1900 BCE Near East Mass Migration
978-613-3-73926-0
6133739266
96
2010-10-09
34.00 €
eng
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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Sometime around 2000 BCE and 1900 BCE, a series of events led to a large swath of destruction starting from Eastern Anatolia (now Eastern Turkey) to the Aegean Sea. The destruction, traveling along the traditional trade routes, left a series of burnt and destroyed cities in its wake. The 1900 BCE Near East mass migration refers to the theory that the refugees from this invasion or event caused a mass migration of Indo-European peoples, who would become the Mycenaean Greeks, from their former settlements into south and central Greece displacing the former non-Greek inhabitants of Greece. Little is known about these non-Greek people, possibly Pelasgians, who were either conquered or absorbed by the Greek migration. It is clear however that their language used the suffices -nthos, -ssos, -ndos for place names.
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City and regional sociology
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