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rnoorda | 1 year ago

If anyone's interested in the Sea Peoples and the Late Bronze Age, I recommend 1177 B.C.: The Year Civilization Collapsed by Eric H. Cline. It gives a great overview of the primary sources and evidences for the factors leading to the Late Bronze Age collapse, including the role the Sea Peoples may have played as both a cause and symptom of larger societal issues.

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perrygeo|1 year ago

In the decades before 1177 BC, there were eight empires on the Mediterranean. After, there were three barely-surviving city-states. That the "sea people" came into the picture just as things collapsed is not a coincidence. They were largely the desperate displaced people from fallen civilizations, both victims and agents of violence, acting in a feedback loop. It took centuries to recover; there's a reason it's called the Greek Dark Ages.

namaria|1 year ago

I also have a strong feeling that this collapse and the roving sea peoples are what the Illiad narrates. Or at least the body of traditional oral lyric poetry it's inspired on.

verisimi|1 year ago

I have to wonder, what primary sources there could be. I would be amazed if there were any.

Khaine|1 year ago

At that time, lots of the civilisations wrote on clay tablets, and as their cities burned their clay tables were baked and hardened and so managed to survive the destruction.

rustymonday|1 year ago

There were several. Clay tablets from Ugarit, a Linear B tablet from Pylos, cuneiform tablets from Hattusa (in the decades before the city was abandoned), and several records from Egypt during the reigns of Merneptah and Ramesses III.

cobbzilla|1 year ago

Largely archaeological finds that yield tons of forensic evidence. Plus there are actually plenty of written records that have survived, albeit with major gaps. The Akkadians wrote on stone tablets, thousands of which have survived. Mostly they are banal transaction records (which still tell us a lot!) but there are many others, including some court records from ancient Egypt and elsewhere.

jcranmer|1 year ago

The main literary primary sources are monumental inscriptions in Egypt and a cache of diplomatic letters from some of the cities that were destroyed in the Bronze Age collapse.