1 Introduction
The Greeks called the peninsula, which  appeared like a large island to the west, Hesperia. [1]
Hesperia was the Italian peninsula,  inhabited by the Oenotrians. [2]
The 2nd-century AD geographer Pausanias  wrote that Italy was the first Greek overseas colony. [3]
The primary source of information about the  Bronze Age Italian peninsula is Antiochus, son of Xenophanes, a historian who  wrote about Italy and Sicily. [4]
Antiochus lived in Syracuse, Sicily, in the  5th century BC. [5]
Pausanias, the 1st-century AD geographer  Strabo, and the 1st-century BC historian Dionysius of Halicarnassus all  reference Antiochus's works. [6]
This chapter describes the Bronze Age  history of the Italian peninsula, Lipara, Sardinia, and Sicily. No Bronze Age  traditions have been found for Cyrnus, north of Sardinia.
      2 First Migration
        2.1 First migrants
        The first Greeks to arrive in the Italian  peninsula were led by two sons of Lycaon, Oenotrus and Peucetius. [7]
        Lycaon was the son of Pelasgus, the son of  Niobe, daughter of Phoroneus, founder of Argos. [8]
        Pelasgus was the progenitor of the  Pelasgians, and the people led by Oenotrus and Peucetius were Pelasgians. [9]
      2.2 Causes of Migration
        In 1635 BC, a dispute arose among the  descendants of Argus, son of Niobe, in Argos.
        Tiryns, son of Argus, migrated southeast  from Argos and founded Tiryns.[10]
        Epidaurus, son of Argus, migrated east from  Argos and founded Epidaurus.[11]
        The two sons of Lycaon, Oenotrus and  Peucetius, migrated from Argos to the Italian peninsula.[12]
      2.3 Settlement of Oenotrus and Peucetius
        In 1635 BC, Oenotrus and Peucetius migrated  from Argos to southern Italian peninsula.
        Peucetius settled in the southeastern part  of the Italian peninsula. [13]
        The people who settled with Peucetius were  called Peucetians (or Peucetii, Poedicli), and the region came to be called  Peucetia. [14]
        Oenotrus settled in the southwestern part  of the Italian peninsula. [15]
        Oenotrus lived at the high point where  three peaks meet near the Acheron River. His companions expanded their  settlements near the coast, founding Pandosia (present-day Mendicino) as their  center. [16]
        The people who settled with Oenotrus were  called Oenotrians (or Oenotri), and the region came to be called Oenotria. [17]
      2.4 Derivation from the Oenotrians
        During the reign of Italus, likely  Oenotrus' grandson, the Oenotrians expanded their territory from Pandosia to  the Laus River, more than 60 km north. Italus was a wise leader, and his people  came to be called Italians. [18]
        Italus had two sons, Morges and Ausonus (or  Auson). [19]
        Sicelus, the ancestor of the Sicels, is  also likely his son. [20]
        Thucydides records Italus as king of the  Sicels. [21]
        In 1520 BC, Sicelus migrated to the central  part of the Italian peninsula. [22]
        In 1520 BC, Ausonus migrated south of the  Acheron River and founded Tempsa. [23]
        In 1520 BC, Morges migrated to the  southwestern part of the Italian peninsula. [24]
        The peoples led by Sicelus, Ausonus, and  Morges became known as Sicels, Ausones, and Morgetes, respectively. [25]
      2.5 Expansion of the Ausones' territory
        In 1400 BC, Liparus, son of Auson,  descendant of Ausonus, son of Italus, was driven out by his brothers and  migrated from the Italian peninsula to the island northeast of Sicily. The  island was called Melogonis or Meligunis, but it came to be known as Lipara  after him. [26]
        In 1365 BC, Aeolus, son of Melanippe,  migrated from Metabum (later Metapontium) in southern Italian peninsula to  Lipara and married Cyane, daughter of Liparus. [27]
        In 1364 BC, Liparus, aided by Aeolus,  migrated from Lipara to the vicinity of Surrentum near Neapolis. [28]
        Consequently, the Ausonians expanded their  territory northward, and the sea west of the Italian peninsula came to be  called the Ausonian Sea, while the peninsula itself was named Ausonia. [29]
        Strabo questioned why a sea unrelated to  the Ausonians came to bear their name, but the above sequence of events  explains it. [30]
      2.6 Settlement in Reatine
        The Ausones expanded their settlement near Reate,  located in the highlands of the Apennines in central Italian peninsula. Three  large groups of Ausones migrated there:
        1) The first group settled in Lista, near  Amiternum, east of Reate. [31]
        2) The second group settled around Cutilia,  east-southeast of Reate. [32]
        3) The third group, led by Sancus, settled  in Testruna, near Amiternum. [33]
        All three groups shared a common ancestor:  Quirinus, the progenitor of the Romans. [34]
      2.7 Merging with the Pelasgians
        In 1389 BC, after these groups had settled,  another group came over the Apennine Mountains from the Adriatic Sea side. They  were the Pelasgians, who had fled Thessaly, pursued by the sons of Deucalion.  Their leader was Janus, son of Nanas, who had lived in Perrhaebia in northern  Thessaly. [35]
        The Pelasgians led by Janus encamped near  Cutilia, east of Reate, and confronted the second group residing there. [36]
        Both groups shared Niobe, daughter of  Phoroneus, son of Inachus of Argos, as a common ancestor. Oenotrus, ancestor of  the Ausones, had departed Argos in 1635 BC, 246 years prior. The family of  Larisa, daughter of Pelasgus son of Triopas, and the ancestor of Janus, had  migrated from Argos to Thessaly in 1560 BC, 171 years prior.
        Though their languages had diverged due to  contact with different peoples and independent linguistic evolution since  leaving Argos, they likely still understood each other.
        At that time, the area around Reatine was  scattered with settlements of the Umbrians, the earliest inhabitants of the  Italian peninsula, and the Sicels, who had migrated from southern Italian  peninsula to the central part of the peninsula. [37]
        The second group accepted the Pelasgians  led by Janus, cohabiting with them and making them allies in their battles  against the Umbrians and Sicels. [38]
      2.8 Further confluence
        Sancus, leading the third group, drove out  the first group residing in nearby Lista and expanded his settlement. The first  group from Lista fled to join the second group around Cutilia, where they  settled together. [39]
        Sancus then attacked Cutilia, where the  first and second groups coexisted with Pelasgians who had migrated from  Thessaly. However, through marriage alliances and the conclusion of agreements,  the two sides avoided serious hostilities. [40]
        The marriage alliance was the union of  Olistene, daughter of Janus, and Sabus, son of Sancus. The agreement was to  fight together against the indigenous Umbrians and Sicels as a common enemy.  [41]
        Through this marriage, Janus became one of  the gods of Rome and gave his name to the first month of the year. [42]
      2.9 Name of the Group
        The group of Sancus grew in power during  the reign of his son Sabus and came to be called the Sabines after Sabus's  name. [43]
        Meanwhile, the group other than Sancus's  had no specific name. Later writers called them the Aborigines. [44]
        The Aborigines were said to be named for  living in the mountains and were a group of wanderers who had gathered from  many places.[45]
        Dionysius of Halicarnassus wrote, "The  Aborigines were Greeks who came to Italy from the Peloponnesus and Thessaly."  [46]
      2.10 Expansion from Reatine
        Sabus and Janus's daughter Olistene bore at  least four sons, Modius, Saturnus, Janus, and Picus, and a daughter, Ops. [47]
        In 1335 BC, Modius (or Fabidius) migrated  south from Cutilia and founded Cures in the land between the coast and the  interior. [48]
        In 1330 BC, Saturnus led the Pelasgians to  settle near the mouth of the Tiber River and founded Saturnia. [49]
        In 1330 BC, Janus married Jaturuna,  daughter of Vulturnus, settled near the mouth of the Tiber River, and founded  the Janiculum. [50]
        The name Vulturnus referred to both the  river flowing into the Tyrrhenian Sea near Neapolis, slightly closer to Rome,  and the town situated near its mouth. [51]
        Jaturuna's father Vulturnus is presumed to  have been the Ausones and a leader of the Aborigines.
        In 1335 BC, Picus migrated across the  Apennine Mountains seeking settlement on the Adriatic Sea side.
        Picus' settlement was called Picentine, and  its inhabitants were known as Picentini. [52]
        Picus was named from the Latin word for the  woodpecker bird. [53]
        Near Testruna, where Sancus first settled,  was an oracle of Mars, the god of war. This connection stemmed from the  woodpecker (picus), with its sturdy beak capable of piercing even hard oak, and  the spear (quiris) wielded by the war god. [54]
        Sancus' ancestor Quirinus was a master of  the spear. After his death, Quirinus was revered by the people as a god of war,  and the woodpecker, with its beak as sharp as a spearhead that could pierce  even a shield, was cherished as a sacred bird. [55]
      2.11 Descendants of Janus, son of Nanas
        Janus, son of Nanas, who led the Pelasgians  in migration from Thessaly, had a son named Aethex in addition to his daughter  Olistene, and Aethex had a son named Faunus. [56]
        In 1340 BC, Faunus, together with the  Aborigines, made an expedition from Cutilia to Croton, northwest of there,  drove out the Umbrians, and gained control of the entire region around Lake  Trasimene. [57]
        In 1315 BC, Maleus, son of Janus, son of  Sabus, moved from the Janiculum, which his father had founded, to a location  near the coast and founded Regis Villa. [58]
        In 1300 BC, Arnus, son of Faunus, was  driven from the area around Lake Trasimene by the Maeonians led by Tyrrhenus,  son of Atys, who had migrated to the Italian peninsula from Lydia. [59]
        The Maeonians led by Tyrrhenus also  expelled the Pelasgians who lived in Regis Villa, Agylla, Alsium, Pisae, and  other towns. The expelled Pelasgians fled to Sicily. [60]
      2.12 Descendants of Saturnus, son of Sabus
        Saturnus, founder of Saturnia, is said to  have first introduced agriculture in Latium, with spelt being the first grain  cultivated. [61]
        When Saturnus' son Picus came of age, the  Maeonians led by Tyrrhenus migrated and expelled the Pelasgians who had settled  on the right bank near the Tiber estuary from Thessaly. [62]
        In 1299 BC, Picus succeeded Saturnus and  married Venilia, daughter of Janus. Venilia was Picus' cousin. [63]
        In 1295 BC, Picus migrated southeast from  Saturnia and founded Laurentum near the coast.[64]
        In 1262 BC, Picus' son Faunus succeeded his  father and married his sister Fatua Fauna.[65]
        Faunus also had a son, Acis, with his  second wife Symaethis. [66]
        In 1218 BC, Faunus was succeeded by his son  Latinus, born to his third wife Marica. [67]
        Latinus married Amata, and they had a  daughter named Lavinia. [68]
        During Latinus' reign, the clan came to be  called the Latins, though Faunus was the founder of the Latins. [69]
      3 Migrations by the Massive Tsunami
        In 1390 BC, a massive eruption occurred on  Thera (present-day Santorini), located north of Crete, triggering a tsunami in  the Aegean Sea.[70]
        This tsunami caused large-scale population  movements.
      3.1 Migrations from Thessaly
        3.1.1 Migration of Dius
        Dius, a Pelasgian, living in coastal  Thessaly, lost his homeland by the tsunami and attacked Itonus on the western  shore of the Pagasetic Gulf. Dius carried off Melanippe, wife of Itonus, son of  Amphictyon, as spoils of war. [71]
        Itonus' father Amphictyon rallied his kin  in Locris and Thessaly to expel the Pelasgians from Thessaly. Dius migrated  with Melanippe to Metapontium in southern Italian peninsula. [72]
        Melanippe bore Aeolus and Boeotus in  Metapontium. [73]
        Aeolus married Cyane, daughter of Liparus  who lived on Lipara, an island northeast of Sicily, and ruled the surrounding  islands.[74]
        Boeotus returned with his mother Melanippe  from the Italian peninsula to Arne in Thessaly, succeeding his grandfather  Aeolus.[75]
      3.1.2 Migration of Janus
        The Pelasgians who lived in Perrhaebia,  northern Thessaly, migrated to the Italian peninsula under the leadership of  Janus, passing through Dodona. [76]
        Janus is thought to be a descendant of  Triopas's son Pelasgus's daughter Larisa who migrated from Argos to Thessaly in  1560 BC. [77]
        During the reign of Nanas, son of  Teutamides, son of Amyntor, son of Phrastor, son of Pelasgus, son of Larisa,  the Pelasgians living in Thessaly migrated to various regions. [78]
        In 1389 BC, Janus led the Pelasgians from  the east coast of the Italian peninsula over the Apennine Mountains to the  mountainous region on the peninsula's west side, settling near Cutilia in  Reatine. The Pelasgians under Janus were received and lived among the Ausones,  who had migrated to the land some time before them. [80]
      3.1.3 Migration outside of Dius and Janus
        Some Pelasgians who fled Thessaly migrated  to northeastern Italian peninsula, founding Spina south of the mouth of the  Padus River. [81]
        The Pelasgians also founded Ravenna,  located slightly south of Spina. [82]
        Furthermore, the Pelasgians founded cities  along the western coast of central Italian peninsula. Agylla (later Caere),  Alsium, and Pisae were towns founded by the Pelasgians. [83]
      3.2 Migration from Boeotia
        Messapus led a group of immigrants from  Hyria in Boeotia to settle in Peucetia, in the southeastern part of the Italian  peninsula. [84]
        Messapus is presumed to be the son of  Hyrieus, who was the son of Megassares and Alcyone, daughter of Orchomenus.  [85]
        The region Messapus settled was called  Messapia.[86]
        Antoninus Liberalis records Messapus as  Illyrian, while Solinus and Pliny record him as Greek.[87]
      4 Migration from Egypt
        In 1341 BC, Danae, daughter of Acrisius,  led a migration from Egypt to Sardinia.[88]
        This migration is presumed to have been  caused by warfare in Egypt, similar to the migrations of Danaus and Cadmus.  After Danae's migration, Egypt ceases to appear in Greek traditions.
        When Danae emigrated, Pharaoh Amenhotep IV  of the 18th Dynasty reigned in Egypt.[89]
        The ships carrying Danae's emigrants were  driven off course by strong southerly winds en route to Sardinia and drifted  ashore on the west coast of central Italian peninsula. [90]
        Danae's husband Pilumnus died, and Danae,  daughter of the King of Argos, became the central figure in founding Ardea  southeast of Rome. [91]
        At that time, Sicels were scattered across  Latium, where Danae built the town. Soon after, the Sabines emerged from the  mountains and founded Saturnia and Janiculum. [92]
        Danae's immigrant group included Achaeans  and Pelasgians who had migrated from Argos to Egypt, and they were similar to  the Sabines in language and customs.
        It is presumed that the people who migrated  with Danae from Egypt taught wheat cultivation to Saturnus, son of Sabus of  Saturnia. [93]
        Danae had another son besides Perseus,  named Daunus, who succeeded Ardea. [94]
        Turnus, leader of the Rutuli who fought and  died against Aeneas, was a descendant of Daunus. [95]
      5 Migration from Lydia
        In 1300 BC, the Maeonians, led by  Tyrrhenus, son of Atys, migrated from Lydia to central Italian peninsula. [96]
        Herodotus states famine was the cause, but  the historical facts were as follows. [97]
      5.1 Situation Before Migration
        In 1390 BC, the Pelasgians living in  Thessaly were expelled by the sons of Deucalion and migrated to various  regions. Some settled on islands such as Chios, Lesbos, Lemnos, and Imbros.[98]
        Additionally, Pelasgians who crossed from  these islands to the mainland settled in Lydia. [99]
        According to Hittite texts, the region  where the Pelasgians settled was called Arzawa.[100]
        When the Pelasgians, led by Manes, likely  son of Silenus, arrived there, Arzawa lacked a powerful leader.[101]
        The Pelasgians coexisted with the  indigenous people, and Manes became king of the land.
        Manes appears in Hittite texts under the  name Kupanta-Kurunta, King of Arzawa. [102]
      5.2 Causes of Migration
        In 1325 BC, Tantalus, who lived near Mount  Ida in the northwestern Anatolian peninsula, was driven out by Ilus of Ilium  and migrated to Lydia (part of Arzawa).[103]
        At that time, the king of Arzawa was  Maskhuiluwa, son of Tarhuntaradu. [104]
        Tantalus expelled Maskhuiluwa and became  king of Arzawa. [105]
        Maskhuiluwa fled to seek refuge with the  Hittite king Suppiluliuma I. [106]
        During the reign of the Hittite king  Mursili II, Arzawa was attacked and occupied by the Hittite army. [107]
      5.3 Migration to Lemnos
        In 1318 BC, the Maeonians who fought  alongside Tantalus against the Hittite army were expelled from Lydia. Eighteen  years passed between Arzawa's conquest by the Hittites and the appearance of  the Maeonians, led by Tyrrhenus, on the Italian peninsula. During this period,  the Maeonians are presumed to have resided on Lemnos for the following reasons.
        The Maeonians later migrated to the Italian  peninsula and changed their name to Tyrrhenians. [108]
        The following elements connect Lemnos and  the Italian peninsula.
        The island of Elba in the Tyrrhenian Sea  was called Aethalia, the ancient name of Lemnos. [109]
        Of the four labyrinths of the ancient  world, besides those in Egypt and Crete, there were labyrinths in Lemnos and  Etruria. [110]
        Lemnos was also called the Tyrrhenian  Island. [111]
      5.4 Migration from Lemnos to Italian  peninsula
        In 1300 BC, the Maeonians, led by  Tyrrhenus, son of Atys, migrated from Lemnos to central Italian peninsula.  [112]
        The following are possible reasons why  Tyrrhenus chose Italian peninsula, far from Lemnos, as his destination:
      5.4.1 Hearings from Telchines
        It is believed that Tyrrhenus's voyage  guide was Telchines, known as the Son of the Sea and a skilled navigator. [113]
        In 1425 BC, the Telchines, who lived in  Rhodes, then called Telchinis, were expelled from the island by the sons of  Rhodes. Some of the Telchines also migrated to Lemnos. [114]
        Telchines, skilled in navigation and  metallurgy, likely navigated not only the Aegean Sea but also the Tyrrhenian  Sea in search of mines. The island of Aethalia, between the Italian peninsula  and Cyrnus, is believed to have been one of the islands where they discovered  mines.[115]
      5.4.2 Heard through Delphi
        Agylla, founded by the Pelasgians who  migrated from Thessaly in 1390 BC, was so prosperous that they donated a  treasury to Delphi. [116]
        Word of Agylla's prosperity likely spread  throughout Greece as people from around the world visited Delphi to seek  oracles. [117]
      5.5 Tyrrhenus and his descendants after the  migration
        The Maeonians, led by Tyrrhenus, expelled  the Umbrians and Pelasgians and established colonies. [118]
        Both the Maeonians and Pelasgians lived in  Thessaly 90 years earlier, but the two did not speak the same language. [119]
        The Maeonians, who settled in the Italian  peninsula, changed their name to Tyrrhenians after Tyrrhenus, and their  settlement came to be called Tyrrhenia. [120]
        The Tyrrhenians were also sometimes called  Tusci because of their ritual sacrifices. The Romans called them Etrusci and  the region they inhabited Etruria. [121]
        During the time of Pausanias, the area from  Pisae on the west coast of the Italian peninsula to the Tiber River was  apparently called Tyrrhenia. At the height of their power, their settlements  extended to the Padus River near the eastern base of the Italian peninsula and  Ravenna. [122]
        After the death of Tyrrhenus, the  Tyrrhenians lacked a strong leader, and each town lacked unity. They were  defeated by neighboring tribes in military battles, abandoned their land, and  became pirates. [123]
      5.6 Major towns of Tyrrhenia
        Tyrrhenus is said to have founded 12 towns.  Tyrrhenia included the following towns: [124]
      5.6.1 Saturnia (present-day Rome)
        Saturnia was founded by Saturnus, son of  Sabus, and was inhabited by Pelasgians who had migrated from Thessaly. [125]
        During the reign of Saturnus' son  Dercennus, the city was attacked by the Tyrrhenians and killed in battle.
        Saturnia was inhabited by Tyrrhenians, but  they were also driven out by the Sicels. [126]
      5.6.2 Caere (present-day Cerveteri)
        The most powerful Tyrrhenian town was  Caere, located west of Saturnia. [127]
        Caere was founded by the Pelasgians who  migrated from Thessaly and was called Agylla, but was captured by the  Tyrrhenians. [128]
      5.6.3 Alsium (present-day Ladispoli)
        Alsium was inhabited by Pelasgians who  migrated from Thessaly, but was expelled by the Tyrrhenians. [129]
      5.6.4 Tarquinii (present-day Tarquinia)
        Tarquinii was founded by Tarco, a general  of Tyrrhenus, who expelled the Pelasgians who migrated from Thessaly. [130]
      5.6.5 Regis Villa (present-day Montalto di  Castro)
        Regis Villa was inhabited by Maleus, a  Pelasgian who migrated from Thessaly, but was driven out by the Tyrrhenians.  [131]
      5.6.6 Pisae (present-day Pisa)
        In 1389 BC, Pelasgians who migrated from  Thessaly drove out the Ligurians and founded Pisae. [132]
        In 1300 BC, the Pelasgians of Pisae were  driven out by the Tyrrhenians. [133]
        Strabo tells us that the natives of Pisa,  who were led by Nestor to Troy, wandered and founded Pisae, and the inhabitants  of the town were called Pylians. [134]
        However, the following facts suggest that  the story of the founding of Pisae is a fiction.
        1) According to legend, Nestor returned  safely to Pylus.
        2) It is likely that the inhabitants of  Pylus were called Pylians because there were more people from Pylus than from  Pisa. If so, the founders must have been from Pylus, not Pisa.
        In 1126 BC, the Pelasgians living around  Larissa were driven from their land by people who migrated from Locris to Asia  Minor and founded Cyme. [135]
        Led by a descendant of Teutamus, the  Pelasgians migrated to the Italian peninsula and settled in Pisae, where the  Tyrrhenians lived. [136]
        It is likely that the Tyrrhenians accepted  as co-residents the people who had migrated from Asia Minor, where their  ancestors had once lived.
      5.6.7 Croton (present-day Cortona)
        In 1340 BC, Faunus, son of Aethex, led an  expedition with the Aborigines to Croton, northwest of Cutilia, expelling the  Umbrians and gaining control of the Lake Trasimene region. [137]
        In 1300 BC, Faunus' son, Arnus, was driven  out of the Lake Trasimene region by the Tyrrhenians. [138]
      6 Migration from Troad
        6.1 First Trojan War
        In 1295 BC, a succession dispute broke out  in Ilium on the Trojan War, and Phaenodamas and his sons were killed by  Laomedon. [139]
        The descendants of Assaracus (or Asarakos),  son of Tros, who supported Phaenodamas, migrated from Dardania to various  places.
        Phaenodamas' daughters fled from Troad to  Sicily and settled on the Crimisus River in the northwestern part of the  island. [140]
        Phaenodamas' daughter, Egesta, had a son  named Aegestus (or Acestes). [141]
      6.2 Second Trojan War
        In 1244 BC, Laomedon, son of Ilus, died.  Priam, son of Laomedon, succeeded him as king of Wilusa (Troy). [142]
        Anchises, son of Capys, son of Assaracus,  expelled Priam from Ilium and installed Aegestus, son of Egesta, who had been  summoned from Sicily, as king. [143]
        Ilium was subsequently recaptured by Priam,  aided by the Hittite army.
        Anchises and his allies fled to various  locations.
      6.2.1 Philoctetes' Migration to Southern Italian  peninsula
        In 1244 BC, Philoctetes, son of Poeas, who  sided with Anchises, returned to Meliboea in Thessaly. However, civil unrest  broke out, and he accompanied Anchises to Sicily. [144]
        Philoctetes separated from Anchises in  southern Italian peninsula and settled in Macalla, Croton. [145]
        Philoctetes founded Petelia near Croton.  [146]
        In the Trojan War, Philoctetes accompanied  Agamemnon on his expedition to Troy.
        However, in the story, Philoctetes was acting  together with his enemy, Aegestus the Trojan. [147]
      6.2.2 Elymus' Migration to Southern Italian  peninsula
        In 1244 BC, Elymus, son of Anchises, fled from  Troad and settled in southern Italian peninsula with Philoctetes.[148]
        The people who followed Elymus came to be  called Elymians.[149]
      6.2.3 Anchises' Migration to Sicily
        In 1244 BC, Anchises fled to Sicily, guided  by Aegestus.[150]
        Many people from the Scamander River basin  accompanied Anchises.[151]
      7 Migration from Arcadia
        7.1 Departure from Arcadia
        In 1240 BC, conflict arose in Pallantium,  west of Tegea in Arcadia. Evander, son of Themis, defeated in the conflict,  sought a new land.[152]
        Evander belonged to the Parrhasians, who  had existed since the founding of Argos, and descended from the house of  Lycaon, son of Pelasgus, who had expanded Argos' settlements into Arcadia.[153]
        Evander's migrant group traveled from Tegea  along the Alpheius River, taking the road leading to Olympia, and headed toward  Cyllene. Along the way, Evander incorporated into his colony those who had  participated in Heracles' attack on Elis. These were the Epeans of Dyme in  Achaea and the Arcadians of Pheneus.[154]
        Evander's colonists set sail from Cyllene,  the outer harbor of Elis.[155]
      7.2 Migration to Latium
        Evander's colonists sailed around the  Italian peninsula clockwise, ascended the Tiber River in the peninsula's  center, and landed on the site of future Rome. They settled near the hill  previously called Velia, later named Palatium. [156]
        Herilus, who held the region east of Rome,  challenged Evander to battle but was repelled. [157]
        Evander's colonists included many seasoned  warriors who had participated in the expeditions of Heracles, and their  military strength surpassed that of the Ausonians. [158]
        Faunus of Laurentum, who was suffering at  the hands of the barbarous Sicels at the time, accepted Evander as an ally  rather than an enemy. [159]
        Catillus the Arcadian, who commanded  Evander's fleet, founded a city northeast of Rome with his two brothers, Coras  and Tiburnus, naming it Tibur.
      7.3 Descendants of Evander
        Evander married Nicostrate, and they had a  son named Pallas.[161]
        Nicostrate was a prophetess who delivered  divine oracles in a trance, and she was also called Carmenta.[162]
        Evander's mother, Themis, was also a  prophetess, known as Carmenta. [163]
        Pelasgus's son Lycaon's son Pallas,  ancestor of Themis, had a daughter named Chryse. She possessed traditions  concerning a mysterious religion. The art of prophecy appears to have been  passed down through the generations to women in the lineage of Pallas, son of  Lycaon. [164]
        In 1182 BC, Pallas, son of Evander, fought  alongside Aeneas and died in battle against Turnus of the Rutulians.[165]
        In 1154 BC, the Arcadians who had migrated  with Evander settled in Alba, founded by Ascanius, son of Aeneas. [166]
        However, some Arcadians continued to live  near the Palatine Hill. Faustulus, foster father of Romulus, founder of Rome,  was one of them. [167]
      7.4 Evander's Achievements
        The Arcadians who migrated with Evander  brought the alphabet to Italy, greatly contributing to Rome's prosperity. [168]
        In the 2nd century AD, the 15th Roman  Emperor Antoninus recognized Evander's achievements and granted autonomy and  tax exemption to the inhabitants of Pallantium in Arcadia, his homeland. [169]
        Subsequently, the inhabitants of Pallantium  erected a statue of Evander. [170]
      8 Migration from the Italian Peninsula to  Sicily
        In 1240 BC, Faunus of Latium, aided by  Evander, defeated Cacus, son of Vulcanus (or Vulcan), leader of the Sicels. The  Sicels fled from central peninsula to the territory of the Oenotrians in  southern peninsula. [171]
      8.1 Migration of the Sicels
        The Sicels, led by Straton, were driven by  the Oenotrians and migrated to Sicily.[172]
        At this time, the number of Sicels who  crossed to the island was considerable, and the island, previously called  Sicania, came to be known as Sicily.[173]
      8.2 Migration of the Elymians
        The Elymians, led by Elymus, fled from  Troad and settled in the southwestern Italian peninsula. They were later driven  out by the Oenotrians and migrated to Sicily. [174]
      9 Migration from Acarnania
        In 1237 BC, Heracles led an expedition to  Thesprotia.[175]
        The Teleboans, who lived in Taphos in  Acarnania, migrated to the west coast of the Italian peninsula under the  leadership of Oebalus, son of Telon.[176]
        Oebalus founded Capreae on an island near  Neapolis.[177]
        Capreae became famous as the retreat of the  second Roman emperor, Tiberius Caesar. [178]
        The Teleboans who founded Capreae were a  branch of the Leleges, named after Lelex, founder of Lacedaemon. [179]
        Lelex, son of Libya, was the uncle of  Danaus, and the Leleges were a branch of the Pelasgians. [180]
        Before Oebalus, Liparus, son of Auson,  migrated to the vicinity of Surrentum near Capreae; Liparus too was a  Pelasgian. [181]
        The Pelasgians inhabiting Acarnania and the  western coast of the Italian peninsula appear to have been linked through trade  activities.
      10 Migration from Crete
        After Minos' death, it is presumed that no  strong leader emerged in Crete, and civil war persisted.
        The following migrations occurred from  Crete to the Italian peninsula.
      10.1 Migration of Iapyx
        In 1235 BC, Iapyx, son of Daedalus, led a  group of immigrants from Crete to settle in Messapia in southeastern Italian  peninsula.[182]
        Herodotus relates that Iapyx founded Hyria  (modern Oria).[183]
        However, the name Hyria likely originated  with Messapus, who settled in the region before him.
        Messapus' grandfather Megassares had  founded Hyria in Boeotia.[184]
        The region settled by Iapyx became known as  Iapygia, its inhabitants as Iapygians (or Iapyges), and the cape as the  Iapygian Cape.[185]
        The Iapygians also expanded their  settlements into the southwestern part of the peninsula.[186]
      10.2 Migration of Botton
        Botton, who was among the emigrants of Iapyx,  formed a new group and continued the journey, settling near what later became  Pella in Macedonia.[187]
        The people led by Botton came to be called  the Bottiaeans. [188]
        Among Botton's colonists were descendants  of the youths sent from Athens as tribute to Minos in Crete. [189]
      10.3 Migration of Idomeneus
        Among Iapyx's colonists was also Idomeneus,  son of Deucalion, son of Minos.
        Tradition holds that Idomeneus participated  in the Trojan expedition led by Agamemnon.
        However, tradition also states that  Idomeneus migrated from Crete to Calabria.[190]
        Calabria is another name for Messapia or  Iapygia, and Idomeneus is thought to have been among the migration group of Iapyx.[191]
      10.4 Migration of Cleolaus
        Cleolaus, son of Minos, who was among the  emigrants of Iapyx, led a new group of migrants and settled in Apulia, the  eastern part of the Italian peninsula. Cleolaus named his tribe the Daunii  after his son Daunus. [192]
        Euippe, daughter of Daunus, married  Diomedes, son of Tydeus, who had led the Aetolians in their migration to  Apulia. [193]
      11 Migration from Mycenae
        In 1190 BC, Halaesus, son of Agamemnon,  migrated to the Italian peninsula. He settled at Falerii, located north of Rome  along the Flaminian Way.[194]
        The area around Falerii was held by the  Rutulians, who lived in Ardea in Latium. The Rutulian king Turnus was a  descendant of Danae, mother of Perseus, founder of Mycenae. [195]
        It is thought the Rutulians invited  Halaesus to gain an ally against hostile neighboring powers.
        In 1182 BC, war broke out between the  Latins and the Rutulians. Halaesus fought on the Rutulian side and was killed  by Pallas, son of Evander. [196]
        After Halaesus' death, the Mycenaeans  residing in Falerii likely returned to Mycenae. Recent archaeological  excavations have uncovered artifacts dating to the 12th century BC indicating  connections between Mycenae and Italy.
      12 Migration from Athens
        When Priam, son of Laomedon, died in 1188  BC, the sons of Antenor took possession of Ilium. [197]
        Priam's son Hector attempted to recapture  Ilium with reinforcements from the Achaeans, but was defeated in battle, and  the Achaeans fled to various locations. [198]
        In 1186 BC, some Athenians who had sided  with Hector fled to the southern Italian peninsula and settled in Scylletium.  [199]
      13 Migration from Aetolia
        13.1 Migration of Diomedes
        In 1184 BC, Diomedes, son of Tydeus, after  returning from Troy to Argos, migrated via Aetolia to Apulia in the eastern  Italian peninsula. [200]
        After migrating, Diomedes married Euippe,  daughter of Daunus, ruler of Apulia. [201]
        Daunus was the son of Cleolaus, son of  Minos.[202]
        Cleolaus settled in the Italian peninsula  from Crete alongside Iapyx, son of Daedalus. Cleolaus named his tribe the  Daunii after his son.[203]
        Diomedes founded Argyrippe, Canusium, and  Sipus.[204]
      13.2 End of Diomedes
        Strabon presents four versions of  Diomedes's end. [205]
        1) Diomedes was recalled to his hometown of  Argos and died there.
        2) Diomedes died in Apulia.
        3) Diomedes disappeared on a desert island  off the coast of Apulia.
        4) Diomedes died in Heneti, at the very  heart of the Adriatic Sea.
        The Aetolians, who migrated with Diomedes,  migrated southeast and founded Brundisium. However, they were driven from there  by the Apulians. [206]
        This suggests that there was conflict  between Diomedes and the indigenous people.
        It is also said that Daunus organized a  funeral games for Diomedes, in which the Greeks were killed. [207]
        The 4th-century BC philosopher Aristotle  reports that Diomedes' companions were shipwrecked near Diomedeia when he was  murdered by the local king. [208]
        In Diomedeia in Apulia, there was a temple  to Diomedes and his tomb under a plane tree. [209]
        Diomedeia is thought to be present-day San  Domino in the Tremiti Islands.
        From the above, it is believed that  Diomedes's end was as follows:
        There was a conflict between Diomedes and  Daunus, and Diomedes was killed in a surprise attack. Diomedes' companions fled  to Diomedeia and buried his body on the island.
        The 12th-century AD rhetorician Tzetzes  wrote that Daunus killed Diomedes. [210]
      14 Migration from Sicily
        In 1184 BC, Aeneas, son of Anchises, set  sail from Sicily and landed near Laurentum in central Italian peninsula.[211]
        At that time, Aeneas was about 40 years old  and had a son, Ascanius.[212]
        The ruler of Laurentum was Latinus, son of  Faunus, in the 35th year of his reign. [213]
        In 1182 BC, Aeneas married Latinus'  daughter Lavinia. This marriage caused a war with Turnus, king of the  Rutulians. Latinus was killed in battle, and Aeneas succeeded to Laurentum.  [214]
        In 1179 BC, Aeneas was killed in battle  against the Rutulians, and his son Ascanius succeeded him in Laurentum. [215]
        Many traditions recount Aeneas as if he  were born in Troad.
        However, Aeneas was born in Sicily.
        Tradition holds that Aeneas fled from Troad  to Sicily with Anchises.
        However, Anchises migrated to Sicily in  1244 BC, and Aeneas was born after that. [216]
      15 History of Lipara
        15.1 Migration from the Peninsula
        In 1400 BC, Liparus, son of Auson, was  driven from the Italian peninsula by his brothers and migrated to an island  northeast of Sicily. The island came to be called Lipara after him. [217]
        Until then, Lipara had been called  Meligunis. [218]
      15.2 Migration from Southern Peninsula
        In 1365 BC, Aeolus, son of Melanippe,  migrated to Lipara from Metapontium in southern Italian peninsula and married  Cyane, daughter of Liparus. Aeolus' son Astyochus succeeded him in Lipara.  [219]
      15.3 Migration to the Peninsula
        In 1364 BC, Liparus, aided by Aeolus,  migrated to the vicinity of Surrentum near Cape Athenaeum in the Gulf of Crater  (present-day Gulf of Naples).[220]
        In 1340 BC, Iocastus (or Jocastus), son of  Aeolus, migrated to southern Italian peninsula and founded Rhegium. [221]
        In 1340 BC, Misenus, son of Aeolus,  migrated to Parthenope near Cumae.[222]
      15.4 Liparus's Tribe
        The following points suggest Liparus's  tribe was the Ausones, a branch of the Pelasgians.
        1) The 2nd-century BC historian Polybius  records that the Ausones inhabited the area around the Gulf of Crater. [223]
        2) Liparus' father Auson shared the same  name as Auson, son of Italus, the progenitor of the Ausones. [224]
      15.5 Migration to Sicily
        In 1340 BC, the sons of Aeolus of Lipara  migrated to Sicily.
        Two sons of Aeolus, Pheraemon and  Androcles, migrated to Sicily and settled in the northern part of the island.  [225]
        Xuthus, son of Aeolus, migrated to eastern  Sicily, and that region came to be called Xuthia. [226]
        Agathyrnus, son of Aeolus, migrated to  northern Sicily and founded Agathyrnus. [227]
      16 History of Sardinia
        16.1 Migration from Egypt
        In 1390 BC, Sardus, son of Maceris, led a  group of migrants from Egypt to Ichnussa on the western side of the Italian  peninsula.[228]
        Ichnussa came to be called Sardinia after  Sardus' name. [229]
        When Sardus migrated to the island,  indigenous peoples were already present, but they coexisted without conflict.  [230]
        In southwestern Sardinia stood the “Temple of Father Sardus,” presumed to be Sardus' settlement  site. [231]
      16.2 Migration from Egypt
        After the settlement of Sardus, it was  Aristaeus who settled in Sardinia.[232]
        Aristaeus was born in Phthiotis, the son of  Archander, son of Achaeus, progenitor of the Achaeans, and Cyrene, daughter of  Hypseus who lived in Thessaly.[233]
        Aristaeus migrated from Phthiotis via Argos  to the Nile Delta in Egypt, where he founded Archandropolis with his father  Archander. [234]
        In 1372 BC, Aristaeus led a colony from  Egypt to settle in Sardinia. [235]
        Aristaeus founded Caralis east of the  settlement of Sardus. [236]
        Pausanias relates that Nora, founded after  Aristaeus' settlement, was the first city in Sardinia. [237]
      16.3 Migration from Iberia
        In 1240 BC, Norax, son of Erytheia,  daughter of Geryones, migrated to Sardinia and founded the oldest city, Nora,  at the southern tip of the island. [238]
        Norax is said to have been Iberian.  However, he is presumed to have been a descendant of Maceris of Canopus in  Egypt, who founded Heracleia at the southern tip of the Iberian Peninsula and  died there. [239]
        Norax's homeland was Tartessus, centered  around the Tartessus River northwest of Heracleia. [240]
        Gadeira (modern-day Cadiz) near the mouth  of the Tartessus River and the island opposite it were collectively called  Erytheia, where Geryones kept his great herd of cattle. [241]
        Geryones was born upstream on the Tartessus  River, a location also near the final resting place of Maceris, known as  Egyptian Heracles or Phoenician Heracles. Considering that Norax, Geryones'  grandson, settled in Sardinia before Iolaus' settlement, Norax is presumed to  have been a contemporary of Heracles, son of Amphitryon. [242]
      16.4 Migration from Boeotia
        After conquering Ephyra in Thesprotia,  Heracles, son of Amphitryon, instructed his nephew Iolaus to colonize Sardinia.  [243]
        In 1236 BC, Iolaus led a colony composed of  the grandsons of Thespius, ruler of Thespiae in Boeotia, to settle in Sardinia.  [244]
        Iolaus established Olbia, settling the  colonists alongside the Tyrrhenians already residing in northeastern Sardinia.  Afterward, Iolaus returned to Trachis, where Heracles was. [245]
      16.5 Migration from Athens
        After Heracles' death, Iolaus defeated  Eurystheus, King of Mycenae, who had invaded Athens, and protected Heracles'  children. [246]
        In 1216 BC, having completed his role as  guardian of Heracles' children, Iolaus recruited settlers in Athens and led  another colony to Sardinia. The Athenians founded Ogryle there.[247]
        Iolaus ended his life in Sardinia.[248]
      17 History of Sicily
        The first inhabitants of Sicily were the  Sicanians (or Sicani).[249]
        The Sicanians, who lived in Iberia, were  driven out by the Ligurians and fled to the island called Trinacria, which came  to be known as Sicania.[250]
      17.1 First Greeks
        In 1340 BC, the sons of Aeolus of Lipara  migrated to Sicily.
        Pheraemon and Androcles, two sons of Aeolus,  settled in northern Sicily.[251]
        Xuthus, son of Aeolus, settled in eastern  Sicily, and that region came to be called Xuthia. [252]
        Aeolus' son Agathyrnus migrated to northern  Sicily and founded Agathyrnus. [253]
        The people who migrated to Sicily with  Aeolus' sons were Pelasgians who had migrated from Thessaly via Metapontium to  Lipara. [254]
      17.2 Migration from the Central Peninsula
        In 1300 BC, the Pelasgians living in Regis  Villa, Agylla, Alsium, Pisae, and other towns in central Italian peninsula were  driven out by the Tyrrhenians and migrated to Sicily. [255]
      17.3 Migration from Troad
        In 1295 BC, the daughters of Phaenodamas  fled from Troad to Sicily and settled on the banks of the Crimisus River in the  northwest of the island.[256]
      17.4 Expedition to Troad
        In 1244 BC, Aegestus, son of Egesta,  daughter of Phaenodamas, launched an expedition from Sicily to Troad.
        Aegestus's purpose in this expedition was  to fulfill his grandfather's will and become King of Troy. However, Aegestus  was defeated in battle against Priam, son of Laomedon, and returned to Sicily.  [257]
        Afterwards, Aegestus founded Aegesta (or  Egesta) in the northwest of the island. [258]
      17.5 Migration from Troad
        In 1244 BC, Anchises, son of Capys,  defeated in battle by Priam, migrated from Troad to Sicily, guided by Aegestus.  [259]
      17.6 Migration from the southwestern  Peninsula
        In 1240 BC, the Sicels, Morgetes, and  Elymians, who had lived in the southwestern Italian peninsula, migrated to  Sicily after being driven out by the Oenotrians. [260]
        The Sicels drove the island's original  inhabitants, the Sicani, to the western part of the island and settled  throughout the entire island. The island, previously called Sicania, came to be  known as Sicily. [261]
        The leader of the Sicels was either Straton  or Sicelus. [262]
        The Morgetes founded Morgantium in the  inland region of eastern Sicily. [263]
        The Elymians founded Elyma (or Eryx) in  northwestern Sicily. [264]
      17.7 Migration to Acarnania
        In 1240 BC, the Pelasgians living in Sicily  migrated to Acarnania to escape the turmoil caused by the migrations of the  Sicels, Morgetes, and Elymians.[265]
        Subsequently, the Pelasgians migrated  repeatedly from Acarnania as follows:
        In 1188 BC, the Pelasgians invaded Boeotia,  which had been left vulnerable by the Trojan expedition, and drove out the  Boeotians. [266]
        In 1126 BC, the Pelasgians were expelled  from Boeotia by the Boeotians, who had returned from Arne in Thessaly, and fled  to Athens. [267]
        In 1115 BC, the Pelasgians were expelled  from Athens and migrated to Lemnos.[268]
        In 495 BC, the Pelasgians were driven from  Lemnos by Miltiades, son of Cimon, and migrated to the Chalcidice  peninsula.[269]
      17.8 Migration to the Central Peninsula
        In 1184 BC, Aeneas, son of Anchises,  migrated from Sicily to the vicinity of Laurentum in central Italian peninsula.  [270]
      End