The Sea Peoples always felt like an unfair in-game event, they just showed up out of nowhere and wrecked stuff. The art work in this brilliant as usual, it's great to see ancient faces and people depicted in a real way. Really brings them to life.
LOL; absolutely, I can imagine one of my favorite games like Crusader Kings or better even Tropico being interrupted by such a catastrophic, totally unfair, gam calamity. "Presidente, presidente! We have a huge crisis: the Sea Peoples are invading!" :D
The entire Bronze Age Collapse was probably the single most devastating balance patch in the history of civilisation. Perhaps even rivaling the Black Death.
The Black Death was ridiculous! It threw off the balance of the game completely and cause 1/3rd of the player base to rage quit. There was no need for that
odds are pretty good that the sea people invasion resulted from a general civilization collapse that was already happening, and the real trigger was some kind of ecological problem, like we know for sure that the Indus Valley civilization's collapse was ecological but there is ample evidence of unrest and barbarism that resulted from it, which makes sense if you think about it
All the sea peoples were decimated, they brought women and children and their belongings with them, sounds like a symptom of the age and sheer desperation amidst the bronze age collapse of the world
The ancient Assyrians wrote about "Yawnaya" (Ionian) pirates who would raid the Mediterranean coasts. The Assyrians even referred to Alexander as Alexander Yawnaya (the Ionian), likely because he spoke the same or similar language to these Ionian pirates and was thus associated with the pirates. Food for thought
Yavan (from Ionian) is also the word used in Sanskrit for Greeks and mentioned in many Sanskrit texts. There were Greek kingdoms in Bactria (modern day Afghanistan), and norht-western India (including today's Pakistan).
Well thats corect but those historians are useles...the hole west balkan was lived by ionian named as illyrian tribes a race of pelasgians and they got spread all over the mediterian.
The greeks were not pirats and they would not destroy them states...the illyrians tribe were pirates...and its 100% sure that the sea people came from the illyrian tribes.
I'm completely blown away with the story of the sea people. They gave no land on which to discover artifacts, but their mention is unavoidable in ancient history. It was nice seeing a video focused on just them.
Sea people where tribes living in today west balkan knowen as illyrian...they were spread all over the mediteranian cost like in italy iscland of sardinia spain north african cost...and thats why they came all together couse they spoke the same language a were from the same origine.
@@klodianbiba2142 You desperate people even want to claim nameless, uncivilized raiders who caused the collapse of civilization and were so savage they hardly left any trace to commemorate them. Even Tamerlane and Genghis Khan knew to learn from the people they sacked and thus left cities or roads behind. These Sea People were quite illiterate savages. Maybe the dumbest and most primitive raiders any major crisis on civilization has seen.
@@zippyparakeet1074 yeah thats funny by you good comedian...i suggest you to keep on going with comedy and leave the history to whom does make reseach and studies on it.
Thanks man! Just watched your awesome Ironclad video...would have been pretty stunning to have witnessed the Monitor and the Merrimack ricocheting cannonballs off each other
@@huskyfaninmass1042 One is correct, the other isn't. Unique means, one of a kind, thus "very unique" is a redundancy. The Armchair Historian (I inspired to call myself that with my own channel before he was a thing, but I didn't get around to it) is attempting to add vigour to his words, and is actually saying "this topic is exceedingly special/fascinating/intriguing", as it only qualifies as unique in that it is a specific arch in chronological time; but then so to is everything in history; indeed, every person and organism is unique - so is every sub-atomic particle, if you get technical. A figure of speech and an example of how poorly language attests to our thoughts and emotions. What puzzles me more is his use of a preterite or simple past tense in "(I) Loved" with the word "always", which is a Continous adverb in the same clause. Not least of all given that this is a re-watchable video and not an experience limited to memory.
no, its an archeological study, primarily, that takes into account all possible socio-economic, environmental, and geographical hypotheses as to what may have occurred to disrupt bronze age life...kinda lets down the reader in the sense that a handful of key theories exist to explain how the bronze age civilization collapses, but with no definitive answer. think of this video as a mere outline to the book (i.e., LOTS more interesting details in the book...obviously a 10 minute video can't cover much ground)
Eric Cline does flashback to the previous centuries when the bronze age civilizations were on their peak. This flashback explains the collapse of the older empires (Hittites, Mycenaeans, Egypt etc) and the rise of the new ones such as Israel and Assyria. Egypt did not really collapsed but it lost the southern part of Syria and declined after the victories against the Sea Peoples.
Whenever anyone else covers this topic it always starts and ends with, "And then the Sea People showed up out of nowhere and we have no idea who they were or if they even existed at all." I never knew there was so much historians have already theorised about them.
@@TheosgosnosIt's Phoenecians aka Canaanites aka proto-Jews. They had colonies in Spain and elsewhere. Sea Peoples were likely their slaves that they had bred with over a few hundred years. They used them to destroy their enemies.
The Mycenaeans were like, "Our kingdoms are collapsing, and it took so long to build them, oh it's *such* a drag to rebuild them... Let's destroy everyone else's instead, so we are even! Who's with me?!"
Before the invasion of Greeks(sea people) there was no Greek and they assimilated the pre-Greek societies (Pelasgians) Ancient Greek writings exactly explains these events clearly
@Thorekk you clearly don't know what the term "semitic" encompasses. You just insulted Arabs, Jews, Mandaeans, Samaritans, and Assyrians/Syriacs and called them destroyers of civilization which, with the current majority religion in mind, I wouldn't disagree with. When it comes to the progression of civilization however, Jews easily take the cake - while the rest ferment in their institutions so corrupted by nepotism that no real progress can be made other than for choosing who - other than themselves - takes the blame for the situation they put themselves in. Trust me, it isn't this tiny minority called Jews, it's the narrow-minded, bigoted and stale majority of the muslim fath. Grow up and take responsibility for your own shit instead of blaming it on someone else.
In bible philistines came from an island called caphtor, and many historian believe caphtor is crete and they're already migrated aroud bronze age..so they're might be minoan greek
Who would win? A millennium of prosperity and growth with the earliest known instance of a "globalized" economy and mass production, or some pirate dudes?
Well by this time many of the great empires were in collapse. That would be like saying the Germanic tribes were the sole reason the Roman Empire fell without acknowledging the decades and centuries of decline before then
The problem was exactly the globalized economy. The bronze age empires were too dependent on mutual trade, and if one piece fell the rest collapsed like a house of cards. The main issue was that to make bronze weapons, you need bronze. To make bronze you need copper and tin, and these are almost never found together. Thus needed to be traded from far away. Commerce interrupted=no bronze=no weapons.
@hellos grog majority of All European arent Excatly white too.. they are more Has brownish Shade than Central& East Asian who has such Clear white skin.. at least in my Opinion after Saw and compared many German tourists with Japanese tourists in Air port
@@williamgarayua5878 frkin ingrates. The Jews thrived in many places in the muslim world, in anadalus, in yemen etc. while the christians were constantly persecuting them. Now they turn it all around and act as if the muslims persecuted them all along(probably to justify what they're doing to palestinians, bombing men who have glass bottles and makeshift guns for weapons). The greatest rabbis were literally living peacefully in muslim lands.
One nation only? No, seven or a dozen! It's "Peoples", plural, for a reason. And they surely even fight each other, else who looted all Greece soon afterwards. I'm sure they were the Weshesh, the Sherden, the Shekelesh and the Teresh.
@@cramMetallic - That depends on context, specific meaning. When we use people as nation or equivalent sub-national or community, it is singular, example: "the Danish are one people" and can and should be pluralized therefore, for example: "the Scandinavian peoples". People is only plural when it's not used to mean a collectivity but a generality of individual persons: "people say...", "the people gathered...", etc.
@@stoferb876 Just saying. Some Vikings wore horned helmets…. It was an inherited thing to do, dating all the way back to Bronze Age. Literally thousands and thousands of men or Gods wearing horns / horned helmets are depicted in Scandinavian petroglyphs and metalwork. There are even men (or Gods) wearing horned helmets depicted on real helmets without horns. It was the belief - probably all over the ancient world - that wearing something from an animal would transfer some of its strength. The Scandinavians of cause didn’t wear horned helmets or (whole) furs from bears / wolfs in battle, it was ONLY during rituals / ceremonies.
The hype for Operation Odysseus has paid off!! Been looking forward to this for some time, and lo and behold Epimetheus releases a video about the Sea People, one of my favourite mysteries of the ancient world. Great video! :)
If they haven't by now, I imagine Sesame Street would parody the Sea Peoples as Muppets with C's embroidered on their armor and weapons and making all sorts of C-based puns as they go to plunder.
@Manley Nelson// When Dr. Cline told that story about people wearing C's on their attire for a costume contest saying they were Sea Peoples, I thought to myself: "That joke is right up Sesame Street's alley." In the Monsterpiece Theatre on The Old Man and the Sea, we see Grover fishing on a boat, on a big letter C.
These videos are really great for keeping things in perspective quickly and easily as I have been bouncing around your related videos. Grasping time spans (Egypt...ugh!), and understanding interactions with neighboring cultures is so much easier to grasp the way you condense things. Thank you!👍
Bronze Age: We Wuz Kangz! *Mediterranean Vikings: The hell you ain't 😈 (Oh yeah they had horned helmets too, I guess the old Wagnerian depiction of Vikings fit for those guys)
Definitely were guys one would not want to mess with...Unless your the Sea People! :) Some now don't think they sacked Hatti, but Ramses III thought they did...so I'll go with his info, he lived through it
I'd say it was the Bryges-Phrygians-Armenians, who were a bit more land-minded and thus never made it to Egypt but they were in the wider plot or coalition, no doubt.
@@EpimetheusHistory - The Ugarit tables, taken at face value at least, suggest that prior to the invasion of Cyprus and Syria, there was already ongoing war further west ("all my ships are in Lukka", etc.) To me it seems the Greeks were leading (somehow it must be related to the Trojan War, also Cyprus hellenization, etc.) but that there was a huge amount of nations. The Egyptans treat it almost as a "Viking raid" (a major one anyhow) but to my eyes it was rather like a World War between (main powers) Greeks and Hittites (and whoever else they thought ripe for the taking).
I love it that nowadays there's a revival of interest in ancient history (in this case REALLY ancient) among the younger generation. In my younger days, you couldn't get anybody interested in it. Very good video. Even if these hypotheses can't be proven they OUGHT to be true!
Just found you, I’m INSTANTLY a fan!! I absolutely love history and your way of retelling the story is awesome, well researched and unique! New sub rite here! Begin video binge now!
Greeks, Sardinians, and Sicilians. They're a very interesting confederation of different European people with a common goal: to go Viking before the Vikings!
:) HAHAHAHA yes I agree. But I don't think that at this time these people saw themselves as European. But this is possible that they shared some linga franca
Of course, they also create a big state in Central Asia (The greco bactrian kingdom) who existed during 200 years. But at the time of this event, this state had been subjuged to Yuezhi
Thank you very much. This is an excellent summary of what we have learned so far. Just a few decades ago the knowledge was minimal so I am learning this for the first time
Dude, been thinking about who they were for the past several days! Had to insta-like and insta-comment before watching the video! Cheers y'all, and thanks again Epimetheus for your amazing content, dedication to research and spreading knowledge onto the common folk like myself! Thanks again brother
The Sea Peoples were the Mediterranean Sea version of the Vikings :D Also nice video btw. When I was a kid in school I remember they taught us a theory that what actually caused the sea people's raids was a volcano that erupted and destroyed their homeland.
Sea peoples are the name given by ancient archaeologists and historians of the Middle East in the 19th century to a group of ancient peoples that migrated through the Mediterranean sea and attacked the kingdoms that were located east of the Mediterranean basin, Egypt as well as the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, and the Anatolians in Anatolia. The attacks of sea people led to the fall of the Hittitese mpire and the weakening of the Pharaonic Kingdom of Egypt for a long time, and the destruction of many cities of the eastern Mediterranean, such as Ogarit. The sea people , most importantly the Palestinians (Philistines) , have taken control of large areas of the southern coast of Canaan. There are also theories that the emigration of sea peoples is a migratory migration, as they returned to their original homeland Palestine, after they established kingdoms in Greece. The earliest mention of the sea people dates back to the end of the 13th century BC, where Pharaoh Merneptah lists the peoples he has won, among them "foreign sea people " as he described in his letters. 20 years later, Pharaoh Ramses III mentions another attack of these peoples on Egypt and boasts that he defeated them despite their power that led to the defeat of the Hittites and other nations . Some historians doubt the credibility of Ramses III's report, and believe that he attributed Merenptah's victories to himself. BTW jews don't like them because they defeated them many times.
wrote a research paper years ago about the sea peoples. origins of the Sea Peoples (i made the argument their origins were across the Mediterranean World) who resettled into the ANE for subsistence purposes beyond raiding. Great video!
Heard a lot about the possibility of Mycenaean warriors being the sea people due to their excessively violent collapse and the invasion of the Dorians into Greece. It's good to learn about the other supposed origins of the sea peoples.
Yep it is known that the collapse of Mycenaean Greece/Achaeans was incredibly violent/chaotic as seen by archeological evidence such as remains of arrowheads, broken weapons, burn marks on ruins, etc. indicating battles being fought and cities getting razed to the ground. Remains of fortified hamlets at high elevations to protect the survivors from, well, something. It is clear that it was an age of massive depopulation and destruction. Any Mycenaeans who remained either migrated away in thousands of boats with families and cattle towards the east or the little who remained hid away in these fortified hamlets and forgot how to write.
@@zippyparakeet1074Dorians were the Indo European Hellenics also known as maccedonians during classical age.. they migrated/invaded Mycenean, then the minority of Mycenaeans such as the Ionians/Acheans, Aeolians were vast war migrated to Near East
Can’t believe I only just discovered your channel! Love your content! Very helpful for learning ancient history. Also appreciate your use of “BC” rather than “BCE”.
Yayyy! This was what i exactly needed. A few years back i was really interested in these people but there werent enough information i could find, and my english was pretty poor compared to now back then. Thanks!
Last I check it was completely unknown who the sea people were. How did this change so radically? Did archaeologists stumble upon a contemporary account of what was going on in recent years?
So let me see if I got this right. The Sea Peoples were a loose conglomeration of pirates who came together to raid cities along the Mediterranean coastlines and help advance the Bronze age collapse? Outside of Lukka they had no country of their own and probably only had a string of conquered port cities they used to trade their booty and sell slaves. A federation of sorts. Also, 'the islands of Sardinia in the west and Crete in the east were convenient bases where they could rest, hide out, and plan their next raid. They relied on fast raids with small groups of fierce warriors instead of large armies to do battle. .Sounds a lot like the Vikings of the 9th century.
Thank you for the excellent production value, good script just filled to the brim with wonderful history, and to top it off I do like your narration style especially how you shift your vowel inflections to emphasize important points. Now I have a new list of interesting historical events to look at learn from. I am curious about how you gravitated towards ancient history. Santayana was so correct about the the dangers of ignoring history, but which also means that the constant reinterpretion of history is crucial when new facts arise and when we look at macro & micro models of history. Oh yes, the playlist you linked to in one of your posts is just what I was looking for. Cheers from Canada.
Given that they were a warfare seasociety- how skewed were the genders by population? Could you say seasociety had a low seamen count? And would a low seamen count affect fertility rates drastically? Thank you for your time.
A great introduction to a still not fully understood event in the bronze age. Although Ramses II (1213-1279 BCE) had fairly small battles with the Sherden, Lukka and Karkisha.who may have been mercenaries for the ever annoying Libyans, records show the Sherden particularly were also used by the Egyptians as mercenaries too. Merenptah (1213-1204 BCE , son of Ramses and later Ramses III (1187-1156 BCE) felt the full brunt of the Sea Peoples invasion. Both times the Peoples brought their families shown by Oxen driven carts in inscriptions. Merenptah records attack by the Libyans, Ekwesh, Teresh, Lukka, Sherden, and Shekelesh. The Meshwesh appear later in the text as do the Ekwesh and Teresh and not grouped with the sea peoples. Later in the document the numbers of the dead and valuables taken from the invaders list 742 dead from the Ekwesh with the figures not shown for the other groups. Ramses III denotes the Peleset, Tjeker, Shekelesh, Denyen and Weshesh were among the Sea Peoples he defeated. I would caution transliterating Egyptian names for these peoples into our knowledge of who they are. Because the subtraction of vowels may lead us to assume similar sounding names today can be wildly wrong and scholars still fiercely debate their original locations. The only agreed name are the Peleset who are believed to be the Philistines of the Bible. If you think today, we call the country Germany, the French say Allemagne, the Swedish say Tyskland, none are even close to what they call themselves-- Deutschland as examples of how one people can be called many names by their neighbors.
To be fair though, comparing the name of a nation state with that of a tribe is not accurate since, during that time, peoples existed, not nations. For example, the French name for Germany- Allemagne- clearly originates from the Latin word Alemannia which means "the land of the Alemanni", Alemanni being the Germanic tribe living roughly in the areas of Bavaria and Alsace. Although it is debated if they were a single tribe or a tribal confederation- although the French usage of the world would make even more sense if it referred to a confederation of tribes. Anyways, other countries use the transliteration of the same Latin word to refer to Germans such as the Spanish- Alemania, Portuguese- Alemanha, Welsh- Yr Almaen, Arabic- Almania, Turkish- Almanya, Persian- Alman. Western Europeans states continued to use the terms because of the Romance languages they use while the Eastern states used the term clearly either because of their interactions with the continuing Roman Empire in the East or because of the later interactions with the Franks during the crusades.
The Berbers or Imazighen actually do appear in the video but only very occasionally. Not really fair because the Libu (from Cyrenaica) and the Meshwesh (Amazigh, later known as Mazyes, from Tripolitania and Southern Tunisia) were very important in all the Sea Peoples' attacks against Egypt. In fact the Meshwesh would come to conquer Lower Egypt and kept it under control for the Second Intermediate Period. However there's more stuff going on in later periods: the famous Numidians that show up once and again in the Punic Wars (and the related Yugurthine War) were also Berbers, probably akin to modern Kabyles. Further West they were called Mauri (from which Moor, Moorish) and had their own kingdom(s), which gradually were absorbed by the Roman Empire.
History Civilis is cool, but this channel is pretty cool to. I've seen the other channels you mentioned. There quite big. I like this channel cause I'm actually seeing it grow. Pretty soon this channel will. Be in the same league as those other guys.
I love to hear about those most ancient civilisations and their wars. It always gives me a mindfuck and some uncanny feeling. Hearing about their wars and migrations, it's strange, interesting and amazing.
I personally think another factor of the sea people winning was that the most popular military technology was the chariot, however soldiers had to be trained for at least 20 years meaning that if you lost your chariots, it would be another generation before you can get those chariots back not to mention how expensive they were to make and maintain. Chariots were intended to fight short battles as bronze age doctrine mainly saw a single battle to decide a winner and the sea people were a hoard who constantly harassed the costal towns and villages and chariots were not great at fighting waves and waves of enemies so the powerful armies that these empires built to defend themsleves was practically useless against this kind of invasion.
You should give this an update with the new DNA information on the possible origin of the Philistines from the Aegean, Sardinia, and the Iberian coast.
@@mysticmagicsmurfdarklord6844 his newer videos have sources, but the older ones doesn't. i think he just forgot about them, or they are in his patreon
Kit Kefner The Nubians were a group of civilizations not one entity... The area of Sudan could be compared to the size of half of Europe so there is a lot of history there..
@Kit Kefner Ancient Nubia was an older civilization than Egypt. They were very powerful and unlike Egypt, we weren't conquered by everyone. I'm sure your ancestors were irrelevant compared to Sudan.
@Kit Kefner this argument is stupid. Evidence currently shows that organized monarchy in Nubia may slightly pre-date that of Egypt, and Nubia had multiple different states - Kerma Culture, Kush, and later on Makuria, Alodia, and Nobatia, capable of repelling the otherwise unstoppable Arabs.
very interesting video. I would have added the fact that in the XIII-XII centuries BC a "minor" climate change happened in the Mediterranean. there were droughts through the region that let south eastern iberian late bronce culture El Argar to collapse too
This is the very best video on the sea people on youtube. I've been obsessed with cracking the mystery for about 10 years now and I can say this is probably the best I think.
Try eustace mullins book the curse of canaan or his many talks on you tube...canaanites to phoenicians to venitians to the black nobility who rule today by owning the banking system.
awesome video! finally chipping away at the air of mystery surrounding the sea peoples. Now it makes sense and most of all pretty clear it was a logical series of events following the Bronze age collapse. Now I can focus on the solving who the Weshesh were and origins.
We know some of the sea people’s came from the lukka lands of southern anitolia, western anitolia had confederations called the asuwa league later becoming arwaza. Arwaza was known to fight the hittie they were known to work with myceanan kings. Western anitolia has always been a thorn in the side of the hitties. And I think the Sheridana are the nuragic Sardinian, they even have the same type of swords and helmets.
I am impressed by your presentation. Visual and audible illustrations give a vivid imagination of what took place. Which gives a clear perspective on our current time... Thank you. P.s. Have you heard of the table of nations?
Superb video for an amazing subject ! Thank you for your clear explanations of such a vast subject in such small time. I’d like to ask where you got your documentation, sources ? What books, or articles ? Thank you in advance
The two main sources used for my video are 1177 BC by Robert Cline(2015), and Sea Peoples of the Bronze Age Mediterranean by D'Amato(2015). Also The Sea Peoples by Chekijian (2015) ...all 2015, pretty recent
Its quite interesting, depictions of "Sea people" ; heavily depicted and charicaturised as "wild" BUT they were one of the most advanced civilisation when those events took place at the 12th cenntury B.C.
Full operation Odysseus Playlist Link-A huge Nautical themed collaboration!
ruclips.net/p/PLDb22nlVXGgd2rdNu1C44t-hoYXA9bL2M
Thanks. One of the great mysteries of thw world.
Wow that’s cool!
Wow, I'm so absolutely bookmarking that to watch bit by bit. Seems a truly impressive endeavor and very worth enjoying. Thanks a lot to all.
Bronze Age total war would be awesome
I see you guys have made an alliance.
The Sea Peoples always felt like an unfair in-game event, they just showed up out of nowhere and wrecked stuff. The art work in this brilliant as usual, it's great to see ancient faces and people depicted in a real way. Really brings them to life.
LOL; absolutely, I can imagine one of my favorite games like Crusader Kings or better even Tropico being interrupted by such a catastrophic, totally unfair, gam calamity. "Presidente, presidente! We have a huge crisis: the Sea Peoples are invading!" :D
@@alexandrine1558 Only the Egyptians got nerfed. Everybody else got vaulted.
@@bredmond812 *quit the game (we're still playing the r/outside thing,right?)
The entire Bronze Age Collapse was probably the single most devastating balance patch in the history of civilisation. Perhaps even rivaling the Black Death.
The Black Death was ridiculous! It threw off the balance of the game completely and cause 1/3rd of the player base to rage quit. There was no need for that
"that's a nice civilization you've got there it be a shame if something were to happen to it" sea person 1200 ish BC
Nice army base you got here, Colonel. Well,you know Colonel, things break. - Luigi Vercotti.
Good one
odds are pretty good that the sea people invasion resulted from a general civilization collapse that was already happening, and the real trigger was some kind of ecological problem, like we know for sure that the Indus Valley civilization's collapse was ecological but there is ample evidence of unrest and barbarism that resulted from it, which makes sense if you think about it
All the sea peoples were decimated, they brought women and children and their belongings with them, sounds like a symptom of the age and sheer desperation amidst the bronze age collapse of the world
Who wants Bronze Age Total War?
Victory Obaseki no thats iron age
@@Parables_of_Prosperity bro.
That's classical antiquity, not the bronze age.
There is a a mod of Rome II called Age of Bronze
Not Total War, but the first Age of Empires game was based off the Bronze Age.
Lets crush the sea people!
The ancient Assyrians wrote about "Yawnaya" (Ionian) pirates who would raid the Mediterranean coasts. The Assyrians even referred to Alexander as Alexander Yawnaya (the Ionian), likely because he spoke the same or similar language to these Ionian pirates and was thus associated with the pirates. Food for thought
Yavan (from Ionian) is also the word used in Sanskrit for Greeks and mentioned in many Sanskrit texts. There were Greek kingdoms in Bactria (modern day Afghanistan), and norht-western India (including today's Pakistan).
Well thats corect but those historians are useles...the hole west balkan was lived by ionian named as illyrian tribes a race of pelasgians and they got spread all over the mediterian.
Greeks from IONIA
The greeks were not pirats and they would not destroy them states...the illyrians tribe were pirates...and its 100% sure that the sea people came from the illyrian tribes.
@@klodianbiba2142 Greeks are Masters at Sea , always have been always will be .
I'm completely blown away with the story of the sea people. They gave no land on which to discover artifacts, but their mention is unavoidable in ancient history. It was nice seeing a video focused on just them.
Sea people where tribes living in today west balkan knowen as illyrian...they were spread all over the mediteranian cost like in italy iscland of sardinia spain north african cost...and thats why they came all together couse they spoke the same language a were from the same origine.
@@klodianbiba2142 You desperate people even want to claim nameless, uncivilized raiders who caused the collapse of civilization and were so savage they hardly left any trace to commemorate them. Even Tamerlane and Genghis Khan knew to learn from the people they sacked and thus left cities or roads behind. These Sea People were quite illiterate savages. Maybe the dumbest and most primitive raiders any major crisis on civilization has seen.
@@klodianbiba2142 here come the Albanians claiming everything in the entire world originated from Albania 😂😂😂
@@zippyparakeet1074 yeah thats funny by you good comedian...i suggest you to keep on going with comedy and leave the history to whom does make reseach and studies on it.
@@klodianbiba2142 definitely not you
**knock, knock**
"Who's there?"
"Sea people."
"Sea people who?"
"See people die as we sack your cities!"
...that was a good one to be honest😂
🤣🤣
sea deez nuts people
Ramesses II: Sea People die as you try.
Too soon
did you know that the diet of sea people consisted on the tears of the enemies they destroyed
pickpocketing
what MORE salt water?
No wonder they were so hungry all the time
They must malnourished as hell!
Cringe
Very unique topic Epimetheus! Loved your artwork as always.
Thanks man! Just watched your awesome Ironclad video...would have been pretty stunning to have witnessed the Monitor and the Merrimack ricocheting cannonballs off each other
What exactly is the difference between "unique" and "very unique"?
@@huskyfaninmass1042 One is correct, the other isn't. Unique means, one of a kind, thus "very unique" is a redundancy. The Armchair Historian (I inspired to call myself that with my own channel before he was a thing, but I didn't get around to it) is attempting to add vigour to his words, and is actually saying "this topic is exceedingly special/fascinating/intriguing", as it only qualifies as unique in that it is a specific arch in chronological time; but then so to is everything in history; indeed, every person and organism is unique - so is every sub-atomic particle, if you get technical.
A figure of speech and an example of how poorly language attests to our thoughts and emotions.
What puzzles me more is his use of a preterite or simple past tense in "(I) Loved" with the word "always", which is a Continous adverb in the same clause. Not least of all given that this is a re-watchable video and not an experience limited to memory.
@@matthewlaurence3121 nnnnnnnnnnnerd!
Oh hello there
The sardinians. Being vikings before being a viking was cool.
best part is that the sardinians really used horned helmets, while real Vikings don't
And as a result im sure less Vikings had their necks broke in battle
We Sardinians were basically Atlanteans
@Woiller- Relic we are Brothers in Battle and Trade,and as such..Both Vikings and Shardana Warriors will both take part in Ragnarok
You can imagine what vikings are doing at this time in norse world ? XD 🤔
There’s a great book on this subject called “1177 BC: The Year Civilization Collapsed”
A novel or..?
no, its an archeological study, primarily, that takes into account all possible socio-economic, environmental, and geographical hypotheses as to what may have occurred to disrupt bronze age life...kinda lets down the reader in the sense that a handful of key theories exist to explain how the bronze age civilization collapses, but with no definitive answer. think of this video as a mere outline to the book (i.e., LOTS more interesting details in the book...obviously a 10 minute video can't cover much ground)
It’s a very good read. Eric Cline does a great job of putting the Bronze Age into words.
@@ilangoldman8224 Wow, gonna watch the full video, thanks.
Eric Cline does flashback to the previous centuries when the bronze age civilizations were on their peak. This flashback explains the collapse of the older empires (Hittites, Mycenaeans, Egypt etc) and the rise of the new ones such as Israel and Assyria. Egypt did not really collapsed but it lost the southern part of Syria and declined after the victories against the Sea Peoples.
Whenever anyone else covers this topic it always starts and ends with, "And then the Sea People showed up out of nowhere and we have no idea who they were or if they even existed at all." I never knew there was so much historians have already theorised about them.
What's strange us Thier DNA it's part Spanish and west Asia with a little greek not the mixture you find in Greece or Cyprus
@@TheosgosnosIt's Phoenecians aka Canaanites aka proto-Jews. They had colonies in Spain and elsewhere. Sea Peoples were likely their slaves that they had bred with over a few hundred years. They used them to destroy their enemies.
The Mycenaeans were like, "Our kingdoms are collapsing, and it took so long to build them, oh it's *such* a drag to rebuild them... Let's destroy everyone else's instead, so we are even! Who's with me?!"
Why does this have less than 1k likes?
@@СтефановићКараџић maybe it hits to close to home? Not sure how though.
Before the invasion of Greeks(sea people) there was no Greek and they assimilated the pre-Greek societies (Pelasgians) Ancient Greek writings exactly explains these events clearly
This is why we can't have nice Bronze Ages.
Lol
TAKE THAT BRONZE AGE!
#EarlyModernPeriodIsBestPeriod.
This meme brought to you by the early civilian age
*Take THAT, Bronze Age!
@Thorekk you clearly don't know what the term "semitic" encompasses. You just insulted Arabs, Jews, Mandaeans, Samaritans, and Assyrians/Syriacs and called them destroyers of civilization which, with the current majority religion in mind, I wouldn't disagree with. When it comes to the progression of civilization however, Jews easily take the cake - while the rest ferment in their institutions so corrupted by nepotism that no real progress can be made other than for choosing who - other than themselves - takes the blame for the situation they put themselves in. Trust me, it isn't this tiny minority called Jews, it's the narrow-minded, bigoted and stale majority of the muslim fath.
Grow up and take responsibility for your own shit instead of blaming it on someone else.
Seems recent DNA analysis confirms that the Philistines were indeed of Greek-ish origin.
Yeah I read somewhere they came from Crete.
Főfasírozó exactly, people believe anything 🤦🏾♂️
@Főfasírozó y
@Valentina Valley So, like, "Pelasgians"?
In bible philistines came from an island called caphtor, and many historian believe caphtor is crete and they're already migrated aroud bronze age..so they're might be minoan greek
Who would win? A millennium of prosperity and growth with the earliest known instance of a "globalized" economy and mass production, or some pirate dudes?
the ones with the less commodities and with more ambition to own something they lack so much
Well by this time many of the great empires were in collapse. That would be like saying the Germanic tribes were the sole reason the Roman Empire fell without acknowledging the decades and centuries of decline before then
@HAYAO LEONE If [joke missed=TRUE], run [r/whoosh.reply]
The problem was exactly the globalized economy. The bronze age empires were too dependent on mutual trade, and if one piece fell the rest collapsed like a house of cards. The main issue was that to make bronze weapons, you need bronze. To make bronze you need copper and tin, and these are almost never found together. Thus needed to be traded from far away. Commerce interrupted=no bronze=no weapons.
well those pirate dudes later being defeated by the hebrews
In regards to the Philistines, the name Pleset is derived from Hebrew "Pleshet" which comes from the root word to describe invaders in Hebrew.
@hellos grog majority of All European arent Excatly white too.. they are more Has brownish Shade than Central& East Asian who has such Clear white skin.. at least in my Opinion after Saw and compared many German tourists with Japanese tourists in Air port
Dear "@@sanarroyos5501" : ✈🚶Comparing tourists at Airport is not the best Census; history of DNA is longer than Passport lines...
wgt
Really? Why would the Egyptians use a word from Hebrew to describe a 3rd group of people?
@@williamgarayua5878 So they took for themselves the name which means "invaders" :D:D:D?
@@williamgarayua5878 frkin ingrates. The Jews thrived in many places in the muslim world, in anadalus, in yemen etc. while the christians were constantly persecuting them. Now they turn it all around and act as if the muslims persecuted them all along(probably to justify what they're doing to palestinians, bombing men who have glass bottles and makeshift guns for weapons). The greatest rabbis were literally living peacefully in muslim lands.
Those damn sea people! always breaking our bronze age civilizations.
The Sea Peoples and me.
They are called higsos in spanish
@@ShadowMinnie and hyksos in ancient egyptean... 🤔
That's why we can't have nice bronze things.
BigDirtyUncle why we can’t have nice things :(.
Perfect topic to kick off Operation Odysseus! Great job 👏👏👏 One of my favorite time periods in history.
Thanks! Glad you liked it
Sardinian here. Finally a good content about our history in english!
Great video man! This is probably the first time a seafaring nation went rogue. Move over Vikings, the Sardinians are in town!
One nation only? No, seven or a dozen! It's "Peoples", plural, for a reason. And they surely even fight each other, else who looted all Greece soon afterwards. I'm sure they were the Weshesh, the Sherden, the Shekelesh and the Teresh.
@@LuisAldamiz People is already plural. hahaha. Peoples??? Come on...
@@cramMetallic
Peoples is correct. Look it up in a dictionary.
@@cramMetallic - That depends on context, specific meaning. When we use people as nation or equivalent sub-national or community, it is singular, example: "the Danish are one people" and can and should be pluralized therefore, for example: "the Scandinavian peoples". People is only plural when it's not used to mean a collectivity but a generality of individual persons: "people say...", "the people gathered...", etc.
@@stoferb876 Just saying. Some Vikings wore horned helmets…. It was an inherited thing to do, dating all the way back to Bronze Age.
Literally thousands and thousands of men or Gods wearing horns / horned helmets are depicted in Scandinavian petroglyphs and metalwork. There are even men (or Gods) wearing horned helmets depicted on real helmets without horns. It was the belief - probably all over the ancient world - that wearing something from an animal would transfer some of its strength. The Scandinavians of cause didn’t wear horned helmets or (whole) furs from bears / wolfs in battle, it was ONLY during rituals / ceremonies.
The hype for Operation Odysseus has paid off!! Been looking forward to this for some time, and lo and behold Epimetheus releases a video about the Sea People, one of my favourite mysteries of the ancient world. Great video! :)
The problem is the DNA of the sea people was a mixture of Spanish and west Asian mainly not greek
Wow they're like the vikings but actually did wear horned helmets
They're way cooler than the Vikings.
If they haven't by now, I imagine Sesame Street would parody the Sea Peoples as Muppets with C's embroidered on their armor and weapons and making all sorts of C-based puns as they go to plunder.
That's an awesome image, dude!
@Manley Nelson// When Dr. Cline told that story about people wearing C's on their attire for a costume contest saying they were Sea Peoples, I thought to myself: "That joke is right up Sesame Street's alley." In the Monsterpiece Theatre on The Old Man and the Sea, we see Grover fishing on a boat, on a big letter C.
@@KTChamberlain I think that's transformative enough to count as a homage. :P
I would absolutely LOVE to see a the Henson Creature shop create these puppets
Great video
These videos are really great for keeping things in perspective quickly and easily as I have been bouncing around your related videos. Grasping time spans (Egypt...ugh!), and understanding interactions with neighboring cultures is so much easier to grasp the way you condense things. Thank you!👍
Your materials are exactly what I wanted, just enough knowledge' not too detailed and not too broad. I love the idea of cooperation of many channels!
Bronze Age: We Wuz Kangz!
*Mediterranean Vikings: The hell you ain't 😈
(Oh yeah they had horned helmets too, I guess the old Wagnerian depiction of Vikings fit for those guys)
Vikings never wore horned Helmets into battle according to another video.
> arrives
> obliterates massive powerful civilizations
> refuses to elaborate
> leaves
Egyptians were masters of war, beat them twice ? Then made them join their army. That deserve some applause.
Wow...the way you draw faces has gotten so good!!! Great video!
Those Hittites look so evil :D Pretty much what I imagined them to look like.. Great video!
Definitely were guys one would not want to mess with...Unless your the Sea People! :)
Some now don't think they sacked Hatti, but Ramses III thought they did...so I'll go with his info, he lived through it
I'd say it was the Bryges-Phrygians-Armenians, who were a bit more land-minded and thus never made it to Egypt but they were in the wider plot or coalition, no doubt.
@Luis Aldamiz agreed. I think it must have been a very large coalition to take down the Hittite Empire so close to their prime.
@@EpimetheusHistory - The Ugarit tables, taken at face value at least, suggest that prior to the invasion of Cyprus and Syria, there was already ongoing war further west ("all my ships are in Lukka", etc.) To me it seems the Greeks were leading (somehow it must be related to the Trojan War, also Cyprus hellenization, etc.) but that there was a huge amount of nations. The Egyptans treat it almost as a "Viking raid" (a major one anyhow) but to my eyes it was rather like a World War between (main powers) Greeks and Hittites (and whoever else they thought ripe for the taking).
@Luis Aldamiz Yes, this is exactly what I was thinking too . It was a bronze age world war.
2:47 I was all comfortable and accustomed to your smooth voice and then this.
I love it that nowadays there's a revival of interest in ancient history (in this case REALLY ancient) among the younger generation. In my younger days, you couldn't get anybody interested in it. Very good video. Even if these hypotheses can't be proven they OUGHT to be true!
Prominent for nobodies looking for nationalistic pride for their inglorious countries. Hence the Albanian and Greek debate going on in these comments.
@@maaz322 Albanians are forever searching for something, anything, in their history to be proud of. And the search continues...
I just stumbled into this channel and I loved it. I'll definetly watch more of your videos
Thanks! :D Glad you stumbled here :)
Overly sarcastic productions sent me here.
Same
Your art is beautiful, I love the fact that a person honors the legacy of our ancestors...
@Provocateur what???
Our ancestors? We don't know who the Sea Peoples were, though...
@@tundra5171 They're someone's ancestors. Not like they happened in a vacuum
Just found you, I’m INSTANTLY a fan!! I absolutely love history and your way of retelling the story is awesome, well researched and unique! New sub rite here! Begin video binge now!
Glad you found my channel :)
I really love the artwork as well as how you covered this topic in such depth. I definitely look forward to more of these.
I must admit, i didn't expect your presentation to be so accurate. Great video, in accordance with modern archaeological findings as well.
The Sea People Came from Greece and italy regions.
The Philistines came from Crete for instance,
The Shekelesh came from Sicily and so forward ...
Greeks, Sardinians, and Sicilians. They're a very interesting confederation of different European people with a common goal: to go Viking before the Vikings!
:) HAHAHAHA yes I agree. But I don't think that at this time these people saw themselves as European. But this is possible that they shared some linga franca
@@marathamarrak7037 Greeks at some point inhabited south Italy and created whole states there, perhaps that had something to do with it
Of course, they also create a big state in Central Asia (The greco bactrian kingdom) who existed during 200 years. But at the time of this event, this state had been subjuged to Yuezhi
The ancient Italians were the same people as the vikings.
Jean Bethencourt more like the middle eastern and North Africans
This was far more detailed than most overviews I have seen on the subject. Great job!
Thank you very much. This is an excellent summary of what we have learned so far. Just a few decades ago the knowledge was minimal so I am learning this for the first time
Your material is fantastic; I'm always looking forward to an Epimetheus upload!
Thanks for your great work!
Dude, been thinking about who they were for the past several days! Had to insta-like and insta-comment before watching the video! Cheers y'all, and thanks again Epimetheus for your amazing content, dedication to research and spreading knowledge onto the common folk like myself! Thanks again brother
Awesome man, Thanks! Yeah they are a super fascinating subject
This was excellently done! Thank you for making quality content.
The Sea Peoples were the Mongols of the Bronze Age.
Yes
Mongolians raised an empire besides their destruction. The sea people just destroyed and later...puff! Like Kayser Soze.
No
Sea peoples were the Pelasgians and their descendants, we don't mess like that with other nations (I'm Greek though)
What a mistery
The Sea Peoples were the Mediterranean Sea version of the Vikings :D
Also nice video btw.
When I was a kid in school I remember they taught us a theory that what actually caused the sea people's raids was a volcano that erupted and destroyed their homeland.
Your artwork keeps getting better.
Thanks!
Sea peoples are the name given by ancient archaeologists and historians of the Middle East in the 19th century to a group of ancient peoples that migrated through the Mediterranean sea and attacked the kingdoms that were located east of the Mediterranean basin, Egypt as well as the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, and the Anatolians in Anatolia. The attacks of sea people led to the fall of the Hittitese mpire and the weakening of the Pharaonic Kingdom of Egypt for a long time, and the destruction of many cities of the eastern Mediterranean, such as Ogarit.
The sea people , most importantly the Palestinians (Philistines) , have taken control of large areas of the southern coast of Canaan. There are also theories that the emigration of sea peoples is a migratory migration, as they returned to their original homeland Palestine, after they established kingdoms in Greece.
The earliest mention of the sea people dates back to the end of the 13th century BC, where Pharaoh Merneptah lists the peoples he has won, among them "foreign sea people " as he described in his letters. 20 years later, Pharaoh Ramses III mentions another attack of these peoples on Egypt and boasts that he defeated them despite their power that led to the defeat of the Hittites and other nations . Some historians doubt the credibility of Ramses III's report, and believe that he attributed Merenptah's victories to himself.
BTW jews don't like them because they defeated them many times.
wrote a research paper years ago about the sea peoples. origins of the Sea Peoples (i made the argument their origins were across the Mediterranean World) who resettled into the ANE for subsistence purposes beyond raiding. Great video!
Dominique Wilson interesting stuff. Which parts of the Mediterranean do you think they originated?
I came here from Stefan Milo. How could I have missed this channel...? Have now subscribed. Great video!
Heard a lot about the possibility of Mycenaean warriors being the sea people due to their excessively violent collapse and the invasion of the Dorians into Greece. It's good to learn about the other supposed origins of the sea peoples.
i didnt see this in the cinema i houpe one Will come out
Yep it is known that the collapse of Mycenaean Greece/Achaeans was incredibly violent/chaotic as seen by archeological evidence such as remains of arrowheads, broken weapons, burn marks on ruins, etc. indicating battles being fought and cities getting razed to the ground. Remains of fortified hamlets at high elevations to protect the survivors from, well, something. It is clear that it was an age of massive depopulation and destruction. Any Mycenaeans who remained either migrated away in thousands of boats with families and cattle towards the east or the little who remained hid away in these fortified hamlets and forgot how to write.
@@zippyparakeet1074Dorians were the Indo European Hellenics also known as maccedonians during classical age.. they migrated/invaded Mycenean, then the minority of Mycenaeans such as the Ionians/Acheans, Aeolians were vast war migrated to Near East
Can’t believe I only just discovered your channel! Love your content! Very helpful for learning ancient history. Also appreciate your use of “BC” rather than “BCE”.
I like that "if u can beat them, hire them"
Yayyy! This was what i exactly needed. A few years back i was really interested in these people but there werent enough information i could find, and my english was pretty poor compared to now back then. Thanks!
Last I check it was completely unknown who the sea people were. How did this change so radically? Did archaeologists stumble upon a contemporary account of what was going on in recent years?
I love these videos, they're way better than the flashy documentaries on the History channel
HC used to be good💚
The Númenóreans
Which had fled from their recently submerged island.
...Wait
@@magiv4205 After invading the western land of the valar
Good one! Hahahaha!
I am also a Tolkien fan.
More like Corsairs of Umbar,
Your videos are some of the best ancient and prehistoric history vids on RUclips. Keep up the good work.
So let me see if I got this right. The Sea Peoples were a loose conglomeration of pirates who came together to raid cities along the Mediterranean coastlines and help advance the Bronze age collapse? Outside of Lukka they had no country of their own and probably only had a string of conquered port cities they used to trade their booty and sell slaves. A federation of sorts. Also, 'the islands of Sardinia in the west and Crete in the east were convenient bases where they could rest, hide out, and plan their next raid. They relied on fast raids with small groups of fierce warriors instead of large armies to do battle. .Sounds a lot like the Vikings of the 9th century.
It does...and that was a good summary :)
Thank you for the excellent production value, good script just filled to the brim with wonderful history, and to top it off I do like your narration style especially how you shift your vowel inflections to emphasize important points. Now I have a new list of interesting historical events to look at learn from. I am curious about how you gravitated towards ancient history. Santayana was so correct about the the dangers of ignoring history, but which also means that the constant reinterpretion of history is crucial when new facts arise and when we look at macro & micro models of history. Oh yes, the playlist you linked to in one of your posts is just what I was looking for. Cheers from Canada.
Bronze Age Vikings?
More like Greek/Anatolian Vikings
But to the n-th power. Also much more ethnically diverse.
vikings with actual horned helmets :D
mediterranean vikings/pirates for the glory of looting
Sardinian pirates.
Given that they were a warfare seasociety- how skewed were the genders by population? Could you say seasociety had a low seamen count? And would a low seamen count affect fertility rates drastically? Thank you for your time.
I’m in love with this channel! And the soothing voice, makes history come alive.
A great introduction to a still not fully understood event in the bronze age. Although Ramses II (1213-1279 BCE) had fairly small battles with the Sherden, Lukka and Karkisha.who may have been mercenaries for the ever annoying Libyans, records show the Sherden particularly were also used by the Egyptians as mercenaries too. Merenptah (1213-1204 BCE , son of Ramses and later Ramses III (1187-1156 BCE) felt the full brunt of the Sea Peoples invasion. Both times the Peoples brought their families shown by Oxen driven carts in inscriptions. Merenptah records attack by the Libyans, Ekwesh, Teresh, Lukka, Sherden, and Shekelesh. The Meshwesh appear later in the text as do the Ekwesh and Teresh and not grouped with the sea peoples. Later in the document the numbers of the dead and valuables taken from the invaders list 742 dead from the Ekwesh with the figures not shown for the other groups. Ramses III denotes the Peleset, Tjeker, Shekelesh, Denyen and Weshesh were among the Sea Peoples he defeated.
I would caution transliterating Egyptian names for these peoples into our knowledge of who they are. Because the subtraction of vowels may lead us to assume similar sounding names today can be wildly wrong and scholars still fiercely debate their original locations. The only agreed name are the Peleset who are believed to be the Philistines of the Bible.
If you think today, we call the country Germany, the French say Allemagne, the Swedish say Tyskland, none are even close to what they call themselves-- Deutschland as examples of how one people can be called many names by their neighbors.
Very interesting, great comment!
To be fair though, comparing the name of a nation state with that of a tribe is not accurate since, during that time, peoples existed, not nations.
For example, the French name for Germany- Allemagne- clearly originates from the Latin word Alemannia which means "the land of the Alemanni", Alemanni being the Germanic tribe living roughly in the areas of Bavaria and Alsace. Although it is debated if they were a single tribe or a tribal confederation- although the French usage of the world would make even more sense if it referred to a confederation of tribes.
Anyways, other countries use the transliteration of the same Latin word to refer to Germans such as the Spanish- Alemania, Portuguese- Alemanha, Welsh- Yr Almaen, Arabic- Almania, Turkish- Almanya, Persian- Alman.
Western Europeans states continued to use the terms because of the Romance languages they use while the Eastern states used the term clearly either because of their interactions with the continuing Roman Empire in the East or because of the later interactions with the Franks during the crusades.
so thrilled that the first episode of operation odysseus is finally here!
which youtuber got this idea first?
Whoever it is, it's a really great idea
Can you do one on early Moroccan tribes and the people of the Atlas Mountains
Ghostface Warrior north west africa are just imazighen
@@amazigh8776 I always wanted to know
Ghostface Warrior i am from the atlas everyone west of egypt is the same race all are imazighen/berbers
The Berbers or Imazighen actually do appear in the video but only very occasionally. Not really fair because the Libu (from Cyrenaica) and the Meshwesh (Amazigh, later known as Mazyes, from Tripolitania and Southern Tunisia) were very important in all the Sea Peoples' attacks against Egypt. In fact the Meshwesh would come to conquer Lower Egypt and kept it under control for the Second Intermediate Period.
However there's more stuff going on in later periods: the famous Numidians that show up once and again in the Punic Wars (and the related Yugurthine War) were also Berbers, probably akin to modern Kabyles. Further West they were called Mauri (from which Moor, Moorish) and had their own kingdom(s), which gradually were absorbed by the Roman Empire.
Luis Aldamiz if you see the bright insight video he even says that the imazighen are the atlanteans and my ancestors builded end founded atlantis
It probably went wrong when the first guard shouted "Sea people" and the second guard interpreted that as "See, people!" and neglected to see.
Interesting could be the ancestors of Rome. Ancient Rome has said that there orgins trace back to Troy. They also could of influenced Phonicia
Doubt it since rome couldn't even build ships and had to copy Carthage
Good video. Clearly detailed the possible origin of this Bronze Age Marauders.
The sea people may have not been the main cause for the downfall of the bronze age but they definitely seem to have dealt it the killing blow
the most real and best story I have ever heard >>> thank u, Great
your telling me historia civilis,kings and generals and alternate history hub aren't in this collaboration :(
@@andreascovano7742 *injustice* at its core
@nik Bahtin without historia civilis its lacking too much
@nik Bahtin *away
History Civilis is cool, but this channel is pretty cool to. I've seen the other channels you mentioned. There quite big. I like this channel cause I'm actually seeing it grow. Pretty soon this channel will. Be in the same league as those other guys.
Your visual presentation brings it all together beautifully and informatively.
Thank you! :)
Cool video and very interesting topic for sure. Only didn't like that theatrical, overly-dramatic voice - but thats a probably a matter of taste.
Thank you for a succinct summary. I needed that.
Glad it was helpful!
I love to hear about those most ancient civilisations and their wars. It always gives me a mindfuck and some uncanny feeling. Hearing about their wars and migrations, it's strange, interesting and amazing.
Dense, but palatable. My attention span isnt the best. But you’re ability to interpret and narrate history is entertaining, but still educational
I am excited for this!
I personally think another factor of the sea people winning was that the most popular military technology was the chariot, however soldiers had to be trained for at least 20 years meaning that if you lost your chariots, it would be another generation before you can get those chariots back not to mention how expensive they were to make and maintain. Chariots were intended to fight short battles as bronze age doctrine mainly saw a single battle to decide a winner and the sea people were a hoard who constantly harassed the costal towns and villages and chariots were not great at fighting waves and waves of enemies so the powerful armies that these empires built to defend themsleves was practically useless against this kind of invasion.
You should give this an update with the new DNA information on the possible origin of the Philistines from the Aegean, Sardinia, and the Iberian coast.
What are the Akwash or however it’s spelled? You said they were Mycenaean ambit I cannot find ANYTHING about them in the internet
yea this channel is weird. a lot of his videos doesn't even sources
@@mikhailosbutya do you think he’s making stuff up, or just has really obscure sources that he’s failing to cite?
@@mysticmagicsmurfdarklord6844 his newer videos have sources, but the older ones doesn't. i think he just forgot about them, or they are in his patreon
This time period needs a Total War Game.....looking at you Creative Assembly.
Boy, do I have news for you. There is now a Bronze Age Total War game. It’s called total war: pharaoh.
Found your channel from Operation Odysseus and subscribed. Loving the collaboration between y’all!!
When we ruled the world!! 😁😁...Cheers from Sardinia!
And by ruled, you mean trashed it? Love from Scandinavia
Sardines?
No you didnt??
We will all be remembered as the rulers of our era, let us be well remembered.
Look! It's King Meriadoc Anchovy and his prime minister Grin Sardinia !
I’d love a multi part series on Portugal’s overseas expansion!! Great work, Keep em coming!!
The Sea people caused a massive hit to Egypt, possibly one of the factors causing the mighty Kushite empire to rise.
Very true, I believe
Epimetheus Make a video about the Nubian kingdoms, they lasted 5000 years
Kit Kefner The Nubians were a group of civilizations not one entity... The area of Sudan could be compared to the size of half of Europe so there is a lot of history there..
@Kit Kefner
Ancient Nubia was an older civilization than Egypt. They were very powerful and unlike Egypt, we weren't conquered by everyone. I'm sure your ancestors were irrelevant compared to Sudan.
@Kit Kefner this argument is stupid.
Evidence currently shows that organized monarchy in Nubia may slightly pre-date that of Egypt, and Nubia had multiple different states - Kerma Culture, Kush, and later on Makuria, Alodia, and Nobatia, capable of repelling the otherwise unstoppable Arabs.
This was so beautiful 😭 Thank you 💐
very interesting video. I would have added the fact that in the XIII-XII centuries BC a "minor" climate change happened in the Mediterranean. there were droughts through the region that let south eastern iberian late bronce culture El Argar to collapse too
This was such an insightful look into history! It’s astonishing to realize how decisions made long ago continue to resonate in our modern lives.
This is the very best video on the sea people on youtube. I've been obsessed with cracking the mystery for about 10 years now and I can say this is probably the best I think.
Yeah I wonder who they were lol.
Try eustace mullins book the curse of canaan or his many talks on you tube...canaanites to phoenicians to venitians to the black nobility who rule today by owning the banking system.
awesome video! finally chipping away at the air of mystery surrounding the sea peoples. Now it makes sense and most of all pretty clear it was a logical series of events following the Bronze age collapse. Now I can focus on the solving who the Weshesh were and origins.
We know some of the sea people’s came from the lukka lands of southern anitolia, western anitolia had confederations called the asuwa league later becoming arwaza. Arwaza was known to fight the hittie they were known to work with myceanan kings. Western anitolia has always been a thorn in the side of the hitties. And I think the Sheridana are the nuragic Sardinian, they even have the same type of swords and helmets.
That would not be the last time Italians came by sea to ruin Egypts day
I am impressed by your presentation.
Visual and audible illustrations give a vivid imagination of what took place. Which gives a clear perspective on our current time...
Thank you.
P.s.
Have you heard of the table of nations?
Your pronunciation is on point. Very good work you do.
Superb video for an amazing subject ! Thank you for your clear explanations of such a vast subject in such small time.
I’d like to ask where you got your documentation, sources ?
What books, or articles ?
Thank you in advance
The two main sources used for my video are 1177 BC by Robert Cline(2015), and Sea Peoples of the Bronze Age Mediterranean by D'Amato(2015).
Also The Sea Peoples by Chekijian (2015) ...all 2015, pretty recent
Epimetheus Also from 2015 is this remarkable lecture on the Luwians ruclips.net/video/1DNyA90f_aw/видео.html
Its quite interesting, depictions of "Sea people" ; heavily depicted and charicaturised as "wild" BUT they were one of the most advanced civilisation when those events took place at the 12th cenntury B.C.