SCYTHIA
Encyclopedia Britannica
11th edition, vol 24, pp. 526-529
Ellis Hovell Minns
Scythia (Gr, xx), originally (e.g. in Herodotus iv, 1. 142), the country of
the Scythae or the country over which the nomad Scythae were lords, that is,
the steppe from the Carpathians to the Don. With the disappearance of the
Scythae as an ethnic and political entity, the name of Scythia gives place in
its original seat to that of Sarmatia, and is artificially applied by
geographers, on the one hand, to the Dobrudzha, the lesser Scythia of Strabo,
where it remained in official use until Byzantine times; on the other, to the
unknown regions of northern Asia, the Eastern Scythia of Strabo, the
"Scythia intra et extra Imaum" of Ptolemy; but throughout classical
literature Scythia generally meant all regions to the north and north-east of
the Black Sea, and the Scythian (Scythes) any barbarian coming from those
parts. Herodotus (I.c.), to whom with Hippocrates (De aere, %c. 24, sqq) we own
our earliest knowledge (Homer, Il. Xiii, 5, speaks of "mare-milkers,"
and Hesiod, ap. Strabo vii. 3 (7) mentions Scythae) of the land and its
inhabitants, tries to restrict this merely geographical usage and to confine
the word Scyth to a certain race or at any rate to that race and its subjects,
but even he seems to slip back into the older use. Hence there is much doubt as
to his exact meaning.
His account of the geography falls into two irreconcilable parts; one (iv. 99
sqq), in connexion with the tale of the invasion of Darius, makes of Scythia a
kind of chessboard 4000 stades square on which the combatants can make their
moves quite unhindered by the great rivers: the other (16-20), founded on what
he learned from Greeks of Olbia and supplemented by the tales of the 7th
century traveler Aristeas of Proconnesus, is not very far removed from
first-hand information and can be made more or less to tally with the lie of
the land. In accordance with this we can give the relative positions of the
various tribes, and an excursus on the rivers (47-57) lets us define their
actual seats. In western Scythia, starting from Olbia and going northwards, we
have Callippidae on the lower Hypanis (Bug), Alazones where the Tyras (Dnister)
and Hypanis come near each other in their middle courses, and Aroteres
("Ploughmen") above them. These tribes raised wheat, presumably in
the river valleys, and sold it for export; in the eastern half from west to
east were Georgi (perhaps the same as Aroteres) between the Ingul and the
Borysthenes (Dnieper), nomad Scyths and Royal Scyths between the Borysthenes
and the Tanais (don). Above all these stretched a row of non-Scythian tribes
from west to east: on the Maris (Maros) in Transylvania the Agathyrsi; Neuri in
Podolia and Kiev, Androphagi and Melanchlaeni in Poltava, (Ryazan) and Tambov.
On the lower Don and Volga we have the Sauromatae, and on the middle course of
the Volga the Budini with the great wooden town of Gelonus and its semi-Greek
inhabitants. From this region started an important trade route eastward by the
Thyssagetae among the southern Urals, the Iyrcae on the Tobol and Irtysh and
the Kirghiz steppe, where dwelt other Scyths, regarded as colonists of those in
Europe: then by the Argippaei in the Altai and the Issedones in the Tarym
basis, to the one-eyed Arimaspi on the borders of China, who stole their gold
from the watchful griffins, and who marched with goat-footed men and
Hyperboreans reaching to the sea. To the south of Scythia the Crimean mountains
were inhabited by a non-Scythic race, the Tauri. (See also articles on these
tribes.)
Ethnology: - Herodotus expressly divides the Scythians into the
Agriculturists, Callipidae, Alazones, Aroteres and Georgi in the western part
of the country, and the Nomads with their Royal Scyths to the east. The latter
claimed dominion over all the rest. The question arises whether we have to do
with the various tribes of one race in different stages of civilization, or
with a mixed population called by foreigners after the ruling tribe. The latter
seems by far the more probable. The affinities of this tribe have been sought
in various directions, and the evidence suggests that it was itself of mixed
blood. We know that in the 2nd century A. D., when the steppes were dominated
by the Sauromatae (q.v.), the majority of the barbarian names in the
inscriptions of Olbia, Tanais, and Panticapaeum were Iranian, and can infer
that the Sauromatae spoke an Iranian language. Pliny speaks of their descent
from the Medes. Now the Sauromatae are represented as half-caste Scyths
speaking a corrupt variety of Scythian. Presumably, therefore, the Scyths also
spoke an Iranian dialect. But of the Scythic words preserved by Herodotus some
are Iranian, others, especially the names of deities, have found no
satisfactory explanation in any Indo-European language. Indeed they rather
suggest a Ugrian origin. Nevertheless, the general opinion has been that the
Scyths were Iranian. The present writer believes that they were a horde which
came down from upper Asia, conquered an Iranian-speaking people, and in time
adopted the speech of its subjects. The settled Scythians would be the remains
of this Iranian population, or the different tribes of them, may have been
connected with their neighbors beyond Scythian dominion - Thracian Getae and
Arimaspi, Slavonic Neuri, Finnish Androphagi and such like. The Cimmerians who
preceded the Scythians used Iranian proper names, and probably represented this
Iranian element in greater purity. Herodotus gives three legends of the origin
of the Scyths (iv. 5-12); these, though they contradict each other, can be
reconciled with the view stated above. Two of them seem to be the same story;
one is very strongly Hellenized, the other, in more or less native shape, is
shortly this. The tribe is autochthonous, claiming descent from a son of the
river Borysthenes Targitaos, who lived a thousand years before. Of his three
sons the youngest Colaxais, is preferred by an ordeal of picking up certain
objects which fell from heaven, - a plough, a yoke, an axe, and a cup, - and
becomes the ancestor of the ruling clan of Paralatae; from the other sons,
Lipoxais and Harpoxais, are descended minor clans, and the name of the whole
people is Scolotai, not Scythae, which is used by the Greeks alone. In this
story the names make sense in Iranian, the tribes are not again mentioned
except when this passage is copied, the objects are hardly such as would be
held sacred by nomads, the form of ordeal is to be paralleled in Iranian
legends, and the people say themselves that they are not really Scythae. Surely
this is the national legend of the agricultural Scythians about Olbia, and the
name Scoloti, by which careful modern writers designate the Royal Scyths, is
the true designation of the subject race. The royal line of these is quite
distinct from the true Royal Scyths, who, like most nomad conquerors, allowed
their subjects to preserve their own organizations.
The third account fails chiefly in being too plausible, but there seems no
reason to reject it as an artificial combination of unconnected facts.
According to it the Scyths dwell in Asia, and were forced by the Massagetae
over the Araxer(Volga?) Into the land of the Cimmerians. Aristeas says that the
first impulse came from the Arimaspi, who displaced the Pasodones, who in turn
fell upon the Scyths. This comes to much the same thing, as the Massagetae seem
to have contained an element which had come in from the land of the Pasedones.
The Scyths having fallen upon them from the north-east, the Cimmerians appear
to have given way in two directions, towards the south-west, where the tombs of
their kings were shown on the Tyras (Dniester) and one body joined with the
Treres of Thrace in invading Asia Minor by the Hellespont; and towards the
south-east where another body threatened the Assyrians, who called them
Gimirrai (Hebrew Gomer; Gen. Xi.). They were followed by the Scyths (Ashguzai,
Heb. Ashkenax) whom the Assyrians welcomed as allies and used against the
Cimmerians, against the Medes and even against Egypt. Hence the references to
the Scyths in the Hebrew prophet (Jer. Iv.3, vi. 7). This is all put in the
latter half of the 7th century B. C. Herodotus says that the Scyths ruled Media
for twenty-eight years, and were then massacred or expelled. The Assyrian
evidence is in the main a confirmation of Herodotus, though most writers think
that the Scythians who troubled Asia were Sacae from the east of the Caspian
(H. Winckler, Altorientalische Forschungen, p. 484 sqq.) If the Scyths came out
of upper Asia, the Scythian colonists beyond the Iyrcae might be a division
which had remained nearer the homeland, but in dealing with nomads were can
suppose such a return as that of the Calmucks (Kalmuks) in the 18th century.
The physical features of the Scyths are not described by Herodotus, but
Hippocrates (l.c.) Draws a picture of them wich makes them very similar to the
Mongols as they appeared to the Franciscan missionaries in the 13th century. He
says they are quite unlike any other race of men, and very like each other. The
main point seems to be a tendency to slackness, fatness and excess of humours.
The men are said to be in appearance very like eunuchs, and both sexes have a
tendency to sexual indifference amounting in the men to impotence. When a man
finds himself in this condition he assumes the women's dress and habits.
Herodotus mentions the existence of this class, called Enarees, and says that
they suffer from a sacred disease owing to the wrath of the goddess of Ascalon
whose shrine they had plundered. Reinegg describes a similar state of things in
the Nogai in the 18th century. The whole account suggests a Tatar clan in the
last stage of degeneracy. Hippocrates says that this only applies to the ruling
class, not to the slaves, but gives as the reason the want of exercise among
the former. The skulls dug up in Scythic graves throw no light on the question,
some bring round and some long. The representations of nomads on objects of
Greek art show people with full beards and shaggy hair, such as cannot be
reconciled with Hippocrates; but the only reliefs which seem to be accurate
belong to a late date when the ruling clan was Sarmatian rather than Scythic.
Customs. - Herodotus gives a good survey of the customs of the Scyths:
it seems mostly to apply to the ruling race. Again the closest analogy is the
state of the Mongols in the 13th century, but too much weight must not be put
on this, as the natural conditions of steppe- ranging nomads dictated the
greater part of them. Still the correspondence of religion and of funeral rites
is very close. The Scyths lived upon the produce of their herds of cattle and
horses, their main food being the flesh of the latter, either cooked in a
cauldron or made into a kind of haggis, and the milk of mares from which they
made cheese and kumiss (a fermented drink resembling buttermilk). This
necessitated their constantly moving in search of fresh pasture, spending the
spring and autumn upon the open steppe, the winter and summer by the rivers for
the sake of moisture and shelter. The men journeyed on horseback, the women in
wagons with felt tilts. These were drawn by their cattle, and were the homes of
each family. Hence the Greek names, Abii, Hippemolgi, Hamaxobii. The women were
kept in subjection, and were far from enjoying the liberty granted them among
the Sauromatae, among whom they rode on horseback and engaged in war. Polygamy
was practices, the son inheriting his father's wives. Both men and women
avoided washing, but there was something of the nature of a vapour bath, with
which Herodotus has confused a custom of using the smoke of hemp as a narcotic.
The women daubed themselves with a kind of cosmetic paste. The dress of the men
is well shown upon the Kul Oba and Chertomlyk vases, and upon other Greek works
of art made for Scythic use. It must not be confused with the fanciful
barbarian costumes that are so common upon the Attic posts. They wore coats
confined by belts, trousers tucked into soft boots, and hoods or tall pointed
caps. The women had flowing robes, tall pointed caps, and veils descending over
most of the figure. Both sexes wore many stamped gold plates sewn upon their
clothes in lines or seams. Their horses had severe bits, and were adorned with
nose pieces, cheek pieces and saddle cloths. True stirrups were unknown. In war
the nation was divided into three sub-kingdoms, and these into companies, each
with its commander. The companies had yearly feasts, at which the commander
honoured warriors who had slain one or more of the enemy. As evidence of such
prowess, and as a token of his right to a share of any spoil. The warrior was
accustomed to scalp his enemy and adorn his bridle with the trophy. I n the
case of a special enemy or an adversary overcome in a private dispute before
the king, he would make a cup of the skull, mounting it in bull's hide or in
gold. The tactics in war were the traditional nomad tactics of harassing the
enemy on the march, constantly retreating before him and avoiding a general
engagement. Their weapons consisted of bow and arrows, short swords, spears and
axes. The government was a despotism, but a king who aroused the extreme
dissatisfaction of his subjects was liable to be murdered.
Religion - The religion of the Scyths was nature worship. Herodotus (iv.
59) gives a list of their gods, with the Greek deities corresponding, but we
cannot tell what aspect of the Greek deity is in question. He says they chiefly
reverence Tabiti (Hestia), next Papaeus and his wife Apia (Zeus and Ge), then
Oitosyros (Apollo) and Argimpasa (Aphrodite Urania). These are common to all
the Scythians, but Thamimasadas (Poseidon) is peculiar to the Royal Scyths.
They set up no images or altars or temples save to Ares only. To Ares they make
a heap of faggots three stades square, with three sides steep and one inclined,
and bring to it a hundred and fifty fresh loads of faggots every years. Upon
the top is set up a sword which is the image of Ares; to this they sacrifice
captives, pouring their blood over it. The account of the cult of Ares, for
whom no Scythian name is given, appears to be an addition, and the mention of
such masses of faggots suggests the wooded district of the agricultural
Scythians, not the treeless steppe of the Royal tribe. The Scythian pantheon is
not distinctive, and can be paralleled among the Tartars and among the
Iranians. The Scyths had a method of divination with sticks, and the Enarees,
who claimed to be soothsayers by grant of the goddess who had afflicted them,
used another method by splitting bast fibers. They intervened in case of the
king's falling sick, when it was assumed that some man had sworn by the king's
hearth and broken his oath. If a man accused of this denies it, other diviners
are called, and if these concur, he is beheaded and his sons slain and his
goods given to the diviners. But if a majority of diviners decide against the
accusers, the latter are set upon a wagon-load of brushwood and burned to
death. The burial rites are the most fully described. Private persons were
merely carried about among their friends, who held wakes in their honour, and
then buried forty days after death. But the funerals of the kings were much
more elaborate. They exhibit the extreme development of the principle of
surrounding the dead man with everything in which he found pleasure during his
life. The tombs of the kings were in the land of the Gerrhus near the great
bend of the Dnieper where the chief tumuli have been excavated. The body was
embalmed and filled with aromatic herbs, and then brought to this region,
passing through the lands of various tribes. The Royal Scyths who followed the
body were accustomed to cut about their faces and arms, and each tribe that the
cortege met upon its way had to join it and conform ti this expression of
grief. Arrived at the place of burial, the body was set in a square pit with
spears marking out its sides and a roof of matting. Then one of the king's
concubines and his cup-bearer, cook, groom, messenger and horses were strangled
and laid by him, and roundabout offerings of all his goods and cups of gold 0
no silver or bronze. After this they raised a great mound, striving to make it
as high as possible. A year later they strangled fifty youths of the dead man's
servants (all Scyths born) and fifty of the best horses, stuffed them and
mounted them in a circle about the tomb.
Tombs. - The description is generally born out by the evidence of the
tombs opened in the Scythic area. None agrees in every point, but almost every
detail finds a close parallel in some tomb or other. The chief divergence is in
the presence of silver and copper objects, but the great quantity of gold is
the most striking fact, and to say that there was nothing but gold seems merely
an exaggeration. Tombs to which the name Scythic is generally applied form a
well- defined class. They are preceded over the whole area by a much simpler
form of burial marked by the practice of staining the bones with red ochre, and
the presence of one or two rude pots and nothing more; yet that some were tombs
of great chiefs is shown by the great size of the barrows heaped over them.
They have been referred to the Cimmerians, but for this there is no clear
evidence. The Scythic tombs can be roughly dated by the objects of Greek art
that they contain. They seem to begin about the 6th century B. C., and to
continue til the 2nd century A. D.' that is, they cover the period of the
Scythic domination according to the account accepted above, and that of the
Sarmatian, and so suggest that, as far as the archaeological evidence goes,
there was little more than a change of name and perhaps of substitution of one
ruling clan for another - not areal change of population. The finest of the
class were opened about the bend of the Dnieper, where we should put land
Gerrhus. Others are found to the south-west of the central area, and in the
governments of Kiev and Poltava we have many tombs with Scythic
characteristics, but a difference (e.g. the fewness of the horses) which makes
us think of the settled tribes under Scythic domination. Others occur in the
flat northern half of the Crimea, and even close to Kerch, where the famous Kul
Oba seems to have held a Scythic chieftain who had adopted a veneer of Greek
tastes, but remained a barbarian at heart. East of the Maeotis, especially
along the river Kuban, are many groups of barrows showing the same culture as
those of Gerrhus but in a purer form. Farther to the north and east the series
seems to expend into Siberia, but in this region excavations have been few.
Unfortunately very few of these barrows have come down to us un-plundered, and
we cannot find one complete example and take it as a type. Soon after they were
heaped up, before the beams supporting the central chamber had rotted, thieves
made a practice of driving a mine into the mound straight to where the
valuables were deposited, and it is only by the collapse of this mine and the
crushing of the robber after he had thrown everything into confusion that the
treasures of the Chertomlyk barrow, on the whole the most typical, were
preserved to us. This was 60 ft. Height and 1100 ft. Round' about it was a
stone plinth, and it was approached by a kind of stone alley. A central shaft
descended 35 ft. 6 in. Below the surface of the earth, and from each corner of
it at the bottom opened out side chambers. The north-west chamber communicated
with a large irregular chamber into which the plunderer's mine opened. In the
central pit all was in confusion, but here the king seems to have lain on a
bier. His belongings, found piled up near the mine. Seem to have included a
combined bow-case and quiver and a sword sheath, each covered with plates of
gold of Greek work, there swords with gold hafts, a hone with gold mounting, a
whip, many other gold plates and a heap of arrow-heads. In the north-west
chamber was a woman's skeleton, and she had here jewels, mostly of Greek work.
She was attended by a man, and three other men were buried in the other
chambers. They were supplied with simpler weapons and adornments, but even so
their clothes had hundreds of stamped gold plates and strips of various shapes
sewn on to them. By every skeleton were drinking vessels. Store of wine was
contained in six amphorae, and in two bronze cauldrons were mutton-bones. The
most wonderful object of all was a great two-handled vase standing 3 ft. High
and made to hold kumiss. The greater part of its body is covered by a pattern
of acanthus leaves, but on the shoulder is a frieze showing nomads breaking in
wold mares, our chief authority for Scythian costume. To the west of the main
shaft were three square pits with horses and their harness, and by them two
pits with men's skeletons. In the heap itself was found an immense quantity of
pieces of harness and what may be remains of a funeral car. The Greek work
would seem to date the burial as of the 3rd century B. C.
At Alexandropol in the same district was an even more elaborate tomb. But its
contents were in even greater confusion. Another tomb in this region,
Melgunov's barrow, found as long ago as 1760, contained a dagger-sheath and
pollen of Assyrian work and Greek things of the 6th century. In the Kul Oba
tomb mentioned above the chamber was of stone and the contents, with one or two
exceptions, of purely Greek workmanship, but the ideas underlying are the same
- the king has his wife, his servant and his horse, his amphorae with wine, his
cauldron with mutton-bones, his drinking vessels and his weapons, the latter
being almost the only objects of barbarian style. One of the cups has a frieze
with reliefs of natives supplementing that on the Chertomlyk vase.
East of the Maeotis on the Kuban we have many barrows; the most interesting are
the groups called the Seven Brothers, and those of Karagodeuashkh,
Kostromskaya, Ul and Kelermes, the latter remarkable for objects of Assyrian
style, the others for the enormous slaughter of horses; on the Ul were four
hundred in one grave.
Art.- Certain of the objects which occur in these Scythic graves are of
special forms typical for the Scythic area. Most interesting of these is the
dagger or sword, always very short, save in the latest graves, and
distinguished by a heart-shaped guard marking the juncture of hilt and blade;
its sheath is also characteristic, having a triangular projection on one side
and usually a separate shape: these peculiar forms were necessitated by a
special way of hanging the dagger from two straps that might not interfere with
a rider's movements. Just the same form of short sword was used in Persia and
is shown on the sculptures at Persepolis. Another special type is the bow-case,
made to take a short curved bow and to accommodate arrows as well. Further,
there is the peculiar cauldron on one conical foot, round which the fire was
built, the cylindrical hone pierced for suspension, and the cup with a rounded
bottom.
Assyrian and afterwards Greek craftsmen working for Scythic employers were
compelled to decorate these outlandish forms, which they did according to their
own fashion: but there was also a native style with conventionalized beast
decoration, which was almost always employed for the adornment of bits and
horses' gear, and very often for weapons. This style and the types of dagger,
cauldron, bit and two-looped socketed axehead run right across from Hungary to
the upper Yenisei, where a special Bronze Age culture seems to have developed
them. But even here it seems impossible to deny some influence coming from the
Aegean area, and Scythic beasts are very like certain products of Mycenaean and
early Ionic art. Again, the Scythic style is interesting as being one element
in the art of the barbarians who conquered the Roman Empire and the zoomorphic
decoration of the early middle ages.
The dominance from the Yenisei to the Carpathians of a distinct style of art
which, whatever its original elements may have been, seems to have taken shape
as far east as the Yenisei basin is an additional argument in favour of a
certain movement of population from the far north-east towards the south
Russian steppes. It would correspond in time with the movement of the Scyths of
which Herodotus speaks, and it may be inferred that immigrants coming from
those regions were rather allied to the Tatar family of nations than to the
Iranian. Similar movements from the same regions appear also to have penetrated
Iran itself; hence the resemblance between the dress and daggers of certain
classes of warriors on the sculptures of Persepolis and those shown on the Luk
Oba vase. An Iranian origin would not account for the presence of analogous
types on the Yenisei.
History. - To sum up the history of Scythia, the oldest inhabitants of
whom we hear in Scythia were the Cimmerii; the nature of the country makes it
probable that some of them were nomads, while others no doubt tilled some land
in the river valleys and in the Crimea, where they left their name to ferries,
earthworks and the Cimmerian Bosporus. They were probably of Iranian race;
among the Persians Herodotus describes a similar mixture of nomadic and settled
tribes. In the 7th century B. C. these Cimmerians were attacked and partly
driven out by a horde of newcomers from upper Asia called Scythae; these
imposed their name and their yoke upon all that were left in the Euxine
steppes, but probably their coming did not really change the basis of the
population, which remained Iranian. The newcomers adopted the language of the
conquered, but brought with them new customs and a new artistic taste probably
largely borrowed from the metal-working tribes of Siberia. About the same time
similar peoples harassed the northern frontier of Iran, where they were called
Saka (Sacae), and in later times Saka and Scyths, whether they were originally
the same or not, were regarded as synonymous. It is difficult always to judge
whether given information applies to the Sacae or the Scyths.
About 512 B. C. Darius, having conquered Thrace, made an invasion of Scythia,
which, according to the account of Herodotus, he crossed as far as the Oarus, a
river identified with the Volga, burned the town of Gelonus and returned in
sixty days. In this march he was much harassed by the nomads, with whom he
could not come to close quarters, but no mention is made of his having any
difficulty with the rivers (he gets his water from wells), and no reason for
his proceedings is advanced except a desire to avenge legendary attacks of
Scyths upon Asia. After losing many men the Great King comes back to the place
where he crossed the Danube, finds the Ionians still guarding the bridge in
spite of the attempts of the Scyths to make them desert, and safely re-enters
his own dominions. Ctesias says that the whole campaign only took fifteen days
and that Darius did not get beyond the Tyras (Dniester). This is also the view
of the reasonable Strabo; but it does not account for the genesis of the other
story. It seems best to believe that Darius made an incursion in order to
secure the frontier of the Danube, suffered serious reverses and retired with
loss, and that this offered too good a chance to be missed for a moral tale
about the discomfiture of the Great King by a few poor savages. The Greeks had
been trading with the Scyths ever since their coming, and at Lobia there were
other tales of their history. We can make a list of the Scythian kings -
Spargapeithes, Lycus, Gnurus, Saulius (whose brother, the famous Anacharsis
(q.v.), traveled overall the world in search of wisdom, was reckoned a sage
among the Greeks and was slain among his own people because they did not like
his foreign ways). And Idanthyrsus, the lead king at the time of Darius,
probably the father of Ariapeithes. This latter had three wives, a Greek woman
from Istrus, Opoea a Scythian, and a Thracian daughter to the great chief
Teres. Scyles, his son by the Greek mother, affected Greek ways, had a house in
Olbia, and even took part in Bacchic rites. When this came to the knowledge of
his subjects he was murdered, and Octamasadas, his son by the third wife,
reigned in his stead. Herodotus adduces this to show how much the Scyths hated
foreign customs, but with the things found in the graves it rather proves how
strong was the attraction exercised upon the nomads by the higher culture of
their neighbors. Octamasadas did shortly before the time of Herodotus. We
cannot place Ariantas, who made a kind of census of the nation by exacting an
arrow-head from each warrior and cast a great cauldron out of the bronze, nor
Taxacis and Scopasis, the under-kings in the time of Idanthyrsus. After the
retreat of Darius the Scythians made a raid as far as Abydos, and even sent
envoys to King Cleomenes III of Sparta to arrange that they should attack the
Persian Empire from the Phasis while the Spartans should march up from Ephesus.
The chief result of the embassy was that Cleomenes took to the Scythian habit
of drinking his wine neat and went mad therefrom (Herodotus vi. 84). Hence
forward the Scyths appear as a declining power: by the middle of the 4th
century their eastern neighbors the Sarmatae have crossed the Tanais (Don) and
the pressure of the Scyths is felt on the Danube. Here Philip II, of Macedon
defeated and slew their king Ateas in 339 B. C., and from this time on the
representatives of the old Scythic power are petty chieftains in the western
part of the country about Olbia, where they could still be dangerous, and about
Tomi. Towards the second half of the 2nd century B. C. this kingdom seems to
have become the nucleus of a great state under Scilurus, whose name appears on
coins of Lobia, and who at the same time threatened Chersonese in the Crimea.
Here, however, he was opposed by the might of Mithradates VI of Pontus and his
power was broken. Henceforward the name "Scythian" is purely
geographical. Meanwhile Scythia had become the land of the Sarmatae (q.v.).
These, as has been seen, spoke a cognate dialect, and the tombs which belong to
their period show exactly the same culture with Greek and Siberian elements. It
is probable that the Iranian element was stronger among the Sarmatae, whose
power extended as the ruling clan of the Scyths became extinct; but it is quite
likely that they in their turn were officered by some new horde from upper
Asia. Like the Scyths they were pressed towards the west by yet newer swarms,
and with the coming of the Huns Scythia enters upon a new cycle, though still
keeping its owl name in the Byzantine historians.
AUTHORITIES - (1) Ancient: Herodotus iv, 1 - 142 (editions of
Blakesley, Rawlinson, Macan); Hippocrates, De Aere, &c., c. 24 sqq.;
for geography alone : Strabo vii. Cc.3,4; xi.cc.1,2,6; Pliny iv. 75 sqq.;
Ptolemy, Sarmatia; Diodorus Sic. Ii, 2, 45-47; and Justin in. cc.1, 4,
do not seem to add anything of which we can be certain. (2) Modern: E. H.
Minns, Scythians and Greeks (Cambridge, 1909), gives a summary of various
opinions and a survey of the subject from all points of view. See also for
ethnological questions, Mongolian hypothesis: K. Neumann, Die Hellene im
Skythenlande (Berlin, 1855). Iranian hypothesis: K. Mullenhoff, "Uber
Herkunft und Sprache der Pontischen Skythen und Sarmaten," in
Monatsber. D. Berl. Ak. (1866), reprinted in Deutsche Altertumskunde,
vol. Iii. For the archaeology; Kondakoff, Tolstoi and Reinach, Antiquitesde
la Russie Meridionale (Paris, 1892); more fully in Antiquites de la
Russie d'Herodote and Compte rendu de la commission archeologique de
St-Petersbourg, passim.
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Here are photos of a Scythian necropolis.