The 'Denyen' are one of the groups associated with the
Sea Peoples, raiders associated with the Eastern
Mediterranean Dark Ages who attacked Egypt during the reign of
Rameses III. After their defeat by the Pharaoh they are believed to have been taken to Egypt, and subsequently settled with the
Philistines and the
Tjekker, along the coast of Palestine to guard the "way of the Philistines" between Egypt and Syria. Etymologically they are thought to be related to the
Greek ''
Danaoi'' (Δαναοί)— alternate names for the
Hellenes familiar from
Homer. Greek myth refers to
Danaos who with his daughters came from
Egypt and settled in
Argos. Through
Danae's son,
Perseus, the Danaans are said to have built
Mycenae.
On etymological grounds, the Denyen are also identified with
Adana, in
Cilicia, where a people of this name may have settled in late
Hittite Empire times. They are also believed to have settled in
Cyprus. These areas also show evidence of close ties with the Aegean as a result of the
Late Helladic IIIC 1b pottery found in these areas. Most
Biblical scholars now believe that the Tribe of
Dan originated as one of the groups of Denyen, who according to the Bible are believed to have settled with their ships in the area between
Ekron and
Joppa, hence ''remaining on their ships'' in the early
Song of Deborah, and not having Israelite land to their name
[1][2]. Others claim that they were forced to move away from the Mediterranean coast by the
Philistines, moving as a group to conquer
Laish subsequently becoming known as (
Tel Dan), from the Sidonian
Phoenicians who formerly ruled the site. The Book of Exodus describes how the Danites were the largest group in the
Exodus from
Egypt, and the story of
Samson has been suggested to be a classic solar Aegean tale, retold from a
Yahwistic point of view. The Danites also preserved stories of their genealogy from the family of
Moses down to historic times.
Regarding the Denyen connection in Cilicia
[3], a Hittite report, speaks of a
Muksus, who also appears in an eighth-century bilingual inscription from
Karatepe in Cilicia, which traces the kings of Adana from the "house of
Mopsos", given in
hieroglyphic Luwian as Moxos and in
Phoenician as Mopsos, in the form mps. The area also reports a Mopsukrene (Mopsus' fountain) and a
Mopsuhestia (Mopsus' hearth), also in Cilicia.
References