Re: Sea People (Just Joined, got lots of questions -help?)

From: Piotr Gasiorowski
Message: 398
Date: 1999-12-03

 
----- Original Message -----
From: Alexander Stolbov
To: cybalist@egroups.com
Sent: Thursday, December 02, 1999 9:38 PM
Subject: [cybalist] Re: Sea People (Just Joined, got lots of questions -help?)

----- Original Message -----
Sent: Thursday, December 02, 1999 8:45 PM
Subject: [cybalist] Re: Odp: Just Joined, got lots of questions -help?

 
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Thursday, December 02, 1999 5:19 PM
Subject: [cybalist] Re: Just Joined, got lots of questions -help?

Brent:
<<Assuming, that the Philistines were from Crete - does that mean they were
remants
of the original inhabitants i.e. Minoans or the Achaean/Mycenaen Greeks
who are thought to have invaded and taken over Crete in 1450 BCE and
who were in turn probably invaded circa 1250 BCE?>>

As Diodor (V, 80)  informs us there was one more ethnic component among Crete
inhabitants: Pelasgians. By the way, they were the next after Eteocretians
(sorry, if spelling is wrong) and came there earlier then Dorians (folk # 3). By
the way, the folk # 4 was "a mixture of barbarians".

L.Gindin & V.Tsymburski in their book "Homer and History of the Eastern
Mediterranean" write that
Palaistine (or Palaiste) was the name of a seashore territory in Epirus (Caes.
Bel. civ. 3, 6; Lucan, V,460; Lyd. de mag. III, 46). A variant of the name of
Zeus from Dodona (Illiad, XVI, 233) is Pelastikos instead of Pelasgikos.

A speculation: Palaistine, Pelasgian, Pw-r-s-tj and Philistine are 4 variants of
the same name of a folk (correspondingly - original, Greek, Egyptian and Semitic
versions).

Alexander


Then how about connecting them with the Palaians well known as an Anatolian ethnos?
Piotr
Piotr, I was just thinking about this when your message came!
 
First, there are reasons to believe that Pelasgians were of Hitto-Luwian origin (mainly toponymy).
Second, the name of Pelasgos' son was Lykaon, the ruler of Lykaonia, a place with Luwian ethymology - Luka-wana 'country of Luwians'. There are a lot of Lycian toponyms in both Arkadia and Crete. So please add here all your and Sabine's considerations about Lycians.
 
So, Palaistines (Pelasgians) and Palaians could be cognates.
 
Why should we think in the context of Sea People first of all about the Aegean Palaistines, not Anatolian Palaians? Just because the Bible connects Philistines with Crete.
 
Alexander

Sasha,
 
Ain't this group an exciting place! Lots of complex problems could be solved at one fell swoop if we were right. I'll have to have another look at Levin's theory about Hebrew being partly IE. Perhaps it isn't just as cranky as it looks and some of the evidence he cites may -- if carefully verified -- be found to represent "Palaic/Palaistinian" substrate influence. I wonder what Sabine, with her archaeo- and philological expertise, thinks of all that. Goliath as an Indo-European warrior...
 
Piotr