The Scythians
are mentioned in different contexts throughout my blog, but they have never
been discussed as a people.
[Picture from World History Encyclopedia. A map illustrating the expansion of the warrior nomad Scythians between the 7th and 3rd century BC across Asia and Europe. (Simeon Netchev - CC BY-NC-SA)]
We have to go
back to Herodotus
in the 5th century BC who mentions the Scythians for the first time. The author
concentrates on Ukraine,
although his description might well extend to the tribes in Central Asia. When talking about the Scythians, we refer to many different
tribes roaming the steppes north of the “civilized” world. Their habitat
stretched roughly from the Black Sea, the Caspian Sea (north of Persia) to Central Asia and the desert of Mongolia. At this far easterly end, the
Chinese protected themselves from Scythian invasions by building their famous
Chinese Wall.
Generally living
in small bands, they attacked the cities and towns situated south of their
extensive east-west frontier. After a more or less sudden devastating
incursion, they would withdraw with their booty into their vast nomadic
Eurasian steppe lands. Over the years, some tribes settled as farmers, but they
were not interested in founding cities of their own.
In Central Asia
and Persia,
the Scythians were called Sacae
as both tribes shared the same Indo-European language and lifestyle. These Sacae are called Skudat, which the Persians understood
as Sakâ. The
Greeks, in turn, used the name Skythes or Skythai. No wonder the Scythians show up so
often in history under a different disguise.
The Persians
suffered repeated attacks from the Scythians, who, even shortly, dominated the Medes
in the 7th century BC. They are also known to have played a significant role in
the Sack of Nineveh
in 612 BC.
As a result of Miletus’ colonization, the Kingdom of the Bosporus emerged (see: The Kingdom of the Bosporus). It reached its
peak between the 6th and the 3rd century BC. During that period, the new
settlers maintained strong cultural and trade relations with the Scythians.
Over the centuries, the kingdom with its capital of Panticapaeum became a
melting pot of civilizations as the Greeks mingled with neighboring Pontic Scythians.
An earlier blog,
A cast helmet from Central Asia, discussed a helmet found
near Maracanda,
in the tomb of a Sacae
leader. The technique of cast helmets was customary in China, which
proves that these nomadic Scythians lived far to the east. This particular
helmet dated from the 6th century BC and became obsolete afterward.
The Massagetai tribe living
near the Aral Sea also was Scythians. In 529
BC, Cyrus the Great
attacked this tribe, ruled by Queen
Tomyris. That happened after Cyrus’
negotiation to marry her failed. She bluntly refused to submit to him. As a
result, the king attacked her and her tribe, and died on the battlefield.
The Scythians
also successfully withstood Darius the Great’s attack at the beginning of the 5th century BC. Later
that century, the Pontic
Scythians took possession of Thracia.
In the 5th
century BC, the Odrysian
Kingdom was founded – merely a union
of more than forty tribes that turned Thracia into a powerful state. The Odrysians and the Scythians had reached
peaceful relations through their inter-dynastic marriages, which led to
establishing the border of their lands at the Danube River.
Both peoples mingled and were generally recognized as Scythians. Their
agreement, however, was not meant to last as, in the end, southern and central Thracia was divided among the Odrysian kings.
Eventually, Philip II
conquered their land in 340 BC. The Getae
ruled the northeast section.
Alexander attacked
these Getae after his pursuit of the Triballians to the banks of
the Danube River in 335 BC. The Triballians had sought
refuge on an island. Instead of attacking them in that awkward position, Alexander decided to
isolate them and go after the Getae
on the other bank of the Danube. He managed to ferry 4,000
infantrymen and 1,500 cavalry across the wide river by night. No wonder the Getae were in
shock when they woke up with this army on their land and fled to the hinterland
(see: Crossing the Danube River).
A noteworthy Odrysian Thracian is Sitalces. His true origins
remain relatively obscure, but apparently, he was a prince, maybe even the son
of King Cersobleptes
of the Odrysian Thracians.
He joined Alexander’s
army and proved to be a competent commander who led the Thracian javelin men on
more than one occasion. The Thracians appear again at the Battle of
Gaugamela. They were placed with the main body of the
Macedonian troops, under the command of Sitalces once again (see: Sitalces, commander of the Thracians).
Sitalces was also
one of the three generals who, on Alexander’s orders, executed Parmenion in Ecbatana
(see: The
Philotas Affair – Part II – His judgment and execution).
Back in Central Asia, we should mention the story of a Scythian
chief named Karthasis, who
offered one of his daughters – most probably one of those warlike Scythian
young women - in marriage to Alexander.
The King declined, but the story may well have triggered the tale of the
Amazons.
In 329 BC, Alexander marched north to Cyropolis, a city
founded by Cyrus the Great. But
Cyropolis was
situated about 10 km
away from the Jaxartes River. Alexander felt that it
didn’t serve his purpose, i.e., to protect the country against the nomads
inhabiting the lands beyond the majestic river. He decided to build a city of
his own, Alexandria-Eschate
or Alexandria-the-Furthermost
(Ultima), right on the banks of the Jaxartes – the location of today’s Khodjend in Tajikistan.
Shortly after starting his project, a general revolt broke out, and the entire
area exploded into armed resistance, making it clear that the Macedonians were
not welcome. The Scythians on
the opposite shore of the Jaxartes
also grew furious. Consequently, Alexander
set the crossing of the river in motion. He conceived a flotilla of large rafts
made of stuffed leather tent covers, rigged together and covered with a sturdy
platform. These rafts could carry a heavy contingent of men and even horses. Besides, Alexander
equipped them with long-range catapults, a kind of machine the Scythians would
discover for the first time.
When the
Scythians recovered from their first shock and surprise, they played their
favorite maneuver by riding and attacking in circles. Alexander threw in a mixed
force of infantry and cavalry and successfully broke the circle, sending the
Scythians to retreat after being hunted down by Alexander for several miles into the desert
(see: Alexandria-Eschate
and Cyropolis).
The above gives
insight into the Scythians' link between Greece,
Persia, India, and China. It may somehow have laid the
foundation of the Silk Road as a vast trade network.
Although the Scythians
have no written records, they left us substantial archaeological evidence of
their high skills in metalwork. Monumental burial mounts across the Eurasian
steppe reveal high-quality jewelry, weapons, vessels, horse harnesses, belts,
and other decorative items, mostly made of gold.
Inevitably, some
of these Scythian tribes, such as the Pontic Scythians, settled as farmers, while others
kept roaming the vast steppes from Mongolia
to the Black Sea area. In the early Middle
Ages, the most westerly tribes blended in and mixed with the early Slavs.
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