Ancient Apocalypse - The Sea People: Catalysts of Bronze Age Collapse | Full Documentary

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  • Опубликовано: 12 авг 2023
  • Ancient Apocalypse - The Akkadian Empire: • Ancient Apocalypse: Th...
    In modern day Egypt, Syria, Turkey and Greece some of the greatest Bronze Age Civilizations rose to power. The Hittite Empire, the Mycenaeans, the all-powerful Egyptian Empire. But in 1,200 BCE they imploded and the Bronze Age period of history collapsed. What, or who, was to blame? Evidence from across this region point to wave after wave of marauders invading from the sea right at the point the Bronze Age Collapse occurred. They’ve become known as the Sea People. Could they be responsible?
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Комментарии • 713

  • @carlpolen7437
    @carlpolen7437 7 месяцев назад +68

    Excellent. Really enjoyed the content. Truly. Would absolutely recommend. One teeny tiny point of clarification: the Egyptians didn't collapse at this time. Their power did wane. It did retract. But they epmhatically didn't collapse. In fact, they were, essentially, the only power in the mediterranean that continued to be literate. Now, the reasons they Egyptians did better, in my opinion, centers around three big factors which are rarely discussed in videos like this.
    1) Egypt was massively LESS dependent on rainfall than any other power. It was somewhat dependent, in that the Nile would have lowered since the upland regions which fed the nile had less rain, but this is very different than depending on rain to fall directly onto your crops. This was a massive advantage that would have made Egypt much more resistant to drought.
    2) Egypt was less accessible by sea than other areas. The Nile delta was/is actually a horrible place for ships to dock. (This is why Alexandria was founded well to the side of the Delta) And Egypt was protected on the landwards sides by vast deserts which would have been extremely difficult to attack over (as shown by many other armies in history). This made it easier to defend than most other coastal Mediteranean places, or even places inland from the coastal port areas.
    3) Egypt was, by far, the furthest away from the epicenter of the sea-people migration - the Agean. At first this seams counter intuitive, but you have to remember that ships at this time were almost entirely coastal ships, and, when they did venture away from shore, did so ONLY in very specific routes to very specific places. And Egypt was, if you were coming from the Agean/Greece/maybe southern Italy, the LAST place you'll get to if you are following coastal routes.
    So, in summation, Egypt didn't fall at the end of the bronze age. Its civilization continued, albiet reduced. And the reasons it didn't fall were a mixture of the the same things that created its civilization to begin with (the dependabillity of the Nile to produce food, combined with its absolutely excellent geographic defensive features) and also, the luck of being pretty far from the epicenters of the Sea peoples migrations.

    • @caroleminke6116
      @caroleminke6116 6 месяцев назад +1

      Ty

    • @worldadventuretravel
      @worldadventuretravel 4 месяца назад +1

      Interesting analysis, those are great points. I'd argue that it did, however, fall as a superpower. It stands out to me that by the time of the last Cleopatra when Egypt was no more than a vassal state of Rome, the pyramids were ancient monuments even to the Egyptians and none of them knew how or why they were built. Much of their own former history was lost and the transitioning civilization, while it had the advantage of natural wealth, never matched what it was during the Bronze age.

    • @joannecalafiura9864
      @joannecalafiura9864 4 месяца назад

      9:18

    • @SamRer-bd3io
      @SamRer-bd3io 4 месяца назад

      Except there was nothing called Isra steal and there never shall be , their end is soooooon😂

    • @rodpaget9796
      @rodpaget9796 3 месяца назад

      And the christians burned down the hall of records....or is that just a movie @@worldadventuretravel

  • @user-qq8it5if6y
    @user-qq8it5if6y 9 месяцев назад +59

    The best I have seen of the people of the sea.
    When I was 10 years old I visited Pylos for the first time. My question was, how did they get it? Then I thought that the enemies entered the city as friends. So, there were also Greeks among the peoples of the sea.
    I am now 72. I am glad that the questions I had as a child are being answered.

    • @shable1436
      @shable1436 9 месяцев назад +8

      It's funny how timelines intersect

    • @donald2665
      @donald2665 8 месяцев назад +13

      I am an American, a Native Floridian, but have lived much of my formative years in the American West - Texas and Arizona. This subject fascinates me as I am into history and Peoples and places. About 46 years ago was able to read two books written by Conquistadores who had accompanied Hernando Cortez and Pizzaro in their conquests of the Aztec and Inca Empires in the Americas, and in general really get into the antient Indian Civilizations - the Maya and previous Civilizations and enjoy time lining those cultures with events in other areas of the Earth at those times. Would have very much enjoyed visiting Crete and Greece and some of the other historical areas in the Med. I am nearly 72 years of age now, and still thirst with curiosity.

    • @user-qq8it5if6y
      @user-qq8it5if6y 8 месяцев назад +7

      @@donald2665 I am also 72 years old. I'm still taking a university course from the Kapodistrian University of Athens, now lately I'm dealing with the Aegean civilization (3500-1000 BC) Since I was a little girl I was interested in how the Mycenaean palaces were conquered. Now I am inclined to accept that the people of the sea were the cause.
      Thanks for answering me. I admire Indians. Sorry, my English are bad, I'm using machine translation.

    • @gregorynixon2945
      @gregorynixon2945 8 месяцев назад +3

      Great substance for a novel there, Achaeans among the attackers and among the defenders.. I'm working on it now. But if the Peoples of the Sea or others like them took down the great walls of Ilios, Hattusa, Mykenai, and Tiryns, then what makes you think they would have trouble getting into Pylos, which had no walls? I'm 73, and still searching, still creating.

    • @donald2665
      @donald2665 8 месяцев назад +2

      @@gregorynixon2945 - Wish you well with the writing for there is a rich story there. I am not yet a writer of Novels, however that time period and the Peoples involved are of great interest to myself. Also of interest to myself has long been the conquest of the Aztec by Hernan Cortez and the conquest of the Inca by Pizzaro. I read the first hand accounts by separate Conquistadores who accompanied both men, and have also viewed video on the subject which opened my eyes, and although these events were 1,700 or so years apart there are stories there also untold in Novel Form. Apparently the fall of the Aztec Empire and the Spanish conquests and enslavements caused other Indian Peoples near by the Aztec to migrate Northward into the US to become other well known tribes in Texas, Louisiana, Alabama etc., and it seems that an earlier migration out of Mexico Northward resulted in the Mississippian Empire which was it would seem be displaced by a late migration of a large nomadic population out of the Arctic and down into the US over a long period of many decades/ centuries eventually colliding with the established city in Illinois in about 1250 AD which resulted in the survivors of the City moving to Alabama and the Nomad Group of Peoples eventually crossing the Nation to the present site of the State of Delaware where they became "The Delaware". The 1960's Movie "Kings of the Sun" is a very interesting Movie about an Mayan Group fleeing across the Gulf of Mexico to the coast of Texas where another Tribe (Led by Yule Brenner) was. There is so much of a wealth of possibility in these Peoples and History and Place, that it is beyond belief to me that more writers have not ventured into the arena, and that more Movies related to those Peoples and events have not been created.

  • @amadeusamwater
    @amadeusamwater 9 месяцев назад +231

    According to Egyptian records, Ramses III defeated the invasion of these peoples twice, once each on land and sea. After which one of the groups agreed to become his vassals in exchange for land. They were settled in Lower Canaan and later known as the Philistines. Archeologists seem to believe Philistine culture in the area began about this time, which lends weight to the idea. A previous king in 1208 had raided the area and basically stripped it of people, so the land would have been mostly empty.

    • @janettomlin950
      @janettomlin950 9 месяцев назад +8

      Thank you 😊

    • @jozz2248
      @jozz2248 9 месяцев назад +13

      Some of the pottery of the time there appear to be Greco in origin, I've heard.

    • @amadeusamwater
      @amadeusamwater 9 месяцев назад

      Apparently the early stuff they found was a mix of cultures, leading some of them to believe the settlers came in from elsewhere.@@jozz2248

    • @bobbykiefer4306
      @bobbykiefer4306 9 месяцев назад +9

      Illyrians/Aryans

    • @garrettgrooms2773
      @garrettgrooms2773 9 месяцев назад +21

      The best line I ever heard about the pharoes is that they never "lost," they only won closer and closer to Egypt. Ramses "won" on the western edge of Sinai.

  • @mrcoutts1211
    @mrcoutts1211 9 месяцев назад +27

    I totally recommend all interested in this subject to watch a Dr Eric H Cline lecture or his book 1177 BC. About the bronze age collapse.

    • @jeffmead2935
      @jeffmead2935 9 месяцев назад +2

      Respectfully. at 12 minutes and nine seconds they talk of written letters .... of which they have no evidence of .... its all garbage mate ... Do your own research

    • @bobbykiefer4306
      @bobbykiefer4306 9 месяцев назад +5

      @jeffmead2935 There are letters describing that time period like the Battle of Kadesh. Mitanni etc.

    • @paulbennett7021
      @paulbennett7021 9 месяцев назад +1

      I endorse your recommendation

    • @jeffmead2935
      @jeffmead2935 9 месяцев назад

      Cline is making it up as he gos along, his Mrsizz diagram thingies are laughable , inane . could anyone make a diagram .linking up nations within the last year, just like MrsCline ?.... try it .

    • @jeffmead2935
      @jeffmead2935 8 месяцев назад

      @@bobbykiefer4306 where?

  • @exposingproxystalkingorgan4164
    @exposingproxystalkingorgan4164 7 месяцев назад +7

    I find ancient history to by very fascinating. This collapse seem to resemble our modern world of 2023. 😮

  • @js70371
    @js70371 9 месяцев назад +16

    I cannot get enough of this channel!!! Thank you!!!
    ☮️🙏🇨🇦🍻

  • @lindsayalisonstevens3592
    @lindsayalisonstevens3592 6 месяцев назад +11

    Another excellent documentary from Get Factual 😎👏🏽 Had no idea a portion of the Philistines attacked these different civilisations, but it makes sense. I kept waiting for the narrator to say ‘the sea people’ were the Vikings though 😂😂😂

  • @emsnewssupkis6453
    @emsnewssupkis6453 7 месяцев назад +6

    Not a word about the massive gigantic eruption/tsumami/massive earthquakes when that little island literally blew up leaving a huge hole in the ocean. This destroyed the Minoan empire, for example, battles raged in the fall of that mighty power. Also, the climate changed to an extended cold cycle. Warm weather is great for civilizations, cold cycles are very dangerous times.

    • @Bynk333
      @Bynk333 7 месяцев назад +3

      In Santhoriny eruption times (1620BC?) there were no invasion Sea people posible, cause the fleets were destroyed and people dead...

  • @luislucero6920
    @luislucero6920 9 месяцев назад +8

    The best documentary I have seen on this matter, thank you !!!

    • @nima9340
      @nima9340 8 месяцев назад

      Agree, and I've seen alot of them

  • @albertenriquecrowleybeastc217
    @albertenriquecrowleybeastc217 7 месяцев назад +11

    In my own opinion it was a combination of several different catastrophic events, the eruption of Etna, the droughts, the sea people's, who themselves were probably driven by Etna's 🌋,and the sea people's had iron weapons while everyone else were fighting with bronze. So it was one sided in most battles.

  • @elizabethtd1006
    @elizabethtd1006 9 месяцев назад +14

    Both , Informative and pleasant to watch , as always ! Thank you !

  • @dionysise5008
    @dionysise5008 9 месяцев назад +12

    One of my favorite series. Great timing also😊

  • @mariomarino3020
    @mariomarino3020 9 месяцев назад +20

    The Bronze age began around 3.300 BC, which was the moment of the highest temperature and humidity in the period from the Ice Age Maximum (16.000 BC) to the end of BCE. But this was immediately followed by mini ice age which began around 1500 BC. The Bronze Age was doomed from the beginning, what created it caused its breakdown. A significant drop in temperature and humidity caused several mass migrations in Europe from north to south, from the Eurasian steppes and Baltic to the northern Mediterranean, and this caused new movements, from the northern Mediterranean to the eastern (Sea People).

    • @natemyers4946
      @natemyers4946 7 месяцев назад +1

      The first tribes of white people

    • @Bynk333
      @Bynk333 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@natemyers4946 Chetitians, Mitani, Mycenians, Philistines.... and Russian invasion into India cca 1500 BC as Aryans. :D

    • @patriciajackson4303
      @patriciajackson4303 3 месяца назад

      They were Edomites conquerors took from people. Chinese and Japanese

  • @paulparkinson7118
    @paulparkinson7118 8 месяцев назад +3

    Very interesting,enjoyed watching the video !

  • @derekhenson3471
    @derekhenson3471 9 месяцев назад +11

    You can’t forget that the loss of trade and secure trade routes would have definitely contributed as well.

  • @seanzibonanzi64
    @seanzibonanzi64 9 месяцев назад +28

    The bronze age collapse sounds like such a horrifying time to alive, imagine every city you've ever known put to the torch, it must've been pure chaos.

    • @MiracleWinchester
      @MiracleWinchester 8 месяцев назад +6

      Sounds like our current society

    • @RemoGuy0730
      @RemoGuy0730 8 месяцев назад +2

      @@MiracleWinchesterlmao, you sound scared homie. It’s getting bad, but it’s not nearly that bad yet. Not in first world countries at least.

    • @bobbykiefer4306
      @bobbykiefer4306 7 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@RemoGuy0730The first world countries get hit the hardest.

    • @RobMacKendrick
      @RobMacKendrick 6 месяцев назад

      @@bobbykiefer4306 This. Rich people are soft, and it takes very little to make them miserable.

    • @justmenotyou3151
      @justmenotyou3151 3 месяца назад

      ​@RemoGuy0730 Not yet is the key point.

  • @josephphoenix1376
    @josephphoenix1376 7 месяцев назад +11

    Excellent Episode 👍
    Similar to alot of current episodes on this subject. A lot more mass graves and destruction layers need to be found. A lot more testing needs to be done¡

  • @pacalvotan3380
    @pacalvotan3380 8 месяцев назад +15

    I get the distinct impression that we're going to see this happen again in our lifetime.

    • @rrichards3399
      @rrichards3399 8 месяцев назад +4

      its under way now.... or so i surmise.

    • @imdeaded
      @imdeaded 8 месяцев назад

      It is. It's called illegal migration or asylum seekers. They are flooding into Europe and the USA. Practically an invasion of sorts.

  • @darrencorrigan8505
    @darrencorrigan8505 7 месяцев назад

    Thanks, Get. factual.

  • @chrispaquette1204
    @chrispaquette1204 9 месяцев назад +9

    They were a product of the Bronze Age not the cause. The transition from bronze to iron leveled every economy based in the tin and copper mining industry of the time. Iron was pretty much everywhere and there was no need to hoard remote mines and keep control on a limited resource. Sort of like oil…….

  • @mohammedsaysrashid3587
    @mohammedsaysrashid3587 9 месяцев назад +7

    It was an informative and important historical coverage documentary about the bronze age collapsed and labeled to main reasons include sea 🌊 people raiders ...allot thanks for Get.factual documentary channel for sharing remarkable documentary

    • @gregorynixon2945
      @gregorynixon2945 7 месяцев назад

      ruclips.net/video/B965f8AcNbw/видео.html

  • @michaelplanchunas3693
    @michaelplanchunas3693 9 месяцев назад +9

    In Cornwall England the study of tree rings has revealed that around 1179 BC, Cornwall was subjected to 20 years of extraordinary rainfall. Perhaps ruined crops and famine drove those people to France and started the migrations which culminated in the Eastern Mediterranean?

    • @nicktecky55
      @nicktecky55 9 месяцев назад +3

      What that supports is an increase in mining activity, particularly tin. The genomics of the people of Cornwall are exceptional in England, they have strong ties with the Bretons. Copper mined in the Cork area of Ireland is being traded through Cornwall, maybe bronze is also being made? Gold is mined in Cornwall and is being traded into workshops all along the South Coast. Artefacts from those workshops are then traded up the Rhine and onwards. The link with Brittany means for at least some of the population on each side of the Channel the people are family.

  • @zedmoe
    @zedmoe 9 месяцев назад +4

    Great presentation! Some great perspectives I hadn't heard, before.

    • @get.factual
      @get.factual  9 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you for this comment🌻

  • @swingshift.
    @swingshift. 9 месяцев назад +6

    I like how the experts each pronounce the city different

  • @temijinkahn511
    @temijinkahn511 7 месяцев назад +6

    Very interesting presentation. I only had a problem with Dr. Mac Sweeney's section. She basically described the ancient proletariat rising up against their bourgeoisie rulers. I think her Karl Marx and French Revolution perspective is a bit out of place here.😊
    The Sea Peoples would need the numbers, organization, logistics, and tactical expertise to defeat several advanced civilizations until they crashed into the Egyptians and were repelled. A horde of starving rable would not have these qualities.
    My question would be about why the major Phonician city states that were in their path were seamingly spared?

    • @Bynk333
      @Bynk333 7 месяцев назад

      You know that Hatusha, main city of Chetitian empire were not defendable and the people burn it self and flee before Sea people arived? :D

  • @heridfel
    @heridfel 9 месяцев назад +61

    Great video. I am not quite convinced about the "disaffection and rioting" factor being all that significant, because getting an invasion fleet together and storming cities cannot be done by a furious mob of rioters - that absolutely requires organisation and coordination, in other words, leadership. There might be an element of projecting our current sociological fads backwards. I also don't quite get why the climate data concentrate on the eastern mediterranean, when it seems the sea people might have come from Greece and Southern Italy (the Szekeler mentioned by Ramses are sometimes associated with Sicily). Drought conditions would have to be experienced there, not in the area they targetted. Why attack an area ravaged by famine? But maybe the video took a shortcut there and drought was indeed present in the central mediterranean as well - a very likely scenario indeed.

    • @Dragonette666
      @Dragonette666 8 месяцев назад +5

      there is a region of Turkey called Adana and there is an Adana island nearby. They have found bronze age dry docks on the island and there were 270 slipways which makes it larger than the naval yard at Carthage. I would put money on the Sea People having this as a base and their raids probably starting from there.

    • @louie97ation
      @louie97ation 8 месяцев назад +3

      I imagine if you’re experiencing drought the impulse would be to head towards the richest area you’re aware of.

    • @Dragonette666
      @Dragonette666 8 месяцев назад +4

      @@louie97ation Egypt was always seen as a land that had plenty since they rely on Nile floods instead of rain

    • @hUCK-
      @hUCK- 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@Dragonette666 Cyprus was invaded by the "Sea Peoples", and that's the only island anywhere near Adana Turkey. I am interested in what you described though, could you link a source?
      Edit: Found it, it's actually called Dana Island. Definitely will be reading more interesting stuff

    • @CarlosTapia-bw2uu
      @CarlosTapia-bw2uu 7 месяцев назад

      Sea people come from America.

  • @debasishchakraborty9834
    @debasishchakraborty9834 9 месяцев назад +36

    The Indus valley civilization of northwest India, was home to a civilization also known as the Harappan Civilization. It was characterized by large, well-planned cities with advanced municipal sanitation systems and a script that has never been deciphered. But the Harappans seemed to slowly lose their urban cohesion, and their cities were gradually abandoned. The cause mostly accepted is 200 years drought around 4000 years ago.

    • @matthewdolan5831
      @matthewdolan5831 9 месяцев назад +3

      Imagine an Old Testament based upon Harappan culture.. no smiting at all! BAC is the most relevant event to our current terminal dilemma.

    • @gregorynixon2945
      @gregorynixon2945 9 месяцев назад +3

      Nonsense.

    • @LordDirus007
      @LordDirus007 8 месяцев назад

      No offense but you Indians like to play up a bigger role of yourself in World History.

    • @brawndothethirstmutilator9848
      @brawndothethirstmutilator9848 8 месяцев назад +2

      @gregorynixon2945, What a tremendously insightful comment.

    • @gregorynixon2945
      @gregorynixon2945 8 месяцев назад +2

      @@brawndothethirstmutilator9848 It's all the statement deserves.

  • @jonathangariepy9177
    @jonathangariepy9177 9 месяцев назад +2

    Awesome video and great narrator 👍👍

  • @etiennenobel5028
    @etiennenobel5028 9 месяцев назад +3

    great stuff

  • @manongtrending
    @manongtrending 8 месяцев назад +6

    I hope they make a tv series about the sea people. They can do anything with it in terms of story telling since there are little known history about the subject.

  • @rdnkenki
    @rdnkenki 9 месяцев назад +4

    Archaix channel has some great Chronological history on this very subject

  • @joelkurowski7129
    @joelkurowski7129 8 месяцев назад +9

    Sea PeopleS. There were many nations, as described by the Egyptians. Not one people, but a phenomenon of the age.

    • @CorePathway
      @CorePathway 7 месяцев назад

      Clearly climate refugees.

    • @gregorynixon2945
      @gregorynixon2945 7 месяцев назад

      Of course. ruclips.net/video/B965f8AcNbw/видео.html

  • @sanialmuna
    @sanialmuna 7 месяцев назад

    Loving this so much 💕💕❤

  • @matthewmckever2312
    @matthewmckever2312 7 месяцев назад +4

    😮😢its like the Dwarfish letter under the mountain in Tolkien
    " They are coming.
    They are here"
    Except this is real, everyone really died, nobody was alive to return for the buried treasures. 😢😮

  • @ianbrewster8934
    @ianbrewster8934 9 месяцев назад +1

    Great stuff

  • @Mossyz.
    @Mossyz. 9 месяцев назад +3

    Big Love

  • @bobpatty2937
    @bobpatty2937 3 месяца назад +1

    If you ever make another production like this one; please turn the music volume down to the point that people can understand the words that are being used.

  • @HamCubes
    @HamCubes 9 месяцев назад +4

    The best info I have seen on the Sea Peoples remains Nancy Sandars' The Sea Peoples: warriors of the ancient Mediterranean 1250-1150 B. C. (1978)

  • @dboggs175
    @dboggs175 6 месяцев назад +3

    The one event that this video does not address is the incredible eruption of the volcano on Thera, now Santorini. This would explain the cause of all that they mention., Earthquakes, cooling seas and famine caused by the tremendous ash blocking out the sun for several years. Drought and crop failures. I think the eruption is the key to all of this.

    • @justmenotyou3151
      @justmenotyou3151 3 месяца назад

      Santerini was 1600 BC. The bronze age colapse was around 1180 BC.

  • @liamlewis9866
    @liamlewis9866 9 месяцев назад +3

    that was great !

  • @mencken8
    @mencken8 7 месяцев назад +3

    “-They are mysteries. And I am both terrified and reassured that there are things in the universe beyond our explaining.” - G’Kar, on the phenomena associated with Sigma 957

  • @Hallands.
    @Hallands. 7 месяцев назад +3

    The Sea People were sort of the Bronze Age Proto-Vikings.

  • @sydneecook400
    @sydneecook400 26 дней назад +1

    I'm surprised the Trojian War wasn't brought up at all. Greece was in shambles after it and the famines were probably the final straw for the already suffering Greeks

  • @emsnewssupkis6453
    @emsnewssupkis6453 7 месяцев назад +4

    The fall of all the empires also coincided with the beginning of the Iron Age. Iron needs hot fires to forge and in a cold climate during the post-Minoan warm cycle was quite cold and making big fires to make steel weapons was natural and comfortable.

  • @d0ngw4ng
    @d0ngw4ng 8 месяцев назад +1

    Amazing. 10/10

  • @smashakarah5102
    @smashakarah5102 9 месяцев назад

    My favourite narrator: Alisdair Simpson. Wonderful series on ancient apocalypse.

  • @DavidFMayerPhD
    @DavidFMayerPhD 4 месяца назад +3

    You have omitted ENTIRELY a factor inherent in the title: the REPLACEMENT of BRONZE by IRON. The Sea Peoples came with IRON WEAPONS that chopped bronze weapons to pieces.

    • @Petroglyph1
      @Petroglyph1 3 месяца назад

      That would be a game changer.

  • @floathouse2
    @floathouse2 7 месяцев назад +2

    I have come to the startling conclusion that about 3,462 years ago, a global catastrophe occurred that included a partial tilt of the Earth’s axis. The event, while devastating, was not nearly as cataclysmic as the earlier event 7,000 years ago. The Tilt Event caused a change in the Earth’s perpendicular axis of spin to an axial tilt of 23.5 degrees.
    The most well-known description of the Event comes from Biblical records, particularly Joshua, which describe in some detail the fall of the Walls of Jericho, (a sizeable earthquake) enemy troop being killed by a ‘rain’ of large stones, (showing the event to be associated with some celestial event), and the Sun “standing still in its path” (a tilting of the Earth Axis of rotation).
    In addition, I have used many other historical references including Egyptian Hieroglyph translation to support the dating and narrative of events defined in this paper.
    The other major effect of the event is the ‘regression dated” breach of the Strait of Gibraltar. This is the most compelling evidence for the scope of the event. I also think the dating of the eruption of Santorini, or Thera (estimated to have occurred 3,600 years ago) is too close to the date of -3,462 to be more than coincidence. I predict that further testing will establish a date for the Thera eruption to be nearly identical to the regression date of the breach of Gibraltar Strait.
    The Axis Tilt, a catastrophe of serious magnitude, is not nearly as lethal or devastating as the 7,000 YBP Mega Cataclysm. That earlier event was a serious near extinction level event, and will be covered in detail in another chapter of this book called The Last Great Cataclysm, 7,000 Years Ago. The Axis Tilt is a catastrophe, (not a cataclysm) that occurred while there were growing remnant-survivor-derivative populations from the 7,000 YBP Mega Cataclysm event. The 7K super cataclysm stopped progress for nearly a thousand years, which seems to be the length of time necessary before a surviving culture can start rebuilding their civilization in any meaningful way.
    Some of those survivor groups had already started to rebuild their cultures from the 7K event, and had established several advanced technologies including early forms of writing, leaving us fairly reliable reports of the Axis Tilt event.
    Making the case that Gibraltar Strait was breeches as a result of the catastrophe that included the eruption of Santorini, means that it would likely be a couple hundred years before the strait was navigable. Or around 3,250 YBP. Almost exactly when the Sea People showed up and devastated the Mediterranean. They were likely Aryan, probably Celtic and from what is now the Western British Isles.

  • @user-gm3pl4io3r
    @user-gm3pl4io3r 4 месяца назад +2

    Experts have been attempting to decode the Glaswegian language for over 30 years. There hoping one day to crack the code. They deep fry mars bars in batter and are absolutely fearless of diabetes, true warriors.

  • @ottobihrer732
    @ottobihrer732 8 месяцев назад +3

    Great documentation answering not a single question about the collapse of the Bronze Age around 1200 BC. Drought, Marauders, Earthquakes, Angry People, or was it a disease, like the Black Death in 1348 AD, which killed half of Europe's population? Maybe the people cut all the forests down, producing arid deserts and climate change on a grand scale around the big cities. Earlier, Mesopotamia had a problem with oversalting fields by irrigation for centuries until the salt killed crops. Did they hunt prey animals to distinction? Big cities at that time were hard to maintain, with lots of mouths to feed and feces to move away. Not all had sewer systems and even as late as the 1870s AD, big cities had frequent problems with diseases spreading and killing big parts of the population. Was there even such a thing as sea people or just greedy neighbors? We know nothing.

  • @GalactusOG
    @GalactusOG 9 месяцев назад +1

    fascinating.

  • @tonnywildweasel8138
    @tonnywildweasel8138 9 месяцев назад

    Great docu, very intresting 👍
    Greets from the Netherlands, T.

  • @missyyy-
    @missyyy- 9 месяцев назад +1

    Love the narration in this doc but need to work on the volume of it vs the guest speakers, as they come through much louder than the voiceover. Makes it hard to listen to on headphones.

  • @kilpatrickkirksimmons5016
    @kilpatrickkirksimmons5016 9 месяцев назад +5

    To be fair, the Egyptians survived, just in nothing like the form they once were. Everyone else got snuffed out. Great doc though. I think it's pretty clear it was a perfect storm, even if there's a modern tendency to overemphasize climate and underrate invasion.
    For things to go dark like that, you're looking at foreign mercenaries and disgruntled locals annihilating the upper classes (and plenty of others) everywhere. You don't see new occupants in the palaces, you see them destroyed. You don't see new writing or old writing in new languages, you see none at all. That's a *serious* socio-political change, and a lot of killing, even if it was partially helped along by environmental factors. Egypt (probably) simply had the most cohesive society, and the most time to prepare.

    • @sablevo
      @sablevo 7 месяцев назад

      Also possibly the least affected farmlands. Being closest to the Equator and with the Nile remaining a viable water source.

    • @vinnie9458
      @vinnie9458 5 месяцев назад

      Their language :now known as Coptic; is still spoken by some to this day

  • @svennielsen633
    @svennielsen633 9 месяцев назад +3

    It is a misunderstanding, that 1180 or something is the "end of the Bronze Age". That is true only for a small area in the eastern Mediterranean Sea. The Bronze Age continued in Northern Europa without any setback of any kind.

    • @donnievance1942
      @donnievance1942 8 месяцев назад +4

      I thought that calling it the "end of the Bronze Age" was stupid, as well. Obviously, the alloying of tin and copper to make bronze did not disappear. The end of the bronze age was simply the technological advance of learning to smelt iron. The proper term is the "Bronze Age collapse," meaning a civilizational collapse that occurred during the Bronze Age, not a collapse that ended the Bronze Age.

  • @John.Flower.Productions
    @John.Flower.Productions 9 месяцев назад +6

    37:12 People cannot just decide to build ships and become seafarers.

    • @SacredDreamer
      @SacredDreamer 9 месяцев назад +2

      Probably fishermen first.

    • @John.Flower.Productions
      @John.Flower.Productions 9 месяцев назад

      @@SacredDreamer The Sea People began arriving, en masse, aboard ships and this person's postulation is that _"a couple of years of bad harvest"_ and/or _taxation_ somehow _pushed them into statelessness._
      That is, quite literally, more of an absurd claim than anyone on _Ancient Aliens_ would make.

    • @ethanniedorowski116
      @ethanniedorowski116 9 месяцев назад +2

      Had to start somewhere so I disagree based on principle alone but I understand what you mean

    • @Bynk333
      @Bynk333 7 месяцев назад

      They muss seafaring 100-200 years before they exoded i thing. So people around Black and Egyptian sea as Italian coast as well.

  • @johntakolander8613
    @johntakolander8613 8 месяцев назад +3

    I went into a museum in the island of theCanary Islands and was surprised by the pictures of "feathered head" pictures. They looked like the "Sea Peoples".

    • @roiq5263
      @roiq5263 8 месяцев назад

      That's interesting. They also apparently had connections with Egypt, so maybe they frequently sailed to Eastern Mediterranean.

  • @brettmercer8727
    @brettmercer8727 8 месяцев назад +2

    I think the Sea peoples will of been the Cargo ships/Merchant Navy's that due to loss of trade, no longer had work or Orders and so became Pirates. They would of known the trade routes and where the money/food was. Similar to the more recent British Pirates we know ,maybe.

  • @rupertmiller9690
    @rupertmiller9690 6 месяцев назад +1

    The Sea People are who I think about when I am not engaged in thinking about the Romans.

  • @marleenneil7542
    @marleenneil7542 7 месяцев назад

    Amazing film I somehow happened upon it🙏

  • @Missmori
    @Missmori 6 месяцев назад +1

    Ive always felt that the bronze age colapse was the first doccumented case of "eat the rich"
    And the sea people were all the people disenfranchised by the famines earthquakes etc watching the wealthy rebuild and leaving the poor to starve.

  • @janettomlin950
    @janettomlin950 9 месяцев назад +2

    Please tell me ANYTHING about the Library??? So amazing

  • @tribequest9
    @tribequest9 8 месяцев назад +2

    It drives me crazy that in all docs, tv and movies all ancient peoples wore dull looking brown rags and robes when we know from both art and excavations that they wore fitted and colorful clothing unless it was stark white like the Roman togas. Can we get back real representation please?

  • @Constantin_C
    @Constantin_C 9 месяцев назад +18

    Great topic. Philistines were considered sea people, but there were also Phoenicians with so many smaller nations or tribes united under this federation (including the miceans). Were the Philistines part of them, or rivals?

    • @bobbykiefer4306
      @bobbykiefer4306 9 месяцев назад +2

      Very probable.

    • @Sikader
      @Sikader 8 месяцев назад +3

      Palaestinus (Ancient Greek: Παλαιστῖνος) was in Greek mythology a son of Poseidon and father of Haliacmon. From grief at the death of his son, Palaestinus threw himself into the river, which was called after him Palaestinus, and subsequently Strymon.[1]

    • @LordDirus007
      @LordDirus007 8 месяцев назад +2

      You know what's interesting is Carthage was founded by the Philistines

    • @charlesfenwick6554
      @charlesfenwick6554 7 месяцев назад

      @@ahmedrivera-pr9qg keep it in the Aegean area

    • @Bynk333
      @Bynk333 7 месяцев назад +4

      @@LordDirus007 Phoenicians not Philistines! :D

  • @grnt25
    @grnt25 7 месяцев назад +1

    Unless the Sea People invented IRON, they did not cause the end of the Bronze age...

  • @tumblebugspace
    @tumblebugspace 8 месяцев назад +2

    Their world came to an end quite literally. ⚡️

  • @shelleymcafee8197
    @shelleymcafee8197 5 месяцев назад +1

    Although the Sea Peoples seem to be a mixed lot, I have a sneaking suspicion that they were - in part at least - coming from Europe.
    There are too-many similarities between the depictions and descriptions of them, and the Vikings, for example.
    (Religious beliefs, dress/helmets, ship design, dragon theme,…)
    The fact that the recent discovery of European DNA in the oldest Philistine Kings, supports this thinking - in My opinion.
    (As I remember it, that study showed that the European DNA had originated in Italy… after which the peoples had interbred with Others in the Greek Isles; may want to check that.)
    I suspect that there was probably a large (and diverse) number of Peoples who had knowledge of ship-building, sailing, navigation and warfare that were operating at-large in European (and then Mediterranean) waters - who’d discovered the ready-wealth available to a waterborne strike-force; fast-moving marauders that were threats to all settled Civilizations, who eventually found their way to the ‘jackpot’ of the Medeteranian and surrounding Nations.
    This is such a fascinating subject, and DNA is bringing a lot of new-data to the subject. It’ll be interesting to see what further ‘puzzle-pieces’ other emerging technologies (like Archeo-Magnetism) will add to the Big-Picture!
    Thank-You for this!!

    • @anonymousone6075
      @anonymousone6075 4 месяца назад

      Ramses named them all after he defeated them.... This docu just pretends that doesn't exist
      This land battle occurred in the vicinity of Djahy against "the northern countries". When it was over, several chiefs were captive: of Hatti, Amor and Shasu among the "land peoples" and the Tjeker, "Sherden of the sea", "Teresh of the sea" and Peleset or Philistines.

  • @janekahn8562
    @janekahn8562 7 месяцев назад

    Sounds so logical,makes sense.......moving from place to place up the coast looking for food, a homeland...yes i agree perfect storm

  • @leesenger3094
    @leesenger3094 9 месяцев назад +5

    History Time go's much more in depth on this subject

    • @brianswelding
      @brianswelding 9 месяцев назад +2

      Definitely

    • @user-qq8it5if6y
      @user-qq8it5if6y 9 месяцев назад +2

      Think how the sea people appeared after the destruction of Troy.

  • @dkoz8321
    @dkoz8321 6 месяцев назад +1

    So the city of Ugurit , a Cannanite city, was destroyed at about same time as Jericho was razed by Hebrews and Troy was likewise razed and burned by Mycenean Greeks.

  • @aleksandarnikolic2743
    @aleksandarnikolic2743 9 месяцев назад +8

    Peleset could be Pelasgians. People from Balkan peninsula.

    • @JM-nm3bg
      @JM-nm3bg 9 месяцев назад +3

      Yup

    • @Lalakis
      @Lalakis 8 месяцев назад +1

      Ofc not. Just because a word sounds like another ( peleshtim in Hebrew) does not mean anything. Not to mention that pelasgians ( sons of Pelasgus) were residing in Thessaly Greece being one of the components of the Greeks of that era

  • @williambenner701
    @williambenner701 5 месяцев назад +1

    Irish myths also have their own virgin of the "Sea people" as well. This was in the bronze age as well.

  • @gregmiller9238
    @gregmiller9238 4 месяца назад

    I think we are overlooking the volcanic eruption of Santorini and the impact it had on climate and the destructive impact on the civilizations all around that area. A devastating catastrophe such as that would have long lasting effects on climate and peoples for many many years

  • @josephscarpaci3688
    @josephscarpaci3688 7 месяцев назад +2

    Any relationship with the Mount Thera eruptions 1650bce - 1450bce & the 100foot tidal wave sweeping over the north shore of Crete?

    • @Bynk333
      @Bynk333 7 месяцев назад +2

      sure. Thera destroyed Minoan naval civilization, so the Sea people 200 years later have finaly chance rulle the ocean. D:

    • @co.bae.
      @co.bae. 2 месяца назад

      Finally a comment about the minoans whom I have always believed were the sea people I have not finished this video yet tho but I love Crete I'm Italian and like to think of them as fallen ancestors the inspiration to the Greek and Roman before they were a civilization or empire

  • @roiq5263
    @roiq5263 8 месяцев назад +1

    38:10 what do Vikings have to do with the Bronze Age?

    • @soderlund3610
      @soderlund3610 7 месяцев назад

      Nothing much, but the scandinavians lived the same way thousands of years before the "vikings"

    • @roiq5263
      @roiq5263 7 месяцев назад

      @@soderlund3610 then are they implying that the Vikings might have been among the Sea Peoples?

    • @GH-oi2jf
      @GH-oi2jf 7 месяцев назад

      The Vikings did use bronze.

  • @goombah226
    @goombah226 7 месяцев назад +1

    Them sea people were badass!

  • @rezamotori5709
    @rezamotori5709 9 месяцев назад +1

    Hekla eruption > lots of ash in the air all over europe > sunlight doesnt warm the oceans enough > less rain > less crops > famines > collapse of mycenaen and hittite empire > people abandon their lands and take to the oceans to look for food in the cities in the levant they were familiar with as places they used to trade with

  • @cvoudaskc1852
    @cvoudaskc1852 7 месяцев назад +1

    The sea people were a group of dispersed Greeks around the Mediterranean

  • @garrettholtz8379
    @garrettholtz8379 7 месяцев назад +1

    Giorgio Tsoukalos has entered the chat.

  • @Triggernlfrl
    @Triggernlfrl 8 месяцев назад +1

    A world of experiments to experience by love in all facets.

  • @ajoliver74
    @ajoliver74 9 месяцев назад +5

    Gotta love how many different pronunciations there are in one story. Almost as if there were many different tidal waves on many different people.

    • @karimmaasri1723
      @karimmaasri1723 9 месяцев назад +1

      U r on the wrong channel if that's what u got from the video. Lol

  • @bdoubleu6
    @bdoubleu6 9 месяцев назад +7

    Robert sepher covers this in great detail he is a anthropologist and explains this in great length

    • @keirfarnum6811
      @keirfarnum6811 9 месяцев назад

      In great detail or in great length; which is it? 😁

    • @bdoubleu6
      @bdoubleu6 9 месяцев назад

      @@keirfarnum6811 both smart ass

    • @cecileroy557
      @cecileroy557 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@keirfarnum6811 You can have great detail in something of "great length". One is not mutually exclusive of the other...

    • @charlesfenwick6554
      @charlesfenwick6554 7 месяцев назад

      Sephor the charleton.

    • @bdoubleu6
      @bdoubleu6 7 месяцев назад

      @@charlesfenwick6554 ok now I know your brainwashed

  • @fahlici1801
    @fahlici1801 9 месяцев назад +3

    To me this Story is better then Genesis, Tribulation,.. the best!!!

  • @claudiogiaquinto7361
    @claudiogiaquinto7361 6 месяцев назад +1

    In my opinion the abandoned city of ugrit was not due to the invasion of the sea people ,if that would be the case , all the treasures discovered by the archeologist wood no to be found ,simply because the Sea people would have taken

  • @bitter_truth8646
    @bitter_truth8646 7 месяцев назад +1

    I don't know who the sea people were, but certainly the Greeks were one of them because of the geography of the Aegean and the Ionian Sea. I very much doubt if there were peoples from the Middle East living in the deserts had acquired such a technology and know-how in the sea and ships.

  • @RosaGlez-ls1oz
    @RosaGlez-ls1oz 3 месяца назад

    15:12 Reminds Pompeya. My theory is natural catastrophe.

  • @Mike-ye8qv
    @Mike-ye8qv 3 месяца назад +1

    Sea people= sea men
    Let that sink in

  • @rdnkenki
    @rdnkenki 9 месяцев назад +3

    Dan, Danan, Tribe of Dan. The tribe that rejected the handout and took to the sea ⛵🌊

    • @JM-nm3bg
      @JM-nm3bg 9 месяцев назад +1

      Oh, right, the Danes were there too. Damn pirates! Where did they used to live before?

    • @burns2899
      @burns2899 9 месяцев назад

      I'd agree with this comment also

    • @elizabethtd1006
      @elizabethtd1006 9 месяцев назад +4

      The Danan are the Danaoi , Greek tribes . They changed the matriarchical system of the Bronze Age into Patriarchical , replacing Gea's rule with that of Dias (Zeus) . Later the same called Dorians descended from the mountains and raided the wealthy cities

    • @bobbykiefer4306
      @bobbykiefer4306 9 месяцев назад

      Illyrians horseman of the same stock as Aryans.

    • @ronalddunne3413
      @ronalddunne3413 9 месяцев назад

      @@elizabethtd1006 At least some of the "Danaoi" known as Danaans made it thru Egypt, across N Afrika to Spain, and across to Eire, according to Irish myth and legend. Like the later Irish, they got around, it seems.

  • @gonzalonavarro7920
    @gonzalonavarro7920 9 месяцев назад

    are you going to post the final chapter: the maya civilization??

  • @oleviolin
    @oleviolin 8 месяцев назад +1

    Iron age starts around that time. Could the fact of abundance of new types of weapons, be an explanation too?

  •  7 месяцев назад +1

    They were from the north the cliffs in sweden are full of ships, feasting, priests celebrating and fleets leaving the coasts full of men and also many carvings ships returning with fewer men.

  • @worldadventuretravel
    @worldadventuretravel 4 месяца назад

    Climate chaos, class resentment, oligarchy, desperation, imperialism, forced migration- all leading to the collapse of civilizations. That does not bode well for us in the U.S. at all. Great documentary, thanks!

  • @anthonyswart5748
    @anthonyswart5748 3 месяца назад

    The 3rd crusade was there in 1190. For 3 years long. I'm sure there would have been a huge impact.

  • @jamesalias595
    @jamesalias595 3 месяца назад

    The only problem is that the Bronze Age didn't collapse, it only collapsed in the Mediterranean but not in the Far East. However there was an impact in the Indus Valley not linked to the Sea People, so it wasn't the Sea People who made the Bronze Age but some other disaster, the Sea People were just part of the collapse, it is easy to blame someone when your society collapse around you. It's like the fall of the Roman Empire, while it collapsed in Italy it kept going for a long time in Turkey before it finally failed. It is easy to run invasions together as a single cause when they happen over a longer period of time, collapses are not fast but slow.

  • @johnclose2925
    @johnclose2925 8 месяцев назад +2

    According to the WEF, their diversity was a benefit to the countries they landed in. History rhymes.

  • @gayeinggs5179
    @gayeinggs5179 8 месяцев назад

    Amazing this man of over a 1000 years ago is now named and know

  • @jpavlvs
    @jpavlvs 8 месяцев назад +1

    You can't build fleets of ships without organization. A fleet built, gathered and victulated takes time and social organization. A military force capable of sacking cities requires training and a command structure. All of which must be in place before such migrations take place. So we must look at social constructs outside of the eastern Med. The Balkans, Italy, perhaps as far afield as Spain and Southern France and check climate conditions in those areas at the time. 2. There was no mention of resettlement of any of these peoples in the eastern Med other than the Philistines. Does that mean the attacking fleets would sack the cities and return to their homeland with ship filled with grain and treasure?

  • @jacobnash9755
    @jacobnash9755 8 месяцев назад

    The Egyptains were very diligent at recording the details of their VICTORIES... not their defeats.
    They even recorded events that were not victories as victories. Although without as much detail.

  • @walterulasinksi7031
    @walterulasinksi7031 9 месяцев назад +1

    Even in this video, the genetic evidence has at least part of the Philistine population coming from the Western Mediterranean there has even been reported that some was from Iberia. So this focus on the Eastern Mediterranean, while important, is not the cause, of the downfall, but the precursors that weakened these civilizations before the pirate gangs began raiding.
    Scholars must refrain from looking at the center of the civilized portion of the eastern Mediterranean and focus on the fringes. To accomplish this there needs to be more fieldwork in southern France and eastern Spain.

  • @shimacoody4089
    @shimacoody4089 20 дней назад

    Excellent