The
name of Alexandria Troas has a most confusing name since it is
generally thought that the city was founded by Alexander the Great, more so because of the king’s admiration for The Iliad in which Troy played such an important role. Nothing is further remote from the truth.
[Votif relief of Psyche on a dromedary from Alexandria Troas,
2nd century BC, Louvre Museum]
According to Strabo the town of Sigeia was founded on this spot around
306 BC by Antigonus-Monophthalmus.
The name of Alexandria Troas was given to the city by Lysimachos in 301 BC, as a generous referral to Alexander. It was a double harbor in
northwestern Asia Minor and the richest of the
Troad and occupied a strategic position near the entrance
of the Hellespont. It silted up over the
centuries.
In 188 BC, the Romans declared
it a free and autonomous city that counted about 100,000 inhabitants. Emperor Augustus settled a colony of
soldiers within its walls and renamed it Colonnia Alexandria Augusta Troas,
in short Troas.
He lavishly embellished the city, as did the emperors Trajan and Hadrian a century later.
Herodus Atticus, best known for his theater at the foot of the Acropolis in Athens, was appointed by Hadrian as prefect of the free cities of Asia
in 125 AD, including Alexandria Troas. He may have built the aqueduct that carried
water from Mount Ida, although other sources
attribute the construction to Trajan.
Alexandria Troas was surrounded by a 10-kilometer-long city wall,
including fortified towers placed at regular intervals. Some parts are still visible
today together with remains of the Roman Baths and the Gymnasium, a Necropolis, a Nymphaeum, the Odeon, the
Theater, and a recently discovered Stadium dating approximately from 100 BC.
The
Baths and the Gymnasium were built by Herodus Atticus in 135 AD. They were surrounded by vaulted corridors with marble
walls and water was delivered thanks to the aqueducts on the northeast side of
town. The large Baths measured an impressive 123 x 84 meters. Most of the
building remained intact until it was destroyed by the severe
earthquake in the winter of 1809-1810. The whole project was greatly supported
by Emperor Hadrian as revealed in an
inscription found in Hadrian’s Gymnasium in Athens mentioning the emperor as the sponsor of the city in 132 AD. Three more inscriptions unearthed at Alexandria
Troas during excavations in 2006 confirm the emperor’s interest and the
appreciation of the citizens.
The Hellenistic theater stood at the highest point of
the city treating the spectators to a sweeping view over the city and the
Aegean Sea with the island Bozcaada.
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