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There is no city with a name of Zeleia known to modern scholars nor to the ancient writers, except this instance in [[Homer]]'s work.
There is no city with a name of Zeleia known to modern scholars nor to the ancient writers, except this instance in [[Homer]]'s work.


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Revision as of 11:42, 25 November 2006

Zeleia is the name of an ancient town or city, according to the Iliad, which was allied to Troy. It appears to have been located in the Troad and to have been inhabited by Trojans. Says Homer: "They who lived in Zeleia below the foot of Mount Ida, who drank the dark water of Aesepus, Trojans." (Iliad 2.824). Zeleia led a force of warriors to aid Troy during the Trojan War, led by Pandarus, son of Lycaon. It is later related that the people of Zeleia are 'Lycians', although the Zeleians are distinct from the Lycians who come from Lycia in southwestern Asia Minor, led by Sarpedon and Glaucus. The connection between the 'Lycians' of Zeleia and these Lycians is unclear - if there us any connection at all.

There is no city with a name of Zeleia known to modern scholars nor to the ancient writers, except this instance in Homer's work.