In the 12th century BC, the
Sea Peoples (which consisted of several groups, such as Tjekker, Peleset, and Sherden) invaded the Middle East from the eastern
Mediterranean Sea. They attacked
Syria and the
Southern Levant, where many cities were burned and ruined. (
Carchemish was one of the cities which survived the Sea People's attacks.)
Cyprus had also been overwhelmed and its capital sacked. Since the Medinet Habu inscriptions depict women and children loaded in ox carts, the attackers are believed to have been migrants looking for a place to settle. Their attacks are reported, for instance, in letters by
Ammurapi, the last king of
Ugarit, pleading for assistance from
Eshuwara, the king of
Alasiya: The Sea People invasions are often listed among the causes or symptoms of the
Bronze Age collapse. Ramesses had fought the Sea Peoples in southern
Lebanon at the
Battle of Djahy. Ramesses III describes a great movement of peoples in the East from the Mediterranean, which caused massive destruction of the former great powers of the Levant, Cyprus and Anatolia: ==Battle==