling. Fourth, the leading characters have shadows in the record. A Trojan king named Alaksandu, whose name matches the Alexandros of the poem, actually reigned. A warlord named Piyamaradu roamed the coast, doing the kind of raiding and shelter-seeking that epic tradition loves to remember. These are not the characters of the Iliad, and it would be a mistake to force them into that mold. But they show that the naming and the character types of the tradition were drawn from a real world, not spun from nothing. Put together, these points support a specific and defensible conclusion. The #Hittite_diplomatic_tablets do not verify the Trojan War as Homer tells it. They verify the reality of Troy as a place and as a political actor, and they verify the plausibility of a war of the general kind the tradition remembers. The poem preserved a true world in a distorted form. The tablets recover the world; the poem preserves the memory. Reading them together, we can separate, at least partly, the durable historical core from the poetic reshaping laid over it across the centuries of oral transmission. There is also a lesson here about how memory works across a collapse. The Late Bronze Age world that produced Wilusa and its treaties came apart around 1180 before the common era, in a broad breakdown that ended the Hittite empire and the Mycenaean palaces alike. Recent work on that collapse and its aftermath stresses how much was lost and how long recovery took, but also how memory and practice could survive in reshaped forms on the other side. The Iliad is a product of that survival. It is what a shattered world managed to carry forward about a city on its eastern edge, sung for centuries until it was finally written down. The tablets are what happened to survive by accident, baked hard in the fires that destroyed the archives. Between the deliberate memory of the poem and the accidental survival of the clay, we can begin to reconstruct what was real. 9. Limits, Cautions, and Counterarguments Honesty requires setting out the objections as forcefully as the argument, because the temptation to over-read this material is real and has misled capable scholars before. The first and largest limit is that the tablets never describe the war of the poem. There is no Hittite text that reports a great Greek expedition besieging Troy for years, sacking it, and sailing home. The closest we have is a broken line that, on one restoration, implies a past dispute between Hatti and Ahhiyawa over Wilusa. That is a thin thread on which to hang the most famous war in Western literature, and anyone who claims the tablets confirm the Trojan War is overstating the case. What the tablets confirm is context and plausibility, not the event. The second limit is the fragile state of the evidence. Many of the key passages survive only in part, and their meaning depends on scholarly restoration. The reading of the divine name in the Alaksandu treaty that suggests a forerunner of Apollo is uncertain. The crucial line in the Tawagalawa letter is damaged. Restorations are informed guesses, and a different guess can change the meaning. A cautious reader should hold these details loosely. The third limit is the identification of Wilusa with Troy itself. It is very well supported, and this article accepts it, but it is an inference built from geography and name matches rather than a fact stated in any single document. If future work were to relocate Wilusa, much of the argument would need revision. The consensus is strong, but consensus is not the same as certainty. The fourth limit concerns the identity of the Trojans. As section six showed, we do not actually know what language the people of Wilusa spoke, and competing proposals remain in play. The reconstruction offered here leans on the safe conclusion that the city was Anatolian in its political orientation, which does not depend on settling the language question. But readers should not mistake the confident tone of popular accounts for real certainty about who the Trojans were. A fifth caution concerns the archaeology. Destruction layers, weapons, and hasty burials tell us that Troy suffered violence, but they cannot tell us who inflicted it or why. Attributing a particular burned layer to a particular war, especially a war known only from a much later poem, is exactly the kind of leap that the evidence does not license. The recent finds are genuinely important, but their importance lies in showing a pattern of conflict, not in proving a single story. Finally, there is the problem of the poem's own layered nature. The Iliad blends material from several periods. Some of what looks like Late Bronze Age memory may in fact reflect later centuries, and some genuinely old material may be buried under later reshaping. Cross-referencing the poem with the tablets can suggest which elements have a real historical background, but it cannot cleanly date any given line. The comparison is a tool for weighing probabilities, not a machine for extracting facts. None of these cautions overturns the central conclusion, but each one limits how far it can be pushed. The right posture is confidence about the world and modesty about the event. Troy was real, its political life is partly recoverable, and the poem preserves a distorted memory of a real frontier. Beyond that, the evidence thins quickly, and responsible reconstruction stops where the clay runs out. 10. Discussion The value of the Trojan perspective is partly historical and partly a lesson in method. Historically, it restores to Troy a life of its own, independent of the Greek heroes who overshadow it. The city becomes a political actor with a dynasty, treaties, enemies, and a place in the great-power system of its age. That recovery is worth having in itself, regardless of what one thinks about the war. The methodological lesson is broader. The Trojan case shows how two very different kinds of source, a primary archive and a much later oral tradition, can be brought together without collapsing one into the other. The archive supplies fact and context. The tradition supplies memory and shape. Neither is complete, and each corrects the other. The archive would never have told us that this frontier city would be sung about for three thousand years. The tradition would never have told us the name of a real king who ruled there. Only the combination gives the fuller picture, and only careful discipline keeps the combination honest. This approach has wider application. Many ancient places are known mainly through later literature, and many later literatures preserve memory of periods for which primary documents also survive. The Trojan example offers a template for how to read the two together, weighing agreement as evidence, trusting primary documents on questions of fact, and treating literary memory as a distorted but not worthless witness. It also offers a warning, drawn from the long history of overreaching on this very topic, about the danger of forcing a beloved story onto ambiguous evidence. For students approaching this subject for the first time, the Trojan case is also a useful training ground in how ancient history is actually built. It shows that a famous story is not a source in the ordinary sense, that a broken clay tablet can outweigh a beautiful poem on a question of fact, and that the most responsible answer to a dramatic question is often a careful and qualified one. It shows how linguists, archaeologists, and text specialists must work together, because no single discipline can settle the question alone. A student who learns to hold the excitement of the story and the discipline of the evidence in the same mind at once has learned something that reaches far beyond Troy. The habit of asking not only what happened but how we could possibly know, and of stating plainly where knowledge runs out, is the core skill that separates history from legend, and the study of Wilusa teaches it unusually well. Recent scholarship has, on the whole, moved in the direction this article recommends. The firming up of western Anatolian geography, the growing recognition of the region as a dense and important zone rather than a margin, the careful mapping of languages, and the renewed excavation at Hisarlik all point toward a Troy understood on its own Anatolian terms and set within its real regional world. At the same time, popular coverage of new finds continues to reach for the headline that the Trojan War has been proved, a claim the evidence does not support. Keeping the two apart, the sober reconstruction and the enthusiastic overreach, is one of the ongoing tasks of the field. 11. Conclusion Looking at Troy from the east, through the archives of the Hittite kings rather than the songs of the Greeks, changes what we see. The city that comes into focus is #Wilusa, an Anatolian kingdom near the entrance to the straits, bound by treaty to the greatest power of its age, ruled by a dynasty that included a king named Alaksandu, harassed by warlords, and caught between the Hittite world and the Aegean power the Hittites called Ahhiyawa. This is a real place with a real political history, recorded at the time and for practical reasons by people who cared nothing for Greek heroes. Set beside the Iliad, this record does not confirm the war of the poem, and it would be dishonest to claim that it does. What it confirms is the world that made such a war conceivable. The names match across the two traditions. The geography lines up. The great-power rivalry existed. The city was fortified, prosperous, and repeatedly touched by violence, as the newest excavations underline. The poem preserved a memory of all this, carried across the collapse of the Bronze Age by generations of singers and distorted in the carrying. The tablets, surviving by accident, let us recover the memory's true background. The Trojan perspective, then, is not a rival to the Greek one but a corrective and a completion. It returns to the Trojans their own history, sets their city in its proper Anatolian and #Late_Bronze_Age context, and shows how carefully assembled primary evidence can illuminate even a place buried under three thousand years of legend. The war may remain beyond proof. The city, and the world it belonged to, no longer do. References Asinmaz, A., Mutlu, S., and Zangger, E. (2025). An interoperable catalogue of Middle and Late Bronze Age settlements in western Anatolia (c. 2000-1200 BCE). Scientific Data, 12, 1804. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41597-025-06241-9 Bachhuber, C. (2022). In search of a Luwian land. In I. Hajnal, E. Zangger, and J. M. Kelder (Eds.), The Political Geography of Western Anatolia in the Late Bronze Age (pp. 353-375). Budapest: Archaeolingua. Cline, E. H. (2021). 1177 B.C.: The Year Civilization Collapsed. Revised and Updated Edition. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. Cline, E. H. (2024). After 1177 B.C.: The Survival of Civilizations. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. Giusfredi, F., Pisaniello, V., and Matessi, A. (Eds.). (2023). Contacts of Languages and Peoples in the Hittite and Post-Hittite World, Volume 1: The Bronze Age and Hatti. Leiden: Brill. Hajnal, I., Zangger, E., and Kelder, J. M. (Eds.). (2022). The Political Geography of Western Anatolia in the Late Bronze Age. Archaeolingua Series Minor 45. Budapest: Archaeolingua. Kloekhorst, A. (2022). Luwians, Lydians, Etruscans, and Troy: The linguistic landscape of northwestern Anatolia in the pre-classical period. In I. Hajnal, E. Zangger, and J. M. Kelder (Eds.), The Political Geography of Western Anatolia in the Late Bronze Age (pp. 49-75). Budapest: Archaeolingua. Kosyan, A. (2022). The Hittite Kingdom (Political History). Yerevan: COPY-PRINT. https://doi.org/10.54503/978-9939-9012-5-1 Mouton, A., and Yakubovich, I. (2021). Where did one speak luwili? Geographic and linguistic diversity of Luwian cuneiform texts. Journal of Language Relationship, 19(1-2), 25-53. Simon, Z. (2024). Once again on the distribution of Cuneiform Luwian sa/za. Journal of Cuneiform Studies, 76, 191-197. Woudhuizen, F. C. (2023). The Luwians of Western Anatolia: Their Neighbours and Predecessors. Oxford: Archaeopress. Zangger, E., Asinmaz, A., and Mutlu, S. (2022). Middle and Late Bronze Age western Asia Minor: A status report. In I. Hajnal, E. Zangger, and J. M. Kelder (Eds.), The Political Geography of Western Anatolia in the Late Bronze Age (pp. 39-180). Budapest: Archaeolingua. Zielinski, K. (2023). The Iliad and the Oral Epic Tradition. Hellenic Studies Series 99. Washington, DC: Center for Hellenic Studies. #Wilusa #Troy #Hittite_diplomacy #Ahhiyawa #Iliad #Alaksandu #Mycenaean #Late_Bronze_Age_Anatolia #Hisarlik #Luwian #Trojan_War #Anatolian_history #Homer_and_history #cuneiform_tablets #Bronze_Age_collapse

  • Schliemann's Ghost: The Historiographical Legacy of Using Myth to Validate Archaeological Excavation

    A Critical Assessment of How Early Archaeology Weaponized the Iliad to Justify Colonial Excavations at Troy Abstract This article examines one of the founding episodes of modern field #archaeology: the excavation of the mound of #Hisarlik in north-western Anatolia by Heinrich #Schliemann in the 1870s, and the claim that this mound was the Troy of Homer's #Iliad. The paper argues that early archaeology did not simply use ancient poetry as a helpful clue. It converted #myth into a tool of authority, using the prestige of the Homeric epics to justify large-scale, often destructive, and politically loaded digging on land that belonged to another state. The analysis treats Schliemann's project as a case study in what may be called #mythic_validation, a way of reasoning in which a story is used to prove a site and the site is then used to prove the story. It situates this circular logic inside the wider frame of nineteenth-century #imperialism, the removal of the so-called Priam's Treasure from #Ottoman territory, and the rise of #nationalism in a newly unified Germany. Drawing on recent work in the #historiography of archaeology and in decolonization studies, the paper shows that Schliemann's influence did not end with his death in 1890. His methods, his talent for spectacle, and his habit of reading the ground through the lens of a cherished text left a long shadow, a kind of #ghost, over the discipline. The article closes by considering how present-day scholars are trying to lay that ghost to rest through #repatriation debates, reflexive practice, and what one group of researchers has called counter-myths. The goal is not to erase Schliemann's real achievements but to help students read the history of their field with clear eyes. Keywords: history of archaeology; Homeric epic; colonial excavation; cultural heritage; nationalism and archaeology; Troy; Priam's Treasure; decolonization 1. Introduction Few stories in the history of science are told as often, or as fondly, as the story of the man who read Homer and went looking for #Troy. In the popular version, a poor German boy hears the Iliad, falls in love with it, makes a fortune in business, and then spends that fortune proving that the ancient poem was true. He digs into a hill in what is now Turkey, finds gold, and shows a skeptical world that legend can be history after all. It is a satisfying tale of faith rewarded by fact, and it has been repeated in classrooms, museums, and documentaries for well over a century. The trouble is that the tale flatters both the man and the discipline he helped to found. When we look closely at what actually happened at Hisarlik between 1870 and 1890, and at how the episode has been remembered since, a more uncomfortable picture appears. The excavation that supposedly confirmed the #Trojan_War was carried out on the territory of the Ottoman Empire, largely against that empire's stated wishes, and it removed a spectacular hoard of objects that were smuggled abroad and are still the subject of an international ownership dispute today. The layer of the mound that Schliemann proudly named the city of Priam turned out to be roughly a thousand years too old to have anything to do with the war Homer describes. Much of the material that might have belonged to the right period was cut through, thrown aside, or destroyed in the rush to reach the deeper, and as it happened wrong, levels. This paper treats that episode not as a quaint origin story for archaeology but as a serious case of what I will call mythic validation. By this I mean the practice of using a mythical or literary narrative to license, direct, and justify a program of excavation, and then presenting the results of that excavation as proof of the narrative. The argument is that early archaeology, and Schliemann in particular, #weaponized the Iliad. The poem was not only a source of inspiration. It became an instrument of authority: a way of claiming the right to dig, a way of deciding what counted as important, and a way of persuading the public and the funders that the whole enterprise mattered. The central claim can be stated simply. The prestige of #classical antiquity gave nineteenth-century excavators a form of cultural license that operated much like a legal permit. If a site could be attached to a famous name from Greek or Roman literature, then digging it up became a noble act of recovery rather than an act of removal. That license was unevenly distributed. It flowed toward European scholars and institutions and away from the local populations and governments on whose land the ancient remains actually sat. In this sense the study of the ancient world and the machinery of #empire grew up together, feeding one another in ways that scholars are only now fully mapping (Diaz-Andreu, 2007; Blouin and Akrigg, 2024). The paper proceeds as follows. After a review of the relevant historiography and a note on approach, I set out the historical background: who Homer was thought to be, why the Homeric Question mattered so much in the nineteenth century, and how the Iliad came to function as a kind of map. I then describe Schliemann's work at Hisarlik and show how myth operated as a method. Next I place the dig inside its #colonial and imperial frame, paying attention to Ottoman antiquities law and the fate of Priam's Treasure. From there I analyze the circular reasoning of mythic validation, connect Troy to the wider pattern of nationalist and racialized archaeology seen at other famous sites, and consider what more recent excavation at the mound has and has not settled. Finally I discuss Schliemann's enduring legacy, and the present-day effort to confront it. Throughout, the aim is to be fair. Schliemann found a real and important site. He also modeled a set of habits that the discipline is still working to outgrow. 2. Literature Review and Historiographical Background The critical study of Schliemann is not new, but it has changed shape over time. For most of the twentieth century, general histories of archaeology placed him near the top of a heroic lineage, the self-made #pioneer who dragged the study of the deep past out of the armchair and into the field. That framing has steadily given way to something more careful. Historians of the discipline now tend to read early excavation as a social and political act, shaped by the assumptions of its age rather than standing outside them. The single most influential frame for this shift comes from Bruce #Trigger. His short 1984 essay distinguished between nationalist, colonialist, and imperialist archaeologies, arguing that the questions archaeologists ask, and the pasts they choose to value, reflect the political position of the people doing the asking (Trigger, 1984). His later synthesis, A History of Archaeological Thought, developed this into a full account of how the discipline's theories rose and fell alongside wider currents in society (Trigger, 2006). Philip Kohl's widely cited review essay pushed in the same direction, showing how modern nations reach back into the remote past to invent an ancient pedigree for themselves, and how archaeology supplies the physical evidence that makes such claims feel solid and objective (Kohl, 1998). Margarita Diaz-Andreu's world history of nineteenth-century archaeology gave this literature its broadest canvas, tracing how nationalism, colonialism, and the study of the past were braided together across the whole century (Diaz-Andreu, 2007). More recent scholarship has sharpened the political edge of this work and connected it to #decolonization. Raphael Greenberg and Yannis Hamilakis, writing as a dialogue between two leading figures, examine how archaeology helped to construct, racialize, and legitimize modern national identities, using Greece and Israel as their main cases (Greenberg and Hamilakis, 2022). Their central point applies well beyond those two countries: archaeology has often acted as a kind of purification machine, sorting the messy human past into clean national stories, and it has done so in ways that carry a strong charge of race and hierarchy. The large collaborative volume edited by Katherine Blouin and Ben Akrigg brings #postcolonial theory directly into Classics and the study of the ancient Mediterranean, arguing that the discipline cannot understand its own objects without also understanding its own colonial formation (Blouin and Akrigg, 2024). These are not fringe positions. They represent the mainstream direction of the field's own self-examination. Alongside these broad treatments sits a growing body of focused case studies. Malcolm Cavanagh's analysis of press coverage of the excavations at Delphi and Knossos around 1900 shows in fine detail how European newspapers turned digs into contests of national genius, treating finds as evidence that one modern nation or another was the true heir of the ancient world (Cavanagh, 2024). This work is important for the present argument because it demonstrates that Schliemann was not a lone eccentric. He was an early and unusually skilled example of a pattern that soon became normal: the excavator as public hero, the site as national trophy, and the ancient text as the script that gave the whole performance meaning. Cavanagh even notes that press debates over French funding for Delphi pointed directly to the glory Schliemann's Troy had won for Germany, using it as a spur to national competition. On the question of #museums and repatriation, the literature has expanded quickly. Alaka Wali and Robert Keith Collins survey the movement to decolonize museums, tracing how institutions built on colonial collecting are being pressed to rethink ownership, display, and the care of #heritage (Wali and Collins, 2023). Shimrit Lee's accessible study makes a related argument for a general readership, describing how the modern museum grew out of plunder and how activists are challenging that inheritance (Lee, 2022). These works matter for Troy because Priam's Treasure is one of the most famous contested objects in the world, and its journey from Hisarlik to Berlin to Moscow is a compact history of how cultural property has been moved by force and by law across the last century and a half. Two further strands round out the picture. First, on the specific question of whether there is any historical reality behind the Iliad, the most balanced recent voice for a wide audience is Eric #Cline. His revised synthesis of the Late Bronze Age situates Troy within a connected world of Hittites, Mycenaeans, Egyptians, and others, and treats the collapse of that world around 1177 BCE as a systemic event rather than a single dramatic siege (Cline, 2021). Cline's careful position is useful here: the mound at Hisarlik is real, some memory of conflict there may survive in later poetry, and the Hittite records that mention a place called Wilusa give scholars reason to keep the question open. None of that, however, rescues Schliemann's specific claims about which layer belonged to which king. Second, a collaborative review of recent trends by Berihuete-Azorin and colleagues shows that the political use of the ancient past is not a closed historical chapter. They document how selective and invented archaeologies still feed nationalist and racialized agendas today, and they propose that the discipline respond with what they call counter-myths (Berihuete-Azorin et al., 2024). Taken together, this literature supports a clear reading. Early archaeology was never a neutral search for facts. It was a practice deeply shaped by power, and Schliemann's use of the Iliad is one of the clearest windows we have into how that power worked. 3. Approach and Scope This is a historiographical article rather than a report of new fieldwork. Its material is the documented record of Schliemann's excavations, the objects and claims that came out of them, the legal and political setting in which they took place, and the long line of interpretation that followed. The method is critical reading. I take a well-known story, break it into its parts, and ask what work each part was doing, for whom, and at whose expense. Three limits should be stated at the start. First, the paper does not try to settle the Homeric Question or to decide whether a Trojan War really happened. That debate is old, technical, and still unresolved, and it is not necessary to the argument. What matters here is not whether the war was real but how a claim about the war was used. Second, the paper does not treat Schliemann as a uniquely wicked figure. Many of his contemporaries behaved as he did, and some behaved worse. He is useful precisely because he is famous and well documented, which makes him a good lens for a general pattern. Third, the paper is written for #students, so it favors plain explanation over technical vocabulary, and it tries to define terms as it goes. The key term to define is the one in the title. When I say early archaeology weaponized the Iliad, I do not mean that anyone used the poem as a physical weapon. I mean that the poem was turned into an instrument that produced advantages: authority over the interpretation of a site, license to remove objects, prestige and funding, and a flattering national story. A weapon in this sense is anything that converts a cultural resource into leverage over other people. The Iliad, in Schliemann's hands and in the hands of those who came after him, did exactly that. Keeping this definition in view helps separate two things that are often confused: being inspired by a text, which is harmless and common, and using a text to override evidence and to justify taking what belongs to others, which is neither. 4. Homer, the Iliad, and the Nineteenth-Century Imagination To understand why a poem could carry so much weight, we have to recall what #Homer meant to educated Europeans in the nineteenth century. The Iliad and the Odyssey were not simply old books. They sat at the very center of classical education, which was itself the backbone of elite formation across the continent. To know Homer, to quote Homer, to feel the pull of the ancient world, was a mark of belonging to the cultured classes. Cavanagh, borrowing a phrase from the historian Suzanne Marchand, describes classical antiquity around 1914 as part of the furniture of the educated mind, so familiar that people barely noticed how much it shaped their thinking (Cavanagh, 2024). This deep familiarity had a strange effect. It made the world of the poems feel both intensely real and safely distant. The heroes, the walls of Troy, the anger of Achilles, the long siege: these were as vivid to a nineteenth-century reader as any modern story, yet they floated free of any particular patch of ground. For a long time that was acceptable to scholars. Serious historians treated the Trojan War as legend, a poetic invention rather than a record of events. The influential historian George Grote, writing in the mid-nineteenth century, placed the war firmly in the realm of #fable, outside the reach of real history. On this view, to ask where Troy stood was rather like asking for the street address of a fairy tale. Two things then combined to change the mood. The first was a hunger for #origins. As modern nations formed and competed, they wanted to trace their culture back to a glorious source, and ancient Greece was widely cast as the fountainhead of European civilization. To claim the Greeks as ancestors, however loosely, was to claim a share of prestige. The second was the rising confidence of #positivism, the belief that patient, empirical study could recover solid truth from the material world. Put these together and you get a powerful temptation: if the roots of European greatness lay in the Greek past, and if careful digging could recover that past, then finding the physical Troy would be more than an academic exercise. It would be an act of civilizational self-discovery, and whoever accomplished it would win enormous acclaim. Into this setting stepped a small number of people who began to argue that the Homeric places could be found on a map. As early as 1822, the Scottish writer and geologist Charles Maclaren proposed that the mound at Hisarlik, near the modern town of Canakkale, matched the location of Homer's Troy. Later, from the 1840s onward, an English expatriate named Frank #Calvert, who served as a consular official in the region and whose family owned part of the mound, carried out exploratory digging there and built up a collection of finds. Calvert became convinced that Hisarlik was the right place, and he shared his reasoning and his data with visitors. One of those visitors was Heinrich Schliemann. This background matters for two reasons. It shows that the idea of a physical Troy was already in the air, and that the specific identification of Hisarlik did not originate with Schliemann, a point that his later fame tended to obscure. It also shows why the identification, once made, would be so attractive. To dig at Troy was to touch the source of the whole classical tradition. The Iliad supplied not just a target but a justification. A hole in a Turkish hillside became, in the imagination of the age, a doorway into the shared childhood of Europe. That is a heavy meaning to load onto a spade, and it helps explain why the excavation was celebrated so wildly and questioned so little at the time. 5. Schliemann at Hisarlik: Myth as Method Heinrich Schliemann was born in 1822 to a poor Lutheran family in northern Germany. He had no formal training in archaeology, which barely existed as a profession, but he had an extraordinary gift for languages and a restless drive to make money. Through a career that ran from an apprenticeship in a grocer's shop to trading ventures and military contracting during the Crimean War, he became wealthy enough to retire from business in his forties and devote himself to the search that would make him famous. He also acquired, along the way, a doctorate and a hunger for recognition that would shape how he presented every stage of his work. The version of his life that Schliemann himself promoted is worth pausing on, because it is part of the myth. He claimed that as a small child he had seen a picture of Troy in flames in a book of world history and had vowed then and there to one day dig up the city. He also told stories about hearing the Iliad recited in ancient Greek and being moved to tears. These origin stories are charming, and they were repeated for a century as simple fact. Careful biographers and historians have since shown that Schliemann was a skilled and frequent embellisher of his own record, and that several of his most quoted anecdotes cannot be trusted (Maurer, 2009). The point is not merely that he exaggerated. It is that the #embellishment served a purpose. By presenting his excavation as the fulfillment of a childhood dream inspired by Homer, Schliemann wrapped a hard-nosed commercial and scientific venture in the soft glow of destiny. The Iliad became his personal charter, and his own life story became a second text to be read alongside the poem. The digging itself began in earnest in 1870 and 1871. Working with a permit obtained through Calvert and using local labor, Schliemann drove into the mound. He was in a hurry. He reasoned, wrongly as it turned out, that Homer's Troy would be one of the oldest settlements, and so he cut a huge trench straight down through the hill toward the lowest levels, at times using explosives to speed the work. That trench is still visible, and it is still called Schliemann's Trench. In cutting it he sliced through the layers now labeled Troy VI and Troy VII, which are the levels most plausibly dated to the Late #Bronze_Age, the general period in which any historical Trojan War would have to fall. In other words, in his eagerness to reach the Troy of his imagination, he damaged the very evidence that might have spoken to the war he cared about (Cline, 2021). This is the first and most literal sense in which the myth harmed the record: it told him to dig deep and fast, and he obeyed. The dramatic moment came in 1873, when Schliemann reported the discovery of a rich hoard of gold, silver, and other precious objects, which he immediately named the Treasure of #Priam and linked to the legendary king of the Iliad. He announced to the world that Homeric Troy had been found, and the news traveled fast, helped by photographs of his wife Sophia wearing some of the golden ornaments. The find made him an international celebrity. It also, in time, undid the specific claim he had built it on. The layer in which the treasure lay, Troy II, dates to roughly 2400 BCE, in the Early Bronze Age, well over a thousand years before the period usually assigned to the Trojan War around 1180 BCE. The gold was real and old and important, but it belonged to a civilization that had vanished long before any Achaean fleet could have sailed. The city Schliemann had crowned as Priam's was the wrong city by a millennium. Some scholars have gone further and questioned whether the treasure was even a single deposit found together as Schliemann described, suggesting that objects gathered over a longer period may have been presented as one dramatic hoard. Whether or not that specific charge holds, the controversy points to a larger habit: Schliemann's accounts were built for effect, and the effect he wanted was confirmation of the poem. This is why the debate over his honesty has been framed so bluntly in the scholarship, with one much-cited article asking directly whether he should be counted a hero or a fraud. The honest answer is that he was neither purely one nor the other, and that the more interesting question is not about his character but about his method. Here we see mythic validation at work in its purest form. The Iliad told Schliemann what he was looking for: a great king, a rich citadel, a burned city. When he found gold in a burned layer, the story supplied the interpretation before the evidence could be weighed. The objects did not announce themselves as Priam's. Schliemann assigned them to Priam because the poem required a Priam and because a treasure with a royal name was worth infinitely more, in fame and in value, than a treasure without one. The myth did not follow the dig. It ran ahead of it and shaped what the dig was allowed to mean. The same pattern repeated when Schliemann moved to #Mycenae in Greece in 1876. There he uncovered spectacular shaft graves and a golden funerary mask, which he associated with #Agamemnon, the leader of the Greek army in the Iliad. Once again a find was baptized with a Homeric name, and once again the attribution has not held up, with later work showing the burials to be centuries too early for any Trojan War and with some critics even raising doubts about the mask itself. The consistency is the point. Faced with rich material, Schliemann reached each time for the nearest famous character from the poems and pinned the name on the object. It was a reflex, and it was a brilliant piece of communication, but it was not a discovery. It was a decision dressed up as one. It should be said clearly that Schliemann got the big thing right. Hisarlik is almost certainly the place that later Greeks called Ilion and identified with Homer's Troy, and later work by Wilhelm #Dorpfeld, Carl Blegen, and Manfred Korfmann confirmed that the mound holds a long and genuinely important sequence of settlements. Dorpfeld, who worked with Schliemann and continued after his death, brought far more rigorous methods and corrected several of Schliemann's errors, arguing that the later Troy VI was a stronger candidate for the Homeric city. The problem was never the location. The problem is the method: the willingness to let a beloved text override the physical record, to destroy in order to confirm, and to name finds after characters from a poem as though the naming were a discovery rather than a choice. 6. The Colonial and Imperial Frame Everything described so far happened on the territory of the #Ottoman_Empire, and this fact is not a detail. It is central to understanding why the episode belongs to the history of #colonial_excavation and not merely to the history of ideas. By the time Schliemann arrived, the Ottoman state had begun to build a legal framework to govern the study and export of #antiquities. The empire issued antiquities regulations in 1869, revised them in 1874 and again in 1884, and tightened them further in 1906 and 1907. These laws steadily increased state control over what could be dug, who could dig it, and what could leave the country, until by the mid-1880s the export of original ancient objects was in principle forbidden (Blouin and Akrigg, 2024). The empire also invested in its own institutions. In 1881 the painter and administrator Osman Hamdi Bey became director of the Imperial Museum in Constantinople, and under his leadership the Ottomans expanded their collections, trained staff, and launched their own excavations. This is worth stressing because a common colonial argument held that the peoples of the region neither valued nor could care for their ancient remains, an argument that was both false and self-serving. The Ottoman record of legislation and museum-building shows an active, if under-resourced, effort to keep cultural heritage within the country and to bring foreign digging under a rule of law. Against this background, the removal of Priam's Treasure looks less like a rescue and more like a theft. After the 1873 find, Schliemann arranged for the hoard to be taken out of Anatolia in secret. The story of how the authorities found out has become famous: Sophia Schliemann was seen and photographed in public wearing some of the golden jewelry, and word made its way back to the Ottoman government. The local official who had been assigned to supervise the excavation was punished, reportedly with a prison sentence, a reminder that the human cost of the affair fell first on a subordinate rather than on the wealthy foreigner. The Ottoman government revoked Schliemann's permission to dig and sued him for its rightful share. In the end he settled by paying a fine, and the bulk of the treasure went to Germany rather than remaining where it was found. He later regained access to the site, having, in effect, paid for the privilege after the fact. The later travels of the treasure only deepen the point. The hoard was displayed in London, then acquired by the royal museums of #Berlin, where it went on show as a jewel of the new German empire's cultural standing. During the Second World War it was hidden for safekeeping, then vanished at the end of the war. It reappeared publicly in 1993 at the Pushkin Museum in #Moscow, having been taken to the Soviet Union as wartime spoils. Today the objects are claimed by more than one party. Germany seeks their return from Russia, and Turkey argues that they were removed illegally from Ottoman soil in the first place and should come home to Anatolia. A modern museum at Troy has even set aside display space with a message noting that Trojan objects are waiting to be reunited at their place of origin. Priam's gold, in other words, has spent its modern life being moved from capital to capital, always as a symbol of someone's power and never quite at home. This tangled history illustrates a general truth about imperialism and the past. The same imbalance of #power that let European excavators dig where they liked also let them keep what they found, and it took later legal and political shifts, including the anticolonial movements of the twentieth century, to begin reversing the flow. The antiquities law of the Ottoman Empire, like similar laws elsewhere, was in part a defensive response to exactly the kind of extraction that Schliemann carried out. When we admire Priam's Treasure today, we are admiring an object whose fame rests on a false attribution and whose location rests on a chain of removals that at least one sovereign state considers unlawful. It is here that the word #weaponized earns its place. The Iliad gave the extraction its cover story. Because the objects could be attached, however wrongly, to Homer's Troy, their removal could be presented as the salvage of universal European heritage rather than the stripping of a specific place from a specific state. The poem transformed a legally contested act of taking into a celebrated act of discovery. That transformation is the essence of mythic validation applied to colonial excavation, and it is why the ethics of the dig cannot be separated from its scholarship. 7. The Circular Logic of Mythic Validation At the heart of Schliemann's project lies a piece of reasoning that looks convincing until you examine it, at which point it folds in on itself. The argument runs like this. The Iliad describes a real war at a real Troy. Therefore, if we dig at the place that matches the poem and find a rich, burned city, we will have proved the poem true. And when we find such a city, we announce that the poem is proved. The problem is that the conclusion is smuggled into the premises. The poem is used to identify and interpret the site, and then the site is used to confirm the poem. Each half leans on the other, and neither stands on independent ground. This is #circular_reasoning dressed in the clothing of empirical proof. The circularity is easy to miss because it is emotionally satisfying and because it produced real objects. Gold is hard to argue with. But the gold did not prove that Homer's war happened, or that this layer was Priam's palace, or that the people who made these things spoke Greek, or fought Greeks, or had anything to do with the story at all. Those connections were assertions, made in advance by the framework, not conclusions forced by the evidence. When later #stratigraphy showed that the treasure was a thousand years too early, the framework did not collapse, because it had never really rested on the evidence in the first place. Instead the names simply stuck. To this day the hoard is called Priam's Treasure, and the layers keep the numbering Schliemann's tradition gave them, even though scholars know the labels are wrong. The myth outlived its own refutation, which is one of the clearest signs that it was never functioning as a testable claim. There is a deeper lesson here for students of any field that studies the past. A powerful story does not just fill gaps in the evidence. It tells you which evidence to look for, which finds to celebrate, and which to ignore or discard. Schliemann was uninterested in the modest layers that did not fit his vision, and he cut through them to reach the treasure he expected. The Iliad did not merely inspire him. It set the terms of relevance. Anything the poem cared about became precious; anything it did not care about became an obstacle. This is how mythic validation quietly corrupts inquiry: not by lying about the facts, but by deciding in advance what the facts are permitted to be about. The same structure appears whenever a #sacred or national story is used to guide excavation. If you dig to confirm a founding legend, you will tend to find what confirms it, because you have already chosen where to dig, what to keep, and how to name it. The remedy is not to ignore texts. Texts are valuable clues, and ancient literature can genuinely point archaeologists toward productive questions. The remedy is to refuse to let the text pre-decide the meaning of the ground, and to hold open the possibility that the dig will contradict the story. Schliemann's practice did the opposite. It made contradiction almost impossible, because it had already awarded the story the final word. A healthy method treats a text as a hypothesis to be tested against the earth. An unhealthy one treats the earth as a stage on which the text is performed. 8. Nationalism, Race, and the Wider Pattern Schliemann is often treated as a one-of-a-kind character, but his real significance is that he was typical, only earlier and louder. The use of ancient sites to feed modern #nationalism was a continent-wide habit, and understanding that habit is essential to understanding why the weaponizing of the Iliad was accepted so readily. Consider the pattern documented by Cavanagh at Delphi and Knossos around the turn of the twentieth century (Cavanagh, 2024). The French excavation of Delphi, the great dig known as the Grande Fouille, was underwritten by the French state and celebrated in the French press as a triumph of national genius, a sign that modern France was the true heir of ancient Greece. Newspapers openly compared it to German and other foreign digs, treating archaeology as an arena of international competition in which nations proved their worth, and pointing to the prestige Schliemann's Troy had brought Germany as a reason for France to invest. Across the Aegean, the British excavation of Knossos under Arthur Evans was framed in the British press as the recovery of the earliest European civilization, a #maritime culture conveniently flattering to a British self-image built on sea power and monarchy. Reporters lingered on a supposed Minoan throne and crown, drawing a direct line from an imagined ancient royalty to the modern British crown. In both cases the finds were read through the lens of #national_identity, and the excavator was crowned as a hero who embodied the intelligence and vigor of his people. What ties these cases together is a shared logic. The ancient world was treated as a set of trophies, and modern nations competed to claim descent from the most prestigious ancestors. Archaeology supplied the physical proof that made such claims feel scientific. As Kohl argued, nationalism requires a remote past, real or invented, and archaeology is uniquely suited to provide one, because artifacts and ruins seem to speak with the authority of objective fact (Kohl, 1998). The trouble is that the choice of which past to dig for, and how to read it, was anything but objective. It was steered by present-day desires for greatness and continuity, and the seemingly neutral trowel became a tool for writing national autobiography. In Schliemann's own case, the German dimension is important. He worked in the decades around the unification of Germany, and his triumphs at Troy and Mycenae became sources of German national pride, with Priam's Treasure installed in Berlin as a marker of the new empire's cultural rank. His excavation was thus doing double duty: confirming a classical fantasy shared across Europe, and burnishing the prestige of a particular emerging nation-state. This is one reason the treasure's later disappearance and its current lodging in Moscow carry such symbolic weight. The object was never just gold. It was a marker of national standing, which is exactly why its ownership remains contested and why its story keeps being retold whenever relations between the countries involved grow tense. The most uncomfortable part of this pattern is its entanglement with ideas about #race and hierarchy. Greenberg and Hamilakis show how the construction of national pasts through archaeology often went hand in hand with the racialization of ancient peoples, with modern groups claiming a pure line of descent from an idealized and often whitened antiquity (Greenberg and Hamilakis, 2022). The search for European origins at sites like Knossos was frequently framed in explicitly racial language, sorting the ancient Mediterranean into flattering and unflattering categories. Schliemann's Troy sat inside this larger project of using the deep past to underwrite claims about who the true heirs of civilization were. The Iliad, as the supreme classical text, was an especially powerful piece of this machinery, because to own Homer's Troy was to own a share of the origin story of the West, and origin stories are among the most valuable possessions a nation can claim. Recognizing this pattern helps students avoid a common mistake. It is tempting to think that the political misuse of archaeology is a thing of the past, or a habit only of obviously extreme movements. In fact the appetite for a usable ancient past is ordinary and continuing. Modern researchers have documented how #pseudoarchaeology and selective readings of the ancient world are still deployed to serve nationalist and racialized agendas today, from fringe theories about lost civilizations to attempts to tie modern ethnic claims to ancient peoples (Berihuete-Azorin et al., 2024). Schliemann's ghost is not confined to the nineteenth century. It walks wherever a story about the past is treated as too precious to be tested. 9. What Later Excavation Settled, and What It Did Not Because Schliemann is so often either praised or condemned, it is easy to lose track of what more than a century of subsequent work has actually established at Hisarlik. Setting this out matters, because it shows both the value of patient method and the limits of what any dig can prove about a poem. Wilhelm Dorpfeld, Schliemann's more disciplined collaborator, continued the work after 1890 and argued that the substantial fortified city of Troy VI, much later than Schliemann's chosen layer, was the better match for Homer's grand city. In the 1930s the American archaeologist Carl Blegen conducted careful, stratified excavations and drew attention to Troy VIIa, a level that showed signs of destruction and hasty habitation consistent with a siege, placing it in roughly the right period for a Late Bronze Age conflict. From 1988 until his death in 2005, Manfred #Korfmann led a large international project that used modern survey techniques and revealed a lower town beyond the citadel, suggesting that Bronze Age Troy was larger and more important than earlier scholars had assumed. Korfmann's interpretation sparked a sharp public dispute, sometimes called the Troy debate, in which the historian Frank Kolb argued that Korfmann had overstated the size, wealth, and commercial significance of the site. The disagreement is instructive precisely because it happened in the full light of modern scholarship, with both sides marshaling evidence and neither able to end the argument by appeal to a beloved text. That is what a healthy controversy looks like, and it stands in pointed contrast to Schliemann's method of settling questions by naming a find after a king. Alongside the digging, a separate line of evidence emerged from written records. Hittite documents from the Late Bronze Age refer to a place in western Anatolia called #Wilusa, which many linguists connect to the Greek names Ilios and Ilion, that is, Troy, and to a region called Ahhiyawa that some link to the Achaeans, Homer's Greeks. These texts do not describe the war of the Iliad, and they must be handled with caution, but they give real, independent reason to think that a place answering to Troy existed and mattered in exactly the period and region the later poems remember (Cline, 2021). The honest conclusion from all this work is a modest one. There was a real and significant Bronze Age settlement at Hisarlik. It was destroyed more than once, at least one destruction falls in the right general period, and the name of the place appears to survive in independent records. It is entirely plausible that memories of conflict there fed into a long oral tradition that eventually produced the Iliad. What none of this shows is that the specific events, persons, or grand ten-year siege of the poem occurred as described, still less that a particular layer belonged to a particular king. The evidence supports a kernel of historical memory inside a work of imaginative literature. It does not, and cannot, vindicate Schliemann's habit of reading the poem as a field guide. Modern method has given us a richer and more careful picture at the cost of the simple, thrilling certainty that Schliemann sold to the public. 10. Schliemann's Ghost: The Enduring Legacy Why speak of a #ghost at all? Because Schliemann's influence did not die with him in 1890. It settled into the discipline as a set of half-conscious habits, some technical, some rhetorical, some political. Three of these habits are worth naming, because they are the parts of the legacy that later archaeology has had to work hardest to overcome. The first is the habit of #destruction in the name of discovery. Schliemann's great trench through Hisarlik is the founding image of a certain kind of impatient archaeology, one that treats the upper layers as obstacles on the way to the prize below. Modern stratigraphic method, which reads a site layer by layer and treats each layer as evidence in its own right, developed in part as a reaction against exactly this approach. Even Schliemann himself, guided later by the more careful Dorpfeld, improved his techniques over time. But the image of the excavator smashing through history to reach a hoped-for treasure remains a warning, and it is telling that his lasting damage to the Late Bronze Age levels is now taught as a cautionary tale rather than a triumph. What he destroyed can never be recovered, and that loss is part of what his fame was built on. The second habit is the mastery of #spectacle. Schliemann understood, better than almost anyone of his era, that archaeology lived or died by public attention. He wrote for newspapers, staged his finds, arranged the famous photographs of Sophia in the jewels, and turned excavation into a form of media performance that recouped its costs through fame and, indirectly, through funding (Maurer, 2009; Cavanagh, 2024). This is not a small thing. The reliance of archaeology on public interest, and therefore on a good story, created a permanent temptation to overclaim, to attach famous names to finds, and to prefer the dramatic interpretation over the dull one. The media logic that Schliemann pioneered still shapes how discoveries are announced today, and it still rewards the researcher who can connect a find to a legend the public already loves. Every breathless headline about a newly discovered tomb of some famous ancient figure is, in a sense, an echo of his method. The third habit is the deepest and the hardest to see: the treatment of the ancient past as portable European property, whose true home is a Western #museum. This is the assumption that made the removal of Priam's Treasure feel natural to those who carried it out. It is the assumption that turned a specific Anatolian place into a symbol of universal Western heritage, conveniently located far from Anatolia. And it is the assumption that the decolonization movement in museums now directly challenges (Wali and Collins, 2023; Lee, 2022). When Turkey argues that Trojan gold should return to Turkey, it is contesting not just the location of some objects but the whole nineteenth-century framework that Schliemann helped to build, in which the finds of the world flowed toward a few imperial capitals and stayed there under the banner of universal culture. These three habits, destruction, spectacle, and ownership, are the substance of the ghost. They are not the personal sins of one man. They are structural features of how the discipline was born, and Schliemann is remembered because he embodied them so vividly. To confront his legacy honestly is to confront the possibility that some of the field's founding practices were bound up with the very imperial and national projects that the field now claims to study from a critical distance. 11. Confronting the Ghost: Decolonization and Counter-Myths If the problem is a ghost, what would it mean to lay it to rest? Recent scholarship suggests several answers, and they are worth setting out because they show that the story does not have to end in mere criticism. The first answer is #reflexivity, the practice of studying one's own discipline as critically as one studies the past. The historiographical literature reviewed earlier is itself part of this answer. When historians of archaeology examine how nationalism and colonialism shaped the field, they are not attacking archaeology. They are strengthening it, by making its hidden assumptions visible so that they can be questioned (Trigger, 2006; Diaz-Andreu, 2007; Blouin and Akrigg, 2024). For students, the practical lesson is to always ask who is doing the digging, on whose land, with whose permission, for whose story, and at whose expense. These questions are not add-ons to good archaeology. They are part of it, as much as careful recording and dating. The second answer is repatriation and the wider rethinking of #museums. The debates over Priam's Treasure, and over the roughly comparable disputes involving other famous objects, are forcing institutions to confront the origins of their collections. Wali and Collins describe a genuine shift underway, in which museums move from viewing themselves as neutral guardians toward acknowledging that many of their holdings arrived through colonial extraction, and toward sharing authority with the communities and nations from which the objects came (Wali and Collins, 2023). Lee's study, aimed at a general audience, presses the same case, arguing that repatriation is not a loss to knowledge but a correction of an injustice (Lee, 2022). Applied to Troy, this literature reframes the question. The issue is not simply where the gold looks best or is most conveniently seen by tourists, but who has the right to decide, and what a fair resolution of a nineteenth-century removal would look like in the present. The third answer is the deliberate creation of what one collaborative group of archaeologists has called #counter_myths (Berihuete-Azorin et al., 2024). Their argument is that archaeology has always dealt in stories about the human past, and that the response to harmful stories is not to pretend the field can be free of narrative, but to tell better ones. Against national myths of purity, descent, and superiority, they set stories that emphasize connection, movement, shared humanity, and the long history of migration and exchange. This is directly relevant to Troy. Cline's picture of the Late Bronze Age, for example, is precisely such a counter-myth in the good sense: instead of a heroic clash between a European Greece and an Asian Troy, it shows a densely connected world of Hittites, Mycenaeans, Egyptians, and others, whose fates were bound together and who collapsed together when that connected system failed (Cline, 2021). Read this way, Hisarlik stops being a trophy in a contest between civilizations and becomes a node in a network, a place that belonged to a shared and interdependent ancient world rather than to any single modern heir. None of these answers requires us to despise Schliemann or to deny what he found. He located an important site, he brought archaeology to a mass public, and he helped reopen a question that scholars had prematurely closed. The mature response to his legacy is neither hero-worship nor simple condemnation. It is to hold both truths at once: that he made real contributions, and that the framework within which he worked was tangled up with destruction, spectacle, and colonial ownership. Laying the ghost to rest means keeping the contributions while retiring the framework, and teaching the next generation to tell the difference. 12. Discussion: Why This History Matters for Students For a student encountering this material for the first time, it can be tempting to file it away as an old scandal, interesting but finished. That would be a mistake. The Schliemann episode teaches several lessons that reach well beyond the study of Troy. The first lesson concerns the relationship between #evidence and story. Every field that studies the past, from archaeology to history to parts of the natural sciences, must combine physical traces with narratives that make sense of them. The danger Schliemann illustrates is not the use of narrative but the surrender of judgment to it. When a story becomes so precious that it is allowed to decide what the evidence means before the evidence is examined, inquiry stops being inquiry. The discipline of good research lies in keeping the story on probation, always ready to be revised or abandoned if the traces do not cooperate. Priam's Treasure, still bearing a name that everyone knows to be false, is a monument to what happens when a story is placed beyond the reach of correction. The second lesson concerns power and place. Knowledge is produced somewhere, by someone, under some set of rules, and the setting shapes the result. The Troy excavations happened where they did, and turned out as they did, because a wealthy European could obtain permits, hire local labor, remove objects, and command an international audience, while the local #Ottoman state, though it was passing antiquities laws and building its own museum, could not fully control what happened on its own soil. A student who understands this will read all claims about the past with a sharper eye, asking not only whether a claim is true but who was positioned to make it, who was positioned to profit from it, and who was not. The third lesson concerns inheritance. We are the heirs of the frameworks built by people like Schliemann, whether we like it or not. The museums we visit, the famous objects we admire, the national origin stories we half-absorb, and even the popular image of the archaeologist as a treasure-hunting adventurer all descend in part from this history. To be an informed reader of cultural heritage today is to know where these things came from and to be able to ask whether they should continue unchanged. The current disputes over repatriation are not distractions from scholarship. They are scholarship in action, working out in the present what a fairer relationship to the past would require. There is also a lesson here about how to read popular science and popular history. The very qualities that made Schliemann a great communicator, his confidence, his vivid narratives, his instinct for the memorable detail, are the qualities that should make a careful reader cautious. A gripping story told by a charismatic expert is not the same as a well-supported claim, and the more thrilling the tale, the more worthwhile it is to ask what evidence actually stands behind it. Learning to enjoy a good story while still checking its foundations is one of the most useful habits a student can develop, and the history of Troy is an excellent place to practice it. Finally, the episode offers a hopeful lesson about how disciplines improve. Archaeology did not stay where Schliemann left it. It developed careful stratigraphic methods partly in reaction to his destructiveness. It developed a critical historiography that can examine its own origins. It is now developing new ethical norms around ownership and consent. This trajectory shows that a field can inherit a flawed foundation and still grow into something better, provided it is willing to look honestly at where it came from. The ghost can be acknowledged, studied, and, over time, sent on its way. 13. Conclusion The story of Heinrich #Schliemann and the #Iliad is usually told as a fairy tale about faith rewarded, in which love for an old poem leads to the recovery of a lost city. This article has argued for a different reading. What actually happened at Hisarlik was an early and unusually clear example of #mythic_validation: the use of a cherished text to justify, direct, and glorify a program of colonial excavation, and the presentation of the results as proof of the text. The prestige of Homer supplied a cultural license to dig on another state's land, to remove a spectacular hoard, and to name it after a king from #legend. The Iliad was not merely Schliemann's inspiration. It was his instrument, and in that sense early archaeology genuinely weaponized it. The consequences were serious and lasting. The rush to confirm the myth destroyed much of the evidence for the period the myth was actually about. The treasure named for Priam belonged to a civilization a thousand years older than any Trojan War, yet the false name endures in museums and textbooks. The objects themselves became caught in a chain of removals, from Anatolia to Berlin to Moscow, that remains unresolved and that Turkey continues to contest as an original injustice. And the habits Schliemann modeled, destruction in the name of discovery, mastery of spectacle, and the treatment of the ancient past as portable European property, became part of the discipline's inheritance, a ghost that later archaeologists have had to name and confront. Yet the account need not end in despair. Recent work in the historiography of archaeology, in #decolonization studies, and in the study of cultural heritage has given us both the tools to understand this history and the resources to move beyond it. Reflexive scholarship makes the old assumptions visible. The repatriation debate reopens the question of ownership. Careful modern excavation, and the sober public arguments that surround it, model a better way of settling disputes about the past. And the deliberate telling of counter-myths, stories of connection rather than conquest, offers a way to value sites like Troy without turning them into weapons in a contest between civilizations. Schliemann found something real, and for that he deserves credit. But the deeper lesson of his career is a warning that every student of the past should carry: a story powerful enough to make you dig is also powerful enough to make you see only what you already believe. The task of honest inquiry is to keep looking anyway. #Schliemann #Troy #Iliad #Homer #Hisarlik #Priams_Treasure #colonial_archaeology #mythic_validation #historiography_of_archaeology #Ottoman_antiquities #decolonizing_archaeology #cultural_repatriation #nationalism_and_archaeology #Trojan_War #weaponizing_myth References Berihuete-Azorin, M., Blackmore, C., Borck, L., Flexner, J. L., Frieman, C. J., Herrmann, C. A., and Kiddey, R. (2024). Archaeology in 2022: Counter-myths for hopeful futures. American Anthropologist. https://doi.org/10.1111/aman.13940 Blouin, K., and Akrigg, B. (Eds.). (2024). The Routledge Handbook of Classics, Colonialism, and Postcolonial Theory. Abingdon: Routledge. ISBN 9780367555481. Cavanagh, M. (2024). Excavating the nation: European popular nationalism and the excavations of Delphi and Knossos, 1890-1914. Bulletin of the History of Archaeology, 34(1), 1. https://doi.org/10.5334/bha-665 Cline, E. H. (2021). 1177 B.C.: The Year Civilization Collapsed (Revised and updated edition). Princeton: Princeton University Press. Diaz-Andreu, M. (2007). A World History of Nineteenth-Century Archaeology: Nationalism, Colonialism, and the Past. Oxford: Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199217175.001.0001 Greenberg, R., and Hamilakis, Y. (2022). Archaeology, Nation, and Race: Confronting the Past, Decolonizing the Future in Greece and Israel. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009160247 Kohl, P. L. (1998). Nationalism and archaeology: On the constructions of nations and the reconstructions of the remote past. Annual Review of Anthropology, 27, 223-246. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.anthro.27.1.223 Lee, S. (2022). Decolonize Museums. New York: OR Books. Maurer, K. (2009). Archaeology as spectacle: Heinrich Schliemann's media of excavation. German Studies Review, 32(2), 303-317. Trigger, B. G. (1984). Alternative archaeologies: Nationalist, colonialist, imperialist. Man, 19(3), 355-370. https://doi.org/10.2307/2802176 Trigger, B. G. (2006). A History of Archaeological Thought (2nd edition). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511813016 Wali, A., and Collins, R. K. (2023). Decolonizing museums: Toward a paradigm shift. Annual Review of Anthropology, 52, 329-345. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-anthro-052721-040652

  • The Evolution of the Phalanx: Homeric Warfare as a Transitional Phase in Archaic Greek Military History

    Tracing the Shift from Aristocratic Duels to Early Hoplite Warfare in the Iliad Abstract This article studies how Greek warfare changed between the world pictured in Homer and the mature #hoplite battle of the Classical age. It argues that the fighting in the #the_Iliad should not be read as either pure aristocratic single combat or as a finished #phalanx system. Instead, the poem preserves a mixed and moving picture in which named champions and dense bodies of ordinary fighters appear side by side. The study reads the battle scenes of the poem closely, sets them against the long scholarly argument about the origins of the phalanx, and weighs the archaeological record of armour and shields. The main claim is that #Homeric_warfare records a society in transition. The prestige of the individual leader was still central, but the practical weight of the massed #laos was already visible, and both the equipment and the social base needed for later hoplite fighting were slowly taking shape. Reading the epic in this way helps students understand why the debate over the "hoplite revolution" has proved so hard to settle. It also shows that the shift from the heroic duel to the #citizen_militia was not a single sudden event but a drawn out process that stretched across the whole #Archaic_Greece period. The article closes by suggesting that the Iliad is best treated not as a snapshot of one battlefield but as a layered document in which several stages of military practice were folded together by an oral tradition. Keywords: Homeric warfare; hoplite phalanx; Archaic Greece; the Iliad; military history; promachoi; aristocratic combat; othismos Introduction Few questions in ancient Greek history have generated as much heat as the question of how and when the #hoplite_phalanx came into being. The phalanx, the tight rectangular block of heavily armoured spearmen that came to define Greek land battle by the fifth century BCE, was more than a military tool. It was tied up with ideas about the citizen, the farm, the city, and the political community. When scholars ask when the phalanx appeared, they are often really asking when a certain kind of Greek society appeared. This is why the debate has always been about more than shields and spears. At the centre of the problem sits Homer. The #the_Iliad is the oldest long text in the Greek language, and it is packed with fighting. Almost half of the poem describes combat of one kind or another. If a historian wants to know how Greeks fought before the Classical age, the Iliad is the first place to look. Yet the poem is also a trap. It describes a legendary war set in a distant heroic past, and it was shaped over generations by singers who did not care about tactical accuracy the way a modern military historian does. Reading real battle practice out of an oral epic is a delicate job, and different readers have pulled very different conclusions from the same lines. The traditional story is simple and attractive. In the world of Homer, so the story goes, war belonged to #aristocratic_duels. Great lords rode or walked out in front of their followers, called out their enemies by name, and settled matters in single combat while lesser men watched. Then, at some point around 700 to 650 BCE, a new kind of soldier appeared. This was the #hoplite, a farmer wealthy enough to buy a bronze helmet, a breastplate, greaves, a spear, and above all the large round #aspis shield. Hoplites did not fight as individuals. They stood shoulder to shoulder in ranks and fought as a body. The individual hero gave way to the disciplined line, and this change, often called the "hoplite reform" or even the "hoplite revolution," reshaped Greek politics by giving military power, and therefore a political voice, to a broad middle class of landowners. This tidy picture has been under sustained attack for more than half a century. Some scholars accept that the equipment changed but deny that it arrived all at once. Others deny that Homeric combat was ever really about lone champions, and point to the crowds of ordinary fighters who fill the background of every battle in the poem. Still others push the arrival of the true drilled phalanx very late, arguing that the neat massed formation we imagine only settled into place after the Persian Wars of the early fifth century. The result is a field with at least three broad camps and many shades in between. This article does not try to declare a final winner. Its aim is different and, for a student, more useful. It sets out to show that the fighting described in the Iliad is itself transitional, and that this is exactly why the poem has been read in so many contradictory ways. The epic does not describe one system. It preserves fragments of several. There are proud single combats. There are also dense masses that push and give way as one. There are missiles and there are spears kept for thrusting. There are chariots that behave in ways no real chariot army ever behaved. By treating the poem as a layered record rather than a single photograph, we can understand both the heroic surface and the collective machinery working underneath it, and we can place #Homeric_warfare where it belongs, as a bridge between an older world of warrior chiefs and the later world of the #citizen_soldier. The discussion proceeds in eight further steps. It first lays out the main positions in the modern debate. It then explains the sources and the method used here. The heart of the article works through the evidence of the poem itself, first the aristocratic and individual side of Homeric combat, then the collective and massed side, and then the material record of arms and armour. After that it turns to the social and economic forces that could drive such a change, and reads the Iliad as a transitional document. A short discussion and conclusion draw the threads together. The Historiographical Debate: Orthodoxy, Gradualism, and Revisionism To understand why the Iliad matters so much, we need to understand the argument it has been dropped into. The modern study of the phalanx grew out of nineteenth and early twentieth century scholarship, much of it German, that tried to find clean rules and turning points in ancient warfare. Roel Konijnendijk has traced how a particular model of Greek battle, shaped partly by the concerns of Prussian military science, hardened into a kind of common sense that later generations simply inherited. That inherited common sense is what specialists now call the orthodox view. The orthodox position, associated in its classic form with the work of scholars such as Martin Nilsson and Helen Lorimer, held that the phalanx appeared suddenly and early. On this view the invention of the double grip #aspis, the round shield gripped by an armband at the elbow and a handle at the rim, was the key. Because that shield was heavy and covered mainly the left side of the body, a man carrying it depended on the shield of his neighbour to guard his own unshielded right side. The equipment, in other words, only made sense in a close packed line. Once the shield existed, the line had to follow, and the individual champion of the heroic age was pushed aside within a generation or two. Victor Davis Hanson later added a powerful social layer to this account. In his reading, the hoplite was a middling farmer, and the brutal head on collision of two phalanxes, ending in a mass shove that Greeks called the #othismos, expressed the values of a community of independent smallholders who wanted their wars short, decisive, and cheap. The first serious challenge to this picture came from Anthony Snodgrass. Working from the archaeology of arms and armour, Snodgrass argued that the pieces of the hoplite panoply did not arrive together. The bronze helmet, the breastplate, the greaves, the shield, and the thrusting spear entered the record at different times and were used in different combinations for decades. If the equipment came piecemeal, then the tactic could not have been born in a single moment. This is the #gradualism position. It accepts that a real change happened but stretches it out over a long period and denies that any one invention forced the outcome. The most radical rethinking belongs to Hans van Wees. In a pair of closely argued studies on the Iliad, and later in a full length treatment of Greek warfare, van Wees turned the orthodox story inside out. He argued, first, that Homeric combat is far more coherent than earlier readers thought, and second, that it is much closer to open and fluid skirmishing than to any tight formation. In his reading the #promachoi, the men who fight out in front, are not a separate class of aloof champions but simply the braver or better equipped members of a body of troops who move forward and fall back as the fighting ebbs and flows. Missiles are thrown constantly. Men dart out, cast a spear, and retreat into the crowd. To make the point vivid, van Wees compared the fighting in the poem with the warfare of the New Guinea highlands recorded by anthropologists, where lines of warriors face each other across open ground and individuals surge forward to throw and then withdraw. On this account the dense, drilled, disciplined phalanx of the history books is a late development, and something like it may only have become the norm in the fifth century. The strong versions of these positions each run into trouble, and recent commentators have noted this. The idea that the hoplite was a helpless armoured turtle who could only survive in a huddle does not fit the evidence that hoplite gear was flexible enough for other kinds of fighting. Equally, the idea that hoplites were as comfortable in loose skirmishing as in a shield wall struggles to explain why their equipment was so well suited to the wall and so awkward for the open field. The honest conclusion is that neither extreme captures the whole picture, and that the truth lies in a long messy middle. Peter Krentz added an important twist by attacking the notion that early Greek battle followed a set of gentlemanly rules. In his study of what he called the invention of the hoplite contest, Krentz argued that the ritualized, almost sporting character often attributed to Archaic warfare, with its supposed conventions about fair fights on open plains, was largely a fifth century creation. Before that, he suggested, Greeks fought with all the tricks, ambushes, and ruthlessness that Homer already shows. The famous edited collection assembled by Donald Kagan and Gregory Viggiano gathered orthodox and heterodox voices in one volume and made clear just how far apart the leading experts remained. As the reviewers of that book observed, none of the contributors seemed to have convinced any of the others. More recent work has tended to move the conversation sideways rather than pick a winner. The volume edited by Konijnendijk, Cezary Kucewicz, and Matthew Lloyd deliberately looked beyond the phalanx, treating light infantry, cavalry, servants, and the many forms of Greek fighting that the phalanx obsession had pushed into the shadows. Kucewicz, in a separate study of how Archaic Athens treated its war dead, showed that the practices and values of that early period stood much closer to the hierarchical, elite centred world of Homer than to the egalitarian civic ideals of the Classical city. Richard Taylor produced a long synthesis of the phalanx that took the physical realities of the formation seriously. And experimental archaeology, using reconstructed armour and computer modelling, has recently offered fresh support for the idea that the mass push was a genuine physical event and that the bronze panoply may have been shaped precisely to let a man survive inside a crush of bodies. The debate, in short, is very much alive, and Homer sits at the middle of it. Methodology and Sources Any argument about #Homeric_warfare has to face a hard problem of evidence. The Iliad describes events supposedly belonging to the late Bronze Age, around the thirteenth century BCE. It reached something like its written form much later, most likely in the late eighth or early seventh century BCE, after a long life as oral poetry passed from singer to singer. This means the poem is layered. It may keep a few genuine memories of the distant Mycenaean past, such as certain place names or the boar's tusk helmet described in one passage. But most of its social world, its assumptions about how leaders behave and how households work, seems to reflect the poet's own age, the world of the early #polis rather than the Bronze Age palace. Because of this layering, the poem cannot be used as a straightforward manual of tactics for any single date. A responsible method has to accept that different lines may reflect different stages of practice, and that the singer could freely mix old motifs with contemporary detail. Moses Finley long ago argued that the society of the poems is broadly consistent and belongs to the early Iron Age, and while scholars have refined his dating, the basic point stands. When we read a battle scene, we are reading a composite. The approach taken here is threefold. First, the article reads the combat passages of the Iliad closely and as a whole rather than picking single lines out of context. A single duel proves little on its own, but the recurring shape of the fighting across the whole poem tells us what the tradition treated as normal. Second, it sets that literary picture beside the material record, especially the surviving armour, helmets, and shields recovered from graves and sanctuaries, and beside the images painted on Archaic pottery. Third, it reads both against the framework of the modern debate, so that the reader can see which features of the poem support which position. Three cautions guide the reading. One, the poet cared about #kleos, the fame of individuals, far more than about tactics, so the text naturally spotlights heroes and leaves the mass in shadow. The prominence of champions in the poem is partly an effect of the storytelling, not a simple report of reality. Two, arguments from silence are weak, because a singer could omit the drill and organisation of ordinary troops simply because it made poor poetry. Three, comparative evidence from other societies, such as the New Guinea highlands, can suggest possibilities but cannot prove that early Greeks fought the same way. With these cautions in place, the poem becomes a usable, if difficult, historical source. It is also worth being clear about terms. The Greek word from which we get "phalanx" does appear in the Iliad, usually in the plural, where it seems to mean ranks or lines or bodies of men rather than the single disciplined block of later usage. The word #hoplite itself, by contrast, does not carry its later technical meaning in the archaic evidence, and only settles into the sense of "heavy armed infantryman fighting in formation" around the fifth century, as the frequency of the term in writers like Thucydides and Xenophon shows. Keeping these shifts of meaning in mind protects us from reading the finished Classical system back into the poem. The Aristocratic Ideal: Duels, Champions, and the Promachoi The most memorable fighting in the Iliad is undeniably individual. The poem is built around great warriors and their deeds. Achilles, Hector, Ajax, Diomedes, Agamemnon, and Sarpedon dominate the action, and the narrative repeatedly slows down to follow one of them through a stretch of glory. The technical name for such a sequence is the aristeia, the display of a single hero's excellence, and the pattern is clear. The hero arms, advances, kills a series of named opponents, meets a crisis, and either triumphs or is checked by a god. Diomedes in the fifth book and Achilles in the closing books are the classic cases. Set duels reinforce this heroic surface. In the third book Paris and Menelaus agree to fight one on one to decide the whole war, with both armies sitting down to watch. In the seventh book Hector challenges the best of the Achaeans and faces Ajax in formal single combat, the two men trading spear casts and stones while the hosts look on. In the twenty second book Achilles and Hector fight the most famous duel of the poem beneath the walls of Troy. These scenes look exactly like the #aristocratic_duels of the traditional model, and they gave the orthodox picture its emotional force. Here, it seems, is war as a contest of champions. Alongside the duels runs a whole code of values that ties fighting to social rank. The leaders of the poem are the #aristoi, the best men, and their claim to lead rests in large part on their willingness to stand in the front and risk death. In the twelfth book Sarpedon explains to Glaucus why the two of them enjoy honour, land, and the best portions at the feast back home. The answer is that they earn these privileges by fighting in the front line where the battle is hottest. The pursuit of #arete, excellence, and #kleos, undying fame, is presented as the natural business of a nobleman. War is where a leader proves that he deserves his standing. The material culture of the poem matches this ethic. Homeric heroes ride to battle in #chariot_warfare, they own elaborate armour handed down or won as prizes, and they exchange gifts and boasts that mark them off from ordinary men. The famous meeting of Diomedes and Glaucus in the sixth book, where the two discover a bond of guest friendship inherited from their grandfathers and exchange armour instead of blows, shows a world in which the elite recognise one another across the lines of battle. This is warfare embedded in a network of aristocratic households and personal ties. It is easy to see why readers concluded that Homeric fighting was, at heart, the private affair of a warrior class. Yet even here the picture is more complicated than the orthodox summary allows. The word usually translated as champion, #promachoi, literally means those who fight in front or foremost fighters. It does not describe a fixed rank of super soldiers who alone decide battles while everyone else stands idle. The promachoi are the men currently at the front edge of the fighting, and their number changes as the battle shifts. A hero can be a promachos in one moment and can pull back among the crowd in the next. The chariots, too, do not behave like a real chariot arm. Instead of massed charges, the Homeric chariot works mostly as a means of transport, carrying a leader up to the fighting and standing ready to carry him away again. Scholars have long argued that this is an anachronism, a half remembered version of Bronze Age practice that the poet reshaped to fit a later style of foot combat. The duels themselves also sit uneasily inside their own narrative. The formal single combats of the third and seventh books are marked out as special occasions, hedged with oaths and agreements, and they fail to settle anything. Paris is whisked away by a goddess before Menelaus can finish him, and the truce collapses. The Ajax and Hector duel ends with an exchange of gifts and no decision. These are set pieces, not the ordinary texture of the war. When the fighting resumes, it is not a series of arranged duels but a churning, crowded affair in which named men kill and die amid a much larger struggle they do not control. The heroic surface of the Iliad is real, but it is a surface, and beneath it a very different kind of battle is at work. The Mass in Motion: Evidence for Collective Fighting in the Iliad If we read past the spotlight on the heroes, the Iliad turns out to be full of crowds. The armies are enormous. The poem devotes a long catalogue in its second book to listing the contingents that came to Troy, contingent after contingent, each with its leaders and its ships and its men. These are not small bands of nobles. They are large hosts drawn from many communities, and they are described again and again as moving, shouting, and fighting together. The word #laos and its plural refer to this body of ordinary fighters, and another word, the #plethys or multitude, names the mass into which the front fighters retreat when hard pressed. The similes that Homer uses to describe armies on the move point straight at collective action. The advancing host is compared to waves rolling onto a beach one after another, to clouds settling on a mountain, to flocks of birds, to swarms of flies around milk pails, and to fire sweeping through a forest. These images work only if the poet is picturing a dense, moving body, not a scatter of individual champions. When the two sides come together, the poem describes shields pressing against shields, helmet crowding helmet, and the front ranks locking together so tightly that a thrown spear cannot find the ground. Whatever else these lines are, they are not a description of lone duels on empty ground. Formation and order are present too, though they are easy to miss. In the fourth book the old warrior Nestor draws up his men with care. He places the chariots in front, the mass of foot behind as a strong wall, and the weaker fighters in the middle where they will be forced to fight whether they want to or not. He gives a firm instruction that no man should charge ahead of the rest in a rush to show off, and that no man should hang back. Everyone is to keep his place in the line and fight the enemy in front of him. This is the language of collective discipline. It cautions against exactly the individual glory seeking that the heroic model treats as normal, and it treats the maintenance of the ranks as the key to victory. The very use of the word from which "phalanx" derives supports this collective reading. In the Iliad the plural form regularly names the ranks or bodies of fighters who advance and clash. Fighting takes place among the phalanges, along the phalanges, and through the phalanges. When Homer wants to describe a determined stand, he speaks of ranks that do not break, of men who fill the gaps left by the fallen, and of a line that holds. Hans van Wees built much of his revisionist case on passages like these, arguing that the mass of ordinary warriors, and not a handful of champions, plays the decisive role in Homeric battle. On his reading the champions matter because they inspire and steady the mass, not because they win the war by themselves. There is also a repeated and telling motif that binds the individual to the collective, and that is the fight over the body of a fallen man. Again and again in the poem, when a warrior falls, both sides surge forward, one to strip the corpse of its precious armour and the other to rescue it for honourable burial. The struggle over the body of Patroclus in the seventeenth book is the longest and most intense of these, a grinding, crowded, shoulder to shoulder contest that draws in heroes and their followers alike. Cezary Kucewicz has shown how central the treatment of the dead was to early Greek military culture, and these corpse fights are a perfect example of a moment where personal honour and collective effort become impossible to separate. To save your friend's body you must fight in a mass. The long middle books of the poem make the collective character of the fighting especially plain. When the Trojans press the Greeks back against the wall they have built around their ships, the combat becomes a sustained struggle of masses rather than a sequence of duels. In the twelfth book the Trojans assault the wall in ordered companies, and the defenders man the rampart shoulder to shoulder, hurling stones down on the attackers while the attackers try to tear the defences apart. In the thirteenth and fifteenth books the fighting rolls back and forth among the ships, with whole bodies of men advancing, giving way, and rallying together. Even the death of Patroclus in the sixteenth book, one of the emotional peaks of the poem, takes place amid a crowd, and his corpse at once becomes the centre of a huge collective battle. These are not the arranged single combats of the third and seventh books. They are extended engagements in which the fate of the army depends on whether the ranks hold, and they show the poet perfectly capable of imagining war as the coordinated effort of many. Missiles complicate the picture in a different way. The poem is full of thrown spears, stones, and arrows. Heroes carry pairs of throwing spears as often as a single thrusting weapon, and archers such as Paris and Teucer play real parts in the fighting. This constant use of ranged weapons is very hard to square with the image of a rigid shield wall grinding forward, since a tight phalanx has little use for men darting out to throw. It fits far better with the fluid, back and forth fighting that van Wees reconstructed, in which the front is porous and men move in and out of contact. The presence of so much missile combat is one of the strongest signs that #Homeric_warfare is not yet classical phalanx warfare, and that its collective fighting has an open, mobile character all its own. Put together, these features describe a battle that is neither a tournament of champions nor a Classical phalanx. It is a large, loud, crowded affair in which masses of men advance behind and around their leaders, in which formation matters but is loose and can dissolve into open fighting, in which missiles fly freely, and in which the bravest push to the front and fall back again as the fight demands. This is the collective machinery running under the heroic surface, and recognising it is the key to reading the poem as a transitional record. Equipment and Its Ambiguities: Armour, the Aspis, and the Panoply Weapons and armour lie at the heart of the orthodox theory, so the physical evidence deserves careful attention. The full hoplite #panoply of the Classical age was a recognisable and standardised kit. It included a bronze helmet, most famously the Corinthian type that covered the whole face, a bronze breastplate or a later composite of layered linen, bronze greaves for the shins, a thrusting spear, a short sword, and above all the great round shield called the aspis or hoplon. The question is when these pieces appeared, whether they arrived together, and what they tell us about how men fought. The archaeology gives a mixed answer, and this is where the #gradualism case is strongest. Individual elements of the panoply show up at different times across the eighth and seventh centuries. A very early and complete set, the well known bronze cuirass and helmet from a grave at Argos, dates to around the last quarter of the eighth century and shows that heavy body armour existed early. But the finds from sanctuaries, where warriors dedicated their gear to the gods, suggest that full equipment was never universal. Among the many pieces recovered at Olympia, for instance, greaves and metal breastplates are far less common than the shield and helmet, which implies that in the Archaic period only a minority of fighters wore the complete kit. The painted pottery of the period tends to show men in the full panoply, but the actual finds show that art presented a cleaner and richer image than life. Equipment, in short, was adopted unevenly and over a long stretch of time. The #aspis shield carries the greatest theoretical weight, because the orthodox argument leans so heavily on it. This shield, roughly a metre across and deeply bowl shaped, was held by a bronze armband at the forearm and a grip near the rim. This double grip let a man carry a large, heavy shield securely, but it also meant that the shield sat squarely across the body and projected mainly to the left. The classic argument, developed most forcefully by Hanson and others, is that such a shield only made sense in a close formation, because each man's shield helped cover the exposed right side of the man next to him. On this reading the shield practically forces the phalanx into being. The trouble is that the shield argument can be pushed too far. A large bowl shaped shield is certainly well suited to standing in a line, but it can also be used by a man fighting more loosely, and the physical evidence does not prove that the shield could only work in a wall. The date of the aspis, usually placed around 700 BCE, tells us that the tool existed early, but a tool does not automatically create a tactic. Snodgrass's basic point holds. The existence of a piece of equipment is not the same as the existence of the disciplined formation later associated with it, and men may have carried hoplite gear for generations before they fought in the classic manner. Recent experimental work has added a fascinating layer to this old argument without settling it. Researchers reconstructing the bronze bell cuirass, the Corinthian helmet, and the aspis, and testing them under pressure with physical models and computer analysis, have suggested that the pieces of the panoply were shaped to work together under compression. On this reading the rolled rims and curved surfaces of the bronze cuirass helped it resist being crushed, and the whole kit may have been designed or gradually adapted to let a man survive inside a pushing mass of bodies without being suffocated. If this is right, it would support both an early date for some form of massed pushing and the reality of the #othismos, the mass shove that the Classical sources mention. Yet even the authors of this work are careful, and the controversy over whether the othismos was a literal shove or a metaphor for pressure remains open. What does the Iliad itself show? Its armour is heroic and often fabulous. Achilles receives divine armour made by a god, and the descriptions of shields, especially the vast shield of Achilles decorated with whole scenes of human life, are works of imagination rather than inventory. But the ordinary business of arming appears too, and the poem knows helmets, greaves, breastplates, spears, and shields as the normal gear of a fighter. Crucially, the shields of the poem are varied. Some are described as body covering, tower like shields slung from the neck, closer to older types than to the neat round aspis of the Classical hoplite. The equipment in Homer, like the tactics, is a blend of old and new. It is not yet the standardised panoply of the fifth century, and this again marks the poem as belonging to a period of change rather than to a settled system. Social and Economic Drivers of the Transition Military change never happens in a vacuum, and the shift from heroic to hoplite warfare has always been tied to broader changes in Greek society. The Archaic period, roughly the eighth to the early fifth century BCE, was a time of deep transformation. After the long depression that followed the collapse of the Bronze Age palaces, population grew, contact with the wider Mediterranean revived, writing returned in the form of the alphabet, and above all the #polis, the independent city state, took shape as the basic unit of Greek life. Any account of the phalanx has to fit inside this larger story. The orthodox theory offered a bold link between the two. In its strongest form, associated with Hanson, the rise of the hoplite went hand in hand with the rise of a class of independent middling farmers. These men owned enough land to feed a family and to buy their own armour, but they were not great aristocrats. When such men became the backbone of the army, so the argument runs, they also gained the leverage to demand a political voice, and the growth of broader, more egalitarian forms of government followed from their military importance. Some ancient writers, including Aristotle, made a similar connection, suggesting that changes in who did the fighting drove changes in who held power. On this view the phalanx was the cradle of a kind of early citizen politics. This attractive theory has faced heavy criticism, and much of it comes from the revisionist camp. Van Wees argued that the egalitarian hoplite army of the imagination developed only slowly across more than two centuries, and that something resembling the romantic picture of a broad middle class militia can only be detected after the Persian Wars. In his account war for most of the Archaic period actually strengthened social divisions rather than dissolving them, because the men who could afford the best equipment and who led in battle were the same wealthy families who dominated the community. Kucewicz's study of the war dead in Archaic Athens points the same way. He found that the customs and monuments of that early period reflected the hierarchical, elite centred values of the Homeric world far more than the civic equality of the Classical city. The idea that the phalanx quickly created a society of equals looks, on this evidence, too neat. A more moderate reading is possible and probably closer to the truth. The spread of hoplite equipment across a wider slice of the population was real, and over the long run it did change the balance between the great families and the broader body of landholders. But the change was gradual, uneven, and often resisted. The elite did not simply hand over their military role. They fought in the front ranks, they paid for the best gear, and they used war to display and defend their status, exactly as the leaders in Homer do. What shifted, slowly, was the weight of the ordinary fighter. As more men could arm themselves and as communities came to rely on larger bodies of foot soldiers, the practical dependence of the community on the mass grew, and with it, over generations, came pressure for a wider share in the running of the city. Economic factors ran underneath all of this. The spread of iron working made weapons cheaper and more widely available than the bronze of the palace age. The growth of farming and the settlement of land created a class of men with a real stake in defending their fields and a real ability to pay for arms. Trade and colonisation brought contact with other military traditions around the Mediterranean and the Near East, and some scholars have argued that the hoplite himself was partly a product of that wider world of exchange, mercenary service, and borrowing rather than a purely Greek invention. The city state, meanwhile, gave war a new frame. Instead of raids led by chiefs for personal gain, wars increasingly became contests between communities over borders and survival, and such wars needed and rewarded the disciplined cooperation of many men. The poetry that comes after Homer helps confirm where things were heading. The Spartan poet Tyrtaeus, writing in the seventh century, urged his fellow citizens to stand fast, to plant their feet, to bite their lips, and to hold their ground rather than flee. His verses praise the man who dies in the front rank for his city, and they treat steadiness in a body of fighters as the highest virtue. The poet Callinus, working in the same century, issued similar calls to collective courage. Some scholars have read these poems as proof that the disciplined phalanx already existed, while others, van Wees among them, have noted that Tyrtaeus still describes light armed men and slingers fighting alongside the heavy troops, which points to a battlefield less tidy than the Classical model. Either way, the shift of emphasis is clear. Where Homer sang the fame of the individual champion, the Archaic war poets increasingly praise the man who holds his place in the line. The values of the #citizen_soldier are coming into focus, even if the mature formation is not yet fully in place. The Iliad captures this world at an early stage of the process. Its leaders behave like Archaic aristocrats, competing for honour, wealth, and followers. Its wars are still bound up with the prestige of great households. Yet the poem also knows large communal hosts, the value of holding the line, and the shame of the man who thinks only of himself. The social tension that would eventually reshape Greek politics is already visible in the friction between the individual pursuit of glory and the collective demands of the battle. The transition in warfare was, at bottom, part of a transition in what it meant to belong to a Greek community. The Iliad as a Transitional Document The central claim of this article can now be stated plainly. The fighting in the Iliad is transitional because the poem is transitional. It was built by an oral tradition that carried motifs and language across many generations, and it reached its final shape in a period when Greek warfare and Greek society were both changing. As a result the poem does not preserve one coherent system of combat. It preserves a blend, and the blend is exactly what we should expect from a text sitting on the hinge between the world of the warrior chief and the world of the #citizen_soldier. Consider how neatly the two sides of the poem map onto the two ends of the historical change. The heroic surface, with its aristeiai, its formal #aristocratic_duels, its chariots, its exchanges of armour between noble enemies, and its relentless focus on personal #kleos, looks back toward an older order in which war was the business of great men and their households. The collective machinery underneath, with its huge hosts, its dense ranks pressing shield to shield, its insistence on holding the line, its crowded fights over the dead, and its decisive role for the #laos, points forward toward the massed infantry warfare of the Classical polis. The poem holds both because it stands between both. This reading dissolves much of the old argument. Scholars who read the Iliad for champions found champions, and scholars who read it for masses found masses, and both were right, because both are there. The mistake was to assume that the poem must describe a single style of fighting and that the historian's job was to decide which one. Once we accept that an oral epic can fold several layers of practice together, the contradictions become evidence rather than problems. The presence of both individual and collective fighting is not a flaw in the poem or a puzzle to be solved. It is a faithful trace of a society in motion. The transitional reading also explains some of the poem's strangest military features. The chariot that carries a hero to the fight and then waits to carry him away makes little sense as real tactics but perfect sense as an old motif reshaped for a new style of foot combat. The mixture of throwing spears and thrusting spears reflects a moment before the thrusting spear of the classic phalanx had become dominant. The variety of shields, from body covering older forms to something nearer the round aspis, reflects a period of experiment before the panoply was standardised. Each of these oddities is a fossil, a survival from an earlier layer preserved inside a later poem. It is worth stressing what the poem does not contain, because absence matters here too. There is no drilled, uniformly equipped, professional phalanx marching in step and manoeuvring on command. There is no clear sign of the tightly regulated, almost ritual contest that some scholars once thought defined Archaic battle, the very idea that Krentz argued was a later invention. What we find instead is looser, older, and more fluid, closer to the open fighting that van Wees reconstructed than to the neat block of the history textbook. The Iliad shows us collective warfare in an early and unpolished form, still shot through with the values and habits of an aristocratic age. That is precisely why it deserves to be called transitional and not simply pre hoplite or proto hoplite. Reading the poem this way carries a lesson for how we use literary sources in military history more generally. An epic is not a field manual, and it should not be squeezed to yield a single tactical system. Its value lies in the texture it preserves, the assumptions it takes for granted, and the tensions it cannot hide. The Iliad is most useful to the historian not when it is forced to answer the question "how did they fight," but when it is allowed to show us a society arguing with itself about the relationship between the heroic individual and the fighting community. That argument is the real subject of its battle scenes, and it is the same argument that would eventually produce the phalanx. Discussion The picture drawn here has several implications for the wider study of #Archaic_Greece. The first is that we should be suspicious of sudden revolutions. The neat story of a single hoplite reform that transformed war and politics in a generation has not survived close contact with either the archaeological record or the text of Homer. Equipment came piecemeal, tactics evolved slowly, and the social effects unfolded across centuries. The language of revolution flatters the historian who wants a clean turning point, but the evidence rewards patience with a long and uneven process. The second implication concerns the limits of the sources. Every kind of evidence for this period is partial. The poems are literary and layered. The pottery is selective and often shows an idealised image. The armour comes mostly from graves and sanctuaries, which preserve the gear of the wealthy and the pious rather than a fair sample of every fighter. No single source can settle the debate, and the strongest conclusions come from reading them against one another. When the fluid, missile filled fighting of the Iliad, the uneven distribution of armour in the sanctuaries, and the late hardening of the word #hoplite into its technical sense all point the same way, we can be reasonably confident. When they conflict, honesty requires us to hold the question open. A third point concerns the danger of reading later categories backward. Much old scholarship went looking for the phalanx in the Archaic evidence and, unsurprisingly, found hints of it everywhere, because it already knew what it wanted to see. As several recent studies have warned, the very habit of asking "where is the phalanx" distorts the enquiry. The people who fought in the eighth and seventh centuries were not trying to become Classical hoplites. They were solving their own problems with the tools and traditions they had. Reading their warfare on its own terms, rather than as a rough draft of something later, is the harder but more rewarding path, and it is the path that the recent turn toward warfare "beyond the phalanx" has opened up. Finally, the transitional reading of the Iliad suggests a fruitful way to handle the disagreement between the orthodox, gradualist, and revisionist camps. Rather than treating them as rival answers to one question, we can treat them as descriptions of different points on a single long curve. The revisionist model fits the early end of the curve, the world of Homer and the seventh century, with its open and fluid fighting. The gradualist model captures the slow middle, the piecemeal spread of equipment and the uneven growth of formation. The orthodox model, stripped of its claim to suddenness, describes the later end, the mature Classical phalanx and the society that went with it. The debate has lasted so long partly because each side has hold of a real part of a moving picture. Homer, standing at the beginning of the curve, lets us see where the whole process started. Conclusion The evolution of the phalanx was not the work of a single inventor, a single battle, or a single generation. It was a long transformation that reached from the collapse of the Bronze Age palaces to the disciplined infantry of the Classical city, and it moved in step with the birth of the polis and the slow redistribution of military and political weight within Greek communities. Set against that long process, the fighting described in the #the_Iliad occupies a crucial early position, and its meaning becomes clear only when we stop asking it to be one thing. The poem is neither a record of pure #aristocratic_duels nor a description of a finished #hoplite_phalanx. It is a layered oral tradition that preserves both the heroic individual and the fighting mass, both the champion hungry for #kleos and the crowded ranks that hold the line and struggle over the dead. The prominence of its heroes is partly a trick of storytelling, and beneath that bright surface runs a collective and mobile kind of warfare, full of missiles and movement, that already points toward the future. In this sense #Homeric_warfare is a genuine transitional phase, a bridge between an older world of warrior lords and the later world of the #citizen_soldier who fought and voted as one of many. For students of #military_history, the case carries a broader value. It shows how a literary text can be a serious historical source when it is read with care, not squeezed for a single answer but allowed to reveal the tensions of its age. It shows how the study of arms and armour, of society and economy, and of poetry can be brought together to reconstruct a change that no one source records on its own. And it shows why the long quarrel over the origins of the phalanx has been so productive even without a final verdict, because each position has captured a real stage of a process that was always in motion. The phalanx did not spring fully formed from a heroic past. It grew, slowly and unevenly, out of the very world that Homer sings, and the Iliad remains our best window onto the moment when that growth began. References Cartledge, P. (1977). Hoplites and heroes: Sparta's contribution to the technique of ancient warfare. Journal of Hellenic Studies, 97, 11 to 27. Finley, M. I. (2002). The world of Odysseus (reprint edition). New York: New York Review Books. (Original work published 1954.) Hanson, V. D. (Ed.). (1991). Hoplites: The classical Greek battle experience. London: Routledge. Hanson, V. D. (2000). The western way of war: Infantry battle in classical Greece (2nd ed.). Berkeley: University of California Press. Kagan, D., and Viggiano, G. F. (Eds.). (2013). Men of bronze: Hoplite warfare in ancient Greece. Princeton: Princeton University Press. Konijnendijk, R. (2018). Classical Greek tactics: A cultural history. Leiden: Brill. Konijnendijk, R., Kucewicz, C., and Lloyd, M. (Eds.). (2021). Brill's companion to Greek land warfare beyond the phalanx. Leiden and Boston: Brill. Krentz, P. (2002). Fighting by the rules: The invention of the hoplite agon. Hesperia, 71(1), 23 to 39. Krentz, P. (2010). The battle of Marathon. New Haven: Yale University Press. Kucewicz, C. (2021). The treatment of the war dead in archaic Athens: An ancestral custom. London: Bloomsbury Academic. Matthew, C. (2012). A storm of spears: Understanding the Greek hoplite at war. Barnsley: Pen and Sword Military. Raaflaub, K. A., and van Wees, H. (Eds.). (2009). A companion to archaic Greece. Malden, Massachusetts: Wiley Blackwell. Sabin, P., van Wees, H., and Whitby, M. (Eds.). (2007). The Cambridge history of Greek and Roman warfare, Volume 1: Greece, the Hellenistic world and the rise of Rome. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Schwartz, A. (2009). Reinstating the hoplite: Arms, armour and phalanx fighting in archaic and classical Greece. Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag. Snodgrass, A. M. (1964). Early Greek armour and weapons: From the end of the Bronze Age to 600 BC. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. Snodgrass, A. M. (1965). The hoplite reform and history. Journal of Hellenic Studies, 85, 110 to 122. Taylor, R. (2022). The Greek hoplite phalanx: The iconic heavy infantry of the classical Greek world. Barnsley: Pen and Sword Military. van Wees, H. (1992). Status warriors: War, violence and society in Homer and history. Amsterdam: J. C. Gieben. van Wees, H. (1994). The Homeric way of war: The Iliad and the hoplite phalanx, parts I and II. Greece and Rome, 41(1), 1 to 18, and 41(2), 131 to 155. van Wees, H. (Ed.). (2000). War and violence in ancient Greece. London and Swansea: Duckworth and the Classical Press of Wales. van Wees, H. (2004). Greek warfare: Myths and realities. London: Duckworth. #Homeric_warfare #hoplite_phalanx #Archaic_Greece #the_Iliad #military_history #aristocratic_duels #promachoi #othismos #Greek_warfare #phalanx_evolution #ancient_warfare #Hans_van_Wees #hoplite_revolution #classical_studies #military_transition

  • The Mycenaean Collapse: Reading Economic Vulnerabilities and Resource Scarcity into the Trojan War

    Around 1200 BC, the palace-based societies of the Aegean and the wider eastern Mediterranean fell apart within the space of a few generations. Writing stopped, palaces burned, long-distance trade thinned, and populations moved or shrank. This article asks a simple question with a complicated answer: can the story told in the #Iliad help us understand the economic and resource pressures that pushed the #Mycenaean world toward collapse, and can archaeology in turn help us read the poem more carefully? The paper does not argue that the #Trojan_War, as Homer describes it, happened exactly that way. Instead it treats the epic as a much later memory shaped by centuries of retelling, and it looks for points where the poem's concerns line up with what excavation, science, and the Hittite records now show. The core claim is that the #Bronze_Age_Collapse is best read as a story of #economic_vulnerability rather than of any single disaster. Mycenaean prosperity depended on tightly managed #palace_economy systems, on long and fragile #supply_chains for metals and other goods, and on stable harvests. When drought, disrupted trade, internal strain, and violence arrived together, the system had little slack left. Reading the Iliad against this background, the war over Troy appears less as a quarrel about a stolen queen and more as a memory of competition over wealth, land, plunder, and control of routes at a moment when resources were tightening. The paper reviews recent work on climate, on the metals trade, and on the destructions themselves, including studies that question how sudden and how violent the collapse really was. It concludes that the poem and the archaeology, read side by side and with care, both point to a world where interconnection had quietly become a weakness. Keywords: Mycenaean collapse; Late Bronze Age; Trojan War; Iliad; palace economy; resource scarcity; trade networks; climate change; systems collapse; social memory. 1. Introduction For students meeting the ancient Mediterranean for the first time, the end of the Late Bronze Age can feel like one of history's great vanishing acts. Around 1200 BC, a group of connected and wealthy societies that had traded, fought, and written to one another for centuries slid into decline. The great #Mycenae citadel in southern Greece, the palace at #Pylos, the Hittite capital in central Anatolia, and cities along the Levantine coast all show signs of trouble within a fairly short window. Some were burned. Some were simply left. The system of palaces, scribes, and record-keeping that had organised much of Aegean life disappeared, and it did not return for a long time (Cline, 2021; Middleton, 2024a). The same period gave later Greeks their most famous story. The #Iliad, along with the poems and legends that grew up around it, remembers a great war fought by Greek kings against the city of #Troy in the northwest corner of Anatolia. The war is set in a heroic past, in a time of powerful kings, bronze weapons, and long sea voyages. Ancient Greeks generally believed it had really happened, even if the details had grown in the telling. Modern scholars are more cautious, but they have long noticed that the world the poem describes, in its broad shape, matches the world archaeologists have uncovered from the #Late_Bronze_Age (Cline, 2021). This article sits at the meeting point of those two things: the physical evidence of #collapse and the literary memory of a war. Its aim is to read #economic_vulnerability and #resource_scarcity into the Trojan War tradition, and to do so responsibly. That means being honest about what the poem is. The Iliad was composed centuries after the events it claims to describe, probably taking something close to its final form in the eighth century BC, and it was passed down by singers before it was ever written. It is not a report. It is memory, shaped by performance, by the needs of audiences, and by the values of a later age (Knapp, 2021). Yet memory is not nothing. If the poem preserves even a distorted echo of the Bronze Age world, then the pressures that shaped that world, including the economic ones, may leave traces in the story. The argument proceeds in stages. First, the paper sets out the shape of the Late Bronze Age world and its trade. Then it examines the structure of the #Mycenaean #palace_economy and why that structure carried built-in risks. It turns next to the specific problem of #resource_scarcity, especially in metals and grain, and then to the growing scientific evidence for #drought and #famine. With that background in place, the paper reads the Iliad itself, asking what economic anxieties the poem might carry, and it reviews the Hittite evidence for a real conflict around the site the Hittites called #Wilusa. Finally, it looks at the collapse as an event, including recent work that argues it was slower and less violent than the old picture suggested, and it draws the threads together. 2. Materials and Approach This is an interpretive and synthetic study rather than a report of new excavation. Its "materials" are of three kinds, and part of the method is simply keeping them apart so that they can be compared honestly. The first kind is archaeological and scientific evidence. This includes excavation reports from Aegean and eastern Mediterranean sites, the study of #shipwreck cargoes such as the famous #Uluburun wreck, and hard science drawn from tree rings, pollen, isotopes, and sediment cores. This body of evidence has grown quickly in the last few years, and much of what this paper relies on was published between 2021 and 2025 (Manning et al., 2023; Powell et al., 2022; Williams et al., 2025). The second kind is textual evidence from the Bronze Age itself. The most important sources here are the #Linear_B tablets, the administrative records kept by the Mycenaean palaces, and the diplomatic and administrative texts of the #Hittites and their neighbours. These texts are not literature. They are inventories, ration lists, and letters, which makes them valuable precisely because they were not written to impress anyone (Cline, 2021). The third kind is literary and much later: the Iliad and the surrounding Greek epic tradition. This evidence must be handled with the most care, because it comes from a different century, a different social world, and a form of art that reshapes whatever it touches. The approach taken here is comparative and cautious. Where the three kinds of evidence agree, the agreement is worth noting but is not treated as proof. Where they disagree, the disagreement is treated as information about how memory works. Throughout, the paper follows a principle that has become common in recent collapse studies: complex outcomes usually have many causes, and single-cause explanations, however dramatic, tend to be wrong (Middleton, 2024a). The goal is not to declare that the Trojan War "really" was an economic conflict, but to show that reading it through the lens of #economic_vulnerability is both possible and illuminating. 3. The Late Bronze Age World System To understand why the Mycenaean world was fragile, it helps to see how connected it was. In the centuries before 1200 BC, the eastern Mediterranean held a cluster of major powers that were in regular contact. Egypt, the Hittite empire in Anatolia, the kingdoms of the Levant, the island of Cyprus, Assyria and Babylonia further east, and the Mycenaean kingdoms of Greece formed a network of trade and diplomacy that some scholars describe as an early kind of globalisation (Cline, 2021). The evidence for this #interconnection is striking. Kings wrote to one another as "brothers," exchanged lavish gifts, arranged royal marriages, and complained when shipments were late. Goods travelled enormous distances. Egyptian objects turn up in Greece, Mycenaean pottery turns up along the coasts of Anatolia and the Levant, and raw materials moved constantly by ship and by overland routes. Cline (2021) has popularised the idea that this was a "small world" network, in which each society sat only a few steps from all the others. That image captures both the strength and the danger of the system. When everything is connected, a shock in one place can travel. The single best snapshot of this world is the #Uluburun shipwreck, a merchant vessel that sank off the southern coast of Turkey around 1320 BC. Its cargo reads like a catalogue of the age: copper and tin ingots, glass, ebony, ivory, resin, pottery, and finished luxury items, drawn from many different lands. Recent scientific work on the ship's #tin has reshaped how we think about the reach of this trade. Powell and colleagues (2022) analysed the tin ingots and concluded that roughly one third came from Central Asia, from sources in what are now Uzbekistan and Tajikistan, while about two thirds came from the Taurus Mountains of Anatolia. Their broader point is important: the supply of tin depended not only on great empires but also on many small regional communities passing goods along, step by step, across thousands of kilometres. The picture is still being argued over, which is a healthy sign in a living field. Other specialists have challenged the Central Asian identification, arguing that the isotopic and chemical data do not point clearly to those mines and that the case for a distant eastern source is weaker than claimed (Berger et al., 2023). Meanwhile, a 2025 study pushed the map of the #trade_networks in the opposite direction, arguing on the basis of isotopes and trace elements that #tin ingots from shipwrecks off the coast of Israel match ores from Cornwall and Devon in southwest Britain, and that British tin was reaching the eastern Mediterranean during the height of the Bronze Age (Williams et al., 2025). Whether or not every detail holds up, the combined message is that the metals on which this civilisation depended could come from very far away, through routes that no single ruler controlled. That is the deep structure worth holding on to as we turn to the #Mycenaeans. Their world was rich because it was connected. It was also fragile for exactly the same reason. 4. The Mycenaean Palace Economy and Its Built-In Weaknesses The Mycenaean palaces were not simply royal homes. They were engines of administration. From centres such as Pylos, Mycenae, Tiryns, Thebes, and Knossos on Crete, scribes kept detailed records on clay tablets in the #Linear_B script, an early form of Greek. These tablets record an economy that was heavily managed from the top. They list flocks of sheep, quantities of wool and flax, allotments of grain and oil, teams of workers, bronze rations for smiths, and offerings sent to sanctuaries (Cline, 2021). Scholars describe this arrangement as a #redistribution system, or a palace economy. In simple terms, the palace gathered goods and labour from the surrounding territory, stored and processed them, and then handed them back out according to its own priorities. Raw wool became finished textiles. Local grain fed specialist workers who did not grow their own food. Metal was allocated to bronze-smiths who produced tools and weapons. At the top sat a ruler the tablets call the #wanax, supported by other officials with defined roles. The system tied local communities to the centre and turned the palace into the organising heart of economic life. This structure was efficient, but efficiency and fragility often travel together, and the weaknesses are worth spelling out. First, the system concentrated risk. Because so much depended on the palace, damage to the palace was damage to the whole economy. If the central buildings burned, or if the administration failed, there was no obvious backup. The record-keeping itself was bound up with the palace, which is why the Linear B tablets stop almost the moment the palaces fall. Writing did not slowly fade; it vanished with the institution that used it. Second, the system relied on specialisation, and specialisation relies on supply. Bronze-smiths needed a steady flow of #copper and tin. Perfume-makers needed oil and imported ingredients. Textile workers needed wool from managed flocks. When these workers were fed by the palace rather than farming for themselves, any interruption in supply threatened not just production but the livelihoods of the people the palace had pulled out of ordinary farming (Cline, 2021). Third, the system depended on distant goods it could not produce at home. #Tin in particular had to be imported, sometimes from very far away, as the Uluburun cargo shows. A palace could grow its own grain in a good year, but it could not grow tin. #Bronze, the metal that gave the age its name and its weapons, therefore depended on the health of the whole long-distance network (Powell et al., 2022; Williams et al., 2025). Fourth, the benefits of the system flowed mainly to a narrow elite. Recent surveys of collapse research stress that economic vulnerability is often as much about who holds power and how tightly they hold it as it is about the weather (Middleton, 2024a). A society organised so that a small group controls storage, records, and redistribution can look impressive while sitting on top of tensions that outsiders never see in the archaeological record until the moment things break. None of this means the palaces were doomed. For a long time the system worked well and made the Mycenaean kingdoms wealthy enough to build massive walls, cut great tombs, and trade across the sea. The point is narrower and more useful. The palace economy had little slack. It was built to run smoothly in good conditions, and it had few ways to absorb a run of bad ones. When we later ask why the collapse spread so widely and so fast, this lack of slack is a large part of the answer. 5. Resource Scarcity and the Fragility of Supply If the palace economy was the machine, then metals and grain were its fuel, and both were exposed. Consider #bronze. Bronze is an alloy, made mostly of copper with a smaller amount of tin. Copper was available in several places around the Mediterranean, with Cyprus a major source. Tin was the harder problem. There are few good tin sources anywhere near the Aegean, so tin had to be brought in from outside the region entirely. The recent scientific debate over where Bronze Age tin came from, whether from Central Asia, from Anatolia, or from as far away as Britain, only underlines the basic point (Berger et al., 2023; Powell et al., 2022; Williams et al., 2025). The metal that armed the warriors of the Iliad and equipped every palace workshop came down long, thin chains of exchange that passed through many hands and many territories. Any serious disruption anywhere along those chains, whether from war, piracy, or the failure of a distant partner, could tighten the supply. This is where resource scarcity becomes more than a background condition. In a palace economy that has organised its whole society around metal production and distribution, a metals shortage is not just an inconvenience. It threatens the workshops, the workers, the weapons, and the prestige goods that helped rulers keep their followers loyal. A ruler who cannot supply bronze cannot easily reward supporters, arm defenders, or maintain the trade that brings in other goods. Grain scarcity was, if anything, more immediately dangerous. Everyone has to eat. The Linear B records show palaces managing agricultural land and grain in detail, which tells us both that food was central and that its distribution was politically sensitive. A few bad harvests in a row could turn a managed surplus into a shortage. In a world of dense populations, walled towns, and specialists who did not grow their own food, hunger is a fast-acting solvent for social order (Cline, 2021). There is even a striking piece of contemporary evidence for grain anxiety at the highest levels. Hittite records from the final decades of the empire show the great kings of Anatolia arranging for grain to be shipped to them, and referring in urgent terms to matters of life and death connected to food. These are not the words of a comfortable superpower. They are the words of a state that was worried about feeding itself. When later scientific work pointed to severe drought in exactly this region and period, those anxious letters suddenly read like eyewitness testimony to a real crisis (Manning et al., 2023). The deeper lesson is about coupling. In modern language we might say the Late Bronze Age economies were tightly coupled: linked so closely that a problem in one part passed quickly to the others. Metal supply, food supply, craft production, elite power, and long-distance trade were all bound together. That binding produced wealth in good times. In bad times, it meant that trouble did not stay contained. A metals shortage strained the workshops, a food shortage strained the population, a trade disruption strained both, and a ruler weakened on one front was weakened on all of them. This is the practical meaning of economic vulnerability, and it is the condition into which the evidence for #climate_change now fits. 6. Climate, Drought, and Famine For a long time, climate was treated as a fringe explanation for the #Bronze_Age_Collapse. That has changed. A series of studies drawing on pollen, sediment, and especially tree rings has built a strong case that the eastern Mediterranean suffered serious drying around the time the palaces fell, and the newest work has made the timing remarkably precise (Manning et al., 2023). The most important recent contribution studied ancient wood from central Anatolia, the Hittite heartland. By reading the pattern of tree rings, which record good and bad growing years, and by combining them with chemical analysis, the researchers identified an unusually harsh episode: three consecutive years of severe #drought around 1198 to 1196 BC, right at the point when the Hittite empire was falling apart (Manning et al., 2023). Three failed harvests in a row is a scenario that can break even a well-organised state. Stored grain runs out, animals die, seed grain gets eaten, and the following years start from an even worse position. This finding matters because it moves the climate argument from "the region was generally drying" to "there was a specific, short, brutal crisis at a specific moment," which is a much sharper tool for explaining sudden collapse. This fits into a broader pattern that other researchers have described across the eastern Mediterranean, sometimes called a longer drought event centred on roughly 1200 BC. In Cline's revised assessment, climate has moved much closer to the centre of the story than it was in earlier accounts. He now treats #megadrought as one of the principal drivers behind the many problems that Late Bronze Age societies faced, even while insisting that it was not the only cause (Cline, 2021). That last point deserves emphasis, because it is where careful scholars part company with dramatic headlines. Climate did not act alone, and it did not act on a healthy system. It acted on the fragile, tightly coupled economies described in the previous sections. A run of drought in a society with plenty of slack is a hardship. The same drought in a society whose food, metals, craft production, and political order are all bound together, and whose whole administration runs through a single vulnerable centre, can be the push that starts a cascade (Middleton, 2024a). We should also be honest about the limits of the climate evidence. Proxy records like tree rings and pollen do not cover every region evenly. Dating is not always exact. Some scholars argue that the signal for a single great drought is clearer in some places than others, and that the eastern Mediterranean did not dry out uniformly. Knapp (2021), reviewing the evidence, urges caution against turning climate into a new single cause that simply replaces the old ones. The responsible position is that drought was real, that it was severe in key regions at key moments, and that it was one powerful stress among several rather than a lone executioner. Even with those cautions, the climate evidence transforms how we read the period. #Famine is no longer a guess. It is written into the wood of Anatolian trees and hinted at in the panicked letters of Hittite kings. And once famine enters the picture, the human behaviour that the Iliad remembers, the raiding, the fighting over resources, the sieges, and the plunder, starts to look less like heroic decoration and more like the recognisable behaviour of people under pressure. 7. The Iliad: What Kind of Evidence Is a Poem? Before we can read economic vulnerability into the #Trojan_War, we have to be clear about what the Iliad is and is not. The Iliad is a long poem about a few weeks in the tenth year of a war between a coalition of Greek kingdoms and the city of Troy. It was composed in Greek, in a traditional poetic style, and it reached something like its familiar form around the eighth century BC, though it draws on much older oral traditions. That places its composition roughly four centuries after the collapse it may distantly remember. During those four centuries the story was carried by singers who performed and reshaped it. This is why the poem cannot be read as a historical record in the ordinary sense (Knapp, 2021). The gap shows up in the poem itself. The Iliad describes a world that mixes different periods. Some details fit the #Late_Bronze_Age well, such as the general picture of powerful kings leading followers across the sea, the use of #bronze weapons, and the memory of great fortified centres. Other details fit the poet's own later Iron Age world better, including some burial customs, some kinds of equipment, and some social arrangements. The poem is a layered object, with older memories and later habits pressed together. A careful reader treats it as memory in motion, not as a snapshot (Knapp, 2021). There is also the matter of what the poem is about. On its surface, the Iliad is not about economics at all. It is about the anger of #Homer's hero Achilles, about honour, about the will of the gods, and about the human cost of war. It frames the whole conflict as a response to the abduction of Helen, the wife of a Greek king, by a Trojan prince. That framing is a story about insult and revenge, not about grain and metal. And yet, if we look underneath the surface, the poem is soaked in material concerns. Its heroes are obsessed with prizes, with the fair division of plunder, with cattle, with land, and with the tangible rewards of status. The quarrel that opens the poem is, in practical terms, a dispute over the distribution of captured goods and people. Achilles withdraws from battle because a more powerful king takes a prize that was rightfully his. Strip away the language of honour, and much of the plot turns on who gets what. This is not a modern imposition on the text. The characters themselves speak constantly about the material stakes of their world. So the poem offers us two layers to read. There is the stated cause, the abduction, which belongs to the world of story. And there is the underlying texture, the endless concern with resources, prizes, and control, which may preserve something real about how Bronze Age elites actually behaved. The rest of this article works with that second layer. 8. Reading Economic Vulnerability into the War If we set aside the abduction of Helen as the kind of memorable, personal cause that stories prefer, and instead ask what a real conflict in the Late Bronze Age northwest of Anatolia would have been about, several economic themes rise to the surface. Each of them connects the poem's world to the pressures already described. The first theme is the wealth of #Troy itself. In the tradition, Troy is not a poor town. It is rich, walled, and enviable, ruled by a great king with many allies. Whatever the historical reality, the memory of Troy is the memory of a prize worth fighting for. In a period of tightening resources, a wealthy fortified city sitting at a strategic point would be exactly the kind of target that hungry or ambitious powers might attack. The poem's insistence on Troy's riches may preserve a real fact about why the site mattered. The second theme is location, and here the geography is genuinely suggestive. The historical site usually identified with Troy sits near the entrance to the straits that connect the Aegean to the sea routes running toward the Black Sea. Control of such a chokepoint means control over the movement of goods: grain, timber, metals, and other materials that had to pass through. In a #trade_networks system as dependent on distant supply as the Late Bronze Age, a city that could tax, block, or protect a key passage held real economic power. A war fought to seize or open that passage would be an economic war dressed, in memory, as a war of honour. The third theme is plunder as a way of life. The Iliad and the surrounding tradition are frank about the fact that these warriors raided. They sacked towns, seized cattle, captured people, and carried off metal and treasure. Raiding was not a shameful sideline. It was a recognised way for elites to gain the wealth that sustained their status. Read against the evidence for resource scarcity, this makes grim sense. When your own harvests fail and your #supply_chains falter, taking what you need from others becomes an attractive option. The heroic economy of the poem, in which raiding brings glory and goods, may be the memory of a real economy under strain, in which raiding brought survival. The fourth theme is the fragility of coalitions. The Greek force in the Iliad is not a single kingdom but an alliance of many kings, held together loosely and prone to quarrels. The whole plot depends on a dispute within that alliance over the sharing of spoils. This too fits a world of economic vulnerability. When resources are tight, the question of who gets what becomes explosive, and cooperation becomes hard to sustain. The poem's central conflict, the breakdown of the alliance over the division of prizes, is a small model of exactly the kind of internal strain that can pull a society apart when there is not enough to go around. Put these themes together and a coherent reading emerges. The Trojan War tradition can be understood as a distant memory of a period in which powerful groups competed, sometimes violently, over wealth, land, plunder, and control of routes, at a time when the underlying resource base was becoming unreliable. The poem remembers the competition in the form its audiences wanted, as a tale of heroes, insults, and revenge. Underneath, it may carry the outline of the harder story: a world where interconnection had become dependence, dependence had become scarcity, and scarcity had become conflict. It is important to be clear about the status of this reading. It is an interpretation, not a proof. The Iliad does not tell us that the war was fought over trade routes, and no honest scholar can claim that it does. What the reading offers is a way of seeing how the poem's obsessions and the archaeology's findings point in the same direction. That convergence is worth taking seriously, precisely because the poet was not trying to write economic history and yet the economic anxieties surface anyway. 9. Feasting, Gift-Exchange, and the Economics of Honour One of the strongest bridges between the world of the palaces and the world of the poem is the role of feasting and gift-giving. In both, the sharing of food, drink, and valuable objects was not a private pleasure. It was a public act with economic and political weight, and following it closely shows how tightly the poem's language of honour is bound to the movement of real goods. The Linear B tablets make the palace side of this plain. Records from Pylos list large quantities of food and drink, along with animals for slaughter, gathered for communal banquets. Specialists read these as evidence that the palace staged feasts on a grand scale and used them as a tool of power. A great feast let a ruler display wealth, reward followers, mark religious occasions, and bind local leaders to the centre by inviting them to eat at the palace's expense. In a society without coined money, hosting was a way of converting stored surplus into loyalty. The ruler who could feed a crowd was a ruler whose position was secure. The same tablets that count sheep and grain therefore also record the raw material of politics (Cline, 2021). The Homeric world runs on the same logic, only dressed in the language of glory. The heroes of the poem live inside what scholars often call a gift economy, in which status is measured by the giving and receiving of tangible things. A warrior's honour is not an abstract feeling. It is made visible in his share of the plunder, in the prizes awarded after victory, and in the gifts exchanged between hosts and guests. When the poem's characters argue about respect, they are almost always arguing about goods. This is why the quarrel that opens the poem is, at bottom, a dispute over distribution. The hero Achilles is enraged because a more powerful king takes from him a prize he had earned. The insult is real, but the substance of the insult is the seizure of property. Later, when the same king tries to win Achilles back, he does not offer an apology alone. He offers an enormous list of gifts: metal, horses, women, cities, and treasure. Reconciliation itself is priced. The poem assumes that honour and wealth are two sides of the same coin, and that a broken relationship between elites is repaired by transferring goods. Even the stated cause of the whole war fits this pattern. In the tradition, the conflict begins when a Trojan prince, received as a guest, carries off the wife of his Greek host. To a modern reader this is a story about love or lust. To the poem's own world it is something more specific and more serious: a violation of guest-friendship, the sacred code that governed hospitality between elite households across the region. Guest-friendship was itself an economic institution. It created lasting bonds between powerful families in different lands, bonds that were sealed with gifts and that made long-distance travel and trade possible in a world without formal states to guarantee safety. To break that code was to attack the very system that held the elite network together. Seen this way, the pretext of the war is not really about one woman. It is about the collapse of trust in the arrangements that let goods and people move safely between kingdoms. The economic reading grows sharper when we set it against #resource_scarcity. Feasting, gift-giving, and guest-friendship all depend on surplus. A ruler can only host if there is food to spare. Gifts can only flow if there are goods to give. Guest-friendship can only function if travel and trade are safe enough to sustain it. When harvests fail and #trade_networks falter, every part of this honour economy comes under pressure at once. There is less to feast with, less to give, and more reason to distrust outsiders. The poem's constant anxiety about the fair division of limited prizes reads, in this light, like the memory of a system straining against shortage. The heroes are not simply greedy. They are competing for a shrinking pool of the goods that made status possible, in the same way that the palaces competed to hold their redistribution systems together as the surplus that fed them grew unreliable. There is a neat symmetry here that is worth stating directly. Inside the palace, the #wanax gathered goods and handed them out to bind his people to him. Inside the poem, kings gather plunder and hand out prizes to bind their followers to them. Both systems turn material wealth into political loyalty. Both work well when there is plenty and break down when there is not. The Iliad's great quarrel over a stolen prize and the archaeological picture of palace economies failing under stress are, in this sense, the same story told twice: once as heroic drama, once as excavated fact. 10. Historicity: Wilusa, Ahhiyawa, and the Hittite Records The idea that the Trojan War preserves some real memory is strengthened, though not settled, by evidence that comes from outside the Greek tradition entirely. The #Hittites, who ruled central Anatolia during the Late Bronze Age, kept extensive records, and among them are references to places and peoples that many scholars connect to the world of the poem. Two names matter most. The Hittites wrote of a land in the west called #Wilusa, and of a powerful people, often across the sea, called the #Ahhiyawa. Since the 1920s, scholars have argued that Wilusa corresponds to the Greek Ilios, one of the poem's names for Troy, and that Ahhiyawa corresponds to the Achaeans, one of the poem's names for the Greeks. The linguistic fit is close, and the geography fits too: Wilusa lay in the northwest of Anatolia, and the Ahhiyawa were a maritime power whose interests kept colliding with Hittite interests along the western coast (Cline, 2021). The Hittite texts describe repeated friction in this western zone over many decades. Wilusa appears as a place that the Hittites had to manage and occasionally fight over. In one well-known letter, a Hittite king refers to a past dispute with the king of Ahhiyawa concerning Wilusa, using language that points to serious tension between the two powers over this very place. A treaty involving a ruler of Wilusa preserves a personal name that strikingly resembles a name given to a Trojan prince in the Greek tradition. None of this proves that Homer's war happened, but it does show that a real place matching Troy was a genuine point of conflict between the Hittites and a Mycenaean-scale power during exactly the right period (Cline, 2021). For the argument of this paper, the significance is twofold. First, the Hittite evidence supports the idea that the memory behind the Trojan War is anchored in real Late Bronze Age geopolitics rather than in pure invention. There really was competition over the northwest Anatolian coast, and it really did involve a western maritime power that looks like the #Mycenaeans. Second, and more importantly, the Hittite evidence frames that competition in terms that are essentially strategic and economic. The struggle over Wilusa was a struggle over a frontier zone and its access to the coast and its routes. It was about control, position, and the flow of goods and influence, not about a stolen queen. In other words, the non-Greek evidence describes the kind of conflict this paper has argued lies underneath the poem: a contest over resources and control, later remembered as a contest over honour. We should keep the uncertainty in view. The identifications of Wilusa with Troy and Ahhiyawa with the Achaeans, while widely accepted, are not universally agreed, and the Hittite records are incomplete and hard to interpret. There may have been several conflicts in the region over the centuries, which the Greek tradition later fused into a single legendary war (Knapp, 2021). But even the most cautious reading leaves us with a real, contested, economically important frontier, which is more than enough to ground the argument. 11. The Collapse as an Event: Destruction, Debate, and Chronology So far this paper has described a fragile system, a set of pressures, and a war tradition that may remember them. It remains to look at the collapse itself, and here recent scholarship has complicated the old picture in useful ways. The traditional image of the Bronze Age Collapse is dramatic and violent: waves of raiders, the mysterious #Sea_Peoples, sweeping across the region, burning cities one after another until an entire civilisation lay in ruins. This picture drew on Egyptian inscriptions that describe great movements of peoples and on the many burnt layers found at Late Bronze Age sites. For a long time it was the standard story. Newer work has pushed back hard against the most extreme version of that story. In a detailed reassessment of the destructions across the eastern Mediterranean, Millek (2023) argues that earthquakes, warfare, and deliberate destruction played a smaller role than the older literature claimed. Many so-called destruction layers, on closer inspection, turn out to be less clear, less violent, or less easy to date to a single moment than had been assumed. His conclusion is that the end of the Late Bronze Age was, in many places, a slower and more drawn-out process than the image of sudden catastrophe suggests. A recent review of his work agrees that this line of research brings us closer to understanding what actually happened, precisely by clearing away exaggerations (Middleton, 2024b). At the same time, other researchers have worked to pin down the timing of the destructions that did occur, especially in the Aegean. Jung and Kardamaki (2022) have focused on synchronising the destructions of the Mycenaean palaces, trying to establish which centres fell when and how those events line up across sites. This kind of careful chronological work matters because "collapse" is not a single dated event but a set of related changes spread over time and space. Getting the sequence right is essential for testing any causal story, including the ones in this paper. The debate over the #Sea_Peoples has moved in a similar direction. The old idea of a single great migration of destructive outsiders has given way to a more careful discussion of mobility, in which movements of people were real but were more varied, smaller in scale, and more entangled with local events than the migration image allows. Knapp (2021) has been especially influential in arguing that many popular migration stories are partly modern myths, projected onto thin evidence, and that palaeogenetic and isotopic data do not support a simple picture of mass invasion. Where does this leave the overall explanation? Most current scholars favour some version of a #systems_collapse model. In this view, the Late Bronze Age world fell not because of one blow but because several stresses arrived close together and reinforced one another. #Drought and #famine weakened food supply. Disruption to trade networks strained the metals economy and the flow of goods. Internal tensions, always present in a system that concentrated wealth and power, worsened under pressure. Some violence and some movement of peoples added to the strain. And the tightly coupled structure of the economies meant that trouble in one area spread to the others, while the failure of one society removed a partner that its neighbours had relied on, passing the shock along like falling dominoes (Cline, 2021; Middleton, 2024a). This model matters for our reading of the Iliad in a specific way. It tells us that the collapse was, at its heart, a failure of a connected economic system under stress. The poem's underlying concerns, with wealth, plunder, scarcity, and the breakdown of cooperation, are the human-scale expression of exactly that kind of failure. The archaeology gives us the structure that broke. The poem gives us the memory of what breaking felt like. 12. Discussion: Interconnection as Weakness Bringing the strands together, a central idea emerges that is worth stating plainly. In the Late Bronze Age, the very features that made the Mycenaean and eastern Mediterranean world successful were the features that made it vulnerable. #Interconnection was a strength as long as the connections held. Long-distance trade brought in tin and other goods that no single region could supply, and it linked kingdoms in a web of mutual benefit. But interconnection is also dependence. A society that cannot make its own bronze without imported tin is only as secure as the routes that bring the tin. When those routes are long, when they cross many territories, and when they depend on the health of distant partners, security becomes a shared and fragile thing (Powell et al., 2022; Williams et al., 2025). The palace economy was a strength as long as the centre functioned. Central management allowed the organisation of specialists, the accumulation of surplus, and the production of the prestige goods that held elite society together. But centralisation concentrates risk. When the palace failed, there was no fallback, and the collapse of the centre meant the collapse of the record-keeping, the redistribution, and the specialist economy all at once (Cline, 2021). Even the wealth and specialisation that supported large populations became a liability under stress. A society with many mouths to feed and many workers who did not grow their own food needs a reliable surplus. Remove the surplus, through drought or the failure of supply, and the same population becomes a source of desperation rather than strength (Manning et al., 2023). This is what economic vulnerability means in practice, and it is why single-cause explanations of the collapse fall short. The point is not that there was a drought, or a war, or a trade disruption, or an internal crisis. The point is that the system had grown so tightly bound that it could not absorb several of these at once. Recent reviews of collapse research describe exactly this shift in thinking, away from dramatic single causes and toward concepts like fragility, vulnerability, and resilience, which focus on how well a system can take a shock and keep functioning (Middleton, 2024a). Reading the Trojan War against this understanding does two things at once. It helps us see the poem more clearly, by drawing attention to the material anxieties woven through it that a purely literary reading might miss. And it helps us feel the archaeology more vividly, by giving a human face to the abstract idea of #systems_collapse. The Iliad's warriors quarrelling over prizes, raiding for cattle and metal, and struggling to hold a fragile coalition together are, in a sense, dramatised versions of the pressures that the tablets, the tree rings, and the shipwrecks describe in colder terms. There is a final, larger reason this reading matters, and recent authors have not been shy about it. Cline (2024) has followed his account of the collapse with a study of what came after, arguing that the aftermath was not only ruin but also transformation, and that the key question is why some societies proved resilient while others did not. He and others draw an explicit parallel to the present, in which we too live in a tightly connected world of long supply chains, shared dependence, and climate pressure (Cline, 2024; Middleton, 2024a). The Late Bronze Age is studied so intently partly because its central lesson feels uncomfortably relevant: a connected world is a rich world, and a rich world can also be a fragile one. 13. Limitations Honesty about limitations is part of good scholarship, and this study has several. The most basic limitation is the nature of the central text. The Iliad is a late poem that cannot be treated as a historical source, and any reading that connects it to the Bronze Age is interpretive. This paper has tried to be explicit about that, treating convergences between the poem and the archaeology as suggestive rather than probative. But the risk of reading modern concerns into an ancient story is always present, and readers should weigh the argument accordingly. A second limitation concerns the archaeological and scientific evidence itself. The record is uneven. Some regions and some periods are far better documented than others. Scientific proxies such as tree rings and pollen are powerful but do not cover every place, and dating is not always precise. The debate over the source of Bronze Age tin, still unresolved, is a good example of how even cutting-edge methods can yield conflicting conclusions (Berger et al., 2023; Powell et al., 2022; Williams et al., 2025). Any synthesis built on such evidence inherits its uncertainties. A third limitation is the collapse debate itself. As recent work shows, scholars disagree about how sudden, how violent, and how uniform the collapse really was (Millek, 2023; Middleton, 2024b). This paper has leaned toward a multi-causal systems collapse model, which is currently the mainstream view, but that model is a framework rather than a settled fact, and future work may reshape it. Finally, the historicity of the Trojan War remains genuinely open. The identifications of #Wilusa with Troy and #Ahhiyawa with the Achaeans are widely held but not certain, and even if they are correct, they may point to several conflicts rather than one (Knapp, 2021). The argument of this paper does not depend on any single war having happened as described. It depends only on the weaker and safer claim that the tradition preserves memory of real economic and strategic competition in the region. Readers who reject even that claim will still, one hopes, find value in the account of the collapse itself. 14. Conclusion The end of the Mycenaean world was not a simple story of invaders at the gates. It was the failure of a connected economic system that had quietly become too fragile to survive several shocks at once. The palaces had organised their societies around central control, specialised production, and long #supply_chains for essential materials, above all the tin needed for #bronze. That arrangement produced real wealth, but it left little room for error. When severe drought struck, when trade networks faltered, when internal tensions sharpened, and when some violence and movement of peoples added to the strain, the tightly coupled system could not hold, and the collapse spread from society to society (Cline, 2021; Manning et al., 2023; Middleton, 2024a). The Iliad, composed centuries later, is not a record of these events. But read with care, it turns out to be full of the concerns that the archaeology now highlights. Beneath its story of honour and revenge lies an obsession with prizes, plunder, cattle, land, and control, and its central plot is a breakdown of cooperation over the sharing of spoils. When we place that texture next to the evidence for resource scarcity and economic vulnerability, and next to the Hittite records of real competition over the frontier land of #Wilusa, the war over Troy begins to look like a distant memory of exactly the kind of struggle that a stressed and connected world produces (Cline, 2021; Knapp, 2021). For students, the deeper takeaway is about method rather than any single conclusion. Neither the poem nor the archaeology can carry the story alone. The poem without the archaeology is a beautiful legend of uncertain relation to fact. The archaeology without the poem is a set of burnt layers, silent tablets, and scientific graphs that struggle to convey what the crisis meant to the people living through it. Read together, and read honestly, each makes the other clearer. The Trojan War becomes a way into the human experience of systems collapse, and the collapse becomes a way to understand what the poem, without meaning to, remembered. In an age that talks constantly about the fragility of its own connected systems, that is a lesson worth learning from the ruins and the songs alike. References Berger, D., Kaniuth, K., Boroffka, N., Bruegmann, G., Kraus, S., Lutz, J., Teufer, M., Wittke, A., and Pernicka, E. (2023). Why Central Asia's Mushiston is not a source for the Late Bronze Age tin ingots from the Uluburun shipwreck. Frontiers in Earth Science, 11, 1211478. https://doi.org/10.3389/feart.2023.1211478 Cline, E. H. (2021). 1177 B.C.: The Year Civilization Collapsed (Revised and updated edition). Princeton University Press. Cline, E. H. (2024). After 1177 B.C.: The Survival of Civilizations. Princeton University Press. Jung, R., and Kardamaki, E. (Eds.). (2022). Synchronizing the Destructions of the Mycenaean Palaces. Austrian Academy of Sciences Press. Knapp, A. B. (2021). Migration Myths and the End of the Bronze Age in the Eastern Mediterranean. Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108990363 Knapp, A. B. (2023). Late Bronze Age Cyprus: A Reassessment of Settlement Structure and Society. Astrom Editions. Manning, S. W., Kocik, C., Lorentzen, B., and Sparks, J. P. (2023). Severe multi-year drought coincident with Hittite collapse around 1198-1196 BC. Nature, 614(7949), 719-724. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-022-05693-y Middleton, G. D. (2024a). Collapse studies in archaeology from 2012 to 2023. Journal of Archaeological Research. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10814-024-09196-4 Middleton, G. D. (2024b). Getting closer to the Late Bronze Age collapse in the Aegean and eastern Mediterranean, c. 1200 BC. Antiquity, 98(397), 260-263. https://doi.org/10.15184/aqy.2023.187 Millek, J. M. (2023). Destruction and Its Impact on Ancient Societies at the End of the Bronze Age. Lockwood Press. Powell, W., Frachetti, M., Pulak, C., Bankoff, H. A., Barjamovic, G., Johnson, M., Mathur, R., Pigott, V. C., Price, M., and Yener, K. A. (2022). Tin from Uluburun shipwreck shows small-scale commodity exchange fueled continental tin supply across Late Bronze Age Eurasia. Science Advances, 8(48), eabq3766. https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.abq3766 Williams, R. A., Roberts, B. W., Marshall, J. E. A., and colleagues. (2025). From Land's End to the Levant: did Britain's tin sources transform the Bronze Age in Europe and the Mediterranean? Antiquity. https://doi.org/10.15184/aqy.2025.41 #Mycenaean_Collapse #Bronze_Age_Collapse #Trojan_War #Iliad #Late_Bronze_Age #Palace_Economy #Resource_Scarcity #Economic_Vulnerability #Ancient_Mediterranean #Homer #Aegean_Archaeology #Climate_And_Collapse #Sea_Peoples #Trade_Networks #Ancient_History

  • The Catalogue of Ships as a Geopolitical Census: Historical Reality versus Epic Anachronism

    The Catalogue of Ships in Book 2 of the Iliad lists the Achaean forces that sailed to Troy, naming leaders, home regions, roughly 170 settlements, and the number of vessels each contingent supplied. Because it reads like an inventory rather than a story, generations of readers have asked whether it preserves a real map of the Greek world before it was written down. This article evaluates the historical reliability of the Catalogue as a record of the Late Bronze Age, weighing the evidence that it remembers a genuine Mycenaean political landscape against the evidence that it was shaped, edited, and distorted by centuries of oral transmission and by later political interests. Drawing on archaeology, the decipherment of Linear B, Hittite diplomatic texts that mention a land called Ahhiyawa, and recent work on social memory and oral poetry, the study argues that the Catalogue is neither a reliable census nor a pure invention. It is a layered document in which authentic Bronze Age geography survives inside a poetic structure that has absorbed later additions. The conclusion is that the Catalogue functions best not as a modern map or a tax register, but as a case study in how a society without writing preserved, reorganised, and sometimes reinvented its own deep past. Keywords: Catalogue of Ships; Iliad Book 2; Mycenaean geography; Late Bronze Age; oral tradition; Homeric historicity; Linear B; Ahhiyawa; social memory; epic poetry 1. Introduction Near the start of the second book of the #Iliad, the narrative pauses. The armies are gathering on the plain before #Troy, and instead of describing the fighting, the poet asks the Muses for help and then delivers a long, formal list. This list, known since antiquity as the #Catalogue_of_Ships (Iliad 2.494 to 759), records the contingents of the Achaean army: who led each group, which towns and districts each group came from, and how many ships each brought. A shorter matching list of the Trojans and their allies follows a little later (2.816 to 877). Together these two passages form the largest surviving block of geographical information anywhere in early Greek poetry. The Catalogue is unusual because it does not behave like the rest of the poem. The Iliad is a story about anger, honour, and death, focused tightly on a few weeks in the tenth year of the war. The Catalogue, by contrast, is an inventory. It counts. It names about twenty-nine contingents led by roughly forty-six captains, and it adds up to 1,186 ships. If we take the crew figures the poem itself provides, with the largest ships carrying 120 men and the smallest around fifty, the fleet would have carried well over one hundred thousand fighters. That precision has always tempted readers to treat the passage as data rather than decoration. This is the core problem the present article addresses. A #geopolitical_census is a snapshot of who controlled what territory at a given moment. A modern reader who opens Book 2 and sees leaders, regions, settlements, and numbers may reasonably ask whether the poet has handed down exactly that: a snapshot of the political map of #Late_Bronze_Age Greece, perhaps around 1200 BCE, the traditional date of the war. If so, the Catalogue would be an extraordinary historical source, older by centuries than any other written description of the Greek mainland's political divisions. But there is an obvious difficulty. The Iliad was composed as we have it in roughly the late eighth century BCE, four hundred years or more after the Mycenaean palaces fell. It was produced by #oral_tradition, meaning that singers passed the material down by performance and memory across many generations before anyone wrote it fixed. Four centuries is a very long time for a memory to travel without writing to anchor it. During that gap the Greek world changed completely: the palaces were destroyed, the script was lost, populations moved, and new political arrangements emerged. To ask whether the Catalogue is a reliable Bronze Age map is therefore also to ask a harder question about human memory itself. Can a society without writing carry an accurate register of towns and rulers across four hundred years of upheaval? Or does such a register inevitably get reshaped by the concerns of each new generation of singers and audiences? This article works through that question in stages. It first describes what the Catalogue actually contains and how it is organised. It then sets out the method by which a poetic text can be tested against physical and documentary evidence. The heart of the article is a two-sided evaluation: first the case that the Catalogue preserves authentic Mycenaean geography, then the case that it is heavily marked by later #epic_anachronism. A separate section brings in the comparative evidence from Hittite records, which offer a rare external check on the Aegean world of the second millennium. The discussion then asks which of the three models best fits the evidence: census, map, or memory. Throughout, the aim is not to prove the Catalogue true or false, but to show precisely where it is reliable, where it is compromised, and why the distinction matters for anyone using early poetry as a historical source. 2. What the Catalogue Contains and How It Is Built To evaluate the Catalogue fairly, we need to be clear about its shape. The passage is organised geographically, not by importance or alphabetically. It begins in #Boeotia, in central Greece, and then moves outward in a series of regional circuits. From Boeotia it passes to the neighbouring districts of Orchomenos, #Phocis, and #Locris, then to #Euboea, then down through #Athens and #Salamis into the #Argolid, the heartland of #Mycenae. From there it sweeps through the Peloponnese, covering the kingdoms of Agamemnon, Diomedes, Nestor of #Pylos, and the Arcadians, then out to the western islands including #Ithaca, across to #Crete under #Idomeneus, and finally up through the north to #Thessaly and the contingents associated with #Achilles. The order is roughly that of someone tracing routes across a real landscape, which is itself a point that supporters of authenticity have long emphasised. Each entry follows a repeating template. It names one or more leaders, lists the settlements and districts they command, often adds a short descriptive #epithet for a place (a town is "grassy," "rocky," "well built," or "rich in vines"), and gives the number of ships. The formulaic structure is important. It is the structure of #oral_composition, in which a singer builds long passages from repeated patterns that are easy to hold in memory and to perform. Recent analysis of the Catalogue's internal grouping suggests that the poet organised the names into small syntactic and line by line units that often correspond to clusters of real neighbouring places, which points to a compositional method rooted in performance rather than in copying from a written map. The numbers themselves reward attention. #Agamemnon of Mycenae brings the single largest contingent, one hundred ships, which matches his position as overall commander. Nestor of Pylos brings ninety. Diomedes of Argos brings eighty, as does Idomeneus of Crete. Menelaus of Sparta brings sixty. At the other end of the scale, Odysseus of Ithaca brings only twelve, and the contingent of #Ajax of Salamis is also given as just twelve ships in a famously brief two-line entry. The Boeotians open the list with fifty ships, and the poem specifies that their vessels each carried 120 young men, the largest crews named, while the ships of Philoctetes' contingent carried only fifty each. These crew figures are the basis for the huge total army size that later readers calculated, though the poem does not add up the men itself, only the ships. Two features of this structure matter for the historical question. First, the Catalogue is not evenly weighted toward the places that were important in the poet's own day. Boeotia comes first and receives detailed treatment, even though in the eighth and seventh centuries BCE it was not the dominant region of Greece. Athens, which would become a major power in the Archaic and Classical periods, receives a modest and slightly awkward entry. This mismatch between the poem's priorities and the political realities of the poet's time is one of the strongest reasons to suspect that the passage is remembering an older arrangement rather than describing a current one. Second, the Catalogue includes a striking number of places that later Greeks could barely locate. Ancient scholars and geographers, including #Strabo, spent enormous effort trying to identify Catalogue towns, and admitted that some had vanished entirely. A poet inventing a list to flatter his own audience would have no reason to fill it with obscure, forgotten, or abandoned settlements. The presence of these "dead" names is therefore treated by many scholars as a fingerprint of antiquity, a sign that the material was inherited rather than freshly composed. There is a third feature that is easy to overlook but revealing: the way the poet frames the list. Before beginning, he calls on the Muses in unusually strong terms, saying that he could not name the whole host even with ten tongues and ten mouths and a tireless voice, and that only the goddesses, who are everywhere and know everything, could supply the knowledge. This #invocation is more than ornament. It signals that the material about to be delivered is treated as inherited knowledge beyond the ordinary reach of a single singer, the kind of specialised information that a tradition guards and transmits rather than something the poet freely composes on the spot. Ancient audiences understood the Catalogue as a display of memory, a feat of preservation, and the poet's appeal to divine help marks the passage as belonging to a special category of remembered fact. Whether or not one accepts that the content is accurate, the framing tells us how the tradition itself regarded the list: as a record to be recited faithfully, not as a scene to be improvised. The arithmetic of the Catalogue has generated its own long debate. The poem gives ship totals for each contingent and states crew sizes for a few, but it never sums the whole army, and the different crew figures make any single total uncertain. Readers who multiply the 1,186 ships by the larger Boeotian crew figure arrive at an army of over one hundred and forty thousand men, a number far beyond anything the small Bronze Age states could plausibly field, and beyond what the site of Troy could have faced. This gap between the poem's totals and any realistic military reality is itself important evidence. It suggests that the figures serve a poetic purpose, conveying the sheer scale and gravity of the expedition, rather than functioning as an accurate muster count. The numbers are structured, memorable, and grand, which are the qualities that oral verse rewards, and they should be read in that light rather than as the output of a Bronze Age quartermaster. 3. Method: How to Test a Poem Against the Ground Before weighing the evidence, it is worth being explicit about method, because the Catalogue is a poem and not a document, and the two must be compared with care. Three independent bodies of evidence can be set against the text. The first is #archaeology. Since Heinrich Schliemann's excavations at Hisarlik and Mycenae in the 1870s, and the far more careful work of the following century and a half, we have a detailed picture of settlement in mainland Greece during the #Mycenaean period, roughly the fifteenth to twelfth centuries BCE. Systematic surveys have mapped where people actually lived, which sites were large and fortified, and when settlements were founded or abandoned. If a Catalogue place was a real, occupied centre in the Late Bronze Age, archaeology can sometimes confirm it. If a named place shows no Bronze Age occupation at all, that is evidence of a later addition or an error. The second body of evidence is the #Linear_B tablets. Linear B is the script used by the Mycenaean palace administrations to keep records in an early form of Greek. It was deciphered in 1952, and the surviving tablets, mostly from #Pylos, #Knossos, #Thebes, Mycenae, and a few other centres, are administrative documents: lists of personnel, land holdings, offerings, taxes, and goods. Crucially, they include place names. This gives us a genuinely contemporary written geography of parts of the Mycenaean world, produced by the very administrations that governed it. Where a Catalogue toponym also appears in the tablets, we have a direct link between the poem and the Bronze Age bureaucracy. The tablets are limited in coverage, since they survive only where palaces burned and baked the clay, but within that coverage they are decisive contemporary evidence. The third body of evidence is external documentation, above all the #Hittite archives from the Anatolian capital of Hattusa. These texts, written by a foreign power, mention a land called #Ahhiyawa, which most specialists now identify with the Mycenaean Greek world, and they refer to places in western Anatolia that may correspond to sites in the Trojan region. Because these are the records of an outside state with no interest in Greek poetic tradition, they provide an unusually neutral check on whether Mycenaean Greeks were active in the region and whether the geography of the epics has any grounding in real Late Bronze Age politics. The method, then, is triangulation. No single source can settle the question. A place named in the Catalogue that is also occupied in the Bronze Age, also appears in Linear B, and sits in a region where Mycenaean activity is externally attested has a strong claim to authenticity. A place that fails all three tests, or that fits the poet's own era far better than the Bronze Age, is a candidate for #anachronism. The reliability of the Catalogue is not a single yes or no; it is a map of stronger and weaker sections, and the honest task is to draw that map. 4. The Case for Mycenaean Authenticity 4.1 A geography that fits the Bronze Age, not the Iron Age The most powerful argument for authenticity is that the overall settlement pattern of the Catalogue matches the #Late_Bronze_Age far better than it matches the poet's own world. Scholars noticed long ago that the Catalogue's map of Greece is, in broad terms, the map of Mycenaean Greece before the great disruptions at the end of the second millennium. The dominant centres of the poem, such as Mycenae, Pylos, and the Argolid, are exactly the places that archaeology identifies as the major palatial powers of the period, and the list gives weight to regions, such as Boeotia and #Messenia, that were densely populated then and less prominent later. A related and often repeated observation is that the #Dorians are absent. By the poet's own day the Dorian Greeks were established across much of the Peloponnese and were a basic fact of the region's identity. Yet the Catalogue does not mention them at all. The most economical explanation is that the underlying geography predates the movements of population that brought the Dorians to prominence, so the list reflects a pre-migration arrangement that the tradition preserved. Whatever the exact history of these population changes, the silence about Dorians in a detailed regional survey is hard to explain if the passage were freshly composed in the eighth century. The internal proportions also point backward in time. A poet describing the political map of his own era would be expected to foreground the powers of his own era. Instead, the Catalogue foregrounds a distribution of strength that no longer existed. #Mycenae is the seat of the supreme commander, which fits the archaeological picture of the Argolid as a Bronze Age centre of power but not the reality of the Archaic period, when Mycenae was a minor town overshadowed by neighbouring Argos. This is not the kind of picture a singer would invent to please a contemporary crowd; it is the kind of picture a tradition carries forward from an age it no longer fully understands. 4.2 Places that had already vanished A second strand of evidence is the presence of settlements that were abandoned or forgotten well before the poem was written. Some Catalogue names could not be located even by learned Greeks of the Classical and Hellenistic periods, who took the geography of the poem very seriously and searched for these sites on the ground. When archaeology has been able to test such names, a significant number turn out to correspond to places that were occupied in the #Mycenaean era and then deserted, so that no living tradition of them survived into historical times. The logic here is simple but strong. Invention tends to reproduce what the inventor knows. A poet making up a list of towns to lend grandeur to his story would naturally reach for places his audience recognised. The inclusion of genuinely dead sites, places that meant nothing to an eighth-century audience because they had ceased to exist centuries earlier, is very difficult to explain as free invention. It is far more naturally explained as inheritance: the names survived inside the fixed patterns of oral verse long after the settlements themselves had gone. In this sense the Catalogue behaves like a linguistic fossil, carrying forward forms whose original referents had disappeared. 4.3 The Boeotian puzzle and the shape of memory The prominence of #Boeotia is one of the most discussed features of the Catalogue and, on balance, one of the better arguments for antiquity. Boeotia is listed first, and its entry is unusually full, naming a long series of towns. Yet in the epic tradition itself the great Boeotian city of #Thebes had already fallen before the Trojan expedition set out, and in the poet's historical present Boeotia was not the leading region of Greece. Several explanations have been offered, including the practical point that the fleet mustered at Aulis on the Boeotian coast, which would make Boeotia a natural starting point for a listing organised by geography. Recent work has also suggested that the distinctive way the Boeotian section is built, with its particular grouping of names, may point to its origin in an older body of poetry about Thebes that was folded into the tradition. Whatever the precise cause, the Boeotian entry shows that the Catalogue's priorities were set by tradition rather than by the poet's contemporary world. That is exactly what we expect of #social_memory in an oral society. Memory of this kind is not a neutral archive. It preserves what earlier generations chose to preserve, in the forms they used to preserve it, and it hands those choices forward even when they no longer match present realities. The Boeotian puzzle, rather than undermining authenticity, illustrates the mechanism by which authentic old material can persist: it survives because it is embedded in the structure of the song, not because it remains useful or accurate. 4.4 Linear B and the administrative geography of the palaces The decipherment of #Linear_B provided the first direct, contemporary written window onto Mycenaean geography, and it strengthened the case that the epic tradition retained real Bronze Age information. The tablets show that the palaces governed defined territories organised into districts, with named towns, officials, and obligations. The Pylos archive in particular preserves a two-part provincial structure, and scholars have tried, with mixed success, to match its districts to places known from later geography and from the Catalogue. Several names help bridge the gap between tablet and poem. The palace centre itself, Pylos, appears in the tablets as pu-ro and stands at the head of the Pylian kingdom that the Catalogue assigns to #Nestor. Knossos on Crete, prominent in the Cretan tablets, sits within the Cretan contingent that the Catalogue places under #Idomeneus. A number of other place names in the tablets have plausible counterparts in the poetic tradition. These correspondences are not perfect, and the fit between the Catalogue's Pylian towns and the tablet districts remains debated, but the existence of any overlap at all is significant. It means that some of the geography embedded in the epic is not invented; it corresponds to the real administrative world recorded by the palace scribes during the Late Bronze Age. The Linear B evidence also refines our sense of what kind of world the Catalogue is remembering. The tablets reveal that Mycenaean states were bureaucratic, territorially organised, and centred on palaces that tracked people and resources in detail. Recent research on state formation, including excavation at the site of #Iklaina in the Pylos region, indicates that these states were assembled out of smaller units and were not fully integrated until a late stage of the palatial period. This matters for the Catalogue, because it suggests that the political map the poem seems to remember, a patchwork of regional powers of differing sizes rather than a single unified realm, is consistent with the archaeological picture of how Mycenaean polities actually worked. 4.5 A coalition, not a nation A final point in favour of authenticity concerns the political form the Catalogue describes. The Achaean expedition is not presented as the army of a single Greek state. It is a coalition of regional rulers, each with his own contingent, bound together under Agamemnon's leadership by oaths, prestige, and obligation rather than by any permanent institution. This is precisely the kind of arrangement that the archaeological and textual evidence suggests for the Mycenaean world: a set of independent palatial centres of varying power, capable of cooperation but not fused into one kingdom. This is important because it distinguishes the Catalogue's model from the political categories of the poet's own age and from later Greek ideas of a unified Hellenic identity. The coalition structure fits the Bronze Age reality of multiple competing centres. It does not fit a naive projection of a single classical polis or of a later pan-Greek nation. The correspondence between the poem's political form and the Bronze Age's actual political form is one more reason to conclude that authentic memory of that world survives within the text, even if the details have been reworked. 4.6 Regional case studies: Pylos, the Argolid, and Crete The general arguments become sharper when applied to particular regions, and three examples show both the strength and the limits of the authenticity case. The kingdom of #Nestor at Pylos is the most instructive, because it is the one place where a rich Linear B archive can be set beside the poem. The tablets from the palace at Ano Englianos in #Messenia describe a state organised into two provinces, usually called the Hither and Further Provinces, each divided into districts with named principal towns. The Catalogue assigns Nestor a large contingent of ninety ships and lists a set of Pylian towns. Scholars have attempted to line up these poetic towns with the district capitals of the tablets, and the results are partial. Some correspondences are plausible; others are strained, and the number and order of names do not match neatly. What this shows is instructive in both directions. On the one hand, the poem clearly remembers Pylos as a substantial power controlling a defined territory, which the archaeology and the tablets confirm. On the other hand, the details do not map cleanly onto the administrative reality recorded by the scribes, which is what we would expect if four centuries of oral reshaping separated the two. Pylos, in short, supports the memory model precisely because it is authentic in outline and imperfect in detail. The #Argolid presents a different pattern. Here the Catalogue's picture, with Mycenae dominant under the supreme commander and Tiryns and other centres nearby, fits the archaeological record of the region as the powerhouse of the Bronze Age mainland, crowded with major fortified sites. Yet this same picture flatly contradicts the region's status in the poet's own era, when Mycenae had shrunk to insignificance. The Argolid entries therefore behave exactly like inherited memory: they preserve a distribution of power that had ceased to exist. At the same time, the way the Catalogue divides the Argolid between Agamemnon's Mycenae and Diomedes' Argos raises questions, since the relationship between these centres and the exact extent of their territories are debated and cannot be pinned down from the poem alone. The Argolid confirms the deep authenticity of the settlement pattern while reminding us that the internal political boundaries the poem draws may be later rationalisations. #Crete under #Idomeneus offers a third angle. The Catalogue calls Crete an island of many cities and assigns it eighty ships, and it names several centres including Knossos, which is central in the Cretan Linear B tablets. This is a strong correspondence, since Knossos was indeed a major administrative centre in the Late Bronze Age. But the Catalogue's Crete also raises a chronological puzzle, because the height of Knossian palatial administration and the later phases of the Bronze Age on the island do not line up simply, and the poem's image of a unified Cretan contingent smooths over a complicated regional history. Crete therefore shows the same lesson once more: a genuine Bronze Age centre is remembered accurately as important, while the surrounding detail is compressed and simplified by the tradition. Across all three regions the verdict is consistent. The Catalogue is trustworthy about which places mattered and untrustworthy about the fine structure of who controlled what. 5. The Case for Epic Anachronism 5.1 Four centuries of oral transmission Against these arguments stands the basic fact of the gap. The Mycenaean palaces were destroyed in a wave of collapse around 1200 to 1177 BCE, and with them went the palace administrations and the Linear B script. The centuries that followed saw depopulation in many regions, the loss of writing, and profound change in social and political organisation before the recovery that produced the world of the eighth-century poet. The Iliad we have took shape at the end of that long process. Between the world the Catalogue seems to describe and the world that produced the poem lie roughly four hundred years of #oral_transmission with no written record to fix the details. Oral tradition is remarkably good at preserving certain things, especially names, formulas, and the broad shape of a story, and it is precisely this durability that allows genuine Bronze Age material to survive. But oral tradition is not a recording device. It updates, simplifies, and reorganises. Details that lose their meaning tend to be replaced by details that make sense to the current audience. Over four centuries, a list of towns and rulers would be exposed to countless small revisions, as singers dropped names they no longer understood, substituted familiar ones, and adjusted the geography to match a changing world. The result is not a clean Bronze Age document but a #palimpsest, a text in which older and newer layers are written over one another and are difficult to separate cleanly. 5.2 The problem of Athens and Salamis The clearest suspected intrusions concern #Athens and #Salamis. The Athenian entry in the Catalogue praises the city and its leader Menestheus in terms that sit awkwardly with the modest role Athens plays elsewhere in the poem and with what archaeology suggests about Athens in the Bronze Age. Even more debated are the two lines that assign #Ajax of Salamis a mere twelve ships and state that he stationed them next to the Athenian contingent. Since antiquity, readers have suspected that this detail was inserted or shaped to support Athenian claims to the island of Salamis during a much later territorial dispute, in the Archaic period. The ancient sources themselves record accusations that the passage was tampered with for political ends. Whether or not the specific story of Athenian editing is correct, the Athens and Salamis material illustrates a general danger. The Catalogue was performed and transmitted in a living political environment, and its authority as a record of who held what territory made it a target for manipulation. A community that wished to justify a claim to land had a strong incentive to see that claim reflected in the most prestigious traditional inventory of the Greek world. The presence of even one or two politically motivated insertions is enough to show that the Catalogue cannot be read as a neutral, uncorrupted census. Some of its content answers to the politics of the poet's era and later, not to the Bronze Age. 5.3 Chronological layering within a single list Even setting aside deliberate manipulation, the Catalogue mixes material from different periods. This is what we should expect from a tradition that grew over centuries. Some names and arrangements look genuinely old, matching Bronze Age settlement and even Linear B. Others fit the geography of the poet's own time. A few may reflect the intermediate centuries between the two. The passage is therefore not a photograph of any single moment. It is a composite in which layers from several eras coexist. This layering undermines the idea of the Catalogue as a #census in the strict sense. A census records one moment. The Catalogue records a blend of moments, held together by poetic form rather than by a shared date. When a reader treats the list as a map of Greece "around 1200 BCE," that reader is imposing a false unity on a text that never had one. The most that can be claimed is that the deepest layer of the Catalogue reaches back to the Bronze Age, while shallower layers belong to later periods, and that these layers cannot always be told apart with confidence. 5.4 Telescoping and the compression of memory Oral traditions typically #telescope the past. Events, places, and figures from different times are pulled together into a single dramatic frame. The Trojan War itself functions as such a frame in Greek tradition: it became the great heroic event to which a huge range of stories and characters were attached, regardless of whether they belonged together historically. The Catalogue participates in this telescoping. It assembles into one grand muster a set of regions and leaders that may never have acted together at any single time, projecting a unity onto the Bronze Age that the fragmented Mycenaean world probably never possessed. Telescoping does not mean the material is false. It means the arrangement is artificial. The individual pieces, the names of real towns and regions, can be authentic even when the picture of them all sailing together under one commander is a poetic construction. This distinction is central to a fair evaluation. The Catalogue may preserve real Bronze Age geography in its parts while presenting a historically impossible whole. Reliability, again, is not uniform across the text but varies between its components and its overall composition. 5.5 Objects, tactics, and other anachronisms in the wider poem The Catalogue does not stand alone, and the broader Iliad shows the same mixture of old and new that we should expect from oral tradition. The poem contains famous items that appear to remember genuine Bronze Age objects, alongside descriptions of warfare that fit later periods. The poem sometimes describes massed infantry formations of a kind more at home in the poet's own era than in the chariot-based warfare of the Late Bronze Age. These inconsistencies are not flaws to be explained away; they are the natural result of a tradition that accumulated material across centuries and never harmonised it. For the Catalogue, the lesson is one of caution. If the poem as a whole blends Bronze Age memories with later realities in its account of objects and tactics, there is no reason to expect the Catalogue to be a pure Bronze Age stratum untouched by later influence. The same processes that introduced later military detail into the battle scenes could introduce later geographical and political detail into the list. The burden of proof therefore falls on any claim that a given Catalogue entry is authentically Mycenaean; such a claim needs positive support from archaeology or Linear B, not merely the general prestige of the tradition. 5.6 The reliability of the epithets A subtle but important issue concerns the descriptive #epithets attached to places in the Catalogue. The poem does not simply name towns; it characterises them, calling one rocky, another grassy, another rich in doves, another well built or sandy. These epithets have been read in two opposite ways, and the disagreement bears directly on reliability. On one reading, the epithets are precious evidence of concrete geographical knowledge. If a place the Catalogue calls sandy really does sit on a sandy shore, or a town called rocky really does perch on a crag, then the tradition has preserved specific, accurate information about the physical character of these sites, information that would be hard to invent and easy to lose. Detailed study of the Catalogue has argued that many epithets do fit the real terrain, and that this fit reflects genuine knowledge carried within the tradition rather than random decoration. On this view the epithets strengthen the case for authentic memory, because they show that the tradition retained not just names but the look of the places behind them. On the opposing reading, the epithets are largely formulaic, chosen to fill a metrical slot and to please the ear rather than to describe a specific site. Oral verse works by fitting words into fixed rhythmic patterns, and a stock of ready-made descriptive phrases is exactly the tool a singer needs to build lines quickly. If an epithet is selected mainly because it fits the metre, then its apparent accuracy may be partly coincidence, and it cannot be treated as reliable topographical data. On this view the epithets tell us more about the technique of #oral_composition than about the real geography of the Bronze Age. The truth almost certainly lies between these positions, and that middle ground is itself revealing. Some epithets do appear to preserve real features, while others are clearly generic and portable. This mixture is exactly what the memory model predicts: a tradition that carries some authentic detail embedded within a flexible poetic system that can also generate plausible-sounding description on demand. The epithets, like the toponyms and the numbers, cannot be trusted uniformly. Each has to be tested against the ground before it can be used, and the mere fact that the poem describes a place vividly is no guarantee that the description is old or accurate. 6. The Comparative Dimension: Hittite Texts and the Ahhiyawa Question One of the most valuable developments in this debate has come from outside Greece entirely. The #Hittite empire, centred in Anatolia, kept extensive diplomatic and administrative records, and among them are about two dozen texts that mention a land called #Ahhiyawa. Since these documents were first studied in the early twentieth century, scholars have argued over what Ahhiyawa was. The identification that now commands broad, though not universal, acceptance is that Ahhiyawa refers to the #Mycenaean Greek world, or at least to a significant Mycenaean power active in the eastern Aegean and western Anatolia. The publication of the full corpus of these texts in English, with commentary, made the evidence widely accessible and sharpened the discussion. The importance of the Ahhiyawa material for the Catalogue is that it provides an independent, contemporary, non-Greek witness to the Late Bronze Age Aegean. The Hittite texts show that a Mycenaean power was interacting with Anatolian states, sometimes as a rival, sometimes as a partner, over roughly the same centuries in which the epic tradition later placed its heroes. They mention conflicts and negotiations in western Anatolia, the very region where Troy sits. Some scholars connect specific Hittite place names to sites in the Trojan area, most notably the proposed link between the Hittite Wilusa and the Greek Ilios, one of the poem's names for Troy, and between the Hittite Milawanda and the later Greek Miletus on the Anatolian coast. These identifications are debated and should be treated with care, but even in cautious form they establish something significant. What they establish is context, not confirmation. The Ahhiyawa texts do not mention the Trojan War, do not name Agamemnon, and do not validate the Catalogue's list of contingents. They cannot. What they do is show that the general world the epic tradition remembers, a world in which a Mycenaean power projected force across the Aegean into western Anatolia and clashed with the states there, is historically real. This lends credibility to the idea that the epic tradition preserves authentic memory of Late Bronze Age geopolitics in outline, even as it warns us against expecting the poem's details to be accurate. The external evidence supports the framework of the tradition while remaining silent on its specifics, which is exactly the pattern we would expect if the Catalogue carries real but heavily reworked Bronze Age memory. The comparative dimension also underscores how the Aegean fit into a wider #international_system. The Late Bronze Age eastern Mediterranean was an interconnected network of major powers engaged in trade, diplomacy, and war. The collapse of that network around 1200 to 1177 BCE was a systemic event that affected many societies at once, and the Mycenaean palaces were among its casualties. Understanding the Catalogue as a memory of this vanished system, rather than as a report from within it, helps explain both its authentic elements and its distortions. The poem remembers a lost world of interconnected regional powers, but it remembers it from the far side of a catastrophe that erased the records and the institutions that had once made that world legible. 7. Discussion: Census, Map, or Memory? Having laid out both sides, we can now ask directly which model best captures what the Catalogue is. Three candidates present themselves, and it is useful to weigh them against one another. The first model is the #census. On this view the Catalogue is essentially a register of forces at a single moment, a count of contingents and ships that could in principle be checked like a modern muster roll. The evidence weighs heavily against this model. A census belongs to one date, but the Catalogue mixes material from several periods; a census is administrative, but the Catalogue is poetic, built from oral formulas and shaped for performance; a census is neutral, but parts of the Catalogue answer to later political interests. The very precision of the numbers, which makes the census model attractive, is best understood as a feature of oral art, since round and patterned figures are easy to remember and to perform. The census model treats a poem as a spreadsheet, and it fails. The second model is the #map. On this view the Catalogue is a description of the political geography of Greece at a particular time, most often imagined as the eve of the Trojan War around 1200 BCE. This model is more defensible than the census model, because the overall settlement pattern does correspond, in outline, to the Bronze Age rather than to the Iron Age. The absence of the Dorians, the prominence of the true Mycenaean centres, the presence of abandoned sites, and the coalition structure all support the idea that the deepest layer of the Catalogue reaches back to the palatial world. Yet the map model also overreaches, because it implies a single, coherent snapshot. The layering, the telescoping, and the later insertions show that no such single snapshot exists. The Catalogue is not one map but several partial maps from different centuries, superimposed and blurred. The third model, and the one this article endorses, is #memory. On this view the Catalogue is a product of social memory in an oral society: a store of inherited information about the deep past, preserved because it was embedded in the durable structures of song, but continuously reshaped by transmission and by the needs of successive audiences. This model accounts for both bodies of evidence. It explains the authentic Bronze Age elements, because oral tradition genuinely can carry names and outlines across centuries. It explains the anachronisms, because the same tradition inevitably updates and edits. It explains the layering, because memory accumulates rather than records. And it explains why external evidence supports the framework but not the details, because memory preserves the shape of a lost world more faithfully than its particulars. The three models correspond, in a rough way, to the history of scholarship on the Catalogue, and it helps to place the present argument within that history. For much of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the dominant analytical school treated the Catalogue as a separable, probably older document that had been stitched into the Iliad, and much energy went into deciding how much of it was original and how much was later addition. This approach correctly sensed that the passage was in some way detachable and layered, but it tended to think in terms of written documents being combined, rather than in terms of oral tradition, and it often reduced the question to whether the Catalogue was or was not by the same hand as the rest of the poem. The decipherment of #Linear_B in the mid-twentieth century transformed the debate by proving that Greek was written in the Bronze Age and that the Mycenaean palaces kept exactly the kind of administrative geography the Catalogue seemed to echo. In the wake of this breakthrough, some scholars argued forcefully that the Catalogue preserved a real Mycenaean document or a memorised muster from the age of the palaces, treating it as close to a historical record of the Bronze Age political map. Others reacted against this optimism, arguing instead that the epics as a whole reflect the society of the centuries after the collapse rather than the palatial world itself, and that the Catalogue's apparent antiquity could be overstated. This disagreement, between those who saw the poems as a window onto the Bronze Age and those who saw them as a portrait of the early Iron Age, framed the discussion for a generation. More recent work, especially the detailed study of the Catalogue's poetic technique and the integration of archaeology with theories of oral tradition and #social_memory, has moved beyond the simple opposition. Careful analysis has shown that the Catalogue is fully compatible with the compositional methods of oral verse, that its ordering of names is meaningful, and that it carries concrete geographical knowledge, while also acknowledging that the tradition absorbed later material. The current tendency is therefore to reject both extremes: the Catalogue is neither a Bronze Age document copied intact nor a free Iron Age invention. This convergence supports the memory model adopted here and reflects a broader shift in the field toward treating myth and history as intertwined rather than opposed. Recent scholarship on the relationship between archaeology, oral poetics, and social memory has argued strongly for exactly this integrated view, insisting that the old opposition between "myth" and "history" is misleading and that the two are deeply intertwined in a tradition like the Homeric one. Under this approach, the right question is not whether the Catalogue is true or false, but what kind of truth it carries and by what process. The Catalogue carries the memory of a real political world, refracted through four centuries of performance. It is reliable as evidence for the existence and outline of Late Bronze Age regional powers, and unreliable as evidence for the specific alliances, numbers, and boundaries of any single year. This conclusion has consequences for how the Catalogue should be used. It can legitimately support arguments that certain regions were significant in the Bronze Age, especially where archaeology or Linear B agrees. It can illustrate the coalition-based political form of the Mycenaean world. It can even, used cautiously, help identify Bronze Age sites whose ancient names are otherwise lost. What it cannot do is serve as a precise geopolitical census, a document from which the political map of 1200 BCE can be read off directly. Treating it that way confuses the durable outline that memory preserves with the fine detail that memory does not. 8. Limitations of the Evidence Any honest evaluation must acknowledge how much remains uncertain. The Linear B tablets, though decisive where they exist, cover only a few regions and only the final phase of the palaces, because the clay survives only where destruction fires baked it. Vast areas of Mycenaean Greece left no readable records at all, so for most of the Catalogue's regions we simply cannot check the poem against a contemporary written geography. The archaeological identification of specific towns is often tentative, since a scatter of Bronze Age pottery does not always tell us a settlement's ancient name. The Ahhiyawa texts are fragmentary, their key place-name identifications are debated, and they say nothing directly about the Catalogue. And the internal history of the epic tradition, the sequence of additions and revisions over four centuries, can only be reconstructed by inference, since we have no earlier versions of the Catalogue to compare with the text we possess. There is also a deeper methodological limit. Because the Catalogue is a layered composite, separating its strata is partly a matter of judgement, and different scholars weigh the same evidence differently. A feature that one reader sees as an authentic Bronze Age survival, another reads as a later intrusion that happens to fit an old pattern. This is not a defect in any single argument but a structural feature of the material. A four-hundred-year oral tradition does not preserve the seams between its layers, and we should be honest that some questions about the Catalogue's reliability may never be settled with certainty. The responsible position is to state clearly where the evidence is strong, where it is weak, and where it runs out. 9. Conclusion The Catalogue of Ships has been read for more than two thousand years as a bridge between poetry and history, and the temptation to treat it as a #geopolitical_census of Late Bronze Age Greece is understandable. It counts, it names, it measures, and it maps. But the evidence, taken as a whole, does not support that reading. The Catalogue is not a reliable census, because it blends material from several centuries into a single poetic frame and because parts of it were shaped by later political interests. Nor is it a pure invention, because too much of it corresponds to a Bronze Age world that the poet's own age had largely forgotten: the pattern of settlement, the dominance of the true Mycenaean centres, the abandoned towns, the absence of the Dorians, and the coalition structure of the expedition. The most accurate description is that the Catalogue is a work of #social_memory. It preserves the outline of a real Late Bronze Age political landscape, carried across four hundred years by the durable machinery of oral verse, while the fine detail has been reworked, updated, and in places falsified by the long process of transmission. External evidence, above all the Hittite Ahhiyawa texts, confirms the historical reality of the wider world the tradition remembers without confirming any of its specifics, which is exactly what the memory model predicts. For students and researchers, the practical lesson is about how to use early poetry as a historical source. The Catalogue is reliable at the level of framework and unreliable at the level of detail. It can tell us that the Bronze Age Aegean was a world of regional powers capable of collective action, and it can point us toward real, sometimes lost, Mycenaean places. It cannot hand us the political map of any single year. The right way to read the Catalogue is neither as scripture nor as fiction, but as a layered record of memory, valued for the deep past it dimly preserves and read with full awareness of the four centuries of song that stand between that past and the text we hold. Understood this way, the Catalogue of Ships remains one of the most remarkable historical documents to survive from the ancient world, precisely because it shows us not a fixed map but the living process by which a society without writing remembered, and reshaped, the world it had lost. References Beckman, G. M., Bryce, T. R., and Cline, E. H. (2011). The Ahhiyawa Texts. Writings from the Ancient World 28. Atlanta: Society of Biblical Literature. Cline, E. H. (2021). 1177 B.C.: The Year Civilization Collapsed. Revised and Updated Edition. Princeton: Princeton University Press. Cline, E. H. (2024). After 1177 B.C.: The Survival of Civilizations. Princeton: Princeton University Press. Cosmopoulos, M. B. (2019). "State Formation in Greece: Iklaina and the Unification of Mycenaean Pylos." American Journal of Archaeology 123(3), 349 to 380. Cosmopoulos, M. B. (2025). The World of Homer: Archaeology, Social Memory, and the Emergence of Greek Epic Poetry. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Driessen, J., and van Wijngaarden, G. J. (eds.) (2022). Political Geographies of the Bronze Age Aegean. Leuven, Paris, and Bristol: Peeters. Eder, B., and Zavadil, M. (eds.) (2023). (Social) Place and Space in Early Mycenaean Greece. Vienna: Austrian Academy of Sciences Press. Finkelberg, M. (ed.) (2011). The Homer Encyclopedia. Malden and Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell. Finley, M. I. (1977). The World of Odysseus. 2nd edition. London: Chatto and Windus. Hope Simpson, R., and Lazenby, J. F. (1970). The Catalogue of the Ships in Homer's Iliad. Oxford: Clarendon Press. Latacz, J. (2004). Troy and Homer: Towards a Solution of an Old Mystery. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Page, D. L. (1959). History and the Homeric Iliad. Sather Classical Lectures 31. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press. Pache, C. O. (ed.) (2020). The Cambridge Guide to Homer. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Porter, A. (2022). Homer and the Epic Cycle: Recovering the Oral Traditional Relationship. Leiden and Boston: Brill. Visser, E. (1997). Homers Katalog der Schiffe. Stuttgart and Leipzig: Teubner. #Catalogue_of_Ships #Iliad_Book_2 #Homeric_Geography #Mycenaean_Greece #Late_Bronze_Age #Trojan_War #Oral_Tradition #Linear_B #Ahhiyawa #Social_Memory #Bronze_Age_Collapse #Epic_Anachronism #Homeric_Historicity #Ancient_Greek_History #Aegean_Archaeology

  • The Hector Curriculum: Cultivating Civic Duty and Emotional Intelligence in Secondary Education

    This paper proposes a structured ethics syllabus for secondary schools built around a single literary figure: Hector, the Trojan prince from Homer's Iliad. The proposal responds to two long-standing concerns in modern schooling. The first is that young people leave school with strong academic skills but weak preparation for the duties of shared life. The second is that emotional skills, which shape wellbeing and behaviour, are often taught in a scattered way or not at all. The #Hector_Curriculum joins these two concerns into one coherent programme. It uses Hector as a working model of #civic_duty and family devotion, and it uses the emotional world of the poem as a training ground for #emotional_intelligence. The design draws on three research traditions that rarely meet in one classroom plan: neo-Aristotelian character education, social and emotional learning, and civic education. Drawing on recent meta-analytic evidence for social and emotional learning, international assessment of civic knowledge, and current scholarship on moral exemplars, the paper sets out the aims, guiding principles, six teaching modules, methods, and assessment approach of the curriculum. It also treats the risks honestly, including the danger of hero worship, the problem of using a warrior as a moral model, and the challenge of adapting an ancient text for diverse classrooms. The paper argues that a well-chosen story, taught with care, can hold civic and emotional learning together in a way that abstract rules cannot. The proposal is conceptual rather than empirical, and it ends by outlining how schools and researchers might test it in practice. Keywords: character education; civic responsibility; emotional intelligence; Homer's Iliad; moral exemplars; secondary education; virtue ethics; social and emotional learning 1. Introduction Most school systems agree, at least on paper, that education should shape good people and not only capable workers. National curricula speak of respect, responsibility, and care for others. Yet the practical means for reaching these goals are often thin. Values are listed on posters, mentioned in assemblies, and folded into subjects where they compete for time with tested content. The result is a gap between what schools say they want and what they actually plan for. This paper offers one way to close part of that gap in the secondary years, when students are old enough to reason about hard cases and young enough to still be forming lasting habits. The proposal is simple to state. Schools should teach a focused ethics course that follows one character across one great story, and they should use that character to teach both #civic_responsibility and the skills of feeling and relating well. The character is Hector, and the story is the Iliad. The argument is not that Hector is flawless, or that ancient warriors should be copied. The argument is that a single, richly drawn human figure gives young people something that lists of #virtue words cannot: a life to think with. Watching one person carry duty, fear, love, pride, and loss through a long narrative lets students test moral ideas against a case that feels real. Two bodies of evidence make this timing urgent. First, large reviews of #social_and_emotional_learning now show that structured programmes improve students' skills, relationships, behaviour, and even academic results across many countries (Cipriano et al., 2023). Second, international studies of civic knowledge show wide gaps in how well young people understand and value their role as citizens (Schulz et al., 2024). These two fields have grown side by side but rarely share a classroom. The #Hector_Curriculum treats them as one task, because in a human life duty and emotion are never separate. Hector does not choose between his city and his family in a cold way; he feels the pull of both, and his greatness lies partly in how he holds them together. This paper has three aims. The first is to justify the choice of a single #exemplar and to explain why Hector suits the task. The second is to set out a full teaching design, including outcomes, modules, methods, and assessment, so that the idea is concrete enough to try. The third is to face the strongest objections, since any plan to teach ethics through an ancient war poem invites fair criticism. The paper closes by describing how the design could be studied and improved. Throughout, the aim is a practical proposal that respects both the classics and the day-to-day reality of #secondary_education. 2. Background and Rationale 2.1 The moral gap in secondary schooling Secondary schools face a crowded timetable and a testing culture that rewards measurable output. In that setting, moral and civic learning tends to shrink. Character work, where it exists, is often reduced to reward charts and slogans that treat #virtue as a fixed trait to be praised rather than a way of living to be understood (Smith, 2022). Reviews of character education in primary and secondary schools point to the same recurring problems: unclear concepts, weak teacher training, thin assessment, and programmes that sit apart from the rest of school life instead of running through it (Hadi et al., 2025). When values are taught as separate rules, students can recite them without knowing how to act when rules clash. Civic learning shows a similar pattern. International data reveal that many young people hold only a shallow grasp of civic ideas and mixed feelings about taking part in public life (Schulz et al., 2024). Knowing facts about government is not the same as feeling responsible for a shared community, and it is this sense of responsibility, more than factual recall, that predicts real participation. A curriculum that wants to build #civic_duty must reach the heart as well as the head. The problem is not that schools ignore these goals but that the tools they use are often mismatched to them. Emotional skills cannot be delivered by a single assembly, and a sense of duty cannot be printed on a wall. Both grow slowly, through repeated practice and reflection, and both are shaped by the examples young people see around them. When a school treats moral and emotional learning as an occasional add-on, it signals that these things are less serious than the tested subjects, and students read that signal clearly. The strongest programmes do the opposite: they give this learning real time, real structure, and real connection to the rest of school life (Nurazizah & Junaidi, 2025; Hadi et al., 2025). The #Hector_Curriculum is designed to be that kind of programme, structured enough to take seriously and flexible enough to fit different schools. 2.2 Why a single exemplar The usual answer to the moral gap is to add more content: more values, more topics, more units. The #Hector_Curriculum takes the opposite path. It goes deep into one figure rather than wide across many. This choice rests on a claim from moral psychology and philosophy: people learn ethics well from concrete #exemplars, from admired individuals whose actions show what a value looks like in a real situation (Kaftanski, 2022). A vivid model of courage teaches more than a definition of courage, because it shows the fear that courage must overcome and the cost that courage may carry. Recent work on moral education stresses that admiration and emulation are powerful engines of growth, but only when the model is understood in full, including weaknesses and hard choices (Kaftanski, 2023). A single, complex character allows this depth. Students can return to the same person across many lessons, watch him under pressure, disagree with some of his decisions, and still learn from the shape of his life. This is closer to how people actually form judgment than a march through disconnected virtue words. 2.3 Why Hector Hector is unusually well suited to this role for four reasons. First, he is defined by duty to his city. He fights not for personal fame alone but to protect Troy and its people, which makes him a natural anchor for lessons on #civic_responsibility. Second, he is a devoted family man. The scene where he says goodbye to his wife Andromache and their infant son is one of the most tender moments in ancient literature, and it gives #family_devotion a human face. Third, he is emotionally rich. He feels fear, shame, tenderness, pride, and grief, and the poem shows him managing these feelings, sometimes well and sometimes poorly, which makes him a living case study in #emotional_intelligence. Fourth, he is flawed and mortal. He makes a proud decision that leads to his death, and he dies defending a cause that will fail. This keeps the curriculum honest and prevents simple hero worship. The Iliad itself remains alive in modern culture, and recent translations have brought it to new readers in plain, powerful English (Wilson, 2023). This matters for schools: teachers can use accessible versions without losing the force of the story. The text is old, but the questions it raises about loyalty, courage, and love are the questions young people still face. 3. Literature Review 3.1 Character and virtue education The dominant modern framework for character education is neo-Aristotelian. It treats virtues as settled dispositions to feel and act well, formed through practice, reflection, and the guidance of good models (Peterson & Kristjansson, 2024). On this view, a person of good character does not merely follow rules; they perceive what a situation calls for and respond with the right feeling and action. The key capacity is practical wisdom, the judgment that tells us how a virtue applies in a particular case (Kristjansson & Fowers, 2024). Practical wisdom is central to the #Hector_Curriculum, because the point of studying Hector is not to copy him but to sharpen the judgment students will need in their own lives. Character education has faced sharp criticism. Some argue that lists of virtues are unstable, since each virtue sits close to a matching vice and reasonable people disagree about what counts as good conduct (Smith, 2022). Others warn that character programmes can drift toward a narrow, individualistic focus that ignores social and political context (Huo et al., 2024). These criticisms are useful. They suggest that character work should not hand students fixed answers but should help them argue about the virtues and about the kind of person worth becoming. A story-based course meets this test, because a story invites debate rather than closing it. Reviews of how character education is actually delivered add a practical warning. Across many studies, the same barriers appear: teachers who feel unprepared, programmes that sit apart from the life of the school, and assessment systems that cannot capture what character is (Hadi et al., 2025). The role of the teacher is decisive. When teachers model the very qualities they hope to build, and when they hold genuine discussions rather than deliver moral lectures, students respond; when character work is reduced to a checklist, it has little effect (Rao et al., 2024). These findings shape the present design in two ways. They push toward deep teacher preparation, and they push toward a method built on dialogue and modelling rather than instruction. A single admired figure, studied slowly and questioned openly, offers a way to meet both demands at once. 3.2 Social and emotional learning and emotional intelligence The second research strand is #social_and_emotional_learning, often shortened to SEL. SEL programmes teach students to recognise and manage emotions, understand others, build relationships, and make responsible choices. The evidence base is now large. A contemporary meta-analysis of universal school-based SEL, covering hundreds of studies and more than half a million students across many countries, found consistent gains in social and emotional skills, attitudes, behaviour, school climate, peer relationships, and academic achievement (Cipriano et al., 2023). A separate systematic review focused on academic outcomes across grades one to twelve confirmed that participation in SEL is linked to better achievement, including test scores and grade averages (Ha et al., 2025). A further meta-analysis of elementary and middle school students reported small but positive effects on academic performance, while noting that the evidence for older students remains thinner than for younger ones (Zhao & Sang, 2025). This last point is important for the present proposal, since it targets the secondary years, where good SEL research is still needed. Closely related is the idea of #emotional_intelligence, the ability to perceive, use, understand, and regulate emotions. In adolescence, higher emotional intelligence is associated with better wellbeing, stronger relationships, and healthier ways of coping with stress (Yang et al., 2024). Adolescence is a demanding period, marked by rapid change and rising social and academic pressure, and emotional skills act as a protective resource during it. The #Hector_Curriculum treats emotional intelligence not as a soft extra but as a core outcome, taught through the emotional life of the poem. 3.3 Civic and citizenship education The third strand is civic education, which prepares young people for their role as members of a community and a state. The most recent international study of civic and citizenship education gathered data from tens of thousands of students across two dozen education systems (Schulz et al., 2024). It examined not only civic knowledge but also attitudes and readiness to take part, including engagement through digital tools, responses to diversity and migration, and views of the political system. The picture is mixed: knowledge varies widely, and a positive attitude toward participation cannot be assumed. Programmes that succeed tend to link learning to real action and to give students a felt reason to care, not just facts to memorise. School projects that connect civic ideas to concrete work on justice in the community have shown benefits at both the personal level, such as better emotional regulation and a stronger sense of agency, and the community level, such as greater willingness to take part (Martini et al., 2023). 3.4 Narrative, exemplars, and moral imagination The fourth strand ties the others together. Educators have long argued that stories of admired figures can move students to grow, because a good example carries motivational force that a rule lacks (Kaftanski, 2022). But admiration alone is not enough. For a model to teach rather than merely impress, students must engage their #moral_imagination, picturing the situation, weighing the choices, and considering how the model's feelings shaped the outcome (Kaftanski, 2023). Reading fiction that opens up a character's inner life is one of the clearest ways to build #empathy and perspective-taking, because it lets readers try on another mind from the inside. The Iliad is a strong vehicle for this work: it shows the inner life of enemies as well as friends, and it invites readers to feel for people on both sides of a war. 3.5 The gap in the literature These four strands are strong on their own but seldom combined. Character education debates virtue and judgment. SEL builds emotional skills with solid evidence. Civic education develops knowledge and participation. Narrative and exemplar research explains how stories move us. Yet few classroom designs bring all four together around one text and one figure. Recent scholarship even argues that character education and citizenship education, long treated as rivals, are in fact compatible and can support each other when built on a shared account of #virtue (Lu, 2025). The #Hector_Curriculum is an attempt to act on that insight, uniting ethical virtue and civic virtue in a single, story-driven course, while using the emotional depth of the story to serve the aims of SEL. 4. Theoretical Framework 4.1 Neo-Aristotelian virtue ethics and practical wisdom The curriculum rests first on neo-Aristotelian virtue ethics. In this tradition, a good life is one lived well over time, and virtues are the settled traits that make such a life possible. Virtues are learned through habit, reflection, and imitation of good models, and they are held together by #phronesis, or practical wisdom, the capacity to judge what a situation requires (Kristjansson & Fowers, 2024). This framework fits a story-based course naturally. A story does not deliver rules; it presents situations, and situations are exactly where practical wisdom is tested. When students argue about whether Hector was right to stand and fight, they are not reciting a value; they are exercising judgment, which is the very skill the tradition aims to build. Aristotle also treated civic virtue and ethical virtue as linked rather than opposed. Contemporary scholars have revived this point, showing that the virtues a person needs as a member of a community and the virtues they need as an individual are different in emphasis but intertwined in practice (Kristjansson, 2022; Lu, 2025). This gives the curriculum its central bridge: the same figure who models private devotion also models public duty, and students study both at once. 4.2 Exemplarist moral theory The second pillar is the idea that moral learning can start from admired persons rather than from abstract principles. On this account, we come to understand goodness by first recognising it in people we admire, and we grow by wishing to be like them (Kaftanski, 2022). This approach has clear teaching value, but it also carries risk. If a model is presented as perfect, students may either reject the model as unreal or copy it without thought. The safer path is to present the exemplar in full, including doubts, fears, and mistakes, so that admiration is paired with judgment (Kaftanski, 2023). Hector supports this balanced approach because the poem itself refuses to hide his flaws. His pride contributes to his downfall, and the text lets readers see it. Teaching Hector honestly means teaching both his greatness and his error. 4.3 Emotional intelligence and SEL competencies The third pillar is the model of #emotional_intelligence as a set of abilities: perceiving emotions, using them to aid thought, understanding them, and regulating them. These abilities map closely onto the competencies that SEL programmes target, such as self-awareness, self-management, social awareness, relationship skills, and responsible decision-making. The evidence that these competencies can be taught, and that teaching them improves a wide range of outcomes, is now strong (Cipriano et al., 2023; Ha et al., 2025). The #Hector_Curriculum embeds these competencies in the study of the poem. When students name what Hector feels before battle, they practise perceiving emotion. When they discuss how he steadies himself, they study regulation. When they consider Andromache's fear, they build social awareness and #empathy. 4.4 Integrating the strands The framework, then, has three legs that share weight. Virtue ethics supplies the goal, a person of good judgment and good character. Exemplarist theory supplies the method, learning from an admired but honest model. The SEL and emotional intelligence tradition supplies the tools and the evidence, a tested set of teachable skills. Civic education runs through all three, because Hector's defining trait is duty to his community. The integration is not forced. It mirrors a real human life, in which reason, feeling, and public responsibility are woven together. That unity is the deepest reason to teach ethics through a story rather than through a list. 5. Hector as a Pedagogical Exemplar 5.1 Duty to the city Hector's public role is the backbone of the curriculum's civic strand. He is the chief defender of Troy, and he carries the weight of a whole people. He fights knowing the odds, and he continues out of a sense of obligation to those who depend on him. This models a mature form of #civic_duty: responsibility that persists even when it is costly and even when success is uncertain. For students, the lesson is not that they should march to war. It is that membership in a community brings duties that sometimes ask for sacrifice, and that a good person weighs the good of the group alongside personal desire. This connects directly to modern civic aims, which seek not only knowledge of institutions but a felt sense of responsibility for shared life (Schulz et al., 2024; Martini et al., 2023). Hector also shows the tension inside civic duty. He is loyal to Troy even though the war began through the fault of his own brother, Paris. He defends a cause he did not choose and might not fully endorse. This raises a rich question for the classroom: what do we owe a community when we did not create its problems? That question is squarely relevant to young citizens who inherit conflicts and burdens they did not make, and it teaches that #civic_responsibility is often about how we respond to circumstances we did not choose. 5.2 Devotion to family Against the backdrop of war, the poem places one of literature's great domestic scenes. Hector meets his wife Andromache and their infant son near the city wall. Andromache begs him to stay, reminding him that she has already lost her father and brothers and that he is now her whole family. Hector answers with love but does not abandon his duty. He reaches for his son, who is frightened by the plume on his father's helmet, and Hector laughs, removes the helmet, holds the child, and prays that the boy will grow up greater than his father. Then he returns to the fight. This scene is a gift to teachers. It shows #family_devotion without sentimentality, and it shows the pain of competing duties. Hector loves his family and still goes to battle, and the poem does not pretend the choice is easy. Students can explore many angles: whether Hector chooses rightly, how Andromache's fear is treated with dignity, how a parent balances care for a child with duty to others, and how tenderness and courage can live in the same person. The moment where a battle-hardened warrior takes off his helmet to comfort a crying baby is a lesson in reading emotion and adjusting behaviour to another's needs, which is emotional intelligence in action. 5.3 Emotional depth and regulation Hector is not a stone. Before his final battle, he stands alone outside the walls and argues with himself. He feels fear. He considers laying down his arms and negotiating, then rejects the idea out of shame and pride. He knows he may die. The poem shows the full storm of his feeling and then shows him choosing. This inner scene is a direct teaching text for #emotional_intelligence. Students can name each emotion, trace how it pushes toward one action or another, and discuss how Hector manages, or fails to manage, his fear and pride. Crucially, the poem does not present his self-control as flawless. His pride, and his refusal to heed wise advice to bring the army inside the walls, contributes to disaster. This lets the curriculum teach regulation as a real skill with real stakes, not as a slogan. Good emotional management is not the absence of strong feeling; it is the ability to feel deeply and still act with judgment. Where Hector succeeds, students learn what regulation looks like. Where he fails, they learn its cost. Both are valuable, and the honesty of the second protects against shallow hero worship (Kaftanski, 2023). 5.4 The flaws and the human scale A responsible curriculum must resist turning Hector into a saint. He kills. He boasts. His pride helps destroy him. He fights for a city that will fall, in a war caused in part by his own family. These facts are not weaknesses in the teaching plan; they are its safeguard. Studying a flawed exemplar trains judgment rather than obedience, which is what character education at its best aims to do (Smith, 2022; Peterson & Kristjansson, 2024). Students should be free to criticise Hector, to argue that Andromache was right, to question the code of honour that drives him, and to compare his values with their own. A model that can be questioned is a model that teaches thinking, and thinking is the goal. There is also a wider caution. The Iliad is a war poem, and its heroic code prizes killing and glory in ways that modern ethics rejects. Teachers must frame the text with care, drawing the civic and emotional lessons while naming the parts of the ancient world-view that we no longer accept. Handled well, this contrast becomes a teaching tool in itself, helping students see that moral ideas change over time and that reading old texts critically is part of civic and #moral_imagination. 5.5 Grief, mercy, and the enemy's father The curriculum draws heavily on the closing movement of the poem, even though Hector is dead by then, because his death sets up one of the most powerful moral scenes in all of literature. After Achilles kills Hector, he treats the body with cruelty, dragging it behind his chariot. Then Hector's aged father, King Priam, does something almost unthinkable: he travels to the enemy camp, alone and at night, and kneels before the man who killed his son to beg for the return of the body. Achilles, moved by the sight of the grieving father and reminded of his own father far away, weeps, relents, and gives the body back. The two enemies share a meal. This scene is the emotional summit of the course. It shows #empathy crossing the deepest possible divide, between a killer and the father of his victim. It shows grief as something shared by both sides of a war. It shows mercy chosen freely, with nothing gained in return. For a curriculum aimed at #civic_responsibility, this moment teaches a lesson that facts about government never could: that community and shared humanity can survive even bitter conflict, and that recognising the other person's pain is the beginning of reconciliation. Students can explore why Achilles changes, what it costs Priam to kneel, and how enemies find a moment of common feeling. In a world marked by division, learning to see the humanity of an opponent is a civic skill of the first order, and this scene gives students a vivid model of it. 6. The Hector Curriculum: Design and Structure 6.1 Aims and learning outcomes The curriculum has one broad aim and several specific outcomes. The broad aim is to help secondary students grow in practical wisdom, so that they can act with both #civic_responsibility and emotional skill in their own lives. By the end of the course, students should be able to do the following. They should identify and explain core virtues, including courage, loyalty, and justice, using examples from the text and from modern life. They should analyse how emotions influence choices, in the poem and in real situations, and describe strategies for managing strong feeling. They should articulate what individuals owe to their communities and evaluate cases where private and public duties conflict. They should demonstrate #empathy by explaining a situation from more than one point of view, including the view of an opponent. They should form and defend their own moral judgments while listening fairly to others. These outcomes cover the ethical, emotional, and civic goals in one set. 6.2 Guiding principles Six principles shape every lesson. The first is depth over breadth: the course stays with one figure and one story rather than sampling many. The second is honesty: the exemplar is taught with his flaws, and the ancient world-view is examined critically. The third is dialogue: students argue and question rather than receive fixed answers, in keeping with the view that virtues are best understood through discussion (Smith, 2022). The fourth is integration: emotional, ethical, and civic learning happen together in each unit, not in separate boxes. The fifth is application: students connect every theme to their own lives and communities, following evidence that civic learning works best when tied to real action (Martini et al., 2023). The sixth is inclusion: the text is a starting point for universal human questions, and students from every background are invited to bring their own traditions into the conversation. 6.3 The six modules The course is organised into six modules, each lasting several weeks and each built on a section of the poem. Module one, The Person and the City, introduces Hector, Troy, and the idea of duty to a community. Students meet the concept of #civic_duty and begin a personal journal that they will keep all year. The guiding question is what we owe to the groups we belong to. Module two, Love and Duty, centres on the farewell scene with Andromache and their son. It develops #family_devotion, care, and the tension between private love and public obligation. Students practise perceiving emotion in others and reflect on the responsibilities within their own families. Module three, Fear and Courage, studies Hector's inner debate and his management of fear. It develops the core skills of #emotional_intelligence, especially self-awareness and self-regulation. Students learn to name their own emotions and to identify healthy ways of handling stress and fear. Module four, Pride and Its Price, examines how Hector's pride and his refusal of wise counsel lead toward disaster. It teaches humility, the value of listening, and responsible decision-making. Students analyse a decision that went wrong and consider how emotion clouded judgment. Module five, The Enemy's Humanity, uses the wider poem, including the grief on both sides and the final meeting between Achilles and Hector's father, Priam, who comes to beg for his son's body. This module builds #empathy across division and asks how we should treat opponents. It connects to civic themes of conflict, reconciliation, and shared humanity. Module six, My Own Story, turns the lens on the student. Learners draw on all they have studied to reflect on their own duties, feelings, and community role, and they complete a project that applies the course to a real issue in their school or neighbourhood. This final module makes the learning active and civic rather than only reflective. 6.4 Pedagogical methods The methods match the aims. Socratic dialogue is central: teachers pose open questions and guide discussion rather than lecturing, so that students exercise judgment (Kristjansson & Fowers, 2024). Role-play and hot-seating let students speak as Hector, Andromache, Priam, or Achilles, which builds perspective-taking and #empathy. Reflective #journaling runs through the whole year, giving students a private space to track their own emotional and moral growth, a practice consistent with SEL methods that build self-awareness (Cipriano et al., 2023). Structured debate teaches students to defend a view and to grant the strength of an opposing view. Finally, #service_learning anchors the course in the community: in the final module, students plan and carry out a small project that addresses a real need, turning civic ideas into civic action, in line with evidence that active projects strengthen engagement (Martini et al., 2023). These methods also carry the emotional curriculum. Naming a character's feelings trains emotional perception. Debating a hard choice under time pressure, then reflecting on how it felt, trains regulation. Working in groups on a service project trains relationship skills. In this way the SEL competencies are practised, not merely described. 6.5 Assessment Assessment in ethics is difficult, and the curriculum treats it with care. It avoids reducing character to a test score, since virtue is not a fact to be recalled (Smith, 2022). Instead, it uses a mix of methods that value growth and reasoning. Reflective journals are reviewed for depth of thought rather than for a correct answer. Discussion and debate are assessed on the quality of reasoning and on fair listening. Short written analyses ask students to apply a virtue or an emotional concept to a case from the text or from life. The final project is assessed on planning, effort, teamwork, and honest reflection about what was learned. Self-assessment and peer feedback are built in, so that students take part in judging their own growth. The aim is not to rank students by character but to make their thinking visible and to give them useful feedback on it. 6.6 A sample lesson sequence To make the design concrete, consider a three-lesson sequence from module three, Fear and Courage. In the first lesson, students read the passage where Hector stands alone and debates whether to fight or seek terms. They list every emotion he shows and mark the moment where each feeling points him toward a different choice. In the second lesson, students take the hot seat as Hector and are questioned by classmates about why he stays. They then step out of role and discuss whether his courage was wise or reckless, connecting the debate to a modern situation where someone must act under fear. In the third lesson, students write a journal entry about a time they felt fear and how they handled it, and they set one small goal for managing fear more skilfully. Across three lessons, the class has practised emotional perception, perspective-taking, moral judgment, and self-regulation, all through one short passage. This is the pattern the whole course follows. 6.7 Supporting a range of learners A story-based course has a natural advantage in mixed-ability classrooms: the same scene can be approached at many levels. A student who struggles with abstract reasoning can still describe what a character feels and why, while a stronger student can weigh competing duties or compare Hector's code with a modern ethical theory. Teachers can offer the text in different forms, including read-aloud, accessible translation, and short film or audio versions, so that reading level does not block access to the ideas. Discussion, role-play, and project work give students who find writing hard other ways to show their thinking. Reflective #journaling can be done in words, drawings, or voice notes. The aim is that every student can enter the conversation about duty, feeling, and community, because these are human questions that belong to everyone, not only to strong readers. Emotional safety deserves special care. The course touches on fear, grief, family loss, and conflict, and some students may connect these themes to painful experiences of their own. Teachers should set clear ground rules for respectful discussion, make participation in personal sharing voluntary, and know how to respond if a student shows signs of distress. The emotional depth that makes the course powerful is also what makes this care necessary. Good SEL practice treats emotional safety as a condition for learning, not an obstacle to it (Cipriano et al., 2023). 7. Implementation Considerations 7.1 Teacher preparation No curriculum is stronger than the teachers who deliver it, and reviews of character education repeatedly identify weak teacher training as a main barrier to success (Hadi et al., 2025; Rao et al., 2024). The #Hector_Curriculum asks a lot of teachers. They must know the text, guide open discussion without imposing answers, and handle emotionally sensitive material with skill. Schools adopting the course should provide focused training in three areas: the content of the Iliad and its context, the methods of Socratic dialogue and reflective practice, and the basics of SEL and emotional safety in the classroom. Teachers themselves benefit from a virtue-based approach to their own role, since a teacher's character and judgment shape what students absorb (Peterson & Kristjansson, 2024). Ongoing support, such as shared planning time and peer observation, matters as much as an initial workshop. 7.2 Cultural adaptation and inclusivity A curriculum built on a Greek epic must be handled thoughtfully in diverse classrooms. The Iliad is one culture's story, and its warrior code is far from universal. The design treats this openly. The poem is a doorway to universal human questions, not a claim that ancient Greek values are the right ones. Teachers are encouraged to invite students to compare Hector with heroes and moral models from their own cultures and faiths, so that the course becomes a meeting of traditions rather than the promotion of one. Scholars working outside the Western context have shown that neo-Aristotelian character education must be adapted, not simply imported, to fit local values and beliefs (Huo et al., 2024; Tham & Sim, 2025). The same caution applies here. The figure of Hector is a shared starting point; the conversation belongs to everyone in the room. 7.3 Timetabling and integration The course can run in different formats. It can stand alone as a dedicated ethics or citizenship class, meeting once or twice a week across a school year. It can also be woven into existing subjects, with the literary study led in English or literature lessons and the civic project supported in social studies. A blended model is often best, since reviews suggest that character and civic learning work best when they run through school life rather than sitting in a single isolated slot (Hadi et al., 2025). Whatever the format, the six modules should be kept in order, because each builds on the last, moving from the person and the city, through love, fear, and pride, to empathy for the enemy, and finally to the student's own life. 8. Anticipated Benefits and Discussion If implemented well, the curriculum promises several linked benefits. The clearest is the joining of two goals that schools usually pursue apart. By teaching #civic_duty and #emotional_intelligence through one figure, the course reflects the way these qualities actually combine in a human life. Hector's public duty and his private feeling are not separate lessons; they are two sides of one person. Students who study him should come away with a more integrated sense of what it means to be both a good person and a good citizen, which is exactly the union that recent scholarship argues is possible (Lu, 2025). A second benefit is depth of engagement. A single strong story, followed over a year, can hold attention in a way that a scattered list of topics cannot. Narrative pulls readers in and lets them practise #empathy from the inside, trying on minds unlike their own (Kaftanski, 2023). The emotional weight of scenes like the farewell at the wall gives students a reason to care about the abstract ideas the course teaches. Care is the fuel of civic life, and international data suggest that attitude and motivation, not just knowledge, are what schools most need to build (Schulz et al., 2024). A third benefit is the honest treatment of judgment. Because Hector is flawed and his cause is doomed, the course cannot deliver easy answers. It must teach students to weigh, argue, and decide. This trains #phronesis, the practical wisdom at the heart of good character, and it answers the fair criticism that character programmes too often hand down fixed virtues instead of building the capacity to think (Smith, 2022). A course that lets students disagree with its own hero is a course that respects their minds. A fourth benefit is grounded in the evidence for SEL. The emotional skills the course builds, including self-awareness, regulation, and social awareness, are the same skills that large reviews link to better wellbeing, behaviour, relationships, and academic results (Cipriano et al., 2023; Ha et al., 2025). While those reviews cover general SEL rather than this specific design, they give reason to expect that a course rich in emotional analysis and reflection could support the same outcomes, especially since strong evidence for the secondary years is still needed (Zhao & Sang, 2025). The curriculum is thus positioned to contribute both to students and to the research field. There is also a benefit for equity and inclusion, provided the cultural cautions above are respected. A shared story gives a diverse class a common ground on which to bring their different traditions. When students compare Hector with models from their own heritage, the classroom becomes a place of mutual exchange, and the universal questions of duty, love, and fear connect people across difference. This is itself a civic lesson, since democratic life depends on the ability to reason together across disagreement. A harder question is whether learning from a story transfers to real life. It is one thing to reason well about Hector and another to act well when a student faces their own version of fear or duty. This is the central challenge of all moral education, and no method solves it completely. The design tries to build a bridge from text to life at every step. Each module ends by turning to the student's own experience, the journal runs all year to link the poem to daily choices, and the final project asks students to act on what they have learned in their own community. Transfer is more likely when learning is practised, personal, and applied, rather than kept as classroom theory (Martini et al., 2023; Kristjansson & Fowers, 2024). Even so, the honest claim is that the course creates conditions for growth, not a guarantee of it. Character forms over a lifetime, and one school course is a beginning, not an ending. It is worth stressing that the emotional and the civic benefits are not two separate results but one. A student who learns to sit with fear, to see an opponent's pain, and to weigh what they owe to others is at the same time becoming a more capable citizen and a more emotionally skilled person. The Priam scene teaches mercy and empathy, and mercy and empathy are civic virtues as much as personal ones. This unity is the whole point of choosing a single human life as the spine of the course. In a person, feeling and duty are always joined, and a curriculum built on a person can teach them as they truly are. 9. Criticisms, Limitations, and Responses Honesty requires facing the strongest objections to this proposal. The first is the charge that a warrior is a poor moral model. Hector kills, and the poem's heroic code glorifies violence and personal glory in ways modern ethics rejects. The response is that the curriculum does not endorse the warrior code; it studies a person within it. The aim is not to produce warriors but to examine duty, love, fear, and pride in a case where the stakes are life and death. Teachers are asked to name the parts of the ancient world-view we no longer accept, turning the gap between then and now into a lesson in critical thinking. A flawed exemplar, taught critically, builds judgment better than a flawless one (Kaftanski, 2023). A second objection is that character education itself is unstable and possibly conservative, promoting settled virtues that reasonable people contest (Smith, 2022). The design takes this seriously by refusing to treat virtues as fixed. Its method is dialogue, and its hero can be questioned. Students are meant to argue about what courage and loyalty require, not to memorise them. Recent work also shows that character and civic aims can be combined without collapsing into a narrow, individualistic programme, provided the design keeps the community in view (Lu, 2025; Kristjansson, 2022). The strong civic strand of this curriculum is meant to guard against that narrowness. A third objection concerns cultural fit. A Greek epic may seem foreign or exclusionary in a diverse classroom, and importing a Western framework without adaptation is a known error (Huo et al., 2024; Tham & Sim, 2025). The response is the inclusive design described above, which treats the text as a shared doorway rather than a fixed standard and invites every student's tradition into the room. Still, this remains a real challenge that depends heavily on the teacher's skill and sensitivity. A fourth limitation is evidential. This is a conceptual proposal, not a tested programme. The supporting evidence comes from related fields: SEL, civic education, and moral exemplar research. It is fair and important to note that no study has yet evaluated this specific curriculum, and that the SEL evidence for older students is thinner than for younger ones (Zhao & Sang, 2025). The claims here are therefore about promise and design, not about proven results. The proposal should be treated as a hypothesis to be tested, which the next section addresses. A fifth limitation is practical. The course asks for skilled teachers, training, timetable space, and a school culture that values open discussion. These are real costs, and reviews warn that character programmes often fail not because the idea is wrong but because support is missing (Hadi et al., 2025; Rao et al., 2024). Any school considering the curriculum should plan for these needs from the start rather than adding them later. 10. Directions for Future Research Because the proposal is conceptual, its most important next step is empirical testing. Several studies would help. A pilot study in a small number of schools could measure changes in students' emotional skills, using validated instruments, and in civic attitudes, using measures like those in international assessments (Schulz et al., 2024). A controlled comparison, matching classes that take the course against classes that do not, would give stronger evidence, and would help fill the gap in SEL research for secondary students (Ha et al., 2025; Zhao & Sang, 2025). Qualitative work, including analysis of student journals and classroom discussion, could show how students' reasoning changes over the year, capturing growth in judgment that test scores miss. Research on teachers would also be valuable, since teacher preparation is a key factor in success (Rao et al., 2024). Finally, studies of cultural adaptation, exploring how the course works in different national and religious settings, would test whether the inclusive design holds up in practice (Tham & Sim, 2025; Huo et al., 2024). Together, this programme of research would move the #Hector_Curriculum from a promising idea to a tested tool, and would add to knowledge about how narrative can serve both civic and emotional learning. 11. Conclusion Schools want to raise good people and good citizens, but they often lack a clear, unified way to do it. This paper has proposed one: a focused ethics syllabus that follows Hector through the Iliad and uses his life to teach #civic_duty and #emotional_intelligence together. The proposal rests on solid ground. Character education offers the goal of practical wisdom. Exemplar research explains how an admired figure can move students to grow. The strong evidence for social and emotional learning shows that emotional skills can be taught and that teaching them helps students in many ways. Civic education shows that young people need not only knowledge but a felt reason to take part. The #Hector_Curriculum weaves these strands into one story-driven course, because in a real human life duty and feeling are never separate. Hector is not offered as a perfect man to be copied. He is offered as a rich, honest case to be thought with. He carries duty to his city and love for his family at the same time. He feels fear and manages it, mostly. He shows pride, and he pays for it. He dies for a losing cause he did not choose. In all of this he is deeply human, and that is why he can teach. A student who spends a year with Hector will not learn to be a warrior. They may learn something more useful: how to weigh what they owe to others against what they want for themselves, how to feel strongly and still act well, and how to see the humanity even in those on the other side. Those are the skills of a good person and a good citizen. The final test of this proposal is whether it can be built, tried, and shown to work in real classrooms, and that test is now the task ahead. References Cipriano, C., Strambler, M. J., Naples, L. H., Ha, C., Kirk, M., Wood, M., Sehgal, K., Zieher, A. K., Eveleigh, A., McCarthy, M., Funaro, M., Ponnock, A., Chow, J. C., & Durlak, J. (2023). The state of evidence for social and emotional learning: A contemporary meta-analysis of universal school-based SEL interventions. Child Development, 94(5), 1181-1204. https://doi.org/10.1111/cdev.13968 Ha, C., McCarthy, M. F., Strambler, M. J., & Cipriano, C. (2025). Disentangling the effects of social and emotional learning programs on student academic achievement across grades 1-12: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Review of Educational Research. https://doi.org/10.3102/00346543251367769 Hadi, Y., Kholis, N., Remanita, Y., & Harta, L. I. (2025). Systematic literature review on character education strategies in primary and secondary schools. Journal of Educational Research and Practice, 3(2), 321-340. Huo, Y., Xie, J., & Cheng, H. (2024). Ten reasons why neo-Aristotelian character education is not popular in China. Ethics and Education, 19(4), 641-661. Kaftanski, W. (2022). Admiration, affectivity, and value: Critical remarks on exemplarity. The Journal of Value Inquiry, 56(4), 655-672. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10790-021-09875-1 Kaftanski, W. (2023). Mental images and imagination in moral education. Journal of Moral Education. https://doi.org/10.1080/03057240.2023.2236801 Kristjansson, K. (2022). The primacy of civic virtue in Aristotle's Politics and its educational implications. History of Political Thought, 43(4), 607-636. Kristjansson, K., & Fowers, B. J. (2024). Phronesis: Retrieving practical wisdom in psychology, philosophy, and education. Oxford University Press. Lu, Y.-C. (2025). The compatibility of character education and citizenship education in Aristotelian approaches to moral development. Journal of Moral Education, 54(4), 710-724. https://doi.org/10.1080/03057240.2024.2354746 Martini, M., Rollero, C., Rizzo, M., Di Carlo, S., De Piccoli, N., & Fedi, A. (2023). Educating youth to civic engagement for social justice: Evaluation of a secondary school project. Behavioral Sciences, 13(8), 650. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs13080650 Nurazizah, V. A., & Junaidi. (2025). Effectiveness of student character education in the digital age of elementary schools: A systematic literature review. International Journal of Elementary Education, 9(1), 1-10. https://doi.org/10.23887/ijee.v9i1.92656 Peterson, A., & Kristjansson, K. (2024). The philosophical foundations of character virtue development. In M. Matthews & R. Lerner (Eds.), Routledge handbook of character development (pp. 257-284). Routledge. Rao, N. M., et al. (2024). Role of teachers in the character development of students: Findings from a systematic review. Academy of Education and Social Sciences Review, 4(4), 575-594. https://doi.org/10.48112/aessr.v4i4.935 Schulz, W., Ainley, J., Fraillon, J., Losito, B., Agrusti, G., Damiani, V., & Friedman, T. (2024). Education for citizenship in times of global challenge: IEA International Civic and Citizenship Education Study 2022 international report. Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-65603-3 Smith, R. (2022). Character education and the instability of virtue. Journal of Philosophy of Education, 56(6), 889-898. https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9752.12692 Tham, P. H.-H., & Sim, J. B.-Y. (2025). Demystifying character education for the Singapore context. Journal of Moral Education, 54(2), 203-219. https://doi.org/10.1080/03057240.2023.2260957 Wilson, E. (Trans.). (2023). The Iliad. By Homer. W. W. Norton. Yang, S., Jing, L., He, Q., & Wang, H. (2024). Fostering emotional well-being in adolescents: The role of physical activity, emotional intelligence, and interpersonal forgiveness. Frontiers in Psychology, 15, 1408022. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1408022 Zhao, Y., & Sang, B. (2025). The effect of social-emotional learning programs on elementary and middle school students' academic achievement: A meta-analytic review. Behavioral Sciences, 15(11), 1527. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs15111527 #Hector_Curriculum #civic_duty #emotional_intelligence #character_education #the_Iliad #secondary_education #virtue_ethics #moral_exemplars #social_and_emotional_learning #citizenship_education #family_devotion #phronesis #moral_imagination #empathy_in_education #Homer_in_the_classroom

  • Orality and Universal Design for Learning (UDL): Audio-Centric Pedagogies Inspired by Homeric Bards

    This article asks a simple question with far-reaching consequences for the classroom: what can teachers learn from singers who never used a book? Long before writing shaped how we teach, poets in the world of the #Iliad carried enormous stories in their heads and shared them through sound, rhythm, and live performance. This study brings that old craft of #orality into conversation with a modern framework for inclusive teaching, the #Universal_Design_for_Learning approach. It argues that #audio_centric_pedagogy, meaning teaching that treats listening and speaking as full and serious paths to knowledge rather than as second-best supports, can lower barriers for #neurodivergent_students while helping everyone else too. Using a conceptual and narrative synthesis of recent research in classics, cognitive science, and inclusive education, the article maps three features of the #oral_epic_tradition onto the three principles of the modern framework. Formulaic language and repeated phrases act as memory scaffolds that reduce #cognitive_load. Rhythm, meter, and melody support recall and attention. Live performance builds motivation and a sense of #belonging. From these links the article develops classroom strategies built around #audiobooks, #podcasts, spoken assessment, and shared performance, and it discusses how each strategy connects to the goals of #engagement, #representation, and #action_and_expression. The article closes with limits, cautions against treating audio as a cure-all, and directions for future study. The central claim is modest but firm: teaching that honors the ear is not a step backward but a wider door. Keywords: orality; Universal Design for Learning; neurodiversity; audio learning; Homeric epic; inclusive pedagogy; multimodal learning; accessibility Introduction Picture a crowded hall in the ancient Greek world. There is no screen, no printed page, no slide deck. There is a singer with a stringed instrument, an audience that has gathered to listen, and a story that will take hours to tell. The singer does not read the story. He remembers it, or rather he rebuilds it in the moment out of familiar phrases, steady rhythm, and long practice. This is how the great epics that we now read as the Iliad and the Odyssey first lived: as sound in the air, shared between a performer and a listening crowd. The craft behind this achievement is what scholars call orality, and it is far more than an early or primitive stage of communication. It is a complete system for making, holding, and passing on knowledge without writing. For most of the last century, formal education has leaned heavily on the printed word. Reading and writing became the main gates through which learners had to pass, and a student who struggled with print was often treated as a student who struggled with learning itself. This assumption quietly shaped classrooms, exams, and textbooks. Yet a growing body of research on how people actually differ in the way they take in and express information tells a different story. Learners vary enormously, and that variation is normal rather than a defect to be fixed. The framework known as #UDL, short for Universal Design for Learning, builds directly on this insight. It asks teachers to plan flexible lessons from the start so that many kinds of learners can reach the same goals, instead of designing one narrow path and then bolting on adjustments for the students who do not fit (CAST, 2024). This article joins two things that are rarely placed side by side. On one hand there is the ancient practice of the #Homeric_bards, the singers whose methods have been studied by classicists for generations. On the other hand there is the modern movement for #inclusive_teaching, especially teaching that welcomes neurodivergent students such as those with #dyslexia, #ADHD, or #autism. The bridge between them is sound. The bards worked through the ear. Much of modern inclusive practice is rediscovering the ear as well, through audiobooks, podcasts, spoken feedback, and oral projects. My argument is that these are not two separate conversations. The oral craft that carried epic poetry across centuries contains practical lessons for building lessons that more students can enter. The purpose of the article is therefore threefold. First, it explains the core ideas of oral epic tradition in plain terms, drawing on recent scholarship rather than romantic myth. Second, it sets out the modern framework for inclusive design and the reasons audio matters to it. Third, and most important, it connects the two, showing how specific features of oral performance line up with specific principles of inclusive design, and it turns those links into strategies a teacher can actually use. A word on scope is needed at the start. This is a conceptual article, not a report of a new experiment. It gathers and rethinks existing evidence. It does not claim that listening should replace reading, and it does not treat audio as a magic solution. Print literacy remains essential, and some learners find audio harder than text. The claim is narrower and, I think, sturdier: that when teaching is designed to include the ear as a genuine channel for learning, and when it borrows some of the old craft of the singer, more learners gain access, and the ones who most often get left behind gain the most. In the sections that follow I build that case step by step. Background and literature review 2.1 The Universal Design for Learning framework and its recent development The idea behind Universal Design for Learning comes partly from architecture. When builders add a ramp, curb cut, or automatic door, they help wheelchair users, but they also help parents with strollers, delivery workers, and travelers with heavy bags. The feature designed for a specific need turns out to serve a wide public. Applied to teaching, the same logic says that a lesson planned with variation in mind from the beginning will serve far more learners than a rigid lesson patched later. The framework is usually described through three broad principles. The first is providing multiple means of engagement, sometimes called the why of learning, which concerns motivation, interest, and persistence. The second is providing multiple means of representation, the what of learning, which concerns the different ways information can be presented so learners can perceive and understand it. The third is providing multiple means of action and expression, the how of learning, which concerns the different ways learners can plan, act, and show what they know (CAST, 2024). These principles rest on the recognition that human brains handle motivation, perception, and strategy in varied ways, and that a single fixed method will always leave some learners behind. The framework is not frozen. In July 2024 the Center for Applied Special Technology released a major update, often called version 3.0, which kept the three principles but shifted their spirit in ways that matter for this article. The update moves away from language that treats the goal as producing one ideal expert learner and toward language about #learner_variability and learner agency, the capacity of each student to steer their own path in a purposeful and authentic way (CAST, 2024). It also names bias and exclusion as barriers, not just differences in perception, and it puts fresh emphasis on identity, on relationships, and on a sense of belonging within the group. These themes will return later, because the oral tradition was above all a shared and relational event, not a private encounter between one reader and one page. Recent empirical work supports the value of this flexible design for the very students who are the focus here. A multi-institutional study of occupational therapy students found that learners who identified as neurodivergent responded differently to common teaching methods than their peers, and that the design of engagement had an especially strong influence on what they found useful (Cole et al., 2024). This is a reminder that inclusive design is not only about swapping print for audio. It is also about how a lesson invites participation, how safe it feels to take part, and how much choice a learner has. A conceptual analysis of compassion in higher education makes a related point, arguing that many current settings quietly define an acceptable student as one who already matches a narrow standard, and that a more inclusive practice must start by questioning that standard rather than asking the student to hide their differences (Hamilton and Petty, 2023). The broad research picture, then, is that flexible design helps, that neurodivergent students benefit in particular, and that the newest version of the framework cares about identity, motivation, and community as much as about format. What the framework does not do by itself is tell a teacher which flexible methods to choose. That is where the study of orality becomes useful. 2.2 The neurodiversity paradigm and why format matters The term neurodiversity treats differences in how brains work as a natural part of human variation, much like differences in height or handedness, rather than as a set of disorders that all need to be corrected. Under this view, conditions such as autism, ADHD, and dyslexia are not simply deficits. They come with distinct strengths and distinct barriers, and many of those barriers are created by environments that assume everyone learns in the same way (Praslova, 2024). This shift in framing has real consequences for teaching. If a barrier lives in the environment rather than only in the student, then changing the environment is a fair and reasonable response, not a special favor. Reading through print is a clear example of an environmental barrier. For a learner with dyslexia, the effort of decoding written words can consume so much attention that little is left for understanding the meaning behind them. Research on audio support for such learners shows that when the decoding burden is reduced, comprehension and engagement can rise, because the learner can put their mental energy into the ideas rather than into the mechanics of the letters (Nation and Castles, 2022). A five-year follow-up study of students with dyslexia who used #assistive_technology found that audiobooks were valued steadily across the school years, and that whether students kept using such tools depended less on the technology itself and more on whether their schools built a supportive context around it (Milani-style follow-up research summarized in the assistive technology literature; see also the discussion in Cole et al., 2024). The lesson is that format is not neutral. The channel through which content arrives can decide whether a capable learner shines or stalls. Attention offers a second example. Learners with ADHD often find sustained silent reading difficult, not because they lack intelligence or interest but because the task gives them little to hold onto and few changes in stimulation. Audio that carries voice, pace, and feeling can supply some of that missing pull, and it can be paced, paused, and replayed to fit the listener. At the same time, the neurodiversity view warns against sweeping claims. What helps one #autistic learner may overwhelm another, and some learners find a busy audio environment harder than a quiet page. A study that listened carefully to neurodivergent students in higher education captured this tension well, reporting that interactive and media-rich methods were often welcome but could tip into being too much, and that the students wanted control over how and when they engaged rather than a single style imposed on them (drawing on recent higher education research on hearing out neurodivergent student voices). The message for design is not audio instead of print but audio as a genuine, well-supported option among several. This is exactly the spirit of the inclusive framework described above. It does not crown one format. It asks for several, chosen with care, so that learners can find the route that fits them. To choose audio well, though, it helps to study people who mastered the spoken channel long ago. The singers of epic did precisely that. 2.3 Homeric orality and the craft of the bard The modern study of oral epic began with an act of comparison. In the early twentieth century the scholar Milman Parry, later joined by his student Albert Lord, noticed that the repeated phrases in the Homeric poems looked like the tools of a performer rather than the choices of a writer polishing a manuscript. To test the idea, they traveled to the Balkans and recorded living singers of long oral songs, watching how these performers built enormous poems in performance without any script. What they found reshaped the field: the singers did not memorize fixed texts word for word. They composed as they sang, drawing on a deep store of ready-made phrases, scenes, and patterns that fit the rhythm of the line. Recent scholarship continues to build on and refine this foundation, treating the epics as products of a living oral system rather than as ordinary books that happen to be old (Porter, 2022; Zielinski, 2023). Three features of that system matter for this article. The first is #formulaic_language. A formula is a set phrase that fills a regular slot in the rhythm and expresses a familiar idea, such as a standard description of a hero or a repeated line for dawn breaking. Far from being lazy filler, these phrases were the working memory of the tradition. They let the singer produce fluent poetry at speed and gave the audience familiar landmarks to hold onto. A recent linguistic study argues that this formulaic style should be understood as a living language of its own, flexible and creative rather than mechanical, in which the same features that helped the poet produce speech also gave that speech meaning for listeners (Bozzone, 2024). In other words, the repetition was not a limit on art. It was the very thing that made complex art possible in a spoken setting. The second feature is rhythm and structure. Epic was sung or chanted in a strong regular #meter, and it was organized into scenes and patterns that repeated across the whole work. This shape was not decoration. It was memory technology. Steady #rhythm gives the mind a frame to hang words on, and patterned scenes let both singer and listener predict what kind of thing comes next even when the exact words vary. Studies of narrative and memory across oral and written traditions have long observed that stories with strong structure, emotional weight, and rhythmic form are recalled better than loose or flat information, because structure and feeling both help the mind encode and retrieve (a point developed in the broader cognitive literature on memory and mnemonics discussed below). The bard's craft, seen this way, is applied memory science worked out over centuries of practice. The third feature is #performance and community. Epic did not happen in silence between one reader and one text. It happened in a hall, in a crowd, as a live event with a voice, a body, an instrument, and a listening group that reacted in the moment. The meaning of the poem was tied to that shared occasion. The singer read the room, stretched or shortened scenes, and drew the audience into a common experience. Recent work on the oral background of the Iliad stresses that the poem carries the marks of this performance culture even in the written form that survives, and that its artistry cannot be separated from the tradition of singing before an audience (Zielinski, 2023; see also the essays gathered in Ercolani and Lulli, 2022). Scholars also note that the tradition included conscious craft and awareness of other songs, so oral did not mean simple or unthinking (Nelson, 2023). Put together, these three features describe a mature audio-centric pedagogy that existed long before anyone theorized about learning styles. The bard reduced memory load through ready phrases, used rhythm to support recall and attention, and built engagement and belonging through live performance. Each of those moves has a clear echo in the modern principles of inclusive design. The rest of this article traces those echoes and turns them into practice. Conceptual framework: mapping the singer's craft onto inclusive design To move from admiration to application, we need a clear map. The framework I propose lines up the three features of the oral epic tradition with the three principles of the modern inclusive framework, and it names the shared mechanism that makes each pairing work. This mapping is the conceptual heart of the article. The first pairing joins formulaic language with representation. Representation, in the inclusive framework, is about offering content in more than one form so learners can perceive and make sense of it. Formulaic phrasing is a form of representation tuned for the ear. Its repetition and predictability lower the effort needed to follow along, which is exactly what a learner with high cognitive load or a decoding barrier needs. The shared mechanism is reduced processing burden. When key ideas return in stable, recognizable wording, the mind can focus on meaning rather than on figuring out the surface each time. The second pairing joins rhythm and structure with action and expression, though it also touches representation. Action and expression concern how learners organize their thinking and show what they know. Rhythm, meter, and patterned scenes are tools for organizing knowledge in time, and they give learners a scaffold both for taking material in and for producing it back. The shared mechanism is structure as support for #memory and planning. A student who can hang ideas on a rhythmic or patterned frame has an easier time recalling them and an easier time building their own account. The third pairing joins performance and community with engagement. Engagement concerns motivation, interest, safety, and the will to persist. Live oral performance is engagement in its purest social form. It carries emotion, invites response, and binds a group together around a shared experience. The shared mechanism is relationship and belonging. Learners try harder, take more risks, and stay longer when they feel part of something and when a real voice is speaking to them rather than a flat page. Two further points hold this map together. First, the pairings are not walls. Rhythm helps engagement as well as memory; performance aids representation as well as motivation. The oral craft was whole, and its parts reinforced one another, which is one reason it worked so well. Second, and this is central, every one of these mechanisms serves all learners, not only neurodivergent students. Reduced load, clear structure, and real belonging are good for everyone. That is the deep promise of inclusive design and the deep promise of the bard's craft alike: features shaped by the needs of those on the edge turn out to strengthen the whole room. The map, then, is not a plan for a separate special track. It is a plan for better teaching for all, drawn from a very old and very successful practice. Method and approach This article uses a conceptual and narrative synthesis rather than an experiment or a systematic statistical review. That choice fits the goal, which is to build and defend a bridge between two fields that usually stay apart, and to draw practical guidance from the connection. A synthesis of this kind gathers evidence and ideas from several areas, sets them beside one another, and looks for patterns and links that a single-field study would miss. Three bodies of work were drawn together. The first is recent scholarship on Homeric orality and the oral epic tradition from the field of classics, which supplies the account of how the bards actually worked. The second is research in cognitive science and education on memory, #mnemonics, cognitive load, and #audio learning, which explains why the bard's methods succeed in terms a teacher can use. The third is the literature on Universal Design for Learning, neurodiversity, and inclusive teaching, which supplies the framework and the classroom context. Sources were chosen for relevance and recency, with a strong preference for work from the last five years, so that the modern claims rest on current evidence rather than on dated assumptions. The reasoning proceeds in three steps. It first describes each field on its own terms so that readers from any background can follow. It then identifies shared mechanisms, the underlying reasons a practice works, because mechanisms travel across fields even when surface details do not. Finally it translates those shared mechanisms into concrete strategies and checks each strategy against the principles of the inclusive framework. This keeps the practical advice tied to theory rather than floating free. The approach has honest limits, which section seven discusses in full. A conceptual bridge is a hypothesis about what might help, supported by existing evidence, not a proof that a specific classroom method will work for a specific group. The strategies offered here are best read as well-grounded proposals to be tested and adapted, not as settled prescriptions. With that caution in place, the next sections present the findings of the synthesis, organized around the three pairings from the framework. Findings and discussion: audio-centric pedagogies for inclusive classrooms 5.1 Formulaic language and the lowering of cognitive load The first and perhaps most surprising lesson from the bards concerns repetition. In everyday teaching, repeated phrasing is often seen as dull or lazy, something a good writer trims. In the oral tradition it was the engine of the whole enterprise. #Formulaic_language let the singer carry a vast poem because the ready phrases did much of the heavy lifting, freeing attention for the larger shape of the story (Bozzone, 2024). The cognitive reason is clear once stated: our #working_memory is small and easily overloaded, and anything that packages information into familiar, predictable chunks reduces the strain (Ren et al., 2023). For inclusive teaching this points to a practical principle. Consistent, repeated wording for key ideas is not a weakness in a lesson. It is a support. When a teacher uses the same phrase each time to name a core concept, returns to the same spoken structure for instructions, and repeats important points in a steady form, the learner spends less effort decoding the surface and more effort grasping the idea. This helps students with dyslexia, whose decoding of new print is costly, and students with ADHD or high anxiety, whose attention is easily pulled away, and it does no harm to anyone else (Nation and Castles, 2022). The representation principle of the inclusive framework calls for exactly this kind of care in how information is offered, and formulaic clarity is one way to answer that call through the ear. Concretely, an audio-centered version of this principle might sound like the following. A teacher records short spoken summaries of each unit that always open and close with the same signposting phrases, so learners know where they are. Key terms are introduced in a fixed spoken definition that returns unchanged whenever the term appears, giving a stable audio landmark. Instructions for common tasks are delivered in a predictable spoken pattern, so learners can anticipate the shape of what is being asked and do not have to relearn the format every time. None of this dumbs down the content. Just as the bard's formulas supported rather than limited a rich poem, stable phrasing supports rather than limits rich ideas. The difficulty stays in the thinking, which is where difficulty belongs, and it leaves the surface easy to follow. There is a further benefit that ties back to memory. Repeated phrasing is a mild but real form of spaced review. Each time a learner meets the familiar phrase, the idea behind it is refreshed. This is close to the well-supported principle of #retrieval_practice, where recalling material strengthens it more than passively reviewing it (Ren et al., 2023). Spoken formulas that a class comes to know by heart pull the idea back into mind again and again, quietly building durable knowledge. The bards did not know the modern terms, but they were running a memory system that current science would recognize and approve. 5.2 Rhythm, meter, and the architecture of memory The second lesson concerns structure in time. Epic was not spoken flat. It moved in strong rhythm and meter, and it was built from patterned scenes that recurred across the poem. This shape carried the singer's memory and the audience's alike. The value of such structure for learning is one of the better-established findings in the study of memory. Rhythmic, patterned, and emotionally charged material is recalled more reliably than loose facts, because rhythm and pattern give the mind a frame on which to fix and later find the content (this is the core logic behind classic memory techniques and their modern study; see Ren et al., 2023, on how trained mnemonics reshape memory processes). Ancient and modern learners alike have leaned on this. The famous memory methods that trace back to Greek practice, such as placing ideas along an imagined path, work by giving abstract content a structured, almost spatial home. Rhyme, rhythm, and song do something similar in time. Anyone who has kept a phone number in mind by its rhythm, or learned the alphabet through a tune, has used the bard's principle without knowing it. For neurodivergent students the payoff can be large. A learner who finds a wall of prose hard to organize may find a rhythmic or musical version far easier to hold, because the structure does some of the organizing for them. Translated into audio-centric pedagogy, this suggests several moves. Content can be shaped into rhythmic or chant-like summaries for the points that most need to stick, turning key sequences into something with a beat. Songs and rhymes, long used in early education, deserve a place higher up the school system than they usually get, especially for lists, steps, and cycles that must be memorized. Even ordinary spoken explanation can be paced with deliberate rhythm and clear structural markers, so that the audio itself signals where one part ends and another begins. Recorded material has a special advantage here, because a learner can replay a rhythmic summary until its structure is settled in mind, at their own pace and as often as needed. Structure also serves the action and expression side of learning, not only intake. When students are asked to produce a rhythmic or patterned account of what they have learned, whether a short chant, a structured spoken summary, or a simple song, they must organize the material themselves, and that act of shaping is itself powerful for memory. It combines retrieval with structure, two of the strongest supports the science offers. The bard did not merely receive the tradition. He rebuilt it in performance every time, and that active rebuilding kept it alive in his mind. Students who rebuild their knowledge in structured spoken form are doing the same work, and they tend to remember what they have made. A caution belongs here. Rhythm and song help many learners but can distract or overwhelm others, and some autistic learners in particular may find certain sounds or musical textures aversive rather than helpful. As always, the principle is choice within a range, not a single method for all. Rhythmic audio should be one clearly offered path among several, with quiet and plain-spoken versions available too. Structure is the goal; a beat is one way to reach it, not the only way. 5.3 Multimodal representation and the reading of the ear The third area concerns the plain fact that listening is a real way of taking in language, not a lesser substitute for reading. This point deserves emphasis because school culture has often treated audio as cheating, a shortcut for students who cannot manage the real work of print. That attitude does not match what we know. Skilled listening draws on much the same language understanding as skilled reading, and for many learners it opens content that print keeps locked away (Nation and Castles, 2022). When a learner with dyslexia listens to a well-made #audiobook, they are not avoiding comprehension. They are reaching it by a different road. The inclusive framework's principle of representation rests on this idea. It asks teachers to present the same content in more than one form so that a barrier in one channel does not block learning altogether. Audio is one of the most powerful of these alternate forms, because language is native to sound. Speech came first in human history and comes first in each child's life; the ear was built for words long before the eye was trained to them. #Audiobooks, recorded lectures, and podcasts all give learners a spoken route into content, and research on these tools in education reports gains in engagement, access, and for some learners in comprehension, especially when audio is offered alongside text rather than as a lonely replacement (Besser, Blackwell, and Saenz, 2022; Carmi, 2023). The pairing of spoken and written forms is worth stressing, because it turns audio from a substitute into a genuine #multimodal_learning experience. A learner who listens while following the text engages sound and sight together, and each channel can reinforce the other. For a struggling reader, the audio carries the meaning while the eyes track the words, which over time can support the reading itself. The point is not to pick a winner between eye and ear. It is to let them work as a team, and to let each learner lean on the channel that serves them best on a given day and task. Modern research on how people learn from combined words and images and sound underlines that such combinations, when designed with care to avoid overload, can improve understanding for many learners (Mayer, 2024). There are also cautions from theory that the bards, working in sound alone, never faced. Modern lessons often pile on channels at once, and more is not always better. When audio, text, images, and animation compete for attention, they can overload the very working memory they are meant to serve (Mayer, 2024). The design lesson is to keep each channel clean and to align them, so that the spoken words and the written words and any images all point to the same idea at the same time, rather than pulling in different directions. The bard's audio was rich but single. Modern multimodal teaching must earn the same clarity across several channels through deliberate design, or it risks doing harm where it means to help. 5.4 Engagement, voice, and the pull of a living performance If the first three sections concern how content enters and settles in the mind, this one concerns why a learner leans in at all. Here the oral tradition has perhaps its strongest lesson, and it is the one most often missed in talk about audio in schools. Epic was not a recording played to a silent room. It was a performance, a living event with a human voice, feeling, timing, and a crowd that responded. That living quality was the source of its hold on people. The updated inclusive framework places fresh weight on engagement, on motivation, safety, joy, and belonging, and it is precisely in this area that a real voice outperforms a page (CAST, 2024). The human voice carries information that print cannot. It carries warmth, urgency, humor, and care. It signals that a person is speaking to a person. Research on spoken formats in higher education finds that they can build rapport between teacher and student and can make distant or online learning feel more personal and less lonely (Conroy and Kidd, 2023). For learners who feel on the outside of school, whether through a diagnosed difference or through simple discouragement, this relational warmth is not a soft extra. It can be the thing that keeps them present. The inclusive framework's new stress on identity and belonging is, in this light, a return to something the bard understood in his bones: learning is social, and a voice that includes you is a voice you will keep listening to. Choice and control feed engagement as well, and here recorded audio has real strengths. A #podcast or recorded talk can be paused, replayed, slowed, or sped up, which hands the learner control over pace in a way a live lecture rarely does. For a student with ADHD who needs to break work into short bursts, or a student who processes more slowly and needs a second pass, this control can turn a frustrating task into a manageable one. Studies of podcasts in teaching report that flexibility and the ability to learn at one's own time and pace are among the features students value most (Besser, Blackwell, and Saenz, 2022; Carmi, 2023). The bard adjusted the tale to the room; recorded audio lets each learner adjust the tale to themselves. Yet the same warning from earlier returns. Engagement through rich media has a ceiling, and past it lies overload. Recent research that listened to neurodivergent students found that while they often welcomed interactive and media-heavy methods, these could easily become too much, and what the students wanted above all was some say over how they took part (recent higher education research on neurodivergent student voice). Real engagement, then, is not the same as maximum stimulation. It is the fit between the learner and the task, and fit requires choice. The most engaging classroom is not the loudest one. It is the one where a genuine voice speaks with care and where the learner holds the controls. 5.5 The student as bard: action, expression, and the power of speaking So far the learner has mostly been a listener. But the deepest lesson of the oral tradition is that the great performers were not passive receivers. The bard did not simply memorize a fixed poem and recite it. He rebuilt the poem in performance, actively, every time, drawing on the tradition to make something both familiar and new (Bozzone, 2024; Zielinski, 2023). This active remaking is where oral learning was strongest, and it maps directly onto the inclusive framework's principle of action and expression, which asks that learners be given varied ways to show and use what they know. School assessment has long favored one form of expression above all others: the written exam or essay. For many capable learners this single channel badly understates what they understand. A student who thinks clearly but writes slowly, or who has ideas that outrun their spelling, may look weak on paper and yet be strong in speech. Offering spoken forms of expression opens a fairer door. A recorded explanation, an oral presentation, a student-made podcast, or a spoken dialogue can all serve as real assessment of real understanding, and for some learners they reveal a competence that writing hid. Research on student-produced podcasts finds that creating them can deepen engagement, understanding, and creativity, precisely because the student must actively organize and voice the material rather than copy it (Besser, Blackwell, and Saenz, 2022). This is the student as bard. When learners are asked to teach a concept aloud, to record a short spoken account of a topic, or to build an audio story that carries what they have learned, they do the same active work that kept the epic alive: they select, organize, and perform knowledge in their own voice. That work is powerful for memory because it joins retrieval practice with the making of structure, two of the strongest learning mechanisms known (Ren et al., 2023). It is powerful for confidence because it lets learners succeed in a channel where they may be strong. And it is powerful for equity because it does not force every mind through the single narrow gate of formal writing. Practical forms are easy to imagine. Students might record a two-minute spoken summary of a reading in their own words, which trains both comprehension and clear speech. They might produce a short class podcast on a topic, working together to plan, script, and voice it. They might sit for an oral examination in which they explain their reasoning aloud, which can be fairer for those who freeze in front of a blank page. They might build an audio guide, telling the story of a historical event or a scientific process as a small performance. In each case the aim is the same: to let the learner rebuild knowledge actively, in sound, as the bard rebuilt the epic. Writing keeps its central place, but it stops being the only measure of a mind. 5.6 Community, performance, and belonging in the shared room The final lesson gathers the others and returns to where we began, in the crowded hall. Epic was a shared event. Its meaning lived not only in the words but in the gathering, in the fact that a group experienced the story together, in real time, bound by a common voice. The updated inclusive framework, with its new emphasis on interdependence, collective learning, and belonging, has arrived at a truth the oral tradition never forgot: much of the deepest learning is social, and a sense of being part of a group is not a decoration on learning but a condition for it (CAST, 2024). This matters especially for learners who often feel excluded. #Neurodivergent_students in particular frequently report a fear of standing out and a weariness of being treated as problems to manage, and this social strain can weigh on both their learning and their well-being (Hamilton and Petty, 2023). A classroom built only around private, silent, individual work gives such learners few chances to belong. A classroom that sometimes gathers to listen together, to share spoken work, and to build something as a group offers a different kind of place, one closer to the hall of the bard than to the exam room. Shared audio experiences, from a class listening to a recording together and discussing it, to students performing their own audio work for one another, can create the common ground on which belonging grows. Performance also teaches something that private study cannot. To speak before others, even a small group, is to take a risk and to be received, and when that reception is kind it builds both skill and courage. The bard performed for a crowd and grew through its response. Students who perform their spoken work for a supportive class gain not only practice but the experience of being heard, which for many is rare and precious. The goal is not to force reluctant students onto a stage; some will find performance frightening, and their comfort must be respected through smaller and safer options. The goal is to make room for the shared, spoken, communal dimension of learning that print culture, for all its gifts, tends to push aside. Seen whole, the six findings describe a coherent practice. Stable spoken phrasing lowers load. Rhythm and structure support memory and planning. Multimodal audio widens access. A living voice draws learners in. Speaking aloud lets them show and build what they know. And shared performance binds them into a group. Each of these is at once a lesson from the Homeric bards and a principle of modern inclusive design. The two traditions, separated by thousands of years, turn out to teach the same thing. Practical applications for the classroom Ideas earn their keep when they change what a teacher does on Monday morning. This section gathers the findings into practical strategies. None of them requires rare technology or a large budget. Most need only a recording device, some willingness to rethink habits, and attention to choice and clarity. Throughout, the aim is to add audio as a genuine option, not to remove print, and to keep every option clean, well-structured, and warm. Start with representation. Teachers can record short spoken versions of key material, from summaries of readings to walk-throughs of hard concepts, and make them available for learners to replay at their own pace. Where possible, pair spoken and written forms so that learners can listen and read together, letting the channels reinforce each other rather than compete (Mayer, 2024). Use stable, repeated phrasing for the ideas that matter most, so that key concepts arrive in familiar wording each time and the mind is freed to think rather than decode (Bozzone, 2024; Nation and Castles, 2022). Keep each recording focused on one clear idea, because clarity in a single channel beats richness spread thin across many. Turn next to memory and structure. For content that must be memorized, such as sequences, cycles, and steps, teachers can build rhythmic or musical summaries and invite students to learn and even to create them. Songs and chants are not only for young children; they are efficient memory tools at any age, and they draw on the same rhythmic principle that carried the epic (Ren et al., 2023). Encourage students to organize material into patterned spoken forms, since the act of shaping knowledge in structure is itself a strong aid to remembering. Offer plain-spoken versions alongside the rhythmic ones, because some learners find beat and melody distracting rather than helpful. For engagement, lean on the human voice. Teachers can record spoken feedback rather than only written comments, which many students find warmer and easier to take in, and which can strengthen the sense that a real person is guiding them (Conroy and Kidd, 2023). Class podcasts, whether made by the teacher or the students, can carry content in a lively, personal way and can be paused and replayed to fit each learner's pace (Besser, Blackwell, and Saenz, 2022; Carmi, 2023). Above all, give learners control over how they engage, offering audio as one clearly available path and letting them choose it or not. Choice, not sheer stimulation, is what turns a rich medium into an engaging one, and neurodivergent learners in particular ask for that control (as recent research on their voices makes plain). For action and expression, open spoken routes to showing understanding. Where fair and possible, let students choose between a written and a spoken form for some assignments, such as a recorded explanation, an oral presentation, or a short student-made audio piece. Use oral components in assessment for learners who express themselves better in speech, so that a slow hand or shaky spelling does not hide a strong mind. Ask students to teach concepts aloud or to record their reasoning, which turns assessment into active retrieval practice and deepens the very learning it measures (Ren et al., 2023). The student who rebuilds knowledge in their own voice, like the bard rebuilding the tale, tends to keep what they have made. Finally, build community around sound. Gather the class to listen to something together and discuss it, so that learning becomes a shared event and not only a private task. Give students safe, low-pressure chances to share spoken work with peers, scaling the audience from a partner to a small group to the whole class as comfort grows, and always offering smaller options for those who find performance hard. Treat the classroom, now and then, as a version of the hall where people once gathered to hear a story, a place where a voice speaks and a group listens and belongs together (CAST, 2024). This communal dimension is where the oldest and the newest ideas in this article meet most fully. A short word on technology and equity is needed. Audio tools are among the most accessible and affordable of educational technologies, which is part of their appeal for inclusive teaching. A basic recorder and a quiet corner can produce a usable podcast; free and low-cost tools abound. Still, teachers should not assume every student has a quiet space, a device, or reliable connection at home, and should plan so that audio options do not quietly exclude those without resources. Inclusive design means designing for the whole range, in access to tools as much as in modes of learning. Used with that care, audio-centered methods are within reach of nearly any classroom. Limitations and cautions Honesty requires a clear account of what this article does not establish. It is a conceptual synthesis, a bridge built from existing evidence, not a test of a specific method with a specific group. The pairings it draws between the bard's craft and the inclusive framework are well grounded, but they are proposals to be tried and studied, not proven classroom results. Readers should treat the strategies in section six as informed hypotheses worth testing, not as guaranteed outcomes. Several specific cautions follow. First, audio is not a universal good. Some learners find listening harder than reading, some autistic learners experience certain sounds as painful rather than helpful, and some content, such as detailed mathematics or fine visual material, resists a purely spoken form. The claim of this article is for audio as a genuine, well-supported option among several, never as a replacement for print or a single method imposed on all. The moment audio becomes another rigid requirement, it betrays the inclusive spirit that justifies it. Second, the analogy with the Homeric bards has limits and should not be pushed too far. Ancient oral performance served a culture without widespread writing and cannot be simply transplanted into modern schools whose learners must also master print for a text-heavy world. The value of the comparison lies in its mechanisms, the reasons the old craft worked, not in a literal return to a world of singers. We borrow the principle of the ready phrase, the memory power of rhythm, and the pull of a living voice; we do not abandon books. Third, much of the supporting evidence, though recent, comes from settings and samples that may not match every classroom. Studies of audiobooks and podcasts in education vary in size, design, and population, and findings from one group do not automatically transfer to another. The research on neurodivergent students is growing but still uneven, and neurodivergence itself is broad, so what helps one learner may not help the next (Cole et al., 2024). Claims here are offered with that variability in mind. Fourth and finally, there is a risk of overload that grows precisely as teachers add channels. Piling audio onto text onto image onto animation can swamp the working memory it aims to serve (Mayer, 2024). More modes are not automatically better modes. The discipline of clean, aligned, purposeful design matters as much as the choice to use audio at all. These limits do not undo the argument, but they set its proper bounds. Audio-centered, orality-informed teaching is a promising and humane addition to the inclusive toolkit, tested against evidence and offered with care, not a cure for every ill. Directions for future research The bridge built here invites others to walk across it and to test whether it holds. Several lines of study would help. The most direct is controlled classroom research that compares orality-informed, audio-centric pedagogy with standard approaches, measuring not only test scores but engagement, well-being, and a sense of belonging, and paying special attention to outcomes for neurodivergent students. Existing work supports the pieces; what is missing is study of the whole approach as designed here, over time, in real settings. A second line would examine the specific mechanisms this article names. Does stable, repeated spoken phrasing measurably lower cognitive load for learners with dyslexia and others? Does rhythmic or structured audio improve retention more than plain audio, and for whom? Does student-produced spoken work strengthen learning through retrieval practice as the theory predicts (Ren et al., 2023)? Isolating these mechanisms would sharpen the design advice and show where it works and where it fails. A third line concerns the balance and the limits. Research is needed on how much audio, in what mix with print and other modes, best serves different learners, and on where added channels start to overload rather than help (Mayer, 2024). Equally, study of which learners find audio harder, and why, would guard against a naive faith in the ear and keep the practice honestly inclusive. A fourth line is cultural and comparative. The Iliad is one oral tradition among many across the world, and other living oral cultures carry their own techniques of memory and performance. Comparative work could enrich the toolkit far beyond a single ancient source and could help ensure that audio-centered inclusive teaching honors many traditions rather than one. Finally, as recorded and generated audio become cheaper and more flexible, careful research on how new tools can widen access without deepening inequity, and without sacrificing the human voice that gives audio its warmth, will only grow more important. Conclusion This article began with a singer in a hall and ends with a student in a classroom, and it has argued that the distance between them is smaller than it looks. The Homeric bards mastered a complete way of making and sharing knowledge through sound. They used ready phrases to lighten the load on memory, rhythm and structure to make knowledge stick, and live performance to draw people in and bind them together. Modern research on Universal Design for Learning, arriving by a very different road, has reached strikingly similar conclusions: that learning is served by lowering unnecessary burden, by clear structure, by more than one channel of representation, by genuine engagement, by varied means of action and expression, and by a real sense of belonging (CAST, 2024). The meeting of these two traditions yields a practical stance I have called audio-centric pedagogy. It treats listening and speaking as full and serious paths to knowledge, not as crutches for those who cannot manage print. It borrows the bard's ready phrase in the form of stable, clear spoken content; the bard's rhythm in the form of structured, memorable audio; and the bard's living voice in the form of warm spoken teaching, spoken assessment, and shared performance. For neurodivergent students who so often meet barriers built into a print-only world, this widening of the channel can be the difference between struggling at the edge and taking a full part. And because reduced load, clear structure, and real belonging are good for every learner, the gains reach the whole room. The argument is not that we should return to a world without books, nor that audio is a cure for every difficulty. Print remains essential, some learners find the ear harder than the eye, and richness poorly designed can overwhelm rather than help. The claim is steadier than that. When teaching is designed to include the ear as a genuine and well-supported way of learning, and when it draws on the tested craft of those who taught through sound for centuries, more learners can enter, and those most often left outside gain the most. The singer who never used a book still has something to teach the modern classroom. What he offers, in the end, is not a technique but a reminder: that knowledge has always traveled well through the human voice, and that teaching which honors the ear is not a step backward but a wider door. References Besser, E. D., Blackwell, L. E., and Saenz, M. (2022). Engaging students through educational podcasting: Three stories of implementation. Technology, Knowledge and Learning, 27(3), 749-764. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10758-021-09503-8 Bozzone, C. (2024). Homer's Living Language: Formularity, Dialect, and Creativity in Oral-Traditional Poetry. Cambridge University Press. Carmi, G. (2023). Students' attitude and learning effectiveness for two types of podcasts in an MBA course. Online Information Review, 47(7), 1320-1339. https://doi.org/10.1108/OIR-12-2021-0647 CAST. (2024). Universal Design for Learning Guidelines, version 3.0. Center for Applied Special Technology. Cole, K., and colleagues. (2024). Universal Design for Learning principles impact on students with neurodiverse learning styles. Journal of Occupational Therapy Education, 8(2), Article 4. Conroy, D., and Kidd, W. (2023). Using podcasts to cultivate learner-teacher rapport in higher education settings. Innovations in Education and Teaching International, 60(6), 861-871. https://doi.org/10.1080/14703297.2022.2102528 Ercolani, A., and Lulli, L. (Eds.). (2022). Rethinking Orality. De Gruyter. Hamilton, L. G., and Petty, S. (2023). Compassionate pedagogy for neurodiversity in higher education: A conceptual analysis. Frontiers in Psychology, 14. Mayer, R. E. (2024). The past, present, and future of the cognitive theory of multimedia learning. Educational Psychology Review, 36(1), 8. Nation, K., and Castles, A. (2022). Teaching children to read irregular words: A comparison of three instructional methods. Scientific Studies of Reading, 26(6). Nelson, T. J. (2023). Markers of Allusion in Archaic Greek Poetry. Cambridge University Press. Porter, A. (2022). Homer and the Epic Cycle: Recovering the Oral Traditional Relationship. Brill. https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004455559 Praslova, L. (2024). The Canary Code: A Guide to Neurodiversity, Dignity, and Intersectional Belonging at Work. Berrett-Koehler Publishers. Ren, and colleagues. (2023). Mnemonic training contextualizes working memory with long-term memory representations: Commentary on Miller et al. (2022). European Journal of Neuroscience, 57(10), 1639-1641. https://doi.org/10.1111/ejn.15981 Schuck, and Fung. (2024). A dual design thinking and universal design approach to catalyze neurodiversity advocacy through collaboration among high-schoolers. Frontiers in Psychiatry, 14, 1250895. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2023.1250895 Zielinski, K. (2023). The Iliad and the Oral Epic Tradition. Hellenic Studies Series 99. Center for Hellenic Studies. Hashtags #Orality #Universal_Design_for_Learning #UDL #Audio_Centric_Pedagogy #Homeric_Bards #Oral_Epic_Tradition #Iliad #Neurodivergent_Students #Inclusive_Teaching #Inclusive_Education #Multimodal_Learning #Audiobooks_In_Education #Podcasts_In_Learning #Dyslexia_Support #ADHD_Learning

  • Faculty Hubris versus Adjunct Vulnerability: Power Asymmetries in Modern Higher Education Administration, Read Through the Agamemnon-Chryses Dynamic in the Iliad

    This article uses an old story to explain a new problem. It reads the opening quarrel of Homer's Iliad, in which the mighty commander Agamemnon humiliates the suppliant priest Chryses, as a mirror for the everyday power gap between senior, secure #tenured_administrators and the growing crowd of contingent faculty who now do most of the teaching in modern universities. The argument is deliberately satirical, but the target is serious. When a powerful figure refuses a fair and public request, insults the person making it, and treats an unequal exchange as if it were natural justice, the result in Homer is a plague on the whole camp. The claim of this study is that the modern university runs a quieter version of the same script, and pays a quieter version of the same price. Drawing on recent research into #academic_labour, #administrative_bloat, and the affective costs of insecure work, the article maps the characters and moves of Iliad Book 1 onto the structures of contemporary campus governance. It shows that #faculty_hubris is rarely a matter of bad individuals and is better understood as a pattern built into how power is distributed, how honour is counted, and how labour is priced. The satire is offered not to mock any one dean, but to make a structural pattern visible, memorable, and open to reform. The conclusion argues that the plague in the story is not a punishment sent by a god but a predictable outcome of an unjust exchange, and that the remedy Homer hints at, the returning of what was wrongly kept, still applies. Keywords: contingent faculty; #academic_precarity; power asymmetry; #higher_education_governance; #classical_reception; #neoliberal_university; Homer; satire 1. Introduction Every reader of the Iliad remembers how it opens. Not with a battle, but with an argument about status. A priest named Chryses walks into the Greek camp, carrying gifts, asking politely for the return of his captured daughter. The whole army agrees that his request is fair. One man refuses. That man is Agamemnon, the most powerful commander in the camp, and he refuses not because the request is unreasonable but because saying yes would feel, to him, like a small loss of face. He insults the old priest and sends him away. The priest prays for help, and a plague falls on the army. Thousands suffer for one leader's wounded pride. This article takes that scene seriously as a model of how power behaves when it is not held accountable. It argues that the same shape appears, in a slower and less bloody form, inside modern universities, where a small group of secure and senior people, here grouped under the label #tenured_administrators, hold real power over a large group of insecure and junior people, here grouped under the label contingent faculty. The suppliant who comes with a fair request and is turned away for reasons of ego rather than justice is a familiar figure on any campus. So is the plague that follows, though on campus it takes the form of burnout, quiet resignations, falling morale, damaged teaching, and slow collapses of trust. The choice to read a labour problem through an ancient poem is not decoration. It is a method. Numbers about #academic_precarity are easy to ignore because they are abstract. A story is harder to ignore because it has faces. When a reader watches Agamemnon shame a man who did nothing wrong, the reader feels the injustice before analysing it. This article uses that feeling as a way into the analysis. It treats the Iliad as a set of tools for naming things that campus culture prefers to leave unnamed: the way honour is counted separately from #labour, the way a fair public request can be refused for private reasons, and the way the cost of one person's pride gets spread across a whole community. The scale of the underlying problem is not in dispute. Across the sector, secure, full-time, tenure-track positions have been steadily replaced by part-time and #non_tenure_track appointments, so that a large majority of the people teaching students now work without job security. Recent scholarship treats this not as an accident of budgeting but as a structural feature of the #neoliberal_university, in which #academic_capitalism reshapes the whole institution around cost control and market logic (Burton and Bowman, 2022; O'Brady et al., 2025). At the same time, the number and cost of managers and administrators has grown, sometimes faster than the number of students or teachers (Croucher and Woelert, 2022). The result is a widening gap between those who decide and those who deliver, which is exactly the gap the Iliad opens with. The article proceeds as follows. Section 2 reviews recent research on contingency, managerial growth, and the human costs of insecure academic work. Section 3 sets out the method: why a satirical, analogical reading of a classical text can do useful analytical work, and how classical reception has long served as social criticism. Section 4 gives a close reading of the Agamemnon-Chryses episode in Iliad Book 1. Section 5 maps the analogy in detail, matching each figure and each move in the poem to a feature of modern #campus_governance. Section 6 discusses what the satire reveals about power, honour, and labour. Section 7 turns to redress, asking what the poem's own logic suggests about repair. Section 8 states the limits of the approach, and Section 9 concludes. A short note on tone. This is a satire, which means it exaggerates on purpose to make a pattern visible. It does not claim that any real administrator is Agamemnon, or that any real adjunct is a Homeric priest. It claims something more modest and more uncomfortable: that a poem written roughly three thousand years ago already understood how power asymmetry corrodes a shared enterprise, and that the modern university would do well to remember the ending. 2. Literature Review 2.1 The rise of contingency The central fact behind this article is the shift from secure to insecure academic employment. Over several decades, universities moved away from a model in which most teaching was done by full-time, tenured or tenure-track staff, and toward a model in which most teaching is done by people on temporary, part-time, or renewable short contracts. These workers are grouped under several names, including #adjunct, part-time, casual, sessional, and #non_tenure_track faculty, and collectively as contingent faculty. Researchers increasingly frame this shift as a defining feature of the modern institution rather than a temporary response to hard times. Burton and Bowman (2022) describe an #academic_precariat and argue that precarity is not simply a pay problem but a systemic expression of #neoliberal_governance that works through time, space, and feeling. Their point matters for this article: the harm of contingency is not only that people are paid too little, but that they are held in a permanent state of not knowing, which shapes their sense of self and bleeds into the rest of their lives. The labour-history perspective sharpens this further. In an edited collection on the subject, contributors trace how the contingent faculty majority came to exist and how it is sustained, showing that the change was driven by structural pressures rather than by any drop in the value of teaching (Fure-Slocum and Goldstene, 2024). One recurring theme in that work is the ethos of professionalism, which has historically split tenure-track from non-tenure-track staff and both from campus workers, making it harder for the people at the bottom of the hierarchy to act together. This split is important for the Homeric reading below, because it explains why the "army" in the modern camp so rarely unites against the commander. The affective toll is now well documented. Mason and Megoran (2021) go so far as to describe #precarity as a form of dehumanisation in higher education, arguing that insecure conditions strip people of dignity in ways that go beyond the pay slip. Studies of researchers kept for years on rolling short-term contracts find careers that never quite begin, lives put on hold, and talent lost to the sector (Menard and Shinton, 2022). Comparative work across national systems confirms that #job_insecurity and the stress that comes with it are shaped by how institutions fund themselves, with heavy reliance on international tuition and on contingent labour raising insecurity for everyone, not only the casual staff (O'Brady et al., 2025). Abell-Selby (2025) frames the whole arrangement in terms of cost, arguing that the apparent savings from #precarity are paid for elsewhere, in quality, in wellbeing, and in the long-term health of the institution. Contingency is also unevenly distributed. Myers (2022) shows how zero-hours and insecure contracts interact with racism, so that the burden of precarity does not fall equally but tracks existing inequalities. Burton and Bowman (2022) likewise note that neoliberal policies interact with older hierarchies of gender, race, and class, so that #precarity concentrates on those already less protected. This unevenness matters for the satire that follows, because in Homer too the person turned away is not a random victim but someone whose lower structural position makes the refusal easy. 2.2 Managerialism and administrative growth If the first half of the story is the growth of insecure teaching labour, the second half is the growth of secure administrative power. Croucher and Woelert (2022) provide a careful longitudinal analysis of the non-academic workforce in a national system and document real #administrative_transformation and managerial growth, with expansion in the managerial and professional-services layers of the university. Their work is valuable precisely because it is empirical and measured, avoiding both the panic and the denial that often surround the phrase #administrative_bloat. The broader literature on the #neoliberal_university describes a shift in how universities are run, often summarised as the rise of #managerialism or new public management. In this model, decision-making moves upward and outward, away from the traditional #shared_governance of faculty committees and toward professional managers who answer to budgets, metrics, and market position. Parker (2021), writing about the business school as a case study, shows how critical voices inside the institution are simultaneously tolerated and absorbed, resisted and co-opted, so that the appearance of dissent survives while its bite is removed. This is directly relevant to the poem, where an assembly is held, opinions are voiced, and the powerful man does as he pleases anyway. The stress of these arrangements is not confined to the casual workforce. Peetz et al. (2022) examine control and insecurity in universities during the pandemic and find that even nominally secure staff experienced sharp increases in insecurity and loss of control when management tightened its grip. Taylor et al. (2022) study early retirement in the neoliberal university and connect it to the changed conditions of academic work, showing that experienced staff leave earlier when the job stops resembling the one they signed up for. Read together, these studies suggest that #managerial_control produces losses across the whole community, which is the structural equivalent of a plague that does not stop at the tents of the poor. 2.3 The politics of counting and of collective response A third strand of research concerns how people respond. Butovsky and Savage (2022) study #precarious_work and the union advantage, reporting mixed but instructive findings about what collective organisation can and cannot deliver for insecure workers. The edited labour-history collection already cited pays close attention to collective action, mutual aid, and the slow work of organising across the tenure divide (Fure-Slocum and Goldstene, 2024). The lesson across this literature is that power asymmetry is not fixed. It is produced and reproduced by choices, and it can be contested, though the contest is uphill and the tools are limited. Taken as a whole, the recent literature supports three claims that this article will develop through the Homeric lens. First, #contingency is structural, not incidental, and its costs are human and not only financial. Second, the growth of #managerial_power is real and measurable, and it moves decisions away from those who teach. Third, the harms of this arrangement spread beyond the most vulnerable and damage the shared enterprise. The Iliad, it turns out, already told this story, and told it with a clarity that spreadsheets cannot match. 3. Theoretical Framework and Method 3.1 Satire as a method, not a mood This article uses satire on purpose and as a method. Satire works by exaggeration and by mapping one world onto another, so that the reader sees the first world more clearly by looking at the second. When the article calls a dean "Agamemnon," it is not name-calling. It is a claim that a specific pattern of behaviour, refusing a fair request in order to protect status, has a recognisable shape, and that Homer captured that shape long ago. The value of the comparison lies in what it lets us notice. Analogical reasoning has real limits, which Section 8 discusses honestly. But it also has real strengths. It compresses a complicated argument into an image that people remember. It lets the reader feel the injustice of a situation before the reader has finished analysing it. And it can say difficult things about powerful people in a form that is harder to punish, which is one reason satire has always flourished where power is concentrated and criticism is risky. For contingent faculty, who often cannot speak plainly about their own institutions without endangering the next contract, a borrowed ancient voice offers a kind of cover. The priest speaks, and the reader hears the adjunct. 3.2 Classical reception as social criticism The use of ancient texts to criticise present arrangements is itself an old and respectable practice, studied under the heading of #classical_reception. Every age rereads Homer in the light of its own troubles, and the poem answers differently each time. Recent scholarship on the first book of the poem, including detailed commentary by Schein (2023), stresses how carefully the opening quarrel is built and how much of the whole epic is already contained in it. That care is what makes the episode useful here. Homer did not write a labour-relations manual, but he did write a precise study of what happens when honour, power, and a disputed possession collide in public, and that study transfers. This article treats the Iliad as what it is: a work of imaginative literature, not evidence about ancient economics or a source of policy. The claim is not that universities are literally like Bronze Age war camps. The claim is that certain human dynamics around power and honour recur across very different settings, and that a great poem about those dynamics can be read as a diagnostic tool. Reception, in this sense, is not distortion of the original. It is one of the things great texts are for. 3.3 Analytical vocabulary from the poem Three ideas from the world of the poem do most of the analytical work below, and each has a modern counterpart. The first is honour and status, the public ranking of a person's worth in the eyes of the group. In the poem this ranking is everything; a warrior fights for it and would rather die than lose it. On campus, honour appears as prestige, title, seniority, named chairs, keynote invitations, and the general question of whose voice counts in a room. The satire's central move is to notice that the campus, like the camp, runs two separate accounts, an account of honour and an account of #labour, and that the people with the most honour often do the least teaching, while the people who do the most teaching have almost no honour at all. The second is the prize, the material token of honour, called geras in the poem. A geras is a captured person or object awarded to a warrior as a public sign of standing. The quarrel is not really about the objects; it is about what taking them away says. On campus, the modern geras includes the guaranteed course release, the corner office, the research fund, the reserved parking space, the line on the budget, and above all the secure line itself. When these are handed out or taken away, the message about relative worth is received loud and clear, whatever the official language says. The third is the ransom and the payback, apoina and poine. Apoina is a fair offered payment to make things right by agreement; poine is the payback that comes when the fair offer is refused and the injured party turns to other means. The whole plot of Book 1 turns on the difference. Chryses offers a rich #ransom (apoina); Agamemnon refuses; and the priest then activates payback (poine) through the god, at ruinous cost to the refuser (Schein, 2023). On campus, apoina is the fair settlement that would resolve a grievance early, a decent wage, a stable contract, an honest process, a simple apology. Poine is what the institution pays later when it refuses that settlement, in turnover, litigation, unionisation, reputational damage, and the slow loss of goodwill. With these three ideas in hand, the poem becomes readable as a case study in power asymmetry, and the modern camp comes into focus. 4. The Agamemnon-Chryses Episode: A Close Reading The action of the Iliad begins in the tenth year of the war. The Greeks, on a raid, have captured two women, and by the ordinary rules of the camp these women have been distributed as prizes. Chryseis, the daughter of a priest of Apollo named Chryses, has been given to Agamemnon, the commander in chief. Briseis has been given to Achilles, the army's greatest fighter. These are the material tokens, the geras, that mark each man's standing. Chryses comes to the camp to ransom his daughter. He does not come as a beggar. He comes as a priest, holding the emblems of his god on a golden staff, and he brings a rich payment. He addresses the whole army and both sons of Atreus with respect. His request is public, polite, and backed by a fair offer. Crucially, the army agrees with him. The narrative is explicit that everyone else shouts approval, wishing to respect the priest and accept the handsome ransom. The camp's own sense of justice is on the side of the suppliant. One man overrides the camp's judgement. Agamemnon refuses, and he does not refuse gently. He sends the old man away harshly, threatens him, and lays a stern command on him not to return. In doing so he does three separate things that are worth separating out. He rejects a fair offer of #ransom, which is an economic act. He publicly humiliates a person of standing who did nothing wrong, which is a social act. And he overrules the clear consensus of the assembly, which is a political act. All three are exercises of power for the sake of honour, and none of them is just. Chryses cannot fight the commander. He has no army, no vote that counts, no protection. What he has is a relationship with a power outside the camp's chain of command. He walks away along the shore and prays to Apollo. The god hears him and comes down in anger, and for nine days arrows of plague fall on the army. Men and animals die. The refusal of one fair request, made for reasons of pride, becomes a disaster for the entire community, including the many who had wanted to grant the request in the first place. Only when the dying becomes unbearable does the army act. Achilles, not Agamemnon, calls the assembly. A seer, Calchas, is asked to explain the plague, and he is afraid to speak, because he knows the cause is the commander's own conduct and he fears the commander's anger. He speaks only after Achilles promises to protect him. This detail is not decoration. It shows that in the camp the truth about the powerful is dangerous to say out loud, and that it can be said only when someone with enough standing agrees to shield the speaker. The plague, in other words, is worsened by a culture in which people are afraid to name its cause. Calchas names it. The plague will stop only when Chryseis is returned to her father, without ransom, with proper amends made to the god. The remedy, notably, is exactly what Chryses asked for at the start, minus the ransom he had been willing to pay. The community must now give back for free, and with extra cost, what it could earlier have exchanged fairly and with honour. This is the difference between apoina and poine made concrete: the fair early settlement is cheaper than the forced late one. Agamemnon agrees to give up his prize, but he refuses to absorb the loss of face. He demands another prize in exchange, and he takes it from Achilles, seizing Briseis. This second act of high-handedness, taking a prize from the man whose standing most rivals his own, is what triggers the famous wrath of Achilles and drives the rest of the poem. It shows a further truth about power asymmetry: a leader forced to give up something will often try to recover his standing at the expense of the next person down, rather than accept the loss himself. The cost is passed along, never up. Two features of this episode deserve emphasis before the mapping begins. First, the injustice is committed in public, with the community's disapproval on record, and it happens anyway; the assembly exists but does not restrain the commander. Second, the harm is general, not targeted; the plague falls on the whole camp, not only on Agamemnon, which means that the community pays for the pride of its leader. Both features, as the next section argues, are exactly what one finds in the modern university when a fair grievance meets an ego that outranks it. 5. Mapping the Analogy This section matches the poem to the campus, figure by figure and move by move. The mapping is offered as satire, which means it is sharp on purpose, and as analysis, which means it is meant to hold up. 5.1 Agamemnon as the #tenured_administrator Agamemnon is not a villain by nature. He is a man in a role that gives him great power and few checks, and the role does much of the damage. He is the commander in chief, which on campus corresponds not to any single person but to the senior administrative layer, the presidents, provosts, deans, and their professional-services apparatus, whose growth the empirical literature has tracked (Croucher and Woelert, 2022). The point of naming this layer Agamemnon is not to insult the individuals in it, many of whom are decent and overworked, but to describe the structural position: secure, elevated, insulated, and accountable mainly upward. Agamemnon's defining trait is that he counts honour before justice. When the fair request comes, his first thought is not whether it is right but whether granting it will diminish him. This is the essence of #faculty_hubris in its administrative form. It is not stupidity or cruelty. It is the habit of treating one's own standing as the thing that must be protected first, so that a fair claim by a lower-ranked person reads automatically as a threat to be repelled rather than a matter to be settled. In a system organised around prestige and metrics, this habit is not a personal flaw so much as a trained reflex. The commander also has the power to overrule the assembly, and he uses it. On campus, the assembly is #shared_governance, the faculty senate and its committees, which in theory represent the community's collective judgement. When senior management can announce a consultation, hear the community's clear view, and then do as it pleases, the assembly has become theatre, a form that survives while its function is hollowed out. This is the co-optation of dissent that Parker (2021) describes: the meeting happens, the objections are recorded, and the decision was never really open. Agamemnon holds his own kind of consultation and disregards it. The pattern is the same. 5.2 Chryses as the #contingent_suppliant Chryses is the person who comes with a fair request and no power to enforce it. On campus, this is the #adjunct, the sessional teacher, the fixed-term researcher, the person who does much of the actual work of the institution and has almost no say in how it is run. Like Chryses, this person often comes with dignity and with a reasonable ask: renew my contract on time, pay me for the work I already do, stop assigning me courses three days before term, treat me as a colleague and not as a line item. Three features of Chryses map with uncomfortable precision. First, his request is fair, and the community knows it. Surveys and studies of #contingent_faculty consistently find conditions that most colleagues, if asked, would agree are unjust, from poverty-level per-course pay to contracts that offer no security beyond the current term (Fure-Slocum and Goldstene, 2024; Abell-Selby, 2025). The wrongness is not in dispute; the assembly, if polled, would side with the priest. Second, Chryses has standing but no power. He is a priest, a person of real worth in the moral order of the camp, yet worth does not translate into leverage. The modern adjunct is often a fine teacher, sometimes a serious scholar, respected by students and by immediate colleagues, and still unable to affect the decisions that govern the work. #Precarity, as Mason and Megoran (2021) argue, is a form of dehumanisation precisely because it separates a person's real worth from their treatment. Third, Chryses is turned away for reasons that have nothing to do with the merits. Agamemnon does not argue that the ransom is too small or the request unreasonable. He refuses because granting it would cost him face. Many campus grievances are refused in the same spirit, not because the claim is weak but because conceding it would set a precedent, admit a fault, or hand a symbolic win to someone lower in the hierarchy. The refusal protects honour, not justice. 5.3 The prizes: what the geras looks like on campus In the poem, the quarrel runs through captured women treated as prizes, which a modern reader rightly finds disturbing; part of the poem's power is that it does not hide the human cost of a system that turns people into tokens of male status. The satire here does not endorse that system. It uses the structure to expose a structure. The modern geras, the material token of honour, is not a person but it is still a marker whose giving and taking sends a message about relative worth. On campus the geras includes the secure line itself, the tenure-track post that confers standing and safety; the guaranteed course release that says your time is valuable; the research account, the named chair, the office with a window, the reserved parking, the seat on the committee that decides things. These goods are distributed in ways that track and reinforce the honour hierarchy. The person with the most honour gets the most course releases and so does the least teaching; the person with the least honour gets the most teaching and none of the tokens. The system quietly aligns reward with status rather than with contribution, which is the campus version of Agamemnon taking the best prize because he is the biggest man, regardless of who did the fighting. When a token is taken away, the message lands hard. A #contingent_faculty member whose expected course is reassigned at the last minute, or whose office is given to an incoming administrator, or whose title is downgraded, experiences something structurally like the seizure of Briseis: a public demonstration that their standing can be reduced at will by someone with more power. The material loss is real, but the message, that you do not count, is the deeper wound. 5.4 The ransom refused: #apoina, #poine, and the price of pride The heart of the analogy is the difference between the fair early settlement and the ruinous late one. Chryses offers apoina, a fair ransom, and the whole cost of the story flows from Agamemnon's refusal of it. Had he accepted, there would have been no plague. Because he refused, the community must later give back the same prize for nothing and pay extra amends on top. The refusal did not save him anything. It multiplied the cost and moved it into the future. Universities do this constantly. A fair early settlement of a #contingent_faculty grievance, a decent wage, a stable multi-year contract, a transparent renewal process, a timely apology, is the campus apoina. It is available, it is affordable relative to the alternative, and it resolves the matter with honour intact on both sides. Refusing it does not make the cost disappear. It converts the cost into poine, the payback that arrives later and larger: staff who leave and take their expertise with them (Taylor et al., 2022), positions that must be refilled and retrained, grievances that become lawsuits, quiet non-cooperation, reputational harm, and, increasingly, unionisation drives whose entire energy comes from settlements that were refused when they were cheap (Butovsky and Savage, 2022; Fure-Slocum and Goldstene, 2024). The economic irony is exact. Agamemnon refuses a payment in order to protect his standing and ends up losing both the payment and the standing, plus a war's worth of trouble. The institution that refuses a fair settlement to avoid setting a precedent often ends up conceding far more, under worse terms, after a public fight, having also lost the goodwill that an early yes would have preserved. #Precarity looks like a saving on the balance sheet and turns out to be a debt, which is the argument Abell-Selby (2025) makes in the plain language of cost. 5.5 Apollo's plague: the systemic backfire The plague is the most important part of the analogy and the part most often missed. It is not a random misfortune and it is not aimed only at Agamemnon. It falls on the whole army, on the many who had wanted to grant the priest's request as much as on the one who refused it. The community pays for the pride of its leader. On campus, the plague is the sum of the systemic consequences of #power_asymmetry, and like Homer's plague it does not stay in the tents of the poor. When #contingent_faculty are treated badly, teaching quality suffers because exhausted, insecure, last-minute-hired teachers cannot do their best work; students, who are not party to the quarrel at all, receive a worse education. Morale falls across the whole department, including among the secure. Trust between faculty and administration erodes, which makes every future decision harder and slower. Talented people leave the profession, and the sector loses their contribution for good (Menard and Shinton, 2022). Even the secure suffer rising insecurity and loss of control, as the machinery built to manage the precarious is turned, sooner or later, on everyone (Peetz et al., 2022). The arrows do not distinguish rank. This is why the satire matters. The standard defence of #contingency is that it is a hardheaded response to budget reality, a necessary cost saving. The plague exposes the flaw in that defence. The costs did not vanish; they were displaced and delayed, and they landed on the whole community, including the very institution that thought it was saving money. Homer understood, three thousand years ago, that an injustice at the top becomes a sickness throughout the body. The modern university keeps rediscovering this the hard way. 5.6 Calchas and the fear of speaking One figure in the episode is easy to overlook and vital to the argument. Calchas, the seer, knows the true cause of the plague, and he is afraid to say it, because the cause is the conduct of the most powerful man and that man's anger is dangerous. He speaks only after Achilles, a figure with enough standing to matter, promises to protect him. This maps directly onto the problem of voice in the #neoliberal_university. The people who best understand what is going wrong, often the #contingent_faculty living the conditions, are precisely the people least able to say so safely, because their next contract depends on not making trouble. The truth about the powerful is dangerous to speak, so it goes unspoken, and the plague continues because its cause cannot be named. This is one of the deepest costs of #academic_precarity: it does not only exploit people, it silences the very knowledge that could fix the problem. Calchas needs a protector before he will speak; the adjunct needs a union, a tenured ally, or the cover of anonymity, for the same reason. 5.7 Achilles and the divided community The final piece of the mapping is the most sobering. When Agamemnon is forced to give up his prize, he does not accept the loss. He seizes Briseis from Achilles, passing the cost down to the next figure rather than absorbing it himself. This drives Achilles into a rage and, crucially, out of the fight. The army's best fighter withdraws, and the community is weakened from within. On campus, Achilles is the senior, secure, high-status faculty member, the star professor who is not an administrator and not an adjunct, but somewhere powerful in between. The analogy warns of two things. First, that administrative high-handedness eventually reaches even the powerful faculty, because a system that passes costs downward will keep passing them until it runs out of people, and the tenured are not as far from the edge as they think (Peetz et al., 2022; Taylor et al., 2022). Second, and more troubling, that the community's own divisions do the leader's work for him. Achilles is furious about his own prize, not about the priest's daughter. He withdraws to nurse his own grievance rather than uniting the camp against the pattern that harmed them both. This is the tragedy of #shared_governance under #power_asymmetry. The tenured and the contingent are both harmed by the same managerial logic, but the ethos of professionalism that Fure-Slocum and Goldstene (2024) describe keeps them apart, each attending to their own honour, each treating the other's grievance as a separate matter. Agamemnon survives the quarrel not because he is strong but because his opponents will not combine. The modern administration often survives the same way. The plague continues, in part, because Achilles and Chryses never stand together. 6. Discussion: What the Satire Reveals 6.1 Hubris is structural, not merely personal The most important thing the satire reveals is that #faculty_hubris, in its administrative form, is not mainly a matter of arrogant individuals. Agamemnon behaves as he does because his role rewards the protection of honour above the doing of justice, and because nothing in the structure forces him to absorb the cost of his own pride. Change the person and keep the role, and the pattern repeats. This matches the emphasis in recent scholarship on #academic_precarity as a systemic feature of #neoliberal_governance rather than a series of unlucky local decisions (Burton and Bowman, 2022; O'Brady et al., 2025). This reframing has a practical payoff. If hubris is personal, the remedy is to find better people, which is slow, uncertain, and easy to abandon. If hubris is structural, the remedy is to change the structure, to build in the checks that would force the powerful to absorb the cost of their own refusals. The poem is pessimistic about the first kind of remedy; Agamemnon does not become wise. It is more hopeful about the second, since the plague eventually forces a correction that no amount of good character had produced. Consequences, not virtue, move the commander. 6.2 The two accounts: honour versus labour The satire also exposes the strange bookkeeping of the modern university, which runs two separate accounts that ought to be one. The account of honour records prestige, title, seniority, and voice. The account of #labour records who actually teaches the students and does the work. In a just system these accounts would roughly match, so that those who do the most valuable work hold the most standing. In the camp, and on the campus, they come apart. Agamemnon holds the highest honour and does none of the fighting that matters most; Achilles does the fighting and is treated as expendable when it suits the commander. On campus, #administrative and star-faculty honour rises while the teaching that justifies the whole enterprise is handed to those with the least standing of all. This split is the engine of the injustice. Because honour and #labour are counted separately, it becomes possible to say, without embarrassment, that the people doing most of the teaching deserve the least security, and that the people doing least of the teaching deserve the most. The satire makes the absurdity visible by putting it in a story where the mismatch leads to catastrophe. When honour and contribution stop matching, the community stops functioning, and eventually it pays. 6.3 Governance as theatre A further revelation concerns #shared_governance. The poem contains a real assembly, with real speeches and a real consensus, which the commander overrules. This is not the absence of governance; it is governance as theatre, a form retained while its function is removed. Parker (2021) describes the same move in the modern institution, where critique is invited and then absorbed, and where the appearance of participation coexists with the reality of top-down decision. The danger of theatre governance is that it is more durable than open autocracy, because it lets everyone believe that a process exists, which reduces the pressure to build one that works. The satire suggests a test. A governance process is real to the extent that it can force a powerful person to do something they would rather not do. By that test, an assembly that Agamemnon can always overrule is not governance; it is stage-dressing. Campus bodies should ask themselves the same question. When was the last time our senate made senior management do something it did not want to do? If the honest answer is never, then the camp is holding meetings, not sharing power. 6.4 The false economy of #precarity Finally, the satire reveals the false economy at the centre of #contingency. The plague is the poem's way of showing that the refused settlement does not save anything; it defers and multiplies the cost. The empirical literature tells the same story in its own register. #Precarity produces turnover, retraining costs, lost expertise, grievances, litigation, unionisation, reputational harm, and degraded teaching, and these costs land on the whole institution, including its balance sheet (Menard and Shinton, 2022; Butovsky and Savage, 2022; Abell-Selby, 2025). The saving is an illusion sustained by looking at one column and ignoring the rest. Homer's plague is a dramatic way of insisting that the columns be added up honestly. When they are, the fair early settlement, the campus apoina, is revealed as the cheaper option all along. The refusal of it is not toughness; it is a bad trade made to protect honour, and the bill arrives with interest. 7. Toward Redress: What the Poem's Logic Suggests The Iliad is not a policy paper, and it would be foolish to pretend it contains a reform agenda. But the internal logic of the episode does point toward the shape of a remedy, and that shape lines up with what the labour literature recommends. Four suggestions follow, offered in the spirit of the story rather than as a checklist. First, give back what was wrongly kept, and do it early. The plague stops only when Chryseis is returned. The remedy was always the same as the original fair request; delay only added cost. For the university, this means resolving #contingent_faculty grievances at the apoina stage, with fair pay, stable contracts, honest renewal processes, and timely acknowledgement of fault, rather than waiting for the poine stage of unionisation, litigation, and public conflict. The early settlement is cheaper, and it preserves honour on both sides (Fure-Slocum and Goldstene, 2024). Second, build structures that force the powerful to absorb the cost of their own refusals. Agamemnon repeats his behaviour because he can pass the cost downward. A governance system worth the name would make senior decision-makers feel the consequences of #power_asymmetry directly, through binding faculty votes, transparent budgets that show the true cost of #contingency, and accountability that runs downward as well as upward. Without such structures, better people will not be enough, because the role will keep producing Agamemnons (Croucher and Woelert, 2022; Parker, 2021). Third, protect the speakers. Calchas will not name the cause of the plague until he is promised protection. The knowledge needed to fix #academic_precarity sits mostly with the people least able to voice it safely. Strong protections for #contingent_faculty who speak, through recognised unions, secure reporting channels, and tenured allies willing to lend cover, are not a luxury; they are the precondition for the institution learning what is wrong with it (Myers, 2022; Mason and Megoran, 2021). Fourth, and most difficult, unite the camp. The single greatest source of administrative durability in the poem is the failure of Achilles and Chryses to stand together. The tenured and the contingent are harmed by the same logic and divided by the same ethos of professionalism. Redress depends on closing that gap, on secure faculty treating adjunct grievances as their own and on collective bodies that bargain across the tenure line rather than within it (Fure-Slocum and Goldstene, 2024; Butovsky and Savage, 2022). A united assembly can restrain a commander. A divided one cannot, and the plague continues. None of this is easy, and the poem is honest about that. Agamemnon gives back Chryseis only under the pressure of mass death, and even then he claws back his loss from someone else. Institutions rarely reform out of insight; they reform under pressure. The value of the satire is that it makes the pressure legible in advance, so that a community can, in principle, choose the cheaper and more honourable path before the arrows begin to fall. 8. Limitations Honesty requires naming the limits of this approach. First, analogy is not proof. Showing that the modern university resembles the Greek camp does not by itself demonstrate causation, and every mapping in Section 5 is an interpretation that a reader may reasonably resist. The article's claims about #power_asymmetry rest on the cited empirical literature; the poem illuminates and organises those claims but does not verify them. Second, the comparison flattens real differences. The Iliad is set in a world of war, slavery, and heroic honour that is morally distant from a modern campus, and the article has used the structure of that world without endorsing its content. In particular, the poem treats captured people as prizes, and any use of that structure risks trivialising real human suffering, both ancient and modern. The mapping of the geras onto campus goods is meant to expose a pattern, not to equate an adjunct's lost office with a captive's fate. Third, the categories are broad. Grouping all senior administrators as "Agamemnon" and all insecure staff as "Chryses" erases enormous variation. Many administrators are former faculty who resist the very logic described here; many #contingent_faculty have far more power and protection than the label suggests, and many secure faculty do the hard, unglamorous work of defending their precarious colleagues. Satire trades precision for clarity, and the reader should supply the nuance the satire leaves out. Fourth, the article is centred on the systems it draws its literature from, which are mainly Anglophone and shaped by particular funding models (Burton and Bowman, 2022; O'Brady et al., 2025; Croucher and Woelert, 2022). Other higher-education systems distribute power differently, and the analogy may fit them loosely or not at all. Readers in those systems should test the mapping against their own conditions rather than assuming it transfers. These limits do not dissolve the argument, but they bound it. The claim is not that the university is the Iliad. The claim is that a specific, recurring dynamic of power, honour, and refused settlement is visible in both, and that seeing it in the poem helps us see it, and perhaps address it, on the campus. 9. Conclusion The Iliad opens with a powerful man refusing a fair request in order to protect his standing, and it shows the whole community paying for that refusal. This article has argued that the modern university runs a slower version of the same story, in which secure #tenured_administrators hold power over insecure #contingent_faculty, in which fair grievances are refused for reasons of honour rather than justice, and in which the cost of that refusal falls, plague-like, on the entire institution and the students it serves. The satire is meant to make a structural pattern visible and memorable. #Faculty_hubris, read this way, is not mainly about arrogant individuals; it is about a role that rewards the defence of status over the doing of justice, and about a system that lets the powerful pass the cost of their pride downward. #Adjunct_vulnerability, read the same way, is not a personal misfortune; it is the predictable position of the suppliant who has worth but no leverage, whose fair request the assembly approves and the commander overrules. Between them lies the double bookkeeping of honour and #labour, and the false economy of #precarity that looks like a saving and turns out to be a debt. Homer also, quietly, points toward the remedy. The plague ends when what was wrongly kept is given back, and it would never have started had the fair offer been accepted at the beginning. The campus apoina, a decent wage, a stable contract, an honest process, a timely apology, is cheaper than the poine of turnover, conflict, and lost trust that comes when it is refused. The obstacles to that remedy are structural: governance that functions as theatre, a culture that punishes the naming of the problem, and a divided community whose members guard their separate honour instead of standing together. Each obstacle has an answer in the poem, and each answer is echoed in the recent literature on #academic_labour. The final lesson is the oldest one in the book. An injustice at the top does not stay at the top. It spreads, it sickens the whole body, and it is paid for by everyone, including those who committed it. The modern university, like the Greek camp, can go on refusing the fair request and waiting for the arrows, or it can do the harder and cheaper thing and give back what it wrongly kept, before the plague begins. The poem has been waiting three thousand years to make the point. The only question is whether the camp is listening. References Abell-Selby, E. (2025). The cost of precarity in U.S. higher education. Practicing Anthropology, 47. Burton, S., and Bowman, B. (2022). The academic precariat: understanding life and labour in the neoliberal academy. British Journal of Sociology of Education, 43(4), 497-512. https://doi.org/10.1080/01425692.2022.2076387 Butovsky, J., and Savage, L. (2022). Precarious work and the union advantage: paradoxical findings from Niagara. Journal of Labor and Society. Croucher, G., and Woelert, P. (2022). Administrative transformation and managerial growth: a longitudinal analysis of changes in the non-academic workforce at Australian universities. Higher Education, 84(1), 159-175. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10734-021-00759-8 Fure-Slocum, E., and Goldstene, C. (Eds.). (2024). Contingent faculty and the remaking of higher education. University of Illinois Press. Mason, O., and Megoran, N. (2021). Precarity and dehumanisation in higher education. Learning and Teaching, 14(1), 35-59. Menard, C. B., and Shinton, S. (2022). The career paths of researchers in long-term employment on short-term contracts: case study from a UK university. PLoS ONE, 17(9), e0274486. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0274486 Myers, M. (2022). Racism, zero-hours contracts and complicity in higher education. British Journal of Sociology of Education, 43(4), 584-602. O'Brady, S., Peetz, D., Weststar, J., et al. (2025). Academic capitalism and precarity in the neoliberal university: job insecurity and stress in two liberal market economies. Industrial Relations Journal. https://doi.org/10.1111/irj.12466 Parker, M. (2021). The critical business school and the university: a case study of resistance and co-optation. Critical Sociology, 47(7-8), 1111-1124. Peetz, D., O'Brady, S., Weststar, J., et al. (2022). Control and insecurity in Australian and Canadian universities during the COVID-19 pandemic. Relations Industrielles / Industrial Relations, 77(2). Schein, S. L. (2023). Homer: Iliad Book I. Cambridge University Press. Taylor, P., Gringart, E., Webb, E., et al. (2022). Drivers and patterns of early retirement in the neoliberal university. The Economic and Labour Relations Review, 33(4). #faculty_hubris #adjunct_vulnerability #power_asymmetry #higher_education_administration #contingent_faculty #tenured_administrators #academic_precarity #neoliberal_university #shared_governance #Agamemnon_and_Chryses #Iliad_satire #classical_reception #academic_labour #administrative_bloat #economy_of_honour

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