Zeleia
Template:Infobox ancient site Template:Short description Zeleia (Template:Langx) was a town of the ancient Troad, at the foot of Mount Ida and on the banks of the river Aesepus (both located in Turkey), at a distance of 80 stadia from its mouth.<ref name=Strabo>Template:Cite Strabo</ref><ref>Template:Cite Stephanus</ref> It is mentioned by Homer in the Trojan Battle Order in the Iliad, and later when Homer calls it a holy town.<ref>Template:Cite Iliad</ref> Zeleia led a force of warriors to aid Troy during the Trojan War, led by Pandarus, son of Lycaon (the latter Lycaon not to be confused with Lycaon, son of Priam. It is later related that the people of Zeleia are "Lycians", though the Zeleians are distinct from the Lycians who come from Lycia in southwestern Asia Minor, led by Sarpedon and Glaucus.
Arrian mentions it as the headquarters of the Persian army before the Battle of the Granicus, in May 334 BCE, where the Persian satraps held a council at Zeleia where they discussed how best to confront Alexander the Great.<ref>Arrian Anabasis Alexandri 1.13</ref> It existed in the time of Strabo; but afterwards it disappears.<ref name=Strabo/>
Arthmios (Template:Langx, Aryan-Luvian meaning truly mine or my perfect one) of Zeleia together with his family, was declared an outlaw in the territory of Athens and her allies, because he had brought the gold from Persian Empire into Peloponnese.<ref>Plutarch, Life of Themistocles, §6</ref> Nicagoras (Template:Langx) of Zeleia, was a tyrant of Zeleia.<ref>Athenaeus, Deipnosophists, §7.288</ref>
The site of ancient Zeleia is located near Sarıköy, Balıkesir, Turkey.<ref name=Barrington>Template:Cite Barrington</ref><ref>Template:Cite DARE</ref>
See also
References
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Template:Former settlements in Turkey Template:Authority control