The Phrygian people (Phruges or Phryges) in …

Years: 1197BCE - 1054BCE

The Phrygian people (Phruges or Phryges) in earliest history lived in Macedonia under the name of Bruges (or Bryges), which later evolved to Phruges, before that country's adoption of Greek as a national language.

A number of peoples there spoke Balkan languages descended from non-Greek or pre-Greek Indo-European languages, or Greek in some early form of development.

During the ascendancy of the city-state of Troy, a part of the Bruges had immigrated to Anatolia as Trojan allies or under the protection of Troy.

The Trojan language has not survived; consequently, its exact relationship to the Phrygian language and the affinity of Phrygian society to that of Troy remain open questions.

Similarly, the date of migration and the relationship of the Phrygians to the Hittite empire are unknown.

A conventional date of around 1200 BCE often is used, at the very end of the empire.

It is certain that Phrygia is constituted on Hittite land, and yet not at the very center of Hittite power in the big bend of the Halys River, where Ankara now is.

It is presently unknown whether the Phrygians were actively involved in the collapse of the Hittite capital Hattusa or whether they simply moved into the vacuum left by the collapse of Hittite hegemony.

Archaeologists found the so-called Handmade Knobbed Ware at sites from this period in Western Anatolia.

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