Preview

Orientalistica

Advanced search

The migrations of the Sea Peoples circa 1200 BC according to written sources, narrative tradition and archaeology

https://doi.org/10.31696/2618-7043-2020-3-5-1233-1248

Abstract

The article deals with the Sea Peoples’ migrations at the beginning of 12th century BC. It is based on ancient Egyptian written sources, archaeological data and Greek narrative tradition. The author tries to reconstruct the general stages of Late Bronze Age ethnical movements in the Aegean and Eastern Mediterranean at the end of the 13th – beginning the 12th centuries BC. The author shows that the Sea peoples’ movement was not homogeneous. Moreover, not all the Sea Peoples can be considered as migrants. The tribes of Shekelesh and Weshesh were the typical sea raiders who plundered the rich centres of the Eastern Mediterranean. The possible reason for the Peleset, Theker and Turša migration seems to be the war which devastated their homeland in north-eastern Anatolia between 1208/1203 и 1195 BC. The appearance of the Denyen in Sea Peoples’ movement must be connected with the destructions of Mycenaean centres in Southern Greece circa 1200 BC. Their inhabitants left their homeland and migrated to the different regions of the Aegean, Anatolia, Eastern and Western Mediterranean. The Sea Peoples’ migrations were only the first stage of global ethnic movements in Eurasia at the end of the Bronze Age which totally changed the ethnopolitical map of Southern Europe, Anatolia and Eastern Mediterranean.

About the Author

Alexander V. Safronov
Institute of Oriental Studies of the Russian Academy of Sciences
Russian Federation

Alexander V. Safronov ‒ Ph. D. (Hist.), Senior Research fellow, Department of Ancient Orient

Moscow



References

1. Safronov A. V. Upominayetsya li Troyanskaya voyna v nadpisi Ramsesa III? [Does the Ramses III’s inscription mention the Trojan war?] Indoevropeyskoe yazykoznanie i klassicheskaya filologiya. [Indo-European linguistics and classical philology]. 2018;23(2):939–949. (In Russ.)

2. Breasted J. H. et al. Medinet Habu. Vol. I: Earlier Historical Records of Ramses III. Chicago: University of Chicago Press; 1930. XVIII + 10 p. + 54 pl.

3. Yadin Y. The Art of Warfare in Biblical Lands. Vol. 2. New York–Toronto–London: McGraw-Hill Book company, Inc.; 1963. 237 p.

4. Kimmig W. Seevölkerbewegung und Urnenfelderkultur. Ein archäologischer Versuch. Uslar R., Narr K. J. (Hrsg.) Studien aus Alteuropa. Teil. I. Köln: Böhlau; 1964, pp. 220–283.

5. Safronov A. V. Nezamechennaya ikonografiya “naroda moray” vashasha [The unnoticed iconography of the Sea Peoples’ tribe Weshesh]. Vestnik drevney istorii [The Journal of ancient History]. 2021;81(2). In print. (In Russ.)

6. Safronov A. V. The Ramses III’s inscription and the Trojan War: towards the historiography of the discussion. Orientalistica. 2020;3(3):644–661. (In Russ.)

7. Safronov A. V. Essays on the History of the Eastern Mediterranean in the 14th–12th Centuries BC. Moscow: IVRAN; 2018. 174 p. (In Russ.)

8. Safronov A. V. To the interpretation of lines 51–52 of Ramses’ III 5th year inscription from his mortuary temple in Medinet Habu. Vestnik Moskovskogo gosudarstvennogo oblastnogo universiteta. Seriya: Istoriya i politicheskie nauki [Bulletin MSRU. Series: History and Political Science]. 2009(1):144–152. (In Russ.)

9. Lehmann G. A. Die mykenisch-frühgriechische Welt und der östliche Mittelmeerraum in der Zeit der “Seevölker”-Invasionen um 1200 v. Chr. Opladen: Westdeutscher Verlag; 1985. 78 S.

10. Nibbi A. The Sea Peoples and Egypt. Park Ridge: Noyes Press; 1975. XIV + 161 p.

11. Nibbi A. Some Geographical Notes on Ancient Egypt. A Selection of Published Papers, 1975–1997. Oxford: DE Publications; 1997. 423 p.

12. Bachvarova M. R. From Hittite to Homer: The Anatolian Background of Ancient Greek Epic. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2016. XXXIX + 649 p.

13. Hood S. The Bronze Age Age Context of Homer. Carter J. B., Morris S. P. (eds) The Ages of Homer: A Tribute to Emily Townsend Vermeule. Austin: University of Texas Press; 1995, pp. 23–32.

14. Kitchen K. A. Ramesside Inscriptions: Historical and Bibliographical. Vol. 2. Oxford: B. H. Blackwell Ltd.; 1979. XXXI + 928 p.

15. Heuck Allen S. Trojan Grey Ware at Tel Miqne-Ekron. Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research. 1994;(293):39–51.

16. Karageorghis W. Cultural Innovations in Cyprus Relating to the Sea Peoples. Oren E. (ed.) The Sea Peoples and Their World: A Reassessment. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press; 2000, pp. 255–279.

17. Safronov A. V. Troyantsy v Livii: grecheskiye reministsentsii ob uchastii naseleniya Zapadnoy Anatolii v dvizhenii “narodov moray” [The Trojans in Libya: Greek reminiscences about participation of inhabitants of Western Anatolia in the Sea Peoples’ movement]. Indoevropeyskoe yazykoznanie i klassicheskaya filologiya [Indo-European linguistics and classical philology]. 2013;17:790–799. (In Russ.)

18. Manassa C. The Great Karnak Inscription of Merneptah: Grand Strategy in the 13th Century BC. New Haven: Yale University; 2003. 210 p.

19. Wainwright G. A. The Meshwesh. The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology. 1962;48:89–99.

20. Popko L. Die hieratische Stele MAA 1939.552 aus Amara West – ein neuer Feldzug gegen die Philister. Zeitschrift für ägyptische Sprache und Altertumskunde. 2016;143(2):214–233.

21. Freu J. La tablette RS 86.2230 et la phase finale du royaume l’Ugarit. Syria. Revue d’art oriental et d’archéologie. 1988;65(3/4):395–398.

22. Safronov A.V. Ethnopolitical Processes in the Eastern Mediterranean in the 13th–12thcenturies BC. PhD dissertation. Moscow: IVRAN; 2005. 282 p. (In Russ.)

23. Safronov A. V. New Data on the Destruction of Ugarit. Izvestiya Saratovskogo universiteta. Seriya: Istoriya. Mezhdunarodnyye otnosheniya [Saratov University Revue: History and International Relations]. 2019;19(4):454–458. (In Russ.)

24. Safronov A. V. The date of Ugaritic letter RS 88.2009. Vestnik Moskovskogo gosudarstvennogo oblastnogo universiteta. Seriya: Istoriya i politicheskie nauki [Bulletin MSRU. Series: History and Political Science]. 2013;(2):5–10. (In Russ.)

25. Albright W. Some Oriental Glosses on the Homeric Problem. American Journal of Archaeology. 1950;54(3):162–176.

26. Redford D. B. Egypt, Canaan, and Israel in Ancient Times. Princeton: Princeton University Press; 1992. XIII + 488 p.

27. Safronov A. V. Identifikatsiya strani Danuna [The identification of the land Danuna]. Indoevropeyskoe yazykoznanie i klassicheskaya filologiya [Indo-European linguistics and classical philology]. 2018;22(2):1196–1212. (In Russ.)

28. Kelder J. M. The Kingdom of Mycenae. A Great Kingdom in the Late Bronze Age Aegean. Bethesda: CDL Press; 2010. XII + 172 p.

29. Fischer R. Die Aḫḫijawa-Frage mit einer kommentierten Bibliographie. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag; 2010. VI + 124 S.

30. Lewartowski K. The Decline of the Mycenaean Civilization. An Archaeological Study of Events in the Greek Mainland. Wrozlaw–Warszawa–Kraków: Zakład narodowy imienia ossolińskich wydawnictwo Polskjej Akademii nauk; 1989. 231 p.

31. Gunter A. C. Neo-Hittite and Phrygian Kingdoms of North Syria and Anatolia. Potts D. T. (ed.). A Companion to the Archaeology of the Ancient Near East. Chichester: Blackwell Publishing Ltd.; 2012, pp. 797–815.

32. Karageorghis W. Early Cyprus. Crossroads of the Mediterranean. Los Angeles: The J. Paul Getty Museum; 2002. 232 p.

33. Colvin St. Greek Dialects in the Archaic and Classical Ages. Bakker E. J. A Companion to the Ancient Greek Language. Chichester/Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell; 2010, pp. 200–212.

34. Kazansky N. N. Dialekty drevnegrecheskogo yazyka [The Dialects of Ancient Greek]. Leningrad: Leningradskiy universitet; 1983. 100 p. (In Russ.)

35. Kazansky N. N. Formirovaniye pamfiliyskogo dialekta drevnegrecheskogo yazyka [Formation of the Pamphylian Greek]. Tolstoy N. I. (ed.). Areal’nye issledovaniya v yazykoznanii i etnografii (yazyk i etnos) [Areal studies in linguistics and ethnography (language and ethnos)]. Leningrad: Nauka; 1983, pp. 166–173.

36. Middleton G. D. Mycenaean Collapse(s) c. 1200 BC. Middleton G. D. (ed.). Collapse and Transformation: The Late Bronze Age to Early Iron Age. Oxford: Oxbow Books; 2020, pp. 9–22.

37. Safronov A. V. The date of RS 34.129 and Hittite-Ugaritic relations at the end of the 13th century BC. Vestnik drevnei istorii [Journal of Ancient History]. 2011;4(279):211–218. (In Russ.)

38. Wachsmann Sh. Seagoing Ships and Seamanship in the Bronze Age Levant. College Station: Texas A&M University Press; 1998. 448 p.

39. Blegen C. W. Troy and the Trojans. New York: Frederick A. Praeger; 1963. 240 p.

40. Aslan C. Ch. End or Beginning? The Late Bronze Age to Iron Age Transformation at Troia. Bachhuber Ch., Roberts G. R. (eds). Forces of Transformation. The End of the Bronze Age in the Mediterranean. Oxford: Oxbow Books; 2009, pp. 144–151.

41. Radner K. Rezension zu: Wittke, Anne-Maria: Mušker und Phryger. Wiesbaden, 2004. Zeitschrift für Assyriologie und Vorderasiatische Archäologie. 2006;(96):144–149.

42. Diakonoff I. M. Predystoriya armyanskogo naroda [The prehistory of the Armenian People]. Yerevan: Izdatel’stvo AN Armyanskoy SSR ; 1968. 266 p. (In Russ.)


For citation:


Safronov A.V. The migrations of the Sea Peoples circa 1200 BC according to written sources, narrative tradition and archaeology. Orientalistica. 2020;3(5):1233-1248. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.31696/2618-7043-2020-3-5-1233-1248

Views: 669


Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.


ISSN 2618-7043 (Print)
ISSN 2687-0738 (Online)