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Scythians/Sacae
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The Central-Asian steppe has been
the home of nomad tribes for centuries. Being nomads, they roamed across
the plains, incidentally attacking the urbanized countries to the south,
east and west.
The first to describe the life style of these tribes was a Greek researcher,
Herodotus,
who lived in the fifth century BCE. Although he concentrates on the tribes
living in modern Ukraine, which he calls Scythians, we may extrapolate
his description to people in Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan,
Kyrgyzstan and possibly Mongolia, even though Herodotus usually calls these
eastern nomads 'Sacae'. In fact, just as the Scythians and the Sacae
shared the same life style, they had the same name: in their own language,
which belonged to the Indo-Iranian family, they called themselves Skudat
('archers'?). The Persians rendered this name as Sakâ and
the Greeks as Skythai. The Chinese called them, at a later stage
in history, Sai.
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Tribes are, almost by definition, very loose organizations. Every now
and then, new tribal coalitions came into being, and sometimes, new languages
became prominent among the nomads from the Central-Asian steppe.
The oldest group we know of is usually called
Indo-Iranian. (The old name 'Aryan' is no longer used.) There are no contemporary
reports about their migration, but it can be reconstructed from their language.
It is reasonably certain that at the beginning of the second millennium
BCE, the speakers of the Proto-Indo-Iranian language moved from Ukraine
to the southeast. From an archaeological point of view, their migration
is attested in the change from the Yamnaya culture into the Andronovo culture.
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They invaded the country that was later called Afghanistan, where they
separated into an Iranian and an Indian branch. The first group settled
in
Aria,
a name that lives on in our word 'Iran', where they settled after 1000
BCE; the second group reached the Punjab c.1500 BCE. From the second millennium
on, three groups of languages can be discerned: the Indian group (Vedic,
Sanskrit...), the Scythian group (in the homeland on the steppe), and the
Iranian group (Gathic, Persian...). Even when, in the sixth century, the
Achaemenid
empire was at its most powerful and the Persians lived in comfortable
towns, they still remembered their earlier, nomadic life style:
The Persian nation contains a number of tribes,
and the ones which Cyrus
assembled and persuaded to revolt were the Pasargadae, Maraphii, and Maspii,
upon which all the other tribes are dependent. Of these, the Pasargadae
are the most distinguished; they contain the clan of the Achaemenids
from which spring the Perseid kings. Other tribes are the Panthialaei,
Derusiaei, Germanii, all of which are attached to the soil, the remainder
-the Dahae,
Mardi, Dropici, Sagarti,
being nomadic.
[Herodotus, Histories
1.125
tr. Aubrey de Selincourt]
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Sakâ tigrakhaudâ.
Relief
from
the eastern
stairs of the
Apadana
at Persepolis
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The second group of nomads known to have gone
south is the tribe of the Cimmerians.
Their name Gimirru -given to them by the Assyrians-
means 'people traveling back and forth'; this name still exists in our
word 'Crimea'. The Cimmerians destroyed the kingdoms of Urartu
(an old name for Armenia)
and Phrygia (in Turkey) in the first quarter of the seventh century BCE;
other Scythians reached Ascalon in Palestine. According to Herodotus,
they ruled the northwest of Iran (which Herodotus calls Media)
for twenty-eight years.
In the sixth, fifth and fourth centuries BCE, the Persians discerned
several nomadic tribes on the Central-Asian steppe. As we have seem, they
called them Sakâ. We know the names of these tribes from Persian
royal inscriptions and can add information from Herodotus and other Greek
authors.
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The Sakâ haumavargâ ('haoma-drinking
Sacae') were subjected by Cyrus
the Great. Herodotus calls them Amyrgian Scythians. Haoma was
a trance inducing drink, made from fly agaric. This mushroom does not occur
south of the river Amudar'ya (Oxus). Consequently, we may assume that these
nomads lived in Uzbekistan. Herodotus informs us that they wore trousers
and pointed caps; they fought as archers. He also mentions their use of
the battle ax (which they called sagaris).
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The Sakâ tigrakhaudâ ('Sacae
with pointed hats') were defeated in 520/519 BCE by the Persian king Darius
I the Great, who gave this tribe a new leader. One of the earlier leaders
was killed, the other, named Skunkha,
was taken captive and is visible on the relief at Behistun.
(It is possible that Darius created a new tribe from several earlier tribes.)
Herodotus calls the Sakâ tigrakhaudâ the Orthocorybantians
('pointed hat men'), and informs us that they lived in the same tax district
as the Medes. This suggests that the Sakâ
tigrakhaudâ lived on the banks of the ancient lower reaches of the
Amudar'ya, which used to have a mouth in the Caspian Sea south of Krasnovodsk.
The pointed hat is a kind of turban.
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The Apâ Sakâ ('Water Sacae') are also
known as the Pausikoi, as Herodotus prefers to call them. Later
authors, like Arrian
of Nicomedia (in his Anabasis) and Ammianus Marcellinus
(in his Roman history) call them the Abian Scythians; still
later, we encounter them as the
Apasiaki, first east and later southwest
of Lake Aral. They must be situated along the ancient lower reaches of
the Amudar'ya.
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The tribe that Herodotus calls 'Massagetes' must
have been called something like Mâh-Sakâ in Persian,
which means 'Moon Sacae'. This is a bit confusing, because it is known
that the Massagetes venerated only one god, the Sun. The Massagetes were
responsible for the death of the Persian king
Cyrus
the Great (in December 530). From Herodotus' description, it is clear
that they lived along the Syrdar'ya (Jaxartes).
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The nomad tribe known as Dahâ,
which means 'robbers', is mentioned for the first time in the Daiva
inscription of Xerxes;
he must have subjected them. Herodotus calls the Dai a Persian nomad
tribe (above), but they can not have lived in Persia
proper, because they are mentioned in the
Anabasis of Arrian as
living along the lower reaches of the Syrdar'ya. In the days of the Macedonian
king Alexander
the Great, they were famous for their mounted archers. It
is possible that this tribe desintegrated after the fall of the Achaemenid
empire; one of the tribes that came into being was that of the Parni,
who went south in the third century BCE and founded the Parthian
empire.
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The Sakâ paradrayâ ('Sacae across
the sea') were living in Ukraine. These are the nomads that the Greeks
called Scythians. In (514 or) 513 BCE, king Darius launched a disastrous
campaign against the Sakâ paradrayâ. Herodotus gives a long
description of their way of life and discerns many tribes in the neighborhood.
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The Royal Scythians lived in the southern part
of Ukraine, immediately north of the Greek towns.
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The Scythian-Farmers seem to be identical with the archaeological culture
known as Chernoles, which has been identified with the Iron Age Slavs.
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Probably, we may identify the Neuri with the Milograd culture, the archaeological
remains of which have been found on the confluence of the rivers Dnepr
and Pripyat, north of modern Kiev. They may be the ancestors of the Balts.
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Herodotus' story about the Man-eaters received some confirmation with the
excavation of human remains that were gnawed at by human jaws; these
excavations were along the river Sula, to the southeast of Kiev.
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The Argippaeans are sometimes identified with the ancestors of the Calmucs.
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The Issedones may be identical to the Wu-sun who (according to Chinese
texts) lived on the shore of Lake Balchash.
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The Sauromatae are mentioned by Herodotus as the descendants of
Scythian fathers and Amazon mothers. Of course, this is a legend, but the
tribe did exist and was to move to the west after 130 BCE. In the process,
they assimilated the Royal Scythians (above). In the
late first century BCE, the Sarmatian
coalition consisted of four tribes:
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The Iazyges, which had once lived on the shores of the Sea of Azov, were
now living on the northern bank of the Danube. They were to move to what
is now eastern Hungary, where they settled in c.50 CE. They were defeated
by the Roman emperor Marcus
Aurelius (in 175).
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The Urgi lived on the banks of the Dnepr, south of Kiev.
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The Royal Scythians were still living in the south of Ukraine and had become
the most important Sarmatian tribe. They and the Urgi became known as the
Sarmati. The Romans seem to have accepted their settlement in Hungary,
but the situation was sometimes tense. The Sarmati were, for example, responsible
for the destruction of the Twenty-first
legion Rapax in 92.
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The Roxolani initially lived between the Don and the Dnepr but settled
on the lower reaches of the Danube, where the Iazyges had been living before
they migrated to Hungary.
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The Khan (leader) of
the
Tatars. Note the bow and
the pointed hat
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The steppe nomads frequently attacked the urbanized regions to the
east, south or west. Usually, this created great havoc, but after some
time, they went back to their homeland. However, it was necessary for the
attacked states to defend themselves. The Indians thought that they did
not need walls because they were protected by the Himalayas; c.110 BCE,
the valley of the Indus was run over. The Chinese built the 'Wall of ten
thousand miles' to protect themselves. The rulers of the Achaemenid empire,
from Cyrus the
Great to Alexander
the Great, may have built walls as well. These walls are mentioned
in the eighteenth sura of the Quran and in medieval legend, and may be
identified with known archaeological remains
in Mazandaran (Iran). It is certain, however, that both Cyrus and Alexander
built garrison towns along the river Syrdar'ya or Jaxartes; our sources
call them Cyreschata and Alexandria
Eschatê.
Nomadism continued to exist into the first and second millennium CE.
Several tribes may be mentioned. The Alani -whose language lives on in
modern Ossetian- are known from the first century CE; they lived in modern
Kazakhstan. Later, they moved to the west, being pushed forward by the
Huns, which are known from Chinese texts as the Xiung-nu.
Later tribal formations were the Avars, the Chasars, the Bulgars, the Turks,
the Magyars, the Cumans, the Tatars, the Mongols and the Cossacks.
Literature
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J. Harmatta, 'Herodotus, historian of the Cimmerians and the Scythians'
in: Hérodote et les peuples non Grecs. Neuf exposés suivis
de discussions (Entretiens sur l' Antiquité classique,
tome XXV) (1990 Genève), pages 115-130.
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Renate Rolle, Die Welt der Skythen. Stutenmelker und Pferdebogner: ein
antikes Reitervolk in neuer Sicht, 1980 Lucerne
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T. Sulimivski, 'The Scyths' in: Ilya Gershevitch (ed.): The Cambridge
History of Iran, vol. II: The Median and Achaemenian Periods, 1985
Cambridge, pages 149-199.
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Stephanie West, "Scythians" in: Egbert Bakker, Irene de Jong and Hans van
Wees (eds.), Brill's Companion to Herodotus (2002 Leiden), pages
437-456
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