FanatiChris wrote: ↑Mon Oct 11, 2021 9:50 pm
Appreciate your observations and reservations...sound as always. What I can add to the original link I posted is based on a reading of papers presented at academic conferences at scholars and archaeologists on the hot new field of Luwian studies, whose theories are not widely accepted but which seem to fit the archaelogical and available historical records. I've seen a number of academic presentations on-line making the case as part of an expanded awareness of what was going on in that region vis-a-vis the Hittites and the Greeks especially in the Late Bronze Age period, but going back to 2000 BC. References to the Great King of Azwara appear in the Egyptian hierogyphs at Medinet Habu. The Luwian hieroglyphic record is pervasive (e.g.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karatepe_bilingual) and the language and symbols were even adopted by the Hittites.
This is all really good stuff!
The problem with theories that are "not widely accepted" is that some of them turn out to be like Continental Drift (widely reviled for a generation or more before massed evidence gradually crushed the nay-sayers) and some of them turn out to be Immanuel Velikovsky and totally full of feces and crying "I'm being suppressed!" like on Life of Brian.
FanatiChris wrote: ↑Mon Oct 11, 2021 9:50 pm
The theory is that after the smaller Luwians states saw the opportunity to throw off the Hittite yoke because of their Gasgan troubles, and get some payback, they allied themselves with one of the Luwian king of Mira (one of the sub/successor kingdoms of Azwara) to sack Hattusis, after which they had free reign to conduct sea-born raids and establish settlements down the coast as far as Palestine, contributing to the Sea People narrative.
The first part of the chain of what-if above (Luwians getting together and throwing off the Hittite yoke) is quite reasonable; I'll be interested to see if they have any direct evidence for it. And loss of control of Luwia (plus a possible military defeat over there in the Luwian homeland) could have been a contributing factor in the collapse of the Hittites. The Luwian invasion into the Hittite homelands is more of a stretch. The chain of what-if taken as a whole, however, is total BS. Any of this could be true, don't get me wrong. But there are also a million other explanations for any of it. There is no evidence for any of that stuff. Sure, Gasgan troubles are highly probable -- and if the central state got weak, then any peripheral subjects (including Azwara / Luwia) are likely to take advantage and get some independence. But all the rest of that chain of "maybe" is pure conjecture and fabrication. I can make the same story up with the Gasgans being the active agents, with the Lukkans, with the Assyrians even, with a remnant Hurrian state, with a Hittite civil war, possibly combined with drought and other systems-collapse stuff.
Now I like the Luwian imaginary story better than some of the others I've heard regarding the LBA Collapse -- Sardinia being the source for the Sea People, for example (Sardinia-Sherden). But Occam's Razor cuts them both.
We know for sure that the Gasgans were the main threat to the Hittite homelands. We know for sure that civil wars are among the most common sources for internal strife in the Biblical period, and that internal strife was a far greater threat than most external enemies for the superpowers (Egypt, Hittites, name any other, but especially Assyria later on). We don't have any evidence either way, but Occam's Razor tells me to throw out any fanciful stories that involve a sudden union of Luwian states getting together, overthrowing the greatest power Anatolia knew before the Ottomans 3000 years later, destroying it sufficiently that no record survives, then deciding to become a migrating pirate homeland movement to settle in Palestine.
If the Luwians got together and conquered Hattusas sufficiently that the Hittite nation collapsed, why wouldn't they do what every other civilized conqueror did when they had any chance at all -- put their own people in charge and become the ruling dynasty? Why would they turn a Che Guevara / William Wallace "Freedom-from-Hittite-Oppression" movement into a travelling migratory road show (as the standard interpretations of the Sea Peoples are)? And why would the Luwians move from their homelands to invade the severely landlocked Hittite central lands (who were civilized, and therefore turning a profit with agriculture and stuff) and then decide to leave and migrate south to Cilicia, Syria, and Palestine? That's way far from their beaten paths. The basic thought I have is this -- if the Luwians created the power vacuum in the center of Anatolia, they would have stayed there. Or gone home, to bask in their success and the loot they certainly would have had from sacking Hattusas. Why would they do the Sea Peoples thing?
None of my musings above is supported by evidence either, of course. I'm not saying that any of my musings happened -- what I'm saying is that we have no evidence that any of that happened. And my musings seem (to me!) to be less unlikely than the chain of what-if above.
On the plus side, I'm becoming more convinced that the Luwians deserve an army list. I won't be able to look at any material you collect for a few months, though.