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Переселения народов первой трети XII в. до н.э. и хурритский мир
Migrations of Balkan and Aegean peoples (beg. XII century. BC) caused the displacement of the Hurrians of the Upper Euphrates and Upper Tigris basins further to the east-south-east and the disintegration of the Hurrian oecumene of the Late Bronze Age. The invasion of migrants in the Upper Euphrates-Upper Tigris region caused the formation here of a "vast country of Mushki", the collapse of the local Hurrian kingdoms (Isuwa) and the sharp weakening of the Hurrian Alzi-"Hurri/Shubari": main part of the latter was occupied by aliens, and only the eastern remainder continued to exist under the name "Shubriya". The migrations from the west gave impetus to the chain shift of the Hurrian groups themselves (in part to the northeast, where in the Chorokh valley arose the Hurritic realm of the Diauekhi-Diaeni, partly to the southeast along the Tigris to the Lower Zab and possibly to western Iran, where a number of Hurrian enclaves with the name Habhi emerged, all of which led to a radical change in the map of the Hurrian world: the continuous Hurrian areal existed therefrom only in the mountainous northeastern periphery of the Fertile Crescent.