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Lydia
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=== Origins === Lydia's early history remains shrouded in obscurity. During the [[Late Bronze Age]] (1600 BC-1200 BC), the territory that later became Lydia overlapped with two kingdoms called [[Mira (kingdom)|Mira]] and [[Seha River Land|Šeḫa]], themselves part of a broader political entity called [[Arzawa]].<ref name = "LydiaBefore" >{{cite encyclopedia|title=Lydia before the Lydians|encyclopedia= The Lydians and Their World|year=2010|last= Roosevelt |first= Christopher |url=https://sardisexpedition.org/en/essays/latw-roosevelt-lydia-before-lydians}}</ref> Like the other Arzawa Lands, these kingdoms had tumultuous relations with the [[Hittite Empire]], acting both as allies, enemies, and vassals at various points in time.<ref name=steadman-bryce24>{{cite encyclopedia |last=Bryce|first=Trevor|year=2011|editor-last1=Steadman|editor-first1=Sharon|editor-last2=McMahon | editor-first2=Gregory|encyclopedia=The Oxford Handbook of Ancient Anatolia|title=The Late Bronze Age in the West and the Aegean|publisher=Oxford University Press|doi=10.1093/oxfordhb/9780195376142.013.0015}}</ref> By roughly 800 BC, the [[Lydian people]] appear to have established their presence and achieved some degree of political cohesion. However, precise dates and events are impossible to determine due to the absence of contemporary written records. The only firm evidence for this early period comes from the archaeological excavations at Sardis. Although certain literary accounts purport the existence of two early Lydian dynasties, namely the house of [[Atys of Lydia|Atys]] - after whose son [[Lydus]] the Lydians were supposedly named - and the Heraclids, who allegedly ruled for twenty-two generations before 685 BC, these sources are steeped in mythology and lack historical credibility.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Payne|first=Annick|title=The Lydian Empire|url=https://www.academia.edu/1838086}}</ref>
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