Who were the Lelegians? Interrogating affiliations, boundaries and difference in ancient Caria
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Authors
Journal Title
Anatolian Studies
ISSN
0066-1546
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Type
Article
This Version
AM
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Mokrisova, J. Who were the Lelegians? Interrogating affiliations, boundaries and difference in ancient Caria. Anatolian Studies https://doi.org/10.17863/CAM.84823
Abstract
Who were the Lelegians? Ancient Greek and Latin texts refer to the Lelegians as an indigenous people, locating them in southwestern Anatolia in a region known in historical times as Caria. Yet attempts to find evidence for the Lelegians ‘on the ground’ have met with questionable success. This paper has two aims. First, it provides an up to date picture of the
archaeology of ancient Caria and shows that there is little indication for distinctly ‘Lelegian' forms of material culture during the first millennium BCE. Second, it juxtaposes archaeological evidence with the development of the Lelegian ethnonym and suggests that the idea of a distinct Lelegian identity was retrospectively constructed by the Carians to fulfil
the role of an imaginary ‘barbarian other’. This happened in the late Classical and early Hellenistic periods, a time of intensified Carian ethnogenesis, and was a process that responded to and made creative use of earlier Greek knowledge traditions. Finally, this paper argues that a later horizon of Lelegian imagining occurred in modern scholarship of the 19th and 20th centuries. Who, then, were the Lelegians? In this article, I propose that they were an imaginary people, invented and reinvented over the centuries.
Sponsorship
University of Michigan; The American School of Classical Studies at Athens; Koç University’s Center for Anatolian Civilizations; ‘Migration and the Making of the Ancient Greek World’ Project (European Research Council Consolidator project, Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme grant agreement No. 865644)
Embargo Lift Date
2025-05-23
Identifiers
This record's DOI: https://doi.org/10.17863/CAM.84823
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/337411
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
Licence URL: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
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