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This article is about the ancient people called the Achaeans. See Achaea (MUD) for the MUD.
The
Achaeans (in
Greek Ἀχαιοί,
Akhaioi) is one of the collective names used for the Greeks in
Homer's
Iliad (used 598 times) and
Odyssey. The other names are the
Danaans (Δαναοί, used 138 times in the
Iliad) and
Argives (Ἀργεῖοι, used 29 times in the
Iliad). In the historical period, the
Achaeans were the inhabitants of the region of
Achaea, a region in the north central part of the
Peloponnese. The city states of this region formed a confederation known as the
Achaean League which was influential during the 3rd and 2nd centuries BC.
The Achaeans are one of the four main tribes occupying the ancient Greek mainland (Achaeans, Aeolians, Ionians, Dorians). The name Achaeans came to mean all the Greeks at the time of the Trojan War.
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The Homeric "long-haired Achaeans" would have been a part of the
Mycenaean civilization that dominated Greece from ca.
1600 BC, with a history as a tribe that may have gone back to the prehistoric
Hellenic immigration in the late
3rd millennium BC. It has been suggested that the Achaeans hadn't settled in the Greek mainland until the Dorian invasions of the 12th century BC. It is possible that Homer's Achaean leaders held power in the Mycenean world but were replaced by the Dorians. Herodotus identified the Achaeans of the northern Peloponnese as descendants of these earlier Achaeans.
A scholarly consensus hasn't yet been reached on the origin of the historic Achaeans, and is still hotly debated. Former emphasis on presumed race, in which John A. Scott could write an article on Achaean blondness, compared to the dark locks of "Mediterranean" Poseidon, on the basis of hints in Homer, has been laid aside. The contrasting view that "Achaeans", as understood through Homer, are "a name without a country", an
ethnos created in the
Epic tradition, has modern supporters among those who conclude that "Achaeans" were redefined in the fifth century, as contemporary speakers of
Aeolic Greek. Professor Karl Beloch has suggested that there was no Dorian invasion, but rather that the Peloponnesian Dorians were the Achaeans. Professor Eduard Meyer, disagreeing with Beloch, has instead put forth the suggestion that the real-life Achaeans were mainland pre-Dorian Greeks. His conclusion is based on his research on the similarity between the languages of the Achaeans and pre-historic Arcadians. And Professor William Prentice disagrees with both, noting that archeological evidence suggests that the Achaeans instead migrated from “southern Asia Minor to Greece, probably settling first in lower Thessaly” probably prior to 2000 BC.
Hittite documents
Some
Hittite texts mention a nation lying to the west called
Ahhiyawa. An important example is the
Tawagalawa Letter written by an unnamed
Hittite king of the empire period (14th century B.C.) to the king of
Ahhiyawa, treating him as an equal and suggesting that
Miletus (
Millawanda) was under his control. It also refers to an earlier "
Wilusa episode" involving hostility on the part of
Ahhiyawa. In the earliest reference to this land, in a letter outlining the treaty violations of the Hittite vassal
Madduwatta, it's called
Ahhiya. Ahhiya(wa) has been identified with the Achaeans of the
Trojan War and the city of Wilusa with the legendary city of
Troy (note the similarity with (ϝ)Ίλιον,
(w)Ilion, the name of the
acropolis of Troy). However the exact relationship of the term
Ahhiyawa to the Achaeans beyond a similarity in pronunciation is hotly debated by scholars, even following the discovery that Mycenaean
Linear B is an early form of Greek; the earlier debate was summed up in 1984 by Hans G. Güterbock of the Oriental Institute.
Egyptian sources
During the 5th year of Pharaoh
Merneptah, a confederation of
Libyan and northern peoples is supposed to have attacked the Western Delta. Included amongst the ethnic names of the repulsed invaders is the
Ekwesh or Eqwesh, whom some have seen as
Achaeans. Homer mentions an Achaean attack upon the delta, and
Odysseus speaks of the same when he talks to the shade of
Menelaus. Later Greek myths also say that Helen had spent the time of the
Trojan War in
Egypt, and not at
Troy, and that after Troy the
Greeks went there to recover her. There is also the strange myth of the brothers
Aegyptus and
Danaus, sons of
Belus, with the latter supposedly coming from Egypt, that Marianne Luban has suggested may date to this time.
The same Egyptian sources indicate that
Merneptah defeated the invasion, killing 6,000 soldiers and taking 9,000 prisoners. To be sure of the numbers, among other things, he took the penises of all uncircumcised enemy dead and the hands of all the circumcised, from which history learns that the Ekwesh were circumcised, a fact causing some to doubt they were Greek.
In Greek mythology
In
Greek mythology the perceived cultural divisions among the Hellenes were represented as legendary lines of descent that identified kinship groups, among them the Achaeans. The Greek
ethnoi were named in their honor Achaeans, Danaans, Kadmeioi, Hellenes,
Aeolians,
Ionians,
Dorians. Kadmos and Danaos came from Egypt, and Pelops from
Phrygia settled in mainland Greece and were assimilated and Hellenized. Hellen, Graicos, Magnis, and Macedon were sons of Deucalion and Pyrrha, the only people who survived the
Great Flood; the
ethne were said to have originally been named after the elder son Graikoi but renamed later after Hellen who was proved to be the strongest. Sons of Hellen and the nymph Orsiis were Dorus, Xuthos, and Aeolus. Sons of Xuthos and Kreousa, daughter of Erechthea, were Ion and Achaeus.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Danaans'.
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