Updated
Updated · Mentalfloss · Jul 15
Historians Weigh 1180 BC Troy Evidence as Trojan Horse Remains Unproven
Updated
Updated · Mentalfloss · Jul 15

Historians Weigh 1180 BC Troy Evidence as Trojan Horse Remains Unproven

3 articles · Updated · Mentalfloss · Jul 15

Summary

  • Most historians now accept that Troy existed, placing it at a site in modern Turkey whose ruins appear to have been abandoned around 1180 BC.
  • Archaeological finds—skeletons, sling bullets and repeatedly damaged fortifications—suggest the city saw violent conflict, though they do not prove Homer’s Trojan War occurred.
  • The Trojan Horse remains the least verifiable element: some scholars read it as a metaphor for a battering ram or ship, while ancient sources describe a wheeled wooden structure built by Epeius.
  • Accounts also diverge sharply on the horse’s occupants, with ancient estimates ranging from fewer than 30 men to 100, and one source claiming 3,000.

Insights

What did the 2025 Troy excavation reveal that could finally prove the legendary war was real?
If the Trojan Horse was a metaphor, what other famous parts of Homer’s epic might be fiction?
How did a treasure hunter’s destructive search for Troy accidentally create modern archaeology?