After the taking of Babylon, an expedition was led by Darius into
Scythia. Asia abounding in men, and vast sums flowing into the treasury,
the desire seized him to exact vengeance from the Scyths, who had once
in days gone by invaded Media, defeated those who met them in the field,
and so begun the quarrel. During the space of eight-and-twenty years, as
I have before mentioned, the Scyths continued lords of the whole of Upper
Asia. They entered Asia in pursuit of the Cimmerians, and overthrew the
empire of the Medes, who till they came possessed the sovereignty. On their
return to their homes after the long absence of twenty-eight years, a task
awaited them little less troublesome than their struggle with the Medes.
They found an army of no small size prepared to oppose their entrance.
For the Scythian women, when they saw that time went on, and their husbands
did not come back, had intermarried with their slaves.
Now the Scythians blind all their slaves, to use them in preparing
their milk. The plan they follow is to thrust tubes made of bone, not unlike
our musical pipes, up the vulva of the mare, and then to blow into the
tubes with their mouths, some milking while the others blow. They say that
they do this because when the veins of the animal are full of air, the
udder is forced down. The milk thus obtained is poured into deep wooden
casks, about which the blind slaves are placed, and then the milk is stirred
round. That which rises to the top is drawn off, and considered the best
part; the under portion is of less account. Such is the reason why the
Scythians blind all those whom they take in war; it arises from their not
being tillers of the ground, but a pastoral race.
When therefore the children sprung from these slaves and the Scythian
women grew to manhood, and understood the circumstances of their birth,
they resolved to oppose the army which was returning from Media. And, first
of all, they cut off a tract of country from the rest of Scythia by digging
a broad dyke from the Tauric mountains to the vast lake of the Maeotis.
Afterwards, when the Scythians tried to force an entrance, they marched
out and engaged them. Many battles were fought, and the Scythians gained
no advantage, until at last one of them thus addressed the remainder: "What
are we doing, Scythians? We are fighting our slaves, diminishing our own
number when we fall, and the number of those that belong to us when they
fall by our hands. Take my advice- lay spear and bow aside, and let each
man fetch his horsewhip, and go boldly up to them. So long as they see
us with arms in our hands, they imagine themselves our equals in birth
and bravery; but let them behold us with no other weapon but the whip,
and they will feel that they are our slaves, and flee before
us."
The Scythians followed this counsel, and the slaves were so astounded,
that they forgot to fight, and immediately ran away. Such was the mode
in which the Scythians, after being for a time the lords of Asia, and being
forced to quit it by the Medes, returned and settled in their own country.
This inroad of theirs it was that Darius was anxious to avenge, and such
was the purpose for which he was now collecting an army to invade
them.
According to the account which the Scythians themselves give, they
are the youngest of all nations. Their tradition is as follows. A certain
Targitaus was the first man who ever lived in their country, which before
his time was a desert without inhabitants. He was a child- I do not believe
the tale, but it is told nevertheless- of Jove and a daughter of the Borysthenes.
Targitaus, thus descended, begat three sons, Leipoxais, Arpoxais, and Colaxais,
who was the youngest born of the three. While they still ruled the land,
there fell from the sky four implements, all of gold- a plough, a yoke,
a battle-axe, and a drinking-cup. The eldest of the brothers perceived
them first, and approached to pick them up; when lo! as he came near, the
gold took fire, and blazed. He therefore went his way, and the second coming
forward made the attempt, but the same thing happened again. The gold rejected
both the eldest and the second brother. Last of all the youngest brother
approached, and immediately the flames were extinguished; so he picked
up the gold, and carried it to his home. Then the two elder agreed together,
and made the whole kingdom over to the youngest born.
From Leipoxais sprang the Scythians of the race called Auchatae;
from Arpoxais, the middle brother, those known as the Catiari and Traspians;
from Colaxais, the youngest, the Royal Scythians, or Paralatae. All together
they are named Scoloti, after one of their kings: the Greeks, however,
call them Scythians.
Such is the account which the Scythians give of their origin. They
add that from the time of Targitaus, their first king, to the invasion
of their country by Darius, is a period of one thousand years, neither
less nor more. The Royal Scythians guard the sacred gold with most especial
care, and year by year offer great sacrifices in its honour. At this feast,
if the man who has the custody of the gold should fall asleep in the open
air, he is sure (the Scythians say) not to outlive the year. His pay therefore
is as much land as he can ride round on horseback in a day. As the extent
of Scythia is very great, Colaxais gave each of his three sons a separate
kingdom, one of which was of ampler size than the other two: in this the
gold was preserved. Above, to the northward of the farthest dwellers in
Scythia, the country is said to be concealed from sight and made impassable
by reason of the feathers which are shed abroad abundantly. The earth and
air are alike full of them, and this it is which prevents the eye from
obtaining any view of the region.
Such is the account which the Scythians give of themselves, and
of the country which lies above them. The Greeks who dwell about the Pontus
tell a different story. According to Hercules, when he was carrying off
the cows of Geryon, arrived in the region which is now inhabited by the
Scyths, but which was then a desert. Geryon lived outside the Pontus, in
an island called by the Greeks Erytheia, near Gades, which is beyond the
Pillars of Hercules upon the Ocean. Now some say that the Ocean begins
in the east, and runs the whole way round the world; but they give no proof
that this is really so. Hercules came from thence into the region now called
Scythia, and, being overtaken by storm and frost, drew his lion's skin
about him, and fell fast asleep. While he slept, his mares, which he had
loosed from his chariot to graze, by some wonderful chance
disappeared.
On waking, he went in quest of them, and, after wandering over
the whole country, came at last to the district called "the Woodland,"
where he found in a cave a strange being, between a maiden and a serpent,
whose form from the waist upwards was like that of a woman, while all below
was like a snake. He looked at her wonderingly; but nevertheless inquired,
whether she had chanced to see his strayed mares anywhere. She answered
him, "Yes, and they were now in her keeping; but never would she consent
to give them back, unless he took her for his mistress." So Hercules, to
get his mares back, agreed; but afterwards she put him off and delayed
restoring the mares, since she wished to keep him with her as long as possible.
He, on the other hand, was only anxious to secure them and to get away.
At last, when she gave them up, she said to him, "When thy mares strayed
hither, it was I who saved them for thee: now thou hast paid their salvage;
for lo! I bear in my womb three sons of thine. Tell me therefore when thy
sons grow up, what must I do with them? Wouldst thou wish that I should
settle them here in this land, whereof I am mistress, or shall I send them
to thee?" Thus questioned, they say, Hercules answered, "When the lads
have grown to manhood, do thus, and assuredly thou wilt not err. Watch
them, and when thou seest one of them bend this bow as I now bend it, and
gird himself with this girdle thus, choose him to remain in the land. Those
who fail in the trial, send away. Thus wilt thou at once please thyself
and obey me."
Hereupon he strung one of his bows- up to that time he had carried
two- and showed her how to fasten the belt. Then he gave both bow and belt
into her hands. Now the belt had a golden goblet attached to its clasp.
So after he had given them to her, he went his way; and the woman, when
her children grew to manhood, first gave them severally their names. One
she called Agathyrsus, one Gelonus, and the other, who was the youngest,
Scythes. Then she remembered the instructions she had received from Hercules,
and, in obedience to his orders, she put her sons to the test. Two of them,
Agathyrsus and Gelonus, proving unequal to the task enjoined, their mother
sent them out of the land; Scythes, the youngest, succeeded, and so he
was allowed to remain. From Scythes, the son of Hercules, were descended
the after kings of Scythia; and from the circumstance of the goblet which
hung from the belt, the Scythians to this day wear goblets at their girdles.
This was the only thing which the mother of Scythes did for him. Such is
the tale told by the Greeks who dwell around the Pontus.
There is also another different story, now to be related, in which
I am more inclined to put faith than in any other. It is that the wandering
Scythians once dwelt in Asia, and there warred with the Massagetae, but
with ill success; they therefore quitted their homes, crossed the Araxes,
and entered the land of Cimmeria. For the land which is now inhabited by
the Scyths was formerly the country of the Cimmerians. On their coming,
the natives, who heard how numerous the invading army was, held a council.
At this meeting opinion was divided, and both parties stiffly maintained
their own view; but the counsel of the Royal tribe was the braver. For
the others urged that the best thing to be done was to leave the country,
and avoid a contest with so vast a host; but the Royal tribe advised remaining
and fighting for the soil to the last. As neither party chose to give way,
the one determined to retire without a blow and yield their lands to the
invaders; but the other, remembering the good things which they had enjoyed
in their homes, and picturing to themselves the evils which they had to
expect if they gave them up, resolved not to flee, but rather to die and
at least be buried in their fatherland. Having thus decided, they drew
apart in two bodies, the one as numerous as the other, and fought together.
All of the Royal tribe were slain, and the people buried them near the
river Tyras, where their grave is still to be seen. Then the rest of the
Cimmerians departed, and the Scythians, on their coming, took possession
of a deserted land.
Scythia still retains traces of the Cimmerians; there are Cimmerian
castles, and a Cimmerian ferry, also a tract called Cimmeria, and a Cimmerian
Bosphorus. It appears likewise that the Cimmerians, when they fled into
Asia to escape the Scyths, made a settlement in the peninsula where the
Greek city of Sinope was afterwards built. The Scyths, it is plain, pursued
them, and missing their road, poured into Media. For the Cimmerians kept
the line which led along the sea-shore, but the Scyths in their pursuit
held the Caucasus upon their right, thus proceeding inland, and falling
upon Media. This account is one which is common both to Greeks and
barbarians.
Aristeas also, son of Caystrobius, a native of Proconnesus, says
in the course of his poem that wrapt in Bacchic fury he went as far as
the Issedones. Above them dwelt the Arimaspi, men with one eye; still further,
the gold-guarding griffins; and beyond these, the Hyperboreans, who extended
to the sea. Except the Hyperboreans, all these nations, beginning with
the Arimaspi, were continually encroaching upon their neighbours. Hence
it came to pass that the Arimaspi drove the Issedonians from their country,
while the Issedonians dispossessed the Scyths; and the Scyths, pressing
upon the Cimmerians, who dwelt on the shores of the Southern Sea, forced
them to leave their land. Thus even Aristeas does not agree in his account
of this region with the Scythians.
The birthplace of Aristeas, the poet who sung of these things,
I have already mentioned. I will now relate a tale which I heard concerning
him both at Proconnesus and at Cyzicus. Aristeas, they said, who belonged
to one of the noblest families in the island, had entered one day into
a fuller's shop, when he suddenly dropt down dead. Hereupon the fuller
shut up his shop, and went to tell Aristeas' kindred what had happened.
The report of the death had just spread through the town, when a certain
Cyzicenian, lately arrived from Artaca, contradicted the rumour, affirming
that he had met Aristeas on his road to Cyzicus, and had spoken with him.
This man, therefore, strenuously denied the rumour; the relations, however,
proceeded to the fuller's shop with all things necessary for the funeral,
intending to carry the body away. But on the shop being opened, no Aristeas
was found, either dead or alive. Seven years afterwards he reappeared,
they told me, in Proconnesus, and wrote the poem called by the Greeks The
Arimaspeia, after which he disappeared a second time. This is the tale
current in the two cities above-mentioned.
What follows I know to have happened to the Metapontines of Italy,
three hundred and forty years after the second disappearance of Aristeas,
as I collect by comparing the accounts given me at Proconnesus and Metapontum.
Aristeas then, as the Metapontines affirm, appeared to them in their own
country, and ordered them to set up an altar in honour of Apollo, and to
place near it a statue to be called that of Aristeas the Proconnesian.
"Apollo," he told them, "had come to their country once, though he had
visited no other Italiots; and he had been with Apollo at the time, not
however in his present form, but in the shape of a crow." Having said so
much, he vanished. Then the Metapontines, as they relate, sent to Delphi,
and inquired of the god in what light they were to regard the appearance
of this ghost of a man. The Pythoness, in reply, bade them attend to what
the spectre said, "for so it would go best with them." Thus advised, they
did as they had been directed: and there is now a statue bearing the name
of Aristeas, close by the image of Apollo in the market-place of Metapontum,
with bay-trees standing around it. But enough has been said concerning
Aristeas.
With regard to the regions which lie above the country whereof
this portion of my history treats, there is no one who possesses any exact
knowledge. Not a single person can I find who professes to be acquainted
with them by actual observation. Even Aristeas, the traveller of whom I
lately spoke, does not claim- and he is writing poetry- to have reached
any farther than the Issedonians. What he relates concerning the regions
beyond is, he confesses, mere hearsay, being the account which the Issedonians
gave him of those countries. However, I shall proceed to mention all that
I have learnt of these parts by the most exact inquiries which I have been
able to make concerning them.
Above the mart of the Borysthenites, which is situated in the very
centre of the whole sea-coast of Scythia, the first people who inhabit
the land are the Callipedae, a Greco-Scythic race. Next to them, as you
go inland, dwell the people called the Alazonians. These two nations in
other respects resemble the Scythians in their usages, but sow and eat
corn, also onions, garlic, lentils, and millet. Beyond the Alazonians reside
Scythian cultivators, who grow corn, not for their own use, but for sale.
Still higher up are the Neuri. Northwards of the Neuri the continent, as
far as it is known to us, is uninhabited. These are the nations along the
course of the river Hypanis, west of the Borysthenes.
Across the Borysthenes, the first country after you leave the coast
is Hylaea (the Woodland). Above this dwell the Scythian Husbandmen, whom
the Greeks living near the Hypanis call Borysthenites, while they call
themselves Olbiopolites. These Husbandmen extend eastward a distance of
three days' journey to a river bearing the name of Panticapes, while northward
the country is theirs for eleven days' sail up the course of the Borysthenes.
Further inland there is a vast tract which is uninhabited. Above this desolate
region dwell the Cannibals, who are a people apart, much unlike the Scythians.
Above them the country becomes an utter desert; not a single tribe, so
far as we know, inhabits it.
Crossing the Panticapes, and proceeding eastward of the Husbandmen,
we come upon the wandering Scythians, who neither plough nor sow. Their
country, and the whole of this region, except Hylaea, is quite bare of
trees. They extend towards the east a distance of fourteen' days' journey,
occupying a tract which reaches to the river Gerrhus.
On the opposite side of the Gerrhus is the Royal district, as it
is called: here dwells the largest and bravest of the Scythian tribes,
which looks upon all the other tribes in the light of slaves. Its country
reaches on the south to Taurica, on the east to the trench dug by the sons
of the blind slaves, the mart upon the Palus Maeotis, called Cremni (the
Cliffs), and in part to the river Tanais. North of the country of the Royal
Scythians are the Melanchaeni (Black-Robes), a people of quite a different
race from the Scythians. Beyond them lie marshes and a region without inhabitants,
so far as our knowledge reaches.
When one crosses the Tanais, one is no longer in Scythia; the first
region on crossing is that of the Sauromatae, who, beginning at the upper
end of the Palus Maeotis, stretch northward a distance of fifteen days'
journey, inhabiting a country which is entirely bare of trees, whether
wild or cultivated. Above them, possessing the second region, dwell the
Budini, whose territory is thickly wooded with trees of every
kind.
Beyond the Budini, as one goes northward, first there is a desert,
seven days' journey across; after which, if one inclines somewhat to the
east, the Thyssagetae are reached, a numerous nation quite distinct from
any other, and living by the chase. Adjoining them, and within the limits
of the same region, are the people who bear the name of Iyrcae; they also
support themselves by hunting, which they practise in the following manner.
The hunter climbs a tree, the whole country abounding in wood, and there
sets himself in ambush; he has a dog at hand, and a horse, trained to lie
down upon its belly, and thus make itself low; the hunter keeps watch,
and when he sees his game, lets fly an arrow; then mounting his horse,
he gives the beast chase, his dog following hard all the while. Beyond
these people, a little to the east, dwells a distinct tribe of Scyths,
who revolted once from the Royal Scythians, and migrated into these
parts.
As far as their country, the tract of land whereof I have been
speaking is all a smooth plain, and the soil deep; beyond you enter on
a region which is rugged and stony. Passing over a great extent of this
rough country, you come to a people dwelling at the foot of lofty mountains,
who are said to be all- both men and women- bald from their birth, to have
flat noses, and very long chins. These people speak a language of their
own,. the dress which they wear is the same as the Scythian. They live
on the fruit of a certain tree, the name of which is Ponticum; in size
it is about equal to our fig-tree, and it bears a fruit like a bean, with
a stone inside. When the fruit is ripe, they strain it through cloths;
the juice which runs off is black and thick, and is called by the natives
"aschy." They lap this up with their tongues, and also mix it with milk
for a drink; while they make the lees, which are solid, into cakes, and
eat them instead of meat; for they have but few sheep in their country,
in which there is no good pasturage. Each of them dwells under a tree,
and they cover the tree in winter with a cloth of thick white felt, but
take off the covering in the summer-time. No one harms these people, for
they are looked upon as sacred- they do not even possess any warlike weapons.
When their neighbours fall out, they make up the quarrel; and when one
flies to them for refuge, he is safe from all hurt. They are called the
Argippaeans.
Up to this point the territory of which we are speaking is very
completely explored, and all the nations between the coast and the bald-headed
men are well known to us. For some of the Scythians are accustomed to penetrate
as far, of whom inquiry may easily be made, and Greeks also go there from
the mart on the Borysthenes, and from the other marts along the Euxine.
The Scythians who make this journey communicate with the inhabitants by
means of seven interpreters and seven languages.
Thus far, therefore, the land is known; but beyond the bald-headed
men lies a region of which no one can give any exact account. Lofty and
precipitous mountains, which are never crossed, bar further progress. The
bald men say, but it does not seem to me credible, that the people who
live in these mountains have feet like goats; and that after passing them
you find another race of men, who sleep during one half of the year. This
latter statement appears to me quite unworthy of credit. The region east
of the bald-headed men is well known to be inhabited by the Issedonians,
but the tract that lies to the north of these two nations is entirely unknown,
except by the accounts which they give of it.
The Issedonians are said to have the following customs. When a
man's father dies, all the near relatives bring sheep to the house; which
are sacrificed, and their flesh cut in pieces, while at the same time the
dead body undergoes the like treatment. The two sorts of flesh are afterwards
mixed together, and the whole is served up at a banquet. The head of the
dead man is treated differently: it is stripped bare, cleansed, and set
in gold. It then becomes an ornament on which they pride themselves, and
is brought out year by year at the great festival which sons keep in honour
of their fathers' death, just as the Greeks keep their Genesia. In other
respects the Issedonians are reputed to be observers of justice: and it
is to be remarked that their women have equal authority with the men. Thus
our knowledge extends as far as this nation.
The regions beyond are known only from the accounts of the Issedonians,
by whom the stories are told of the one-eyed race of men and the gold-guarding
griffins. These stories are received by the Scythians from the Issedonians,
and by them passed on to us Greeks: whence it arises that we give the one-eyed
race the Scythian name of Arimaspi, "arima" being the Scythic word for
"one," and "spu" for "the eye."
The whole district whereof we have here discoursed has winters
of exceeding rigour. During eight months the frost is so intense that water
poured upon the ground does not form mud, but if a fire be lighted on it
mud is produced. The sea freezes, and the Cimmerian Bosphorus is frozen
over. At that season the Scythians who dwell inside the trench make warlike
expeditions upon the ice, and even drive their waggons across to the country
of the Sindians. Such is the intensity of the cold during eight months
out of the twelve; and even in the remaining four the climate is still
cool. The character of the winter likewise is unlike that of the same season
in any other country; for at that time, when the rains ought to fall in
Scythia, there is scarcely any rain worth mentioning, while in summer it
never gives over raining; and thunder, which elsewhere is frequent then,
in Scythia is unknown in that part of the year, coming only in summer,
when it is very heavy. Thunder in the winter-time is there accounted a
prodigy; as also are earthquakes, whether they happen in winter or summer.
Horses bear the winter well, cold as it is, but mules and asses are quite
unable to bear it; whereas in other countries mules and asses are found
to endure the cold, while horses, if they stand still, are
frost-bitten.
To me it seems that the cold may likewise be the cause which prevents
the oxen in Scythia from having horns. There is a line of Homer's in the
Odyssey which gives a support to my opinion:-
Libya too, where horns hud quick on the foreheads of lambkins.
He means to say what is quite true, that in warm countries the horns come
early. So too in countries where the cold is severe animals either have
no horns, or grow them with difficulty- the cold being the cause in this
instance.
Here I must express my wonder- additions being what my work always
from the very first affected- that in Elis, where the cold is not remarkable,
and there is nothing else to account for it, mules are never produced.
The Eleans say it is in consequence of a curse; and their habit is, when
the breeding-time comes, to take their mares into one of the adjoining
countries, and there keep them till they are in foal, when they bring them
back again into Elis.
With respect to the feathers which are said by the Scythians to
fill the air, and to prevent persons from penetrating into the remoter
parts of the continent, even having any view of those regions, my opinion
is that in the countries above Scythia it always snows- less, of course,
in the summer than in the wintertime. Now snow when it falls looks like
feathers, as every one is aware who has seen it come down close to him.
These northern regions, therefore, are uninhabitable by reason of the severity
of the winter; and the Scythians, with their neighbours, call the snow-flakes
feathers because, I think, of the likeness which they bear to them. I have
now related what is said of the most distant parts of this continent whereof
any account is given.
Of the Hyperboreans nothing is said either by the Scythians or
by any of the other dwellers in these regions, unless it be the Issedonians.
But in my opinion, even the Issedonians are silent concerning them; otherwise
the Scythians would have repeated their statements, as they do those concerning
the one-eyed men. Hesiod, however, mentions them, and Homer also in the
Epigoni, if that be really a work of his.
But the persons who have by far the most to say on this subject
are the Delians. They declare that certain offerings, packed in wheaten
straw, were brought from the country of the Hyperboreans into Scythia,
and that the Scythians received them and passed them on to their neighbours
upon the west, who continued to pass them on until at last they reached
the Adriatic. From hence they were sent southward, and when they came to
Greece, were received first of all by the Dodonaeans. Thence they descended
to the Maliac Gulf, from which they were carried across into Euboea, where
the people handed them on from city to city, till they came at length to
Carystus. The Carystians took them over to Tenos, without stopping at Andros;
and the Tenians brought them finally to Delos. Such, according to their
own account, was the road by which the offerings reached the Delians. Two
damsels, they say, named Hyperoche and Laodice, brought the first offerings
from the Hyperboreans; and with them the Hyperboreans sent five men to
keep them from all harm by the way; these are the persons whom the Delians
call "Perpherees," and to whom great honours are paid at Delos. Afterwards
the Hyperboreans, when they found that their messengers did not return,
thinking it would be a grievous thing always to be liable to lose the envoys
they should send, adopted the following plan:- they wrapped their offerings
in the wheaten straw, and bearing them to their borders, charged their
neighbours to send them forward from one nation to another, which was done
accordingly, and in this way the offerings reached Delos. I myself know
of a practice like this, which obtains with the women of Thrace and Paeonia.
They in their sacrifices to the queenly Diana bring wheaten straw always
with their offerings. Of my own knowledge I can testify that this is
so.
The damsels sent by the Hyperboreans died in Delos; and in their
honour all the Delian girls and youths are wont to cut off their hair.
The girls, before their marriage-day, cut off a curl, and twining it round
a distaff, lay it upon the grave of the strangers. This grave is on the
left as one enters the precinct of Diana, and has an olive-tree growing
on it. The youths wind some of their hair round a kind of grass, and, like
the girls, place it upon the tomb. Such are the honours paid to these damsels
by the Delians.
They add that, once before, there came to Delos by the same road
as Hyperoche and Laodice, two other virgins from the Hyperboreans, whose
names were Arge and Opis. Hyperoche and Laodice came to bring to Ilithyia
the offering which they had laid upon themselves, in acknowledgment of
their quick labours; but Arge and Opis came at the same time as the gods
of Delos,' and are honoured by the Delians in a different way. For the
Delian women make collections in these maidens' names, and invoke them
in the hymn which Olen, a Lycian, composed for them; and the rest of the
islanders, and even the Ionians, have been taught by the Delians to do
the like. This Olen, who came from Lycia, made the other old hymns also
which are sung in Delos. The Delians add that the ashes from the thigh-bones
burnt upon the altar are scattered over the tomb of Opis and Arge. Their
tomb lies behind the temple of Diana, facing the east, near the banqueting-hall
of the Ceians. Thus much then, and no more, concerning the
Hyperboreans.
As for the tale of Abaris, who is said to have been a Hyperborean,
and to have gone with his arrow all round the world without once eating,
I shall pass it by in silence. Thus much, however, is clear: if there are
Hyperboreans, there must also be Hypernotians. For my part, I cannot but
laugh when I see numbers of persons drawing maps of the world without having
any reason to guide them; making, as they do, the ocean-stream to run all
round the earth, and the earth itself to be an exact circle, as if described
by a pair of compasses, with Europe and Asia just of the same size. The
truth in this matter I will now proceed to explain in a very few words,
making it clear what the real size of each region is, and what shape should
be given them.
The Persians inhabit a country upon the southern or Erythraean
sea; above them, to the north, are the Medes; beyond the Medes, the Saspirians;
beyond them, the Colchians, reaching to the northern sea, into which the
Phasis empties itself. These four nations fill the whole space from one
sea to the other.
West of these nations there project into the sea two tracts which
I will now describe; one, beginning at the river Phasis on the north, stretches
along the Euxine and the Hellespont to Sigeum in the Troas; while on the
south it reaches from the Myriandrian gulf, which adjoins Phoenicia, to
the Triopic promontory. This is one of the tracts, and is inhabited by
thirty different nations.
The other starts from the country of the Persians, and stretches
into the Erythraean sea, containing first Persia, then Assyria, and after
Assyria, Arabia. It ends, that is to say, it is considered to end, though
it does not really come to a termination, at the Arabian gulf- the gulf
whereinto Darius conducted the canal which he made from the Nile. Between
Persia and Phoenicia lies a broad and ample tract of country, after which
the region I am describing skirts our sea, stretching from Phoenicia along
the coast of Palestine-Syria till it comes to Egypt, where it terminates.
This entire tract contains but three nations. The whole of Asia west of
the country of the Persians is comprised in these two
regions.
Beyond the tract occupied by the Persians, Medes, Saspirians, and
Colchians, towards the east and the region of the sunrise, Asia is bounded
on the south by the Erythraean sea, and on the north by the Caspian and
the river Araxes, which flows towards the rising sun. Till you reach India
the country is peopled; but further east it is void of inhabitants, and
no one can say what sort of region it is. Such then is the shape, and such
the size of Asia.
Libya belongs to one of the above-mentioned tracts, for it adjoins
on Egypt. In Egypt the tract is at first a narrow neck, the distance from
our sea to the Erythraean not exceeding a hundred thousand fathoms, in
other words, a thousand furlongs; but from the point where the neck ends,
the tract which bears the name of Libya is of very great
breadth.
For my part I am astonished that men should ever have divided Libya,
Asia, and Europe as they have, for they are exceedingly unequal. Europe
extends the entire length of the other two, and for breadth will not even
(as I think) bear to be compared to them. As for Libya, we know it to be
washed on all sides by the sea, except where it is attached to Asia. This
discovery was first made by Necos, the Egyptian king, who on desisting
from the canal which he had begun between the Nile and the Arabian gulf,
sent to sea a number of ships manned by Phoenicians, with orders to make
for the Pillars of Hercules, and return to Egypt through them, and by the
Mediterranean. The Phoenicians took their departure from Egypt by way of
the Erythraean sea, and so sailed into the southern ocean. When autumn
came, they went ashore, wherever they might happen to be, and having sown
a tract of land with corn, waited until the grain was fit to cut. Having
reaped it, they again set sail; and thus it came to pass that two whole
years went by, and it was not till the third year that they doubled the
Pillars of Hercules, and made good their voyage home. On their return,
they declared- I for my part do not believe them, but perhaps others may-
that in sailing round Libya they had the sun upon their right hand. In
this way was the extent of Libya first discovered.
Next to these Phoenicians the Carthaginians, according to their
own accounts, made the voyage. For Sataspes, son of Teaspes the Achaemenian,
did not circumnavigate Libya, though he was sent to do so; but, fearing
the length and desolateness of the journey, he turned back and left unaccomplished
the task which had been set him by his mother. This man had used violence
towards a maiden, the daughter of Zopyrus, son of Megabyzus, and King Xerxes
was about to impale him for the offence, when his mother, who was a sister
of Darius, begged him off, undertaking to punish his crime more heavily
than the king himself had designed. She would force him, she said, to sail
round Libya and return to Egypt by the Arabian gulf. Xerxes gave his consent;
and Sataspes went down to Egypt, and there got a ship and crew, with which
he set sail for the Pillars of Hercules. Having passed the Straits, he
doubled the Libyan headland, known as Cape Soloeis, and proceeded southward.
Following this course for many months over a vast stretch of sea, and finding
that more water than he had crossed still lay ever before him, he put about,
and came back to Egypt. Thence proceeding to the court, he made report
to Xerxes, that at the farthest point to which he had reached, the coast
was occupied by a dwarfish race, who wore a dress made from the palm tree.
These people, whenever he landed, left their towns and fled away to the
mountains; his men, however, did them no wrong, only entering into their
cities and taking some of their cattle. The reason why he had not sailed
quite round Libya was, he said, because the ship stopped, and would no
go any further. Xerxes, however, did not accept this account for true;
and so Sataspes, as he had failed to accomplish the task set him, was impaled
by the king's orders in accordance with the former sentence. One of his
eunuchs, on hearing of his death, ran away with a great portion of his
wealth, and reached Samos, where a certain Samian seized the whole. I know
the man's name well, but I shall willingly forget it
here.
Of the greater part of Asia Darius was the discoverer. Wishing
to know where the Indus (which is the only river save one that produces
crocodiles) emptied itself into the sea, he sent a number of men, on whose
truthfulness he could rely, and among them Scylax of Caryanda, to sail
down the river. They started from the city of Caspatyrus, in the region
called Pactyica, and sailed down the stream in an easterly direction to
the sea. Here they turned westward, and, after a voyage of thirty months,
reached the place from which the Egyptian king, of whom I spoke above,
sent the Phoenicians to sail round Libya. After this voyage was completed,
Darius conquered the Indians, and made use of the sea in those parts. Thus
all Asia, except the eastern portion, has been found to be similarly circumstanced
with Libya.
But the boundaries of Europe are quite unknown, and there is not
a man who can say whether any sea girds it round either on the north or
on the east, while in length it undoubtedly extends as far as both the
other two. For my part I cannot conceive why three names, and women's names
especially, should ever have been given to a tract which is in reality
one, nor why the Egyptian Nile and the Colchian Phasis (or according to
others the Maeotic Tanais and Cimmerian ferry) should have been fixed upon
for the boundary lines; nor can I even say who gave the three tracts their
names, or whence they took the epithets. According to the Greeks in general,
Libya was so called after a certain Libya, a native woman, and Asia after
the wife of Prometheus. The Lydians, however, put in a claim to the latter
name, which, they declare, was not derived from Asia the wife of Prometheus,
but from Asies, the son of Cotys, and grandson of Manes, who also gave
name to the tribe Asias at Sardis. As for Europe, no one can say whether
it is surrounded by the sea or not, neither is it known whence the name
of Europe was derived, nor who gave it name, unless we say that Europe
was so called after the Tyrian Europe, and before her time was nameless,
like the other divisions. But it is certain that Europe was an Asiatic,
and never even set foot on the land which the Greeks now call Europe, only
sailing from Phoenicia to Crete, and from Crete to Lycia. However let us
quit these matters. We shall ourselves continue to use the names which
custom sanctions.
The Euxine sea, where Darius now went to war, has nations dwelling
around it, with the one exception of the Scythians, more unpolished than
those of any other region that we know of. For, setting aside Anacharsis
and the Scythian people, there is not within this region a single nation
which can be put forward as having any claims to wisdom, or which has produced
a single person of any high repute. The Scythians indeed have in one respect,
and that the very most important of all those that fall under man's control,
shown themselves wiser than any nation upon the face of the earth. Their
customs otherwise are not such as I admire. The one thing of which I speak
is the contrivance whereby they make it impossible for the enemy who invades
them to escape destruction, while they themselves are entirely out of his
reach, unless it please them to engage with him. Having neither cities
nor forts, and carrying their dwellings with them wherever they go; accustomed,
moreover, one and all of them, to shoot from horseback; and living not
by husbandry but on their cattle, their waggons the only houses that they
possess, how can they fail of being unconquerable, and unassailable
even?
The nature of their country, and the rivers by which it is intersected,
greatly favour this mode of resisting attacks. For the land is level, well
watered, and abounding in pasture; while the rivers which traverse it are
almost equal in number to the canals of Egypt. Of these I shall only mention
the most famous and such as are navigable to some distance from the sea.
They are, the Ister, which has five mouths; the Tyras, the Hypanis, the
Borysthenes, the Panticapes, the Hypacyris, the Gerrhus, and the Tanais.
The courses of these streams I shall now proceed to
describe.
The Ister is of all the rivers with which we are acquainted the
mightiest. It never varies in height, but continues at the same level summer
and winter. Counting from the west it is the first of the Scythian rivers,
and the reason of its being the greatest is that it receives the water
of several tributaries. Now the tributaries which swell its flood are the
following: first, on the side of Scythia, these five- the stream called
by the Scythians Porata, and by the Greeks Pyretus, the Tiarantus, the
Ararus, the Naparis, and the Ordessus. The first mentioned is a great stream,
and is the easternmost of the tributaries. The Tiarantus is of less volume,
and more to the west. The Ararus, Naparis, and Ordessus fall into the Ister
between these two. All the above mentioned are genuine Scythian rivers,
and go to swell the current of the Ister.
From the country of the Agathyrsi comes down another river, the
Maris, which empties itself into the same; and from the heights of Haemus
descend with a northern course three mighty streams, the Atlas, the Auras,
and the Tibisis, and pour their waters into it. Thrace gives it three tributaries,
the Athrys, the Noes, and the Artanes, which all pass through the country
of the Crobyzian Thracians. Another tributary is furnished by Paeonia,
namely, the Scius; this river, rising near Mount Rhodope, forces its way
through the chain of Haemus, and so reaches the Ister. From Illyria comes
another stream, the Angrus, which has a course from south to north, and
after watering the Triballian plain, falls into the Brongus, which falls
into the Ister. So the Ister is augmented by these two streams, both considerable.
Besides all these, the Ister receives also the waters of the Carpis and
the Alpis, two rivers running in a northerly direction from the country
above the Umbrians. For the Ister flows through the whole extent of Europe,
rising in the country of the Celts (the most westerly of all the nations
of Europe, excepting the Cynetians), and thence running across the continent
till it reaches Scythia, whereof it washes the flanks.
All these streams, then, and many others, add their waters to swell
the flood of the Ister, which thus increased becomes the mightiest of rivers;
for undoubtedly if we compare the stream of the Nile with the single stream
of the Ister, we must give the preference to the Nile, of which no tributary
river, nor even rivulet, augments the volume. The Ister remains at the
same level both summer and winter- owing to the following reasons, as I
believe. During the winter it runs at its natural height, or a very little
higher, because in those countries there is scarcely any rain in winter,
but constant snow. When summer comes, this snow, which is of great depth,
begins to melt, and flows into the Ister, which is swelled at that season,
not only by this cause but also by the rains, which are heavy and frequent
at that part of the year. Thus the various streams which go to form the
Ister are higher in summer than in winter, and just so much higher as the
sun's power and attraction are greater; so that these two causes counteract
each other, and the effect is to produce a balance, whereby the Ister remains
always at the same level.
This, then, is one of the great Scythian rivers; the next to it
is the Tyras, which rises from a great lake separating Scythia from the
land of the Neuri, and runs with a southerly course to the sea. Greeks
dwell at the mouth of the river, who are called Tyritae.
The third river is the Hypanis. This stream rises within the limits
of Scythia, and has its source in another vast lake, around which wild
white horses graze. The lake is called, properly enough, the Mother of
the Hypanis. The Hypanis, rising here, during the distance of five days'
navigation is a shallow stream, and the water sweet and pure; thence, however,
to the sea, which is a distance of four days, it is exceedingly bitter.
This change is caused by its receiving into it at that point a brook the
waters of which are so bitter that, although it is but a tiny rivulet,
it nevertheless taints the entire Hypanis, which is a large stream among
those of the second order. The source of this bitter spring is on the borders
of the Scythian Husbandmen, where they adjoin upon the Alazonians; and
the place where it rises is called in the Scythic tongue Exampaeus, which
means in our language, "The Sacred Ways." The spring itself bears the same
name. The Tyras and the Hypanis approach each other in the country of the
Alazonians, but afterwards separate, and leave a wide space between their
streams.
The fourth of the Scythian rivers is the Borysthenes. Next to the
Ister, it is the greatest of them all; and, in my judgment, it is the most
productive river, not merely in Scythia, but in the whole world, excepting
only the Nile, with which no stream can possibly compare. It has upon its
banks the loveliest and most excellent pasturages for cattle; it contains
abundance of the most delicious fish; its water is most pleasant to the
taste; its stream is limpid, while all the other rivers near it are muddy;
the richest harvests spring up along its course, and where the ground is
not sown, the heaviest crops of grass; while salt forms in great plenty
about its mouth without human aid, and large fish are taken in it of the
sort called Antacaei, without any prickly bones, and good for pickling.
Nor are these the whole of its marvels. As far inland as the place named
Gerrhus, which is distant forty days' voyage from the sea, its course is
known, and its direction is from north to south; but above this no one
has traced it, so as to say through what countries it flows. It enters
the territory of the Scythian Husbandmen after running for some time across
a desert region, and continues for ten days' navigation to pass through
the land which they inhabit. It is the only river besides the Nile the
sources of which are unknown to me, as they are also (I believe) to all
the other Greeks. Not long before it reaches the sea, the Borysthenes is
joined by the Hypanis, which pours its waters into the same lake. The land
that lies between them, a narrow point like the beak of a ship, is called
Cape Hippolaus. Here is a temple dedicated to Ceres, and opposite the temple
upon the Hypanis is the dwelling-place of the Borysthenites. But enough
has been said of these streams.
Next in succession comes the fifth river, called the Panticapes,
which has, like the Borysthenes, a course from north to south, and rises
from a lake. The space between this river and the Borysthenes is occupied
by the Scythians who are engaged in husbandry. After watering their country,
the Panticapes flows through Hylaea, and empties itself into the
Borysthenes.
The sixth stream is the Hypacyris, a river rising from a lake,
and running directly through the middle of the Nomadic Scythians. It falls
into the sea near the city of Carcinitis, leaving Hylaea and the course
of Achilles to the right.
The seventh river is the Gerrhus, which is a branch thrown out
by the Borysthenes at the point where the course of that stream first begins
to be known, to wit, the region called by the same name as the stream itself,
viz. Gerrhus. This river on its passage towards the sea divides the country
of the Nomadic from that of the Royal Scyths. It runs into the
Hypacyris.
The eighth river is the Tanais, a stream which has its source,
far up the country, in a lake of vast size, and which empties itself into
another still larger lake, the Palus Maeotis, whereby the country of the
Royal Scythians is divided from that of the Sauromatae. The Tanais receives
the waters of a tributary stream, called the Hyrgis.
Such then are the rivers of chief note in Scythia. The grass which
the land produces is more apt to generate gall in the beasts that feed
on it than any other grass which is known to us, as plainly appears on
the opening of their carcases.
Thus abundantly are the Scythians provided with the most important
necessaries. Their manners and customs come now to be described. They worship
only the following gods, namely, Vesta, whom they reverence beyond all
the rest, Jupiter, and Tellus, whom they consider to be the wife of Jupiter;
and after these Apollo, Celestial Venus, Hercules, and Mars. These gods
are worshipped by the whole nation: the Royal Scythians offer sacrifice
likewise to Neptune. In the Scythic tongue Vesta is called Tabiti, Jupiter
(very properly, in my judgment) Papaeus, Tellus Apia, Apollo Oetosyrus,
Celestial Venus Artimpasa, and Neptune Thamimasadas. They use no images,
altars, or temples, except in the worship of Mars; but in his worship they
do use them.
The manner of their sacrifices is everywhere and in every case
the same; the victim stands with its two fore-feet bound together by a
cord, and the person who is about to offer, taking his station behind the
victim, gives the rope a pull, and thereby throws the animal down; as it
falls he invokes the god to whom he is offering; after which he puts a
noose round the animal's neck, and, inserting a small stick, twists it
round, and so strangles him. No fire is lighted, there is no consecration,
and no pouring out of drink-offerings; but directly that the beast is strangled
the sacrificer flays him, and then sets to work to boil the
flesh.
As Scythia, however, is utterly barren of firewood, a plan has
had to be contrived for boiling the flesh, which is the following. After
flaying the beasts, they take out all the bones, and (if they possess such
gear) put the flesh into boilers made in the country, which are very like
the cauldrons of the Lesbians, except that they are of a much larger size;
then placing the bones of the animals beneath the cauldron, they set them
alight, and so boil the meat. If they do not happen to possess a cauldron,
they make the animal's paunch hold the flesh, and pouring in at the same
time a little water, lay the bones under and light them. The bones burn
beautifully; and the paunch easily contains all the flesh when it is stript
from the bones, so that by this plan your ox is made to boil himself, and
other victims also to do the like. When the meat is all cooked, the sacrificer
offers a portion of the flesh and of the entrails, by casting it on the
ground before him. They sacrifice all sorts of cattle, but most commonly
horses.
Such are the victims offered to the other gods, and such is the
mode in which they are sacrificed; but the rites paid to Mars are different.
In every district, at the seat of government, there stands a temple of
this god, whereof the following is a description. It is a pile of brushwood,
made of a vast quantity of fagots, in length and breadth three furlongs;
in height somewhat less, having a square platform upon the top, three sides
of which are precipitous, while the fourth slopes so that men may walk
up it. Each year a hundred and fifty waggon-loads of brushwood are added
to the pile, which sinks continually by reason of the rains. An antique
iron sword is planted on the top of every such mound, and serves as the
image of Mars: yearly sacrifices of cattle and of horses are made to it,
and more victims are offered thus than to all the rest of their gods. When
prisoners are taken in war, out of every hundred men they sacrifice one,
not however with the same rites as the cattle, but with different. Libations
of wine are first poured upon their heads, after which they are slaughtered
over a vessel; the vessel is then carried up to the top of the pile, and
the blood poured upon the scymitar. While this takes place at the top of
the mound, below, by the side of the temple, the right hands and arms of
the slaughtered prisoners are cut off, and tossed on high into the air.
Then the other victims are slain, and those who have offered the sacrifice
depart, leaving the hands and arms where they may chance to have fallen,
and the bodies also, separate.
Such are the observances of the Scythians with respect to sacrifice.
They never use swine for the purpose, nor indeed is it their wont to breed
them in any part of their country.
In what concerns war, their customs are the following. The Scythian
soldier drinks the blood of the first man he overthrows in battle. Whatever
number he slays, he cuts off all their heads, and carries them to the king;
since he is thus entitled to a share of the booty, whereto he forfeits
all claim if he does not produce a head. In order to strip the skull of
its covering, he makes a cut round the head above the ears, and, laying
hold of the scalp, shakes the skull out; then with the rib of an ox he
scrapes the scalp clean of flesh, and softening it by rubbing between the
hands, uses it thenceforth as a napkin. The Scyth is proud of these scalps,
and hangs them from his bridle-rein; the greater the number of such napkins
that a man can show, the more highly is he esteemed among them. Many make
themselves cloaks, like the capotes of our peasants, by sewing a quantity
of these scalps together. Others flay the right arms of their dead enemies,
and make of the skin, which stripped off with the nails hanging to it,
a covering for their quivers. Now the skin of a man is thick and glossy,
and would in whiteness surpass almost all other hides. Some even flay the
entire body of their enemy, and stretching it upon a frame carry it about
with them wherever they ride. Such are the Scythian customs with respect
to scalps and skins.
The skulls of their enemies, not indeed of all, but of those whom
they most detest, they treat as follows. Having sawn off the portion below
the eyebrows, and cleaned out the inside, they cover the outside with leather.
When a man is poor, this is all that he does; but if he is rich, he also
lines the inside with gold: in either case the skull is used as a drinking-cup.
They do the same with the skulls of their own kith and kin if they have
been at feud with them, and have vanquished them in the presence of the
king. When strangers whom they deem of any account come to visit them,
these skulls are handed round, and the host tells how that these were his
relations who made war upon him, and how that he got the better of them;
all this being looked upon as proof of bravery.
Once a year the governor of each district, at a set place in his
own province, mingles a bowl of wine, of which all Scythians have a right
to drink by whom foes have been slain; while they who have slain no enemy
are not allowed to taste of the bowl, but sit aloof in disgrace. No greater
shame than this can happen to them. Such as have slain a very large number
of foes, have two cups instead of one, and drink from
both.
Scythia has an abundance of soothsayers, who foretell the future
by means of a number of willow wands. A large bundle of these wands is
brought and laid on the ground. The soothsayer unties the bundle, and places
each wand by itself, at the same time uttering his prophecy: then, while
he is still speaking, he gathers the rods together again, and makes them
up once more into a bundle. This mode of divination is of home growth in
Scythia. The Enarees, or woman-like men, have another method, which they
say Venus taught them. It is done with the inner bark of the linden-tree.
They take a piece of this bark, and, splitting it into three strips, keep
twining the strips about their fingers, and untwining them, while they
prophesy.
Whenever the Scythian king falls sick, he sends for the three soothsayers
of most renown at the time, who come and make trial of their art in the
mode above described. Generally they say that the king is ill because such
or such a person, mentioning his name, has sworn falsely by the royal hearth.
This is the usual oath among the Scythians, when they wish to swear with
very great solemnity. Then the man accused of having foresworn himself
is arrested and brought before the king. The soothsayers tell him that
by their art it is clear he has sworn a false oath by the royal hearth,
and so caused the illness of the king- he denies the charge, protests that
he has sworn no false oath, and loudly complains of the wrong done to him.
Upon this the king sends for six new soothsayers, who try the matter by
soothsaying. If they too find the man guilty of the offence, straightway
he is beheaded by those who first accused him, and his goods are parted
among them: if, on the contrary, they acquit him, other soothsayers, and
again others, are sent for, to try the case. Should the greater number
decide in favour of the man's innocence, then they who first accused him
forfeit their lives.
The mode of their execution is the following: a waggon is loaded
with brushwood, and oxen are harnessed to it; the soothsayers, with their
feet tied together, their hands bound behind their backs, and their mouths
gagged, are thrust into the midst of the brushwood; finally the wood is
set alight, and the oxen, being startled, are made to rush off with the
waggon. It often happens that the oxen and the soothsayers are both consumed
together, but sometimes the pole of the waggon is burnt through, and the
oxen escape with a scorching. Diviners- lying diviners, they call them-
are burnt in the way described, for other causes besides the one here spoken
of. When the king puts one of them to death, he takes care not to let any
of his sons survive: all the male offspring are slain with the father,
only the females being allowed to live.
Oaths among the Scyths are accompanied with the following ceremonies:
a large earthern bowl is filled with wine, and the parties to the oath,
wounding themselves slightly with a knife or an awl, drop some of their
blood into the wine; then they plunge into the mixture a scymitar, some
arrows, a battle-axe, and a javelin, all the while repeating prayers; lastly
the two contracting parties drink each a draught from the bowl, as do also
the chief men among their followers.
The tombs of their kings are in the land of the Gerrhi, who dwell
at the point where the Borysthenes is first navigable. Here, when the king
dies, they dig a grave, which is square in shape, and of great size. When
it is ready, they take the king's corpse, and, having opened the belly,
and cleaned out the inside, fill the cavity with a preparation of chopped
cypress, frankincense, parsley-seed, and anise-seed, after which they sew
up the opening, enclose the body in wax, and, placing it on a waggon, carry
it about through all the different tribes. On this procession each tribe,
when it receives the corpse, imitates the example which is first set by
the Royal Scythians; every man chops off a piece of his ear, crops his
hair close, and makes a cut all round his arm, lacerates his forehead and
his nose, and thrusts an arrow through his left hand. Then they who have
the care of the corpse carry it with them to another of the tribes which
are under the Scythian rule, followed by those whom they first visited.
On completing the circuit of all the tribes under their sway, they find
themselves in the country of the Gerrhi, who are the most remote of all,
and so they come to the tombs of the kings. There the body of the dead
king is laid in the grave prepared for it, stretched upon a mattress; spears
are fixed in the ground on either side of the corpse, and beams stretched
across above it to form a roof, which is covered with a thatching of osier
twigs. In the open space around the body of the king they bury one of his
concubines, first killing her by strangling, and also his cup-bearer, his
cook, his groom, his lacquey, his messenger, some of his horses, firstlings
of all his other possessions, and some golden cups; for they use neither
silver nor brass. After this they set to work, and raise a vast mound above
the grave, all of them vying with each other and seeking to make it as
tall as possible.
When a year is gone by, further ceremonies take place. Fifty of
the best of the late king's attendants are taken, all native Scythians-
for, as bought slaves are unknown in the country, the Scythian kings choose
any of their subjects that they like, to wait on them- fifty of these are
taken and strangled, with fifty of the most beautiful horses. When they
are dead, their bowels are taken out, and the cavity cleaned, filled full
of chaff, and straightway sewn up again. This done, a number of posts are
driven into the ground, in sets of two pairs each, and on every pair half
the felly of a wheel is placed archwise; then strong stakes are run lengthways
through the bodies of the horses from tail to neck, and they are mounted
up upon the fellies, so that the felly in front supports the shoulders
of the horse, while that behind sustains the belly and quarters, the legs
dangling in mid-air; each horse is furnished with a bit and bridle, which
latter is stretched out in front of the horse, and fastened to a peg. The
fifty strangled youths are then mounted severally on the fifty horses.
To effect this, a second stake is passed through their bodies along the
course of the spine to the neck; the lower end of which projects from the
body, and is fixed into a socket, made in the stake that runs lengthwise
down the horse. The fifty riders are thus ranged in a circle round the
tomb, and so left.
Such, then, is the mode in which the kings are buried: as for the
people, when any one dies, his nearest of kin lay him upon a waggon and
take him round to all his friends in succession: each receives them in
turn and entertains them with a banquet, whereat the dead man is served
with a portion of all that is set before the others; this is done for forty
days, at the end of which time the burial takes place. After the burial,
those engaged in it have to purify themselves, which they do in the following
way. First they well soap and wash their heads; then, in order to cleanse
their bodies, they act as follows: they make a booth by fixing in the ground
three sticks inclined towards one another, and stretching around them woollen
felts, which they arrange so as to fit as close as possible: inside the
booth a dish is placed upon the ground, into which they put a number of
red-hot stones, and then add some hemp-seed.
Hemp grows in Scythia: it is very like flax; only that it is a
much coarser and taller plant: some grows wild about the country, some
is produced by cultivation: the Thracians make garments of it which closely
resemble linen; so much so, indeed, that if a person has never seen hemp
he is sure to think they are linen, and if he has, unless he is very experienced
in such matters, he will not know of which material they
are.
The Scythians, as I said, take some of this hemp-seed, and, creeping
under the felt coverings, throw it upon the red-hot stones; immediately
it smokes, and gives out such a vapour as no Grecian vapour-bath can exceed;
the Scyths, delighted, shout for joy, and this vapour serves them instead
of a water-bath; for they never by any chance wash their bodies with water.
Their women make a mixture of cypress, cedar, and frankincense wood, which
they pound into a paste upon a rough piece of stone, adding a little water
to it. With this substance, which is of a thick consistency, they plaster
their faces all over, and indeed their whole bodies. A sweet odour is thereby
imparted to them, and when they take off the plaster on the day following,
their skin is clean and glossy.
The Scythians have an extreme hatred of all foreign customs, particularly
of those in use among the Greeks, as the instances of Anacharsis, and,
more lately, of Scylas, have fully shown. The former, after he had travelled
over a great portion of the world, and displayed wherever he went many
proofs of wisdom, as he sailed through the Hellespont on his return to
Scythia touched at Cyzicus. There he found the inhabitants celebrating
with much pomp and magnificence a festival to the Mother of the Gods, and
was himself induced to make a vow to the goddess, whereby he engaged, if
he got back safe and sound to his home, that he would give her a festival
and a night-procession in all respects like those which he had seen in
Cyzicus. When, therefore, he arrived in Scythia, he betook himself to the
district called the Woodland, which lies opposite the course of Achilles,
and is covered with trees of all manner of different kinds, and there went
through all the sacred rites with the tabour in his hand, and the images
tied to him. While thus employed, he was noticed by one of the Scythians,
who went and told king Saulius what he had seen. Then king Saulius came
in person, and when he perceived what Anacharsis was about, he shot at
him with an arrow and killed him. To this day, if you ask the Scyths about
Anacharsis, they pretend ignorance of him, because of his Grecian travels
and adoption of the customs of foreigners. I learnt, however, from Timnes,
the steward of Ariapithes, that Anacharsis was paternal uncle to the Scythian
king Idanthyrsus, being the son of Gnurus, who was the son of Lycus and
the grandson of Spargapithes. If Anacharsis were really of this house,
it must have been by his own brother that he was slain, for Idanthyrsus
was a son of the Saulius who put Anacharsis to death.
I have heard, however, another tale, very different from this,
which is told by the Peloponnesians: they say, that Anacharsis was sent
by the king of the Scyths to make acquaintance with Greece- that he went,
and on his return home reported that the Greeks were all occupied in the
pursuit of every kind of knowledge, except the Lacedaemonians; who, however,
alone knew how to converse sensibly. A silly tale this, which the Greeks
have invented for their amusement! There is no doubt that Anacharsis suffered
death in the mode already related, on account of his attachment to foreign
customs, and the intercourse which he held with the
Greeks.
Scylas, likewise, the son of Ariapithes, many years later, met
with almost the very same fate. Ariapithes, the Scythian king, had several
sons, among them this Scylas, who was the child, not of a native Scyth,
but of a woman of Istria. Bred up by her, Scylas gained an acquaintance
with the Greek language and letters. Some time afterwards, Ariapithes was
treacherously slain by Spargapithes, king of the Agathyrsi; whereupon Scylas
succeeded to the throne, and married one of his father's wives, a woman
named Opoea. This Opoea was a Scythian by birth, and had brought Ariapithes
a son called Oricus. Now when Scylas found himself king of Scythia, as
he disliked the Scythic mode of life, and was attached, by his bringing
up, to the manners of the Greeks, he made it his usual practice, whenever
he came with his army to the town of the Borysthenites, who, according
to their own account, are colonists of the Milesians- he made it his practice,
I say, to leave the army before the city, and, having entered within the
walls by himself, and carefully closed the gates, to exchange his Scythian
dress for Grecian garments, and in this attire to walk about the forum,
without guards or retinue. The Borysthenites kept watch at the gates, that
no Scythian might see the king thus apparelled. Scylas, meanwhile, lived
exactly as the Greeks, and even offered sacrifices to the gods according
to the Grecian rites. In this way he would pass a month, or more, with
the Borysthenites, after which he would clothe himself again in his Scythian
dress, and so take his departure. This he did repeatedly, and even built
himself a house in Borysthenes, and married a wife there who was a native
of the place.
But when the time came that was ordained to bring him woe, the
occasion of his ruin was the following. He wanted to be initiated in the
Bacchic mysteries, and was on the point of obtaining admission to the rites,
when a most strange prodigy occurred to him. The house which he possessed,
as I mentioned a short time back, in the city of the Borysthenites, a building
of great extent and erected at a vast cost, round which there stood a number
of sphinxes and griffins carved in white marble, was struck by lightning
from on high, and burnt to the ground. Scylas, nevertheless, went on and
received the initiation. Now the Scythians are wont to reproach the Greeks
with their Bacchanal rage, and to say that it is not reasonable to imagine
there is a god who impels men to madness. No sooner, therefore, was Scylas
initiated in the Bacchic mysteries than one of the Borysthenites went and
carried the news to the Scythians "You Scyths laugh at us" he said, "because
we rave when the god seizes us. But now our god has seized upon your king,
who raves like us, and is maddened by the influence. If you think I do
not tell you true, come with me, and I will show him to you." The chiefs
of the Scythians went with the man accordingly, and the Borysthenite, conducting
them into the city, placed them secretly on one of the towers. Presently
Scylas passed by with the band of revellers, raving like the rest, and
was seen by the watchers. Regarding the matter as a very great misfortune
they instantly departed, and came and told the army what they had
witnessed.
When, therefore, Scylas, after leaving Borysthenes, was about returning
home, the Scythians broke out into revolt. They put at their head Octamasadas,
grandson (on the mother's side) of Teres. Then Scylas, when he learned
the danger with which he was threatened, and the reason of the disturbance,
made his escape to Thrace. Octamasadas, discovering whither he had fled,
marched after him, and had reached the Ister, when he was met by the forces
of the Thracians. The two armies were about to engage, but before they
joined battle, Sitalces sent a message to Octamasadas to this effect- "Why
should there be trial of arms betwixt thee and me? Thou art my own sister's
son, and thou hast in thy keeping my brother. Surrender him into my hands,
and I will give thy Scylas back to thee. So neither thou nor I will risk
our armies." Sitalces sent this message to Octamasadas, by a herald, and
Octamasadas, with whom a brother of Sitalces had formerly taken refuge,
accepted the terms. He surrendered his own uncle to Sitalces, and obtained
in exchange his brother Scylas. Sitalces took his brother with him and
withdrew; but Octamasadas beheaded Scylas upon the spot. Thus rigidly do
the Scythians maintain their own customs, and thus severely do they punish
such as adopt foreign usages.
What the population of Scythia is I was not able to learn with
certainty; the accounts which I received varied from one another. I heard
from some that they were very numerous indeed; others made their numbers
but scanty for such a nation as the Scyths. Thus much, however, I witnessed
with my own eyes. There is a tract called Exampaeus between the Borysthenes
and the Hypanis. I made some mention of it in a former place, where I spoke
of the bitter stream which rising there flows into the Hypanis, and renders
the water of that river undrinkable. Here then stands a brazen bowl, six
times as big as that at the entrance of the Euxine, which Pausanias, the
son of Cleombrotus, set up. Such as have never seen that vessel may understand
me better if I say that the Scythian bowl holds with ease six hundred amphorae,
and is of the thickness of six fingers' breadth. The natives gave me the
following account of the manner in which it was made. One of their kings,
by name Ariantas, wishing to know the number of his subjects, ordered them
all to bring him, on pain of death, the point off one of their arrows.
They obeyed; and he collected thereby a vast heap of arrow-heads, which
he resolved to form into a memorial that might go down to posterity. Accordingly
he made of them this bowl, and dedicated it at Exampaeus. This was all
that I could learn concerning the number of the Scythians.
The country has no marvels except its rivers, which are larger
and more numerous than those of any other land. These, and the vastness
of the great plain, are worthy of note, and one thing besides, which I
am about to mention. They show a footmark of Hercules, impressed on a rock,
in shape like the print of a man's foot, but two cubits in length. It is
in the neighbourhood of the Tyras. Having described this, I return to the
subject on which I originally proposed to discourse.
The preparations of Darius against the Scythians had begun, messengers
had been despatched on all sides with the king's commands, some being required
to furnish troops, others to supply ships, others again to bridge the Thracian
Bosphorus, when Artabanus, son of Hystaspes and brother of Darius, entreated
the king to desist from his expedition, urging on him the great difficulty
of attacking Scythia. Good, however, as the advice of Artabanus was, it
failed to persuade Darius. He therefore ceased his reasonings; and Darius,
when his preparations were complete, led his army forth from
Susa.
It was then that a certain Persian, by name Oeobazus, the father
of three sons, all of whom were to accompany the army, came and prayed
the king that he would allow one of his sons to remain with him. Darius
made answer, as if he regarded him in the light of a friend who had urged
a moderate request, "that he would allow them all to remain." Oeobazus
was overjoyed, expecting that all his children would be excused from serving;
the king, however, bade his attendants take the three sons of Oeobazus
and forthwith put them to death. Thus they were all left behind, but not
till they had been deprived of life.
When Darius, on his march from Susa, reached the territory of Chalcedon
on the shores of the Bosphorus, where the bridge had been made, he took
ship and sailed thence to the Cyanean islands, which, according to the
Greeks, once floated. He took his seat also in the temple and surveyed
the Pontus, which is indeed well worthy of consideration. There is not
in the world any other sea so wonderful: it extends in length eleven thousand
one hundred furlongs, and its breadth, at the widest part, is three thousand
three hundred. The mouth is but four furlongs wide; and this strait, called
the Bosphorus, and across which the bridge of Darius had been thrown, is
a hundred and twenty furlongs in length, reaching from the Euxine to the
Propontis. The Propontis is five hundred furlongs across, and fourteen
hundred long. Its waters flow into the Hellespont, the length of which
is four hundred furlongs, and the width no more than seven. The Hellespont
opens into the wide sea called the Egean.
The mode in which these distances have been measured is the following.
In a long day a vessel generally accomplishes about seventy thousand fathoms,
in the night sixty thous