Pergamum Named for Trojan King Priam by Bryges of Thrace Become Phrygians on Hellespont Named for Hellen/Elisha

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High on a hill on the north side of the Kaikos (Bakirkay) river of far western Turkey, about 15 miles east of the Aegean sea, are the ruins of Pergamum, named for the Trojan king Priam by a Thracian tribe (progeny of Japheth’s son Tiras) called the Bryges (which means high place as in berg and bridge), who became known as the Phrygians (according to Herodotus) when they had come across the Hellespont isthmus (named for “Hellen” who was Elisha (for Elysian) a grandson of Japheth who was Iapetus to the Greeks) when the Ice Age had ended in the 1300 b. c. timeframe, the era of The Judges in Israel.