kmt_sesh, on 25 November 2010 - 07:21 PM, said:
For whatever reason these Sea Peoples had been displaced from their homelands. Most of them appear to have come from the Aegean, with allies coming from Libya and Western Anatolia. Why exactly they had been displaced is not definitively known, although it's interesting to speculate based on cormac's earlier posts about the volcanic eruptions in Italy.
But we know that in their invasions of Egypt and the Levant, the Sea Peoples were traveling with their families, livestock, and possessions: they were clearly looking for somewhere new to settle. The Libyans already had been trying for some time to encroach on the Nile Delta, so it's possible the Sea Peoples, allying with the Libu and Meshwesh, were hoping to do the same. They were simply looking for someplace to settle, and it wasn't just Egypt. They were also raiding the coastal areas of the Levant. It's just an accident of history--not to mention the pharaonic tradition of recording any and all successes in combat--that the best evidence comes from Egypt.
[/They were simply looking for someplace to settle, and it wasn't just Egypt. They were also raiding the coastal areas of the Levant.]
Perhaps not quite so simple as much later we find Boudica followed by wagons containing the women and families of the warriors when confronted by Suetonius.
He was on a hill backed by a wood since his force was too small to offer battle in the open. The result was usual for the British tribes... They were eventually trapped against or tried to defend their wagons and were summarily defeated. They were not looking to resettle to my knowledge.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boudica
Read also: The women of the Cimbri, in the Battle of Vercellae against Gaius Marius, were stationed in a line of wagons and acted as a last line of defence;[21]
All through Celtic history (If I can call it that.) we find accounts of these warriors being brave but without any serious thought being given to or development of battle field tactics. The Scots carried on this tradition with their Highland charge.
Apparently the Celts shunned the bow as being cowardly. I can't remember where I read that but whatever they paid dearly for their lack of bows as is testified by the carvings on the temples of Medinet Habu in Egypt.
See also of the Ambrones and their allies against Marius. Here is mention of rising waters forcing their movement.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ambrones
Since the Northerners appear to have entered an empty landscape, at least in part, they may have been thinning their ranks as they went and on meeting more displaced peoples formed an alliance. Quite possible imo.
So yes it's likely they were looking to resettle but people don't just get up and go there is usually a reason behind there moving, hence my amateurish digging.
At this point I always say to myself, "Post and be damned." so here it is for what it's worth.