Talk:List of Lycian place names

Latest comment: 7 years ago by InternetArchiveBot in topic External links modified

The pic

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I went to track down the source of the supposed 15th century map and all I could find anywhere was, in paraphrase, "This is my picture and I own it and I photographed it. I have all the credentials." Great. From where? The contributor is not active now. I think we should know the cartographer's name and the map's provenience or the provenience of the MS if the cartographer is not known. Not only that, but this article is a list and the map only shows Lycia, no detail. So, I replaced it with a modern map of stated creation, which I copied from the article. At least we know who he is and we have his statement that he created the map.Dave (talk) 08:05, 12 February 2012 (UTC)Reply

Condensation of intro

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The intro was not quite right. The sources are any in the ancient world, not just ancient Greek ones. I notice there is an editor who wants to plug the Hellenity of the region. You might as well know, if you didn't already, President Wilson and Ataturk hammered out an agreement for the final settlement of the demise of the Ottoman Empire that they would create what a certain British WWII general called a "tidy battlefield." Greece went over to the limits of the Aegean. Turkey got the coast of Anatolia. The Turkish populations were removed from Greece and the Greek populations were removed from Anatolia. This created a certain ongoing nostalgia for Greek Anatolia, parallel to the Armenian nostalgia for Armenian Anatolia. While I can sympathize with any and all individuals tormented by the twists and turns of history, which certainly is a great devil, WP must be careful not to allow these former nationalistic issues to bias the encyclopedia. Lycia is a tourist region today. Most of interest, I would say, are the monuments of the Luwian people. Let's keep it in perspective.Dave (talk) 08:28, 12 February 2012 (UTC)Reply

One table

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The current classification is I think confusing and artificial. Ptolemy is split over 2 sections, with and without inscriptional evidence. Not only that, but there are other sources. We need to be able to expand to include them. This is a job for super-table, one great table stating the names, the sources and the inscriptional names, if any. Moreover, that inscriptional table is most confusing. Why are there two names? Where does the non-inscriptional one come from? Also the equal signs seem a bit tacky. Are they on the inscriptions? What is this, a group of mathematical formulae? What do you mean =? Some expansion and tabularization seems warranted.Dave (talk) 08:41, 12 February 2012 (UTC)Reply

The names

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Our Greek contributor wants to use the Greek names for the towns. That is not warranted. Identification should be the English names, derived from the Latin in most cases. The original names were Lycian. Then they were Hellenized and were Greek for a few centuries. Then they were Latinized as a Roman province. Currently most have Turkish names. This policy question has been faced before. The English WP uses the English names. The articles are under the English names. There is no point in in piping the name to a Greek name. That can be brought out in the article. We use English names, and those are most like the Latin.Dave (talk) 09:56, 12 February 2012 (UTC)Reply

Lycia/Caria

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This article covers names of Lycia. Some have been tagged Caria. Under what circumstances that can have been true has not been defined by the article. It would need to be. I'm deferring this by removing reference to Caria.Dave (talk) 14:13, 12 February 2012 (UTC)Reply

Greek names

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I decided to defer to the previous contributor and add the Greek names. When transliterating Greek the custom is to use ks for ksi. Moreover, WP went for u as the transliteration of upsilon. Y and x are Latinizations.Dave (talk) 14:12, 12 February 2012 (UTC)Reply

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Since I started using Map 65 here in the last week or so I have had to change the link at least once. I may not be able to put a link in. The publisher obviously does not want you to have it. They are willing to make it reviewable; you can get some if not all online. Right now the link is not working. The site is down. However, it is not a file access problem but a server access problem. I don't know what they are going to do finally. Only generally. Generally, the book publishing industry is fighting back. They are going to make sure you get absolutely nothing for free. WP is the greatest sales opportunty that ever was. All you have to do is find ways to charge people for everthing listed as a source in WP. You probably can look forward to all pay sites. Beware, you people that publish, if you close the lid too tight it will not be possible to do credible articles here. Don't kill the goose that lays the golden egg. I will keep my eye on that link. Meanwhile, you can find it in reviewable stages online elsewhere. No need to mark it a dead link. If it does not come back in another day or so I am just taking it out. Meanwhile I will try to find other sources of site identification.Dave (talk) 11:58, 28 February 2012 (UTC)Reply

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