The Carians (Greek Καρες Kares, or Καρικοι Karikoi) were the inhabitants of Caria.
Modern lingustics supports that the Carian language was a descendant of the Luwiyan language, a linguistic branch of the Anatolian language family. Other Luwiyan offshoots include Lycian and Lydian.
Bronze Age Karkiya aided the confederacy of Assuwa against Tudhaliya I. But later, in 1323 BC, Arnuwandas II was able to write to Karkiya for them to provide asylum for the deposed Manapa-Tarhunta of Seha River. The Karkiyans did so, and allowed Manapa-Tarhunta to take back his kingdom.
Unlike the Luwiyans in the Near East, the Karkiyans did not retain their literacy through the Dark Age. They next appear in records of the 8th century BC.
The Carians are clearly mentioned at 2 Kings 11:4 and possibly at Samuel 8:18, 15:18, and 20:23. Carians are also named as mercenaries in inscriptions found in ancient Egypt and Nubia, dated to the reigns of Psammetichus I and II.
They are sometimes referred to as the Cari / Khari. Carian remnants have been found in the ancient city of Persepolis or modern Takht-e-Jamshid in Iran.
This confusion of the two peoples is found also in Herodotus (1.171), who wrote that the Carians, when they were allegedly living amid the Cyclades, were known as Leleges.
Ancient peoples | Mercenary groups | Anatolia | Indo-European peoples | Carians