fbpx
Wikipedia

*Kóryos


The kóryos (Proto-Indo-European: 'army, people under arms' or 'detachment, war party'[citation needed]) refers to the theoretical Proto-Indo-European brotherhood of warriors in which unmarried young males served for several years, as a rite of passage into manhood, before their full integration into society.

Scholars[who?] have theorized the existence of the kóryos based on later Indo-European traditions and myths that feature links between landless young males, perceived as an age-class not yet fully integrated into the community of the married men; their service in a "police-army" sent away for part of the year in the wild (where they hunted animals and raided foreign communities)[citation needed], then defending the host society for the rest of the year; their mystical self-identification with wolves and dogs as symbols of death, lawlessness, and warrior fury; and the idea of a liminality between invulnerability and death on one side, and youth and adulthood on the other side.

Etymology and name Edit

[improper synthesis?]

The Proto-Indo-European noun *kóryos denotes a 'people under arms' and has been translated as 'army, war-band, unit of warriors',[1] or as 'detachment, war party'.[2] It stems from the noun *kóro- 'cutting, section, division', attested in Old Persian as kāra 'people, army' (Persian: کاروان, romanizedKārāvan, lit.'Troupe') and in Lithuanian as kãras 'war, army'.[2][3][4]

The term *kóryos has descendant cognates in the Baltic *kāryas 'army',[note 1] Celtic *koryos 'troop, tribe',[note 2] and Germanic *harjaz 'host, troop, army, raiding-party'.[note 3][9][2][10] In west-central Indo-European dialects,[note 4] the designation *koryonos, meaning 'leader of the *kóryos' (here attached to the suffix -nos 'master of'), is also attested: Ancient Greek koíranos 'army-leader', Old Norse Herjan (< PGmc *harjanaz 'army-leader'), and Brittonic Coriono-totae 'people of the army-leader'.[11][3][12][7]

The Gallic tribes Uo-corri ('two-armies'), Tri-corii ('three-armies') and Petru-corii ('four-armies') were presumably formed from alliances of roving war-bands.[7][12] The noun *harja- is also part of compound names in Germanic languages,[13] such as Herigast (Heregast), possibly attested as Harikast on the Negau helmet.[14] Some toponyms in Western Europe, such as Cherbourg in France or Heerlen in the Netherlands, may stem from historical ethnic groups whose name contained the Celtic noun *koryo- 'army, troop', as proposed by Pierre-Yves Lambert.[15]

Additionally, the Asturian personal name Vacoria (similar to Gaulish Vocorius) has been interpreted as stemming from the Celtic ethnic name *(d)uo-korio 'possessing two armies',[16] and the Gallic tribal name Coriosolites as meaning 'those who watch over the troop',[17] or 'those who purchase soldiers or mercenaries'.[15] Ancient paleo-Hispanic onomastics also attest the noun, albeit in the form *koro, with the same meaning.[18][19][20][21]

In Indo-European studies, the modern German term Männerbund [de] (literally 'alliance of men') is often used to refer to the *kóryos.[22] However, it can be misleading since the war-bands were made up of adolescent males, not grown-up men. Some scholars have proposed the terms Bruderschaft ('fraternity') or Jungmannschaft ('young [group of] men') as preferable alternatives.[23][24]

Historiography Edit

The concept of the Männerbund was developed in the early 20th century by scholars such as Heinrich Schurtz (1902), Hans Blüher (1917), Lily Weiser-Aall (1927), Georges Dumézil (1929), Richard Wolfram (1932), Robert Stumpfl (1934), Otto Höfler (1934), Stig Wikander (1938), and Henri Jeanmaire [fr] (1939).[25][26]

These theories influenced German Völkisch movements in the period 1900–1920s, then Nazi circles during the 1930–1940s. Scholarship from the later part of the 20th century has pointed out the far-right ideological foundations of most of the earlier works, but has also yielded new evidence supporting the existence of brotherhoods of warriors in Vendel Period Scandinavia.[26]

The standard comparative overview of the subject is Kim McCone's Hund, Wolf und Krieger bei den Indogermanen, published in 1987.[27] Another study is Priscilla K. Kershaw's The One-Eyed God: Odin and the (Indo-)Germanic Männerbünde (1997).[26]

Description Edit

Rite of passage Edit

The kóryos were composed of adolescent males (presumably from 12–13 up to 18–19 years of age), usually coming from prominent families and initiated together into manhood as an age-class cohort.[28][failed verificationsee discussion] After undergoing painful trials to enter the group, they were sent away to live as landless warriors in the wild for a number of years, within a group ranging from two to twelve members. The young males went without possession other than their weapons, living on the edges of their host society.[29] Social behaviour normally forbidden, such as stealing, raiding, or sexually assaulting women, were therefore tolerated amongst kóryos members, as long as the malevolent acts were not directed at the host society.[30] Their activities were seasonal, and they lived with their home community for a part of the year.[31]

 
An Athenian ephebe.

Their life was centred on military duties, hunting wild animals and pillaging settlements on one side; and on the recitation of heroic poetry telling the deeds of past heroes and cattle theft legends on the other side.[29][32] A tradition of epic poetry celebrating heroic and violent warriors conquering loot and territories (which were portrayed as possessions the gods wanted them to have) probably participated in the validation of violence among the kóryos. The leader of the band, the *koryonos, was determined with a game of dice, and the result accepted as the gods' choice. The other members pledged to die for him, and to kill for him.[33] He was regarded as their master in the rite of passage, but also as their 'employer' since the young warriors served as his bodyguards and protectors.[34]

The period of initiation within the kóryos was perceived as a transitional stage preceding the status of adult warrior and was usually crowned by marriage.[35] The kóryos were symbolically associated with death and liminality, but also with fecundity and sexual license.[29] Kim McCone has argued that members of the *kóryos initially served as young unmarried males without possessions before their eventual incorporation into the *tewtéh2- ('the tribe, people under arms'), composed of the property-owning and married adult males.[36]

According to David W. Anthony and Dorcas R. Brown, the kóryos may have served "as an organization promoting group cohesion and effectiveness in combat, as an instrument of external territorial expansion, and as a regulatory device in chiefly feast-centred economies."[37]

In Europe, those oath-bound initiatory war-bands were eventually absorbed by increasingly powerful patrons and kings during the Iron Age, while they were downgraded in ancient India with the rise of the Brahmin caste, leading to their progressive demise.[24]

Role in the Indo-European migrations Edit

 
Early Indo-European migrations from the Pontic–Caspian steppe spread Yamnaya Steppe pastoralist ancestry and Indo-European languages across large parts of Eurasia.[38]

Scholars have argued that the institution of the kóryos played a key role during the Indo-European migrations and the diffusion of Indo-European languages across most of western Eurasia.[39] Raids headed by those young warriors could have led to the establishment of new settlements on foreign lands, preparing the ground for the larger migration of whole tribes including old men, women and children.[40] This scenario is supported by archaeological data from the early Single GraveCorded Ware Culture in Jutland, where 90 per cent of all burials belonged to males in what appears to be a 'colonial' expansion on the territory of the Funnelbeaker culture.[31]

The kóryos probably drove people not protected by the Indo-European social umbrella to move under it in order to obtain safety or restitution from thieving and raiding. They could therefore have served as an incentive for the recruitment of outsiders into social positions that offered vertical mobility, horizontal reciprocity, and the possibility of immortality through praise poetry, made more attractive by generosity at patron-sponsored public feasts.[41]

Attributes Edit

Wolf-like behaviour Edit

The war-bands consisted of shape-shifting warriors (in a symbolic and metaphorical sense), wearing animal skins to assume the nature of wolves or dogs.[42][43][44] Members of the kóryos adopted wolfish behaviours and bore names containing the word 'wolf' or 'dog', each a symbol of death and the Otherworld in Indo-European belief.[45] The idealized attributes of the kóryos were indeed borrowed from the imagery surrounding the wolf: violence, trickery, swiftness, great strength, and warrior fury.[46] By identifying with the wild animals, kóryos members perceived themselves as physically and legally moved outside the human world, and therefore no longer restrained by human taboos. When returning to their normal life, they would feel no remorse for breaking the rules of their home society because they had not been humans or at least not living in the cultural space of the host society when those rules were broken.[33]

In Ancient Greece, the wolfish ways of fighting were reserved to the adolescent groups passing the warrior initiation. Young members of the Athenian ephebos and the Spartan crypteia were able to use war techniques usually forbidden to the adult warrior: they covered their actions and prowled at night, using tricks and ambushes.[47] The ephebos in particular were under the patronage of the god Apollo, associated in many myths with wolves and bearing the epithet Lykeios.[48] During his initiation, the Irish mythical hero Sétanta, a typical depiction of the kóryos member, is given the name Cú Chulainn ('hound of Culann').[49] The young members of the Ossetic balc were strongly associated with the wolf and described as a k'war ('herd').[50] The Avestan literature also mentions the mairyō ('wolf, dog') as the young male serving in warrior-bands.[50]

 
Woodcut image of one of the Vendel era Torslunda plates found on Öland, Sweden. It probably depicts the god of frenzy Óðinn followed by a Berserkr.[51]

In the Norse tradition, berserkers were sometimes called úlfheðnar ('wolf-skinned'), and the frenzy warriors wearing the skins of wolves were designated as úlfheðinn ('wolf-coat').[52][53] The folk legend of the werewolf ('man-wolf'), found in many European traditions, is probably reminiscent of the wolfish behaviour of the warrior-bands. Similar word-formations can be found in Western Indo-European languages, such as Ancient Greek luk-ánthrōpos ('wolf-man'), Proto-Germanic *wira-wulfaz ('man-wolf'; cf. werewolf), Proto-Celtic *wiro-kū ('man-dog'), and Proto-Slavic *vьlko-dlakь ('wolf-haired one'), at the origin of lycanthopy, werewolf, Viroconium, and Wurdulac, respectively.[54][55]

Warrior-fury Edit

The conflicting opposition between death and invulnerability is suggested by the attributes generally associated with the kóryos: great strength, resistance to pain, and lack of fear.[34] The typical state of warrior fury or frenzy was supposed to increase his strength above natural expectations, with ecstatic performances accentuated by dances and perhaps by the use of drugs.[56][57] The Indo-European term for a 'mad attack' (*eis) is common to the Vedic, Germanic, and Iranian traditions.[58] The Germanic berserkers were depicted as practitioners of the battle fury ('going berserk', berserksgangr), while the martial fury of the Ancient Greek warrior was called lyssa, a derivation of lykos ('wolf'), as if the soldiers temporarily become wolves in their mad rage.[57][59][60]

As such, young males were perceived as dangers even to their host society. The Maruts, a group of storm deities of the Vedic tradition were depicted as both beneficial and dangerous entities.[34] The Irish hero Cúchulainn becomes a terrorizing figure among the inhabitants of the capital-city, Emain Macha, after he beheaded three rivals from his own people (the Ulaid). Aiming to appease his fury, they decide to capture him and plunge his body into basins of water in order to 'cool him down'. Irish sources also describe some of the warrior-bands as savages (díberg), living like wolves by pillaging and massacring. Similarly, some Greek warrior-bands were called hybristḗs (ὑβριστή) and portrayed as violent and insolent groups of ransomers and looters.[49][61]

Nudity Edit

 
 
The Yamnaya Kernosovskiy idol, depicting a naked warrior with a belt, axes, and testicles (mid-3rd mill. BC); and the Celtic Warrior of Hirschlanden (6th c. BC), wearing only a helmet, neckband, belt, and sword.[62][63]

Many kurgan stelae found in the Pontic–Caspian steppe, which are associated with the Proto-Indo-European culture, depict a naked male warrior carved on the stone with little else than a belt and his weapons. In later Indo-European traditions, kóryos raiders likewise wore a belt that bound them to their leader and the gods, and little else.[63]

In Ancient Greek and Roman literary sources, Germanic and Celtic peoples were often portrayed as fighting naked or semi naked, armed only with light weapons.[44][56] At the battle of Telamon (225 BC), Gallic warriors reportedly wore only trousers and capes.[64] In the Norse tradition, Berserker usually scorned the use of armour to favour animal skins, and they were sometimes also said to fight naked.[56] Ancient Italic tribes also had in their ranks berserk-like warriors who fought naked, barefoot, flowing-haired, and often in single combat.[65] Similarly, young Vedic boys wore only a belt and an animal skin during their initiation within the kóryos.[66]

Celtiberian statuettes from the 5th–3rd centuries BC depict naked warriors with a sword, a small round shield (caetra), a "power belt", and sometimes a helmet.[64] The tradition of kurgan stelae featuring warriors with a belt is also common in the Scythian cultures.[63] According to military historian Michael P. Speidel, the scene 36 of Trajan's Column, which shows bare-chested, bare-footed young men wearing only a shield, could be a depiction of Germanic Berserkers.[67]

Darkness Edit

The kóryos is usually associated with the colour black, or at least dark,[44] and with the mobilization of chthonic forces.[68] Frequent references are made to the "black earth" or the "dark night" in the Indo-European literature, and hunting and fighting at night appears to have been one of the distinguishing characteristics of the kóryos.[69][68]

In the Vedic tradition, the followers of Indra and Rudra wore black clothes, and the young heroes of Medieval Armenia were called "black youths" (t'ux manuks). The "black" Aram is the idealized figure of the kóryos leader in Armenian myths, and his armies are said to suddenly attack adversaries "before dawn" in the borderlands of Armenia.[69]

The Athenian ephebes traditionally wore a black chlamys,[68] and the Ancient Greek tradition featured an initiation ritual imposed upon young males in which "black hunters" were sent out to the frontier to perform military exploits.[70] Indeed, the Greek model of the black hunter, Meleager, is named after the word for "black" (melas),[71] and the Armenian name Aram stems from the root *rē-mo- ('dirt, soot').[72]

The Roman historian Tacitus (1st c. AD) also mentions the Germanic Harii (whose name could derive from *kóryos) as "savages" wearing black shields, dyeing their bodies, and choosing dark nights for battle.[73][74] Kershaw has proposed that the Harii were the kóryos of the neighbouring Lugii tribe.[75]

Attestations Edit

Krasnosamarskoe Edit

At Krasnosamarskoe (Volga steppes) were found 51 dogs and 7 wolves sacrificed and consumed in what could have been[weasel words] a winter-season rite of passage into a status represented metaphorically by the animals.[76] The site is associated with the Srubnaya culture (1900–1700 BC), generally regarded as proto-Iranian, and possibly made up of archaic Iranian speakers.[77]

Krasnosamarskoe appears to have been a place where people from around the region came to periodically engage in transgressive initiation rituals conducted in the winter and requiring dog and wolf sacrifice.[78] According to Anthony and Brown, "it was a place of inversion, as is the eating of wolves, animal symbolic of anti-culture (a murderer 'has become like a wolf' in Hittite law; 'wolf' was used to refer to brigands and outlaws, people who stand outside the law, in many other Indo-European languages)."[78] The dogs found on the site seem to have been well-treated during their lifetime, and they were probably familiar pets.[79]

The ritual was centred on dog sacrifice in a region and time period when dogs were not normally eaten.[76] Cattle and sheep were indeed consumed throughout the year on the site, whereas dogs were killed almost exclusively in the winter in a regular inversion of normal dietary customs.[80]

Indian tradition Edit

Some Vedic families began initiating young boys at 8 years old, studying heroic poetry about past ancestors and practicing their hunting and fighting skills. At 16, they were initiated into a warrior band during the winter solstice ritual (the Ekāstakā), during which the boys went into an ecstatic state then ritually died to be reborn as dogs of war.[66] After their leader was determined by a dice game, the initiated youths were cast away in the wild for four years to live as dogs, stealing animals, women, goods and territory until the summer solstice ended the raiding season.[81] The young warriors then returned to their forest residence where they held a Vrātyastoma sacrifice to thank the gods for their success.[82] At the end the four-year initiation, a final Vrātyastoma sacrifice was performed to transform the dog-warrior into a responsible adult man, then the newly-initiated males destroyed their old clothes to become human once again, ready to return to their family and to live by the rules of their host community.[83]

The Vrātyas ('dog-priests') were known for performing the Ekāstakā ceremony at the winter solstice, when Indra, the god of war, is said to have been born with his band of Maruts. The term Vrāta is used in particular the Rigveda to describe the Maruts.[84][85]

Iranian tradition Edit

The Scythians probably led military expeditions as a mandatory initiation into manhood which lasted for several years, as suggested by historical raids in Anatolia.[86][87]

In the Ossetic tradition, a compulsory initiation into manhood involved a military expedition known as the balc and lasting for one year. Groups were formed during a spring feast (Styr Tūtyr), dedicated to Wastyrgi, the deity of wolves and warriors, in Varkazana (the "month of men-wolves"; October–November).[88]

According to scholar Touraj Daryaee, figures from the Iranian folkore such as Hosein the Kord (or Gord)[89] exhibit archetype Männerbund traits.[90]

Greek tradition Edit

In Ancient Greece, the traditional war-bands lost some of the frenzy attributes that characterize shape shifters in other Indo-European cultures, but they still maintained the terror-inspiring appearance and the tricky war tactics of the original *kóryos.[91]

From 17 to 20 years old, the Athenian ephebos had to live during the 2 years in the ephebeia (ἐφηβεία).[92][48] Relegated to the edges of society, they were given a marginal status without a full citizenship. Their duty was to guard the limit of their community during peaceful times, generally as guards of fields, forests, and orchards. Leading ambushes and skirmishes in war time, the ephebos wore black tunics and were lightly armed.[92][48] An essential part of their training was the traditional hunt, conducted at night with the use of snares and traps. In the case of the Spartan krypteia, it was even a human hunt.[93]

The Spartan krypteia consisted of young men called agelai ('herds') and led by a boagos ('leader of cattle').[94] Similar formations, the Irenas (ἰρένας), were in charge of overseeing Helots and assisting the krypteia.[92][43] The Greek colony of Taras is said to have been founded by a group of 20-year-old Spartan Partheniae who were refused citizenship in order to encourage them to leave their hometown and found a new settlement.[95] Herodotus mentions the myth of Aristodemus, who fought courageously but was refused the recognition as best fighter by the Spartans because he got "mad" (lyssônta) and abandoned the formation, suggesting that Ancient Greeks thought that berserk-acting warriors had no place in the phalanx formation.[74]

Germanic tradition Edit

 
The Romano-Germanic deity Hercules Magusanus has been interpreted as the patron-figure of the Batavian kóryos (226 AD).[96]

During the first centuries of the Common Era, the Celto-Germanic tribal societies of Gallia Belgica and Germania Inferior probably included formations of young men which represented a significant political force within their host communities because of their military nature. Among the Batavi, the Romano-Germanic god Hercules Magusanus was likely regarded as the patron and protector of the Batavorum iuventus, a sort of paramilitary organization preparing young men for the soldier's life.[96]

Vikings were made up of groups of young people led by an adult male during a three-year campaign overseas. The social group consisting of the grown-up men (the "former youths') only joined the formation when the time had come to settle in the conquered lands. Indeed, during the Viking Age, the raids lasted for two centuries before a definite colonization occurred in regions like modern-day Britain, France or Russia.[97]

In the 13th-century Icelandic Volsunga Saga, Sigmund trains his nephew Sinfjotli to harden him for later conflicts by sneaking with him through the forest dressed in wolf skins, thieving and killing. In a scene that can be compared to the Vedic tradition and the archeological site of Krasnosamarskoe, they removed their wolf skins and burned them at the end of the initiation, since they were ready to return to the host community and follow a life constrained by its social taboos.[29]

Italic tradition Edit

The Italic ver sacrum involved the departure of an entire age group in order to found a "colony". In particular, the story of the Mamertines and the Roman ver sacrum dedicated in 217 AD by the decimviri sacris faciundis explicitly state that participating members were young people.[95]

Celtic tradition Edit

In the Fenian Cycle of Irish mythology, the fianna are depicted as bands of young male warriors and guards, led by the mythical hunter-warrior Finn. They had to live outdoors in the woods and hills of Ireland during the warmer months from May (Beltane) until October (Samhain), feeding themselves only by hunting. During the colder months from November to April, the fianna went back to their family farms.[98]

The early Irish diberga or fēindidi were bands of young unmarried men who lived off the country raiding and hunting; their behaviour was explicitly that of a wolf or dog.[27]

The Gaesatae, a group Gallic mercenary warriors said to fight naked and mentioned in the late 3rd century BC, may also be related.[99]

Armenian tradition Edit

The manuks ('young warriors') are mentioned in the story of the legendary founder of Armenia, Hayk. His descendant, Aram, interpreted as the "second image of Hayk", heads an army of 50,000 norati ('youths') warriors extending the borders of the territory on every side to create a new, superior Armenia.[100] Contrary to Hayk, who is fighting his adversary within the territory of Armenia, Aram makes war in the borderlands and beyond the borders of Armenia. According to Armen Petrosyan, this suggests that the young warriors of Aram can be interpreted as a reflex of the kóryos, while Hayk's soldiers may be the depiction of the adult men in arms.[69]

See also Edit

References Edit

Footnotes
  1. ^ Old Prussian kargis 'army' and caryago 'military campaign'; Lithuanian kãrias 'war, army, regiment'; Latvian karš 'war, army'.[5]
  2. ^ Gaulish corios 'troop, army'; Middle Irish cuire 'troop, host'; Welsh cordd 'tribe, clan'.[6][7]
  3. ^ Gothic harjis 'army'; Old Norse herr 'army'; Old English here 'army'; Old High German hari 'army, crowd'; Old Saxon heri 'army'.[8]
  4. ^ Scholar Blanca María Prósper cites an Iranian personal name Κηρπáτης, found in Galatia. The name probably stems from a compound *kār(i̯)a-pati 'lord of the troop'.
Citations
  1. ^ Mallory & Adams 2006, pp. 278, 282, 284.
  2. ^ a b c Ringe 2006, p. 76.
  3. ^ a b Mallory & Adams 2006, p. 284.
  4. ^ Kroonen 2013, p. 212.
  5. ^ Derksen 2015, p. 226.
  6. ^ Matasović 2009, p. 218.
  7. ^ a b c Delamarre 2003, p. 126.
  8. ^ Kroonen 2013, p. 211.
  9. ^ Kershaw 1997, p. 22.
  10. ^ Mallory & Adams 2006, p. 282.
  11. ^ Kershaw 1997, p. 15.
  12. ^ a b West 2007, p. 449.
  13. ^ Gysseling, Maurits (1990). "Herbillon (Jules). Les noms des communes de Wallonie". Revue belge de Philologie et d'Histoire. 68 (2): 464–467.
  14. ^ Haubrichs, Wolfgang; Pitz, Martina (2009). "Tradition onomastique et construction de mythes. Les noms des prologues de la loi salique". Nouvelle revue d'onomastique. 51 (1): 131–166. doi:10.3406/onoma.2009.1513.
  15. ^ a b Lambert, Pierre-Yves (2008). "Gaulois Solitumaros". Études celtiques. 36 (1): 96. doi:10.3406/ecelt.2008.2303.
  16. ^ Prósper, Blanca María (2014). García Alonso, Juan Luis (ed.). Continental Celtic Word Formation: The Onomastic Data. Ediciones Universidad de Salamanca. p. 184. ISBN 978-84-9012-383-6.
  17. ^ Falileyev, Alexander (2010). Dictionary of Continental Celtic Place-names: A Celtic Companion to the Barrington Atlas of the Greek and Roman World. CMCS. entry 1002b. ISBN 978-0955718236.
  18. ^ Prósper, Blanca María. "Varia Palaeohispánica Occidentalia:, III. Indoeuropeo *kor(y)o- "ejército" en Hispania". In: Palaeohispánica: Revista sobre lenguas y culturas de la Hispania antigua Nº. 4, 2004, pp. 183-185. ISSN 1578-5386
  19. ^ Santos, Maria João Correia. "Inscrições rupestres do Norte de Portugal: novos dados e problemática". In: Sylloge Epigraphica Barcinonensis (SEBarc) VIII, 2010, p. 141 (footnore nr. 28) ISSN 2013-4118
  20. ^ Ruiz, José María Vallejo. "La composición en la antroponimia antigua de la Península Ibérica". In: Palaeohispánica: Revista sobre lenguas y culturas de la Hispania antigua Nº. 5, 2005 (Actas del IX coloquio sobre lenguas y culturas paleohispánicas (Barcelona, 20-24 de octubre de 2004)). pp. 103-104, 115-116. ISSN 1578-5386
  21. ^ Prósper, Blanca María. "Sifting the evidence: New interpretations on celtic and non-celtic personal names of western hispania in the light of phonetics, composition and suffixation". In: Continental Celtic word formation: the onomastic data. Coord. por Juan Luis García Alonso, 2013. pp. 183-186. ISBN 978-84-9012-378-2
  22. ^ Sergent 2003, p. 12.
  23. ^ Falk 1986.
  24. ^ a b Anthony & Brown 2019, p. 101.
  25. ^ Sergent 2003, pp. 11–12.
  26. ^ a b c Nordvig, Mathias (2022). "From Barbarian to Lord: The Influence of Männerbund-Theories on Alt-Right". Religionsvidenskabeligt Tidsskrift. 74: 743–763. doi:10.7146/rt.v74i.132138. ISSN 1904-8181.
  27. ^ a b Mallory & Adams 1997, p. 31.
  28. ^ McCone 1987, pp. 107–108; Mallory 2006, p. 93; Kristiansen et al. 2017, p. 339; Anthony & Brown 2019, p. 111
  29. ^ a b c d Anthony & Brown 2019, p. 111.
  30. ^ Sergent 2003, p. 16; Mallory 2006, p. 94; Anthony & Brown 2019, p. 111
  31. ^ a b Kristiansen et al. 2017, p. 339.
  32. ^ Cebrián 2010, p. 343.
  33. ^ a b Anthony & Brown 2019, p. 116.
  34. ^ a b c Sergent 2003, p. 16.
  35. ^ Sergent 2003, p. 16; Loma 2019, p. 3
  36. ^ McCone 1987, p. 111–114.
  37. ^ Anthony & Brown 2019, p. 117.
  38. ^ Gibbons, Ann (21 February 2017). "Thousands of horsemen may have swept into Bronze Age Europe, transforming the local population". Science.
  39. ^ Sergent 2003, p. 23; Anthony & Ringe 2015, p. 214; Kristiansen et al. 2017, p. 339
  40. ^ Sergent 2003, p. 23; Anthony & Brown 2019, p. 111
  41. ^ Anthony & Ringe 2015, p. 214.
  42. ^ Kershaw 1997, pp. 257, 262.
  43. ^ a b Cebrián 2010, p. 355.
  44. ^ a b c Mallory 2006, p. 94.
  45. ^ Anthony & Brown 2019, p. 111; West 2007, p. 450; Loma 2019, p. 2
  46. ^ Sergent 2003, p. 16; Anthony & Ringe 2015, p. 213; Loma 2019, p. 3
  47. ^ Loma 2019, p. 3.
  48. ^ a b c Cebrián 2010, p. 352.
  49. ^ a b Ivančik 1993, p. 313.
  50. ^ a b Ivančik 1993, p. 314.
  51. ^ Kershaw 1997, p. 13.
  52. ^ West 2007, p. 450.
  53. ^ Speidel 2002, p. 15.
  54. ^ McCone 1987.
  55. ^ Loma 2019, p. 2.
  56. ^ a b c Cebrián 2010, p. 344.
  57. ^ a b West 2007, pp. 449–450.
  58. ^ Speidel 2002, p. 277.
  59. ^ Lincoln 1991, p. 131.
  60. ^ Cebrián 2010, p. 346.
  61. ^ Sergent 2003, pp. 18–19.
  62. ^ Speidel 2002, p. 262.
  63. ^ a b c Anthony 2007, p. 364–365.
  64. ^ a b Speidel 2002, p. 264.
  65. ^ Speidel 2002, p. 266.
  66. ^ a b Kershaw 1997, pp. 203–210.
  67. ^ Speidel 2002, pp. 266–267.
  68. ^ a b c Sergent 2003, p. 17.
  69. ^ a b c Petrosyan 2011, p. 345.
  70. ^ Vidal-Naquet 1986.
  71. ^ Vidal-Naquet 1986, p. 119.
  72. ^ Petrosyan 2011, p. 348.
  73. ^ Kershaw 1997, pp. 66–67.
  74. ^ a b Cebrián 2010, p. 347.
  75. ^ Kershaw 1997, p. 68.
  76. ^ a b Anthony & Brown 2019, p. 97.
  77. ^ Anthony & Brown 2019, p. 103.
  78. ^ a b Anthony & Brown 2019, p. 100.
  79. ^ Anthony & Brown 2019, p. 98.
  80. ^ Anthony & Brown 2019, pp. 97, 100.
  81. ^ Kershaw 1997, p. 251.
  82. ^ Kershaw 1997, p. 209.
  83. ^ Kershaw 1997, p. 63.
  84. ^ Kershaw 1997, p. 231.
  85. ^ Anthony & Brown 2019, p. 112.
  86. ^ Sergent 2003, p. 9.
  87. ^ Ivančik 1993, p. 318.
  88. ^ Ivančik 1993, p. 319.
  89. ^ "ḤOSAYN-E KORD-E ŠABESTARI". Encyclopædia Iranica. Vol. XII. August 21, 2022. pp. 515–516.
  90. ^ Daryaee 2018.
  91. ^ Cebrián 2010, p. 356.
  92. ^ a b c Sergent 2003, p. 22.
  93. ^ Cebrián 2010, p. 353.
  94. ^ Cebrián 2010, p. 354.
  95. ^ a b Sergent 2003, p. 10.
  96. ^ a b Roymans 2009, p. 233.
  97. ^ Sergent 2003, pp. 10, 22–23.
  98. ^ Sergent 2003, p. 15.
  99. ^ MacKillop 2004, s.v. Fianna: "An antecedent body may be the Gaulish gaesatae from the Upper Rhone as described by the Greek historian Polybius (2nd cent. bc ) ... Irish chronicles indicate that the first fianna were approximately contemporary with the gaesatae, as when they protected the ard rí [high king] Fiachach."
  100. ^ Petrosyan 2011, pp. 343–344.

Bibliography Edit

  • Anthony, David W. (2007). The Horse, the Wheel, and Language. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0691058870.
  • Anthony, David W.; Ringe, Donald (2015). "The Indo-European Homeland from Linguistic and Archaeological Perspectives". Annual Review of Linguistics. 1 (1): 199–219. doi:10.1146/annurev-linguist-030514-124812.
  • Anthony, David W.; Brown, Dorcas R. (2019). "Late Bronze Age midwinter dog sacrifices and warrior initiations at Krasnosamarskoe, Russia". In Olsen, Birgit A.; Olander, Thomas; Kristiansen, Kristian (eds.). Tracing the Indo-Europeans: New evidence from archaeology and historical linguistics. Oxbow Books. ISBN 978-1-78925-273-6.
  • Cebrián, Reyes B. (2010). "Some Greek Evidence for Indo-European Youth Contingents of Shape Shifters". The Journal of Indo-European Studies. 38 (3/4): 343–358. ISSN 0092-2323.
  • Daryaee, Touraj (2018). "The Iranian Männerbund Revisited". Iran and the Caucasus. 22 (1): 38–49. doi:10.1163/1573384X-20180104. ISSN 1573-384X.
  • Delamarre, Xavier (2003). Dictionnaire de la langue gauloise: Une approche linguistique du vieux-celtique continental. Errance. ISBN 9782877723695.
  • Derksen, Rick (2015). Etymological Dictionary of the Baltic Inherited Lexicon. Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-27898-1.
  • Falk, Harry (1986). Bruderschaft und Würfelspiel: Untersuchungen zur Entwicklungsgeschichte des vedischen Opfers (in German). Hedwig Falk. ISBN 978-3-925270-00-0.
  • Ivančik, Askold I. (1993). "Les Guerriers-Chiens: Loups-garous et invasions scythes en Asie Mineure". Revue de l'histoire des religions. 210 (3): 305–330. doi:10.3406/rhr.1993.1478. ISSN 0035-1423. JSTOR 23671794.
  • Kershaw, Priscilla K. (1997). The One-eyed God : Odin and the (Indo-)Germanic Männerbünde. Monograph Series. Vol. 36. Journal of Indo-European Studies. ISBN 978-0941694742.
  • Kristiansen, Kristian; Allentoft, Morten E.; Frei, Karin M.; Iversen, Rune; Johannsen, Niels N.; Kroonen, Guus; Pospieszny, Łukasz; Price, T. Douglas; Rasmussen, Simon; Sjögren, Karl-Göran; Sikora, Martin (2017). "Re-theorising mobility and the formation of culture and language among the Corded Ware Culture in Europe". Antiquity. 91 (356): 334–347. doi:10.15184/aqy.2017.17. ISSN 0003-598X.
  • Kroonen, Guus (2013). Etymological Dictionary of Proto-Germanic. Brill. ISBN 9789004183407.
  • Lincoln, Bruce (1991). Death, War, and Sacrifice: Studies in Ideology & Practice. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-48199-9.
  • Loma, Aleksandar (2019). Problems of chronological and social stratification in the historical anthroponomastics: The case of "lupine" and "equine" proper names among the Indo-European peoples (PDF). Personal Names and Cultural Reconstruction. University of Helsinki.
  • Mallory, James P.; Adams, Douglas Q. (1997). Encyclopedia of Indo-European Culture. Fitzroy Dearborn. ISBN 978-1-884964-98-5.
  • Mallory, James P.; Adams, Douglas Q. (2006). The Oxford Introduction to Proto-Indo-European and the Proto-Indo-European World. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-929668-2.
  • Mallory, James P. (2006). "Indo-European Warfare". Journal of Conflict Archaeology. 2 (1): 77–98. doi:10.1163/157407706778942312. ISSN 1574-0773. S2CID 162297933.
  • Matasović, Ranko (2009). Etymological Dictionary of Proto-Celtic. Brill. ISBN 9789004173361.
  • McCone, Kim R. (1987). "Hund, Wolf und Krieger bei den Indogermanen". In Meid, Wolfgang (ed.). Studien zum indogermanischen Wortschatz (in German). Institut für Sprachwissenschaft. pp. 101–154. ISBN 978-3-85124-591-2.
  • MacKillop, James (2004). A dictionary of Celtic mythology. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-860967-1.
  • Petrosyan, Armen (2011). "Armenian Traditional Black Youths: the Earliest Sources". Journal of Indo-European Studies (2019 ed.). 39 (3/4): 155–164.
  • Ringe, Donald (2006). From Proto-Indo-European to Proto-Germanic. A Linguistic History of English. Vol. 1 (2017 ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-153633-5.
  • Roymans, Nico (2009). "Hercules and the construction of a Batavian identity in the context of the Roman empire". In Roymans, Nico; Derks, Ton (eds.). The Role of Power and Tradition. pp. 219–238. ISBN 978-90-8964-078-9. JSTOR j.ctt46n1n2.13. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  • Sergent, Bernard (2003). "Les troupes de jeunes hommes et l'expansion indo-européenne". Dialogues d'Histoire Ancienne. 29 (2): 9–27. doi:10.3406/dha.2003.1560.
  • Speidel, Michael P. (2002). "Berserks: A History of Indo-European Mad Warriors". Journal of World History. 13 (2): 253–290. ISSN 1045-6007. JSTOR 20078974.
  • Vidal-Naquet, Pierre (1986). The Black Hunter: Forms of Thought and Forms of Society in the Greek World. Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 978-0-8018-5951-9.
  • West, Martin L. (2007). Indo-European Poetry and Myth. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-928075-9.

Further reading Edit

  • Daryaee, Touraj. "Männerbund Aspects of Old Persian Anušiya-." In: Achemenet. Vingt Ans Apres: Etudes Offertes a Pierre Briant a L'occasion Des Vingt Ans Du Programme Achemenet. Edited by Agut-Labordère Damien, Boucharlat Rémy, Joannès Francis, Kuhrt Amélie, and Stolper Matthew W. LEUVEN; PARIS; BRISTOL, CT: Peeters Publishers, 2021. pp. 73–78. Accessed July 2, 2021. doi:10.2307/j.ctv1q26jhj.9.
  • Das, Raul Peter; Meiser, Gerhard, eds. (2002). Geregeltes Ungestüm. Brüderschaften und Jugendbünde bei altindogermanischen Völkern. Hempen-Verlag.
  • Harris, Joseph C. (1993). "Love and Death in the Männerbund: An Essay with Special Reference to the Bjarkamál and The Battle of Maldon". Heroic Poetry in the Anglo-Saxon Period: Studies in Honor of Jess B. Bessinger. Western Michigan University, Medieval Institute Publications. ISBN 978-1879288287.
  • McCone, Kim (2021). Age grades, coevals, age sets and the Roman curiae. Power, Gender and Mobility: Features of Indo-European Society. University of Copenhagen.
  • Powell, Eric A. (2013). "Wolf Rites of Winter". Archaeology. 66 (5): 33–36. ISSN 0003-8113. JSTOR 24363683.
  • Ruck, Carl Anton Paul (2019). "The Beast Initiate: The Lycanthropy of Heracles". Athens Journal of History. 5 (4): 225–246. doi:10.30958/ajhis.5-4-1. ISSN 2407-9677.
  • Russell, James R. (1998). "The Armenian Shrines of the Black Youth (t'ux manuk)". Le Muséon. 111 (3–4): 319–343. doi:10.2143/MUS.111.3.519500.
  • Sergis, Manolis G. (2010). "Dog Sacrifice in Ancient and Modern Greece: From the sacrifice ritual to dog torture (Kynomartyrion)" (PDF). Folklore. 45: 61–88.
  • Vassilkov, Y. V. (2019). "The Armenian Epic "Daredevils of Sassoun" and the Mahābhārata: Similarity of the Ethnographic Substratum". Archaeology, Ethnology & Anthropology of Eurasia (in Russian). 47 (2): 140–147. doi:10.17746/1563-0110.2019.47.2.140-147. ISSN 1563-0110.
  • "Youthbands, Migrants, and Wolves". In: Vuković, Krešimir. Wolves of Rome: The Lupercalia from Roman and Comparative Perspectives. Berlin, Boston: De Gruyter Oldenbourg, 2023. pp. 146-172. https://doi.org/10.1515/9783110690118-010
  • Zoller, Claus Peter (2017). "Traditions of transgressive sacrality (against blasphemy) in Hinduism". Acta Orientalia. 78 (78): 1–162. doi:10.5617/ao.7265. ISSN 0001-6438.

kóryos, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, contain, bundled, citations, with, poor, text, source, integrity, please, help, improve, this, ar. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article may contain bundled citations with poor text source integrity Please help improve this article this article by verifying its sources moving citations closer to the claims they support and removing original synthesis August 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article possibly contains original research Relevant discussion may be found on Talk Koryos Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed August 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article has an unclear citation style The reason given is Often multiple sources are used to support one sentence with several claims The references used may be made clearer with a different or consistent style of citation and footnoting August 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message The koryos Proto Indo European army people under arms or detachment war party citation needed refers to the theoretical Proto Indo European brotherhood of warriors in which unmarried young males served for several years as a rite of passage into manhood before their full integration into society Scholars who have theorized the existence of the koryos based on later Indo European traditions and myths that feature links between landless young males perceived as an age class not yet fully integrated into the community of the married men their service in a police army sent away for part of the year in the wild where they hunted animals and raided foreign communities citation needed then defending the host society for the rest of the year their mystical self identification with wolves and dogs as symbols of death lawlessness and warrior fury and the idea of a liminality between invulnerability and death on one side and youth and adulthood on the other side Contents 1 Etymology and name 2 Historiography 3 Description 3 1 Rite of passage 3 2 Role in the Indo European migrations 4 Attributes 4 1 Wolf like behaviour 4 2 Warrior fury 4 3 Nudity 4 4 Darkness 5 Attestations 5 1 Krasnosamarskoe 5 2 Indian tradition 5 3 Iranian tradition 5 4 Greek tradition 5 5 Germanic tradition 5 6 Italic tradition 5 7 Celtic tradition 5 8 Armenian tradition 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Bibliography 8 Further readingEtymology and name Edit improper synthesis The Proto Indo European noun koryos denotes a people under arms and has been translated as army war band unit of warriors 1 or as detachment war party 2 It stems from the noun koro cutting section division attested in Old Persian as kara people army Persian کاروان romanized Karavan lit Troupe and in Lithuanian as karas war army 2 3 4 The term koryos has descendant cognates in the Baltic karyas army note 1 Celtic koryos troop tribe note 2 and Germanic harjaz host troop army raiding party note 3 9 2 10 In west central Indo European dialects note 4 the designation koryonos meaning leader of the koryos here attached to the suffix nos master of is also attested Ancient Greek koiranos army leader Old Norse Herjan lt PGmc harjanaz army leader and Brittonic Coriono totae people of the army leader 11 3 12 7 The Gallic tribes Uo corri two armies Tri corii three armies and Petru corii four armies were presumably formed from alliances of roving war bands 7 12 The noun harja is also part of compound names in Germanic languages 13 such as Herigast Heregast possibly attested as Harikast on the Negau helmet 14 Some toponyms in Western Europe such as Cherbourg in France or Heerlen in the Netherlands may stem from historical ethnic groups whose name contained the Celtic noun koryo army troop as proposed by Pierre Yves Lambert 15 Additionally the Asturian personal name Vacoria similar to Gaulish Vocorius has been interpreted as stemming from the Celtic ethnic name d uo korio possessing two armies 16 and the Gallic tribal name Coriosolites as meaning those who watch over the troop 17 or those who purchase soldiers or mercenaries 15 Ancient paleo Hispanic onomastics also attest the noun albeit in the form koro with the same meaning 18 19 20 21 In Indo European studies the modern German term Mannerbund de literally alliance of men is often used to refer to the koryos 22 However it can be misleading since the war bands were made up of adolescent males not grown up men Some scholars have proposed the terms Bruderschaft fraternity or Jungmannschaft young group of men as preferable alternatives 23 24 Historiography EditThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it August 2023 The concept of the Mannerbund was developed in the early 20th century by scholars such as Heinrich Schurtz 1902 Hans Bluher 1917 Lily Weiser Aall 1927 Georges Dumezil 1929 Richard Wolfram 1932 Robert Stumpfl 1934 Otto Hofler 1934 Stig Wikander 1938 and Henri Jeanmaire fr 1939 25 26 These theories influenced German Volkisch movements in the period 1900 1920s then Nazi circles during the 1930 1940s Scholarship from the later part of the 20th century has pointed out the far right ideological foundations of most of the earlier works but has also yielded new evidence supporting the existence of brotherhoods of warriors in Vendel Period Scandinavia 26 The standard comparative overview of the subject is Kim McCone s Hund Wolf und Krieger bei den Indogermanen published in 1987 27 Another study is Priscilla K Kershaw s The One Eyed God Odin and the Indo Germanic Mannerbunde 1997 26 Description EditRite of passage EditThe koryos were composed of adolescent males presumably from 12 13 up to 18 19 years of age usually coming from prominent families and initiated together into manhood as an age class cohort 28 failed verification see discussion After undergoing painful trials to enter the group they were sent away to live as landless warriors in the wild for a number of years within a group ranging from two to twelve members The young males went without possession other than their weapons living on the edges of their host society 29 Social behaviour normally forbidden such as stealing raiding or sexually assaulting women were therefore tolerated amongst koryos members as long as the malevolent acts were not directed at the host society 30 Their activities were seasonal and they lived with their home community for a part of the year 31 An Athenian ephebe Their life was centred on military duties hunting wild animals and pillaging settlements on one side and on the recitation of heroic poetry telling the deeds of past heroes and cattle theft legends on the other side 29 32 A tradition of epic poetry celebrating heroic and violent warriors conquering loot and territories which were portrayed as possessions the gods wanted them to have probably participated in the validation of violence among the koryos The leader of the band the koryonos was determined with a game of dice and the result accepted as the gods choice The other members pledged to die for him and to kill for him 33 He was regarded as their master in the rite of passage but also as their employer since the young warriors served as his bodyguards and protectors 34 The period of initiation within the koryos was perceived as a transitional stage preceding the status of adult warrior and was usually crowned by marriage 35 The koryos were symbolically associated with death and liminality but also with fecundity and sexual license 29 Kim McCone has argued that members of the koryos initially served as young unmarried males without possessions before their eventual incorporation into the tewteh2 the tribe people under arms composed of the property owning and married adult males 36 According to David W Anthony and Dorcas R Brown the koryos may have served as an organization promoting group cohesion and effectiveness in combat as an instrument of external territorial expansion and as a regulatory device in chiefly feast centred economies 37 In Europe those oath bound initiatory war bands were eventually absorbed by increasingly powerful patrons and kings during the Iron Age while they were downgraded in ancient India with the rise of the Brahmin caste leading to their progressive demise 24 Role in the Indo European migrations Edit See also Indo European migrations Early Indo European migrations from the Pontic Caspian steppe spread Yamnaya Steppe pastoralist ancestry and Indo European languages across large parts of Eurasia 38 Scholars have argued that the institution of the koryos played a key role during the Indo European migrations and the diffusion of Indo European languages across most of western Eurasia 39 Raids headed by those young warriors could have led to the establishment of new settlements on foreign lands preparing the ground for the larger migration of whole tribes including old men women and children 40 This scenario is supported by archaeological data from the early Single Grave Corded Ware Culture in Jutland where 90 per cent of all burials belonged to males in what appears to be a colonial expansion on the territory of the Funnelbeaker culture 31 The koryos probably drove people not protected by the Indo European social umbrella to move under it in order to obtain safety or restitution from thieving and raiding They could therefore have served as an incentive for the recruitment of outsiders into social positions that offered vertical mobility horizontal reciprocity and the possibility of immortality through praise poetry made more attractive by generosity at patron sponsored public feasts 41 Attributes EditWolf like behaviour Edit The war bands consisted of shape shifting warriors in a symbolic and metaphorical sense wearing animal skins to assume the nature of wolves or dogs 42 43 44 Members of the koryos adopted wolfish behaviours and bore names containing the word wolf or dog each a symbol of death and the Otherworld in Indo European belief 45 The idealized attributes of the koryos were indeed borrowed from the imagery surrounding the wolf violence trickery swiftness great strength and warrior fury 46 By identifying with the wild animals koryos members perceived themselves as physically and legally moved outside the human world and therefore no longer restrained by human taboos When returning to their normal life they would feel no remorse for breaking the rules of their home society because they had not been humans or at least not living in the cultural space of the host society when those rules were broken 33 In Ancient Greece the wolfish ways of fighting were reserved to the adolescent groups passing the warrior initiation Young members of the Athenian ephebos and the Spartan crypteia were able to use war techniques usually forbidden to the adult warrior they covered their actions and prowled at night using tricks and ambushes 47 The ephebos in particular were under the patronage of the god Apollo associated in many myths with wolves and bearing the epithet Lykeios 48 During his initiation the Irish mythical hero Setanta a typical depiction of the koryos member is given the name Cu Chulainn hound of Culann 49 The young members of the Ossetic balc were strongly associated with the wolf and described as a k war herd 50 The Avestan literature also mentions the mairyō wolf dog as the young male serving in warrior bands 50 Woodcut image of one of the Vendel era Torslunda plates found on Oland Sweden It probably depicts the god of frenzy odinn followed by a Berserkr 51 In the Norse tradition berserkers were sometimes called ulfhednar wolf skinned and the frenzy warriors wearing the skins of wolves were designated as ulfhedinn wolf coat 52 53 The folk legend of the werewolf man wolf found in many European traditions is probably reminiscent of the wolfish behaviour of the warrior bands Similar word formations can be found in Western Indo European languages such as Ancient Greek luk anthrōpos wolf man Proto Germanic wira wulfaz man wolf cf werewolf Proto Celtic wiro ku man dog and Proto Slavic vlko dlak wolf haired one at the origin of lycanthopy werewolf Viroconium and Wurdulac respectively 54 55 Warrior fury Edit See also Berserker The conflicting opposition between death and invulnerability is suggested by the attributes generally associated with the koryos great strength resistance to pain and lack of fear 34 The typical state of warrior fury or frenzy was supposed to increase his strength above natural expectations with ecstatic performances accentuated by dances and perhaps by the use of drugs 56 57 The Indo European term for a mad attack eis is common to the Vedic Germanic and Iranian traditions 58 The Germanic berserkers were depicted as practitioners of the battle fury going berserk berserksgangr while the martial fury of the Ancient Greek warrior was called lyssa a derivation of lykos wolf as if the soldiers temporarily become wolves in their mad rage 57 59 60 As such young males were perceived as dangers even to their host society The Maruts a group of storm deities of the Vedic tradition were depicted as both beneficial and dangerous entities 34 The Irish hero Cuchulainn becomes a terrorizing figure among the inhabitants of the capital city Emain Macha after he beheaded three rivals from his own people the Ulaid Aiming to appease his fury they decide to capture him and plunge his body into basins of water in order to cool him down Irish sources also describe some of the warrior bands as savages diberg living like wolves by pillaging and massacring Similarly some Greek warrior bands were called hybristḗs ὑbristh and portrayed as violent and insolent groups of ransomers and looters 49 61 Nudity Edit Main article Nudity in combat The Yamnaya Kernosovskiy idol depicting a naked warrior with a belt axes and testicles mid 3rd mill BC and the Celtic Warrior of Hirschlanden 6th c BC wearing only a helmet neckband belt and sword 62 63 Many kurgan stelae found in the Pontic Caspian steppe which are associated with the Proto Indo European culture depict a naked male warrior carved on the stone with little else than a belt and his weapons In later Indo European traditions koryos raiders likewise wore a belt that bound them to their leader and the gods and little else 63 In Ancient Greek and Roman literary sources Germanic and Celtic peoples were often portrayed as fighting naked or semi naked armed only with light weapons 44 56 At the battle of Telamon 225 BC Gallic warriors reportedly wore only trousers and capes 64 In the Norse tradition Berserker usually scorned the use of armour to favour animal skins and they were sometimes also said to fight naked 56 Ancient Italic tribes also had in their ranks berserk like warriors who fought naked barefoot flowing haired and often in single combat 65 Similarly young Vedic boys wore only a belt and an animal skin during their initiation within the koryos 66 Celtiberian statuettes from the 5th 3rd centuries BC depict naked warriors with a sword a small round shield caetra a power belt and sometimes a helmet 64 The tradition of kurgan stelae featuring warriors with a belt is also common in the Scythian cultures 63 According to military historian Michael P Speidel the scene 36 of Trajan s Column which shows bare chested bare footed young men wearing only a shield could be a depiction of Germanic Berserkers 67 Darkness Edit The koryos is usually associated with the colour black or at least dark 44 and with the mobilization of chthonic forces 68 Frequent references are made to the black earth or the dark night in the Indo European literature and hunting and fighting at night appears to have been one of the distinguishing characteristics of the koryos 69 68 In the Vedic tradition the followers of Indra and Rudra wore black clothes and the young heroes of Medieval Armenia were called black youths t ux manuks The black Aram is the idealized figure of the koryos leader in Armenian myths and his armies are said to suddenly attack adversaries before dawn in the borderlands of Armenia 69 The Athenian ephebes traditionally wore a black chlamys 68 and the Ancient Greek tradition featured an initiation ritual imposed upon young males in which black hunters were sent out to the frontier to perform military exploits 70 Indeed the Greek model of the black hunter Meleager is named after the word for black melas 71 and the Armenian name Aram stems from the root re mo dirt soot 72 The Roman historian Tacitus 1st c AD also mentions the Germanic Harii whose name could derive from koryos as savages wearing black shields dyeing their bodies and choosing dark nights for battle 73 74 Kershaw has proposed that the Harii were the koryos of the neighbouring Lugii tribe 75 Attestations EditThis section possibly contains original research No discussion of how these facts support the hypothesis Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed August 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Krasnosamarskoe Edit At Krasnosamarskoe Volga steppes were found 51 dogs and 7 wolves sacrificed and consumed in what could have been weasel words a winter season rite of passage into a status represented metaphorically by the animals 76 The site is associated with the Srubnaya culture 1900 1700 BC generally regarded as proto Iranian and possibly made up of archaic Iranian speakers 77 Krasnosamarskoe appears to have been a place where people from around the region came to periodically engage in transgressive initiation rituals conducted in the winter and requiring dog and wolf sacrifice 78 According to Anthony and Brown it was a place of inversion as is the eating of wolves animal symbolic of anti culture a murderer has become like a wolf in Hittite law wolf was used to refer to brigands and outlaws people who stand outside the law in many other Indo European languages 78 The dogs found on the site seem to have been well treated during their lifetime and they were probably familiar pets 79 The ritual was centred on dog sacrifice in a region and time period when dogs were not normally eaten 76 Cattle and sheep were indeed consumed throughout the year on the site whereas dogs were killed almost exclusively in the winter in a regular inversion of normal dietary customs 80 Indian tradition Edit Some Vedic families began initiating young boys at 8 years old studying heroic poetry about past ancestors and practicing their hunting and fighting skills At 16 they were initiated into a warrior band during the winter solstice ritual the Ekastaka during which the boys went into an ecstatic state then ritually died to be reborn as dogs of war 66 After their leader was determined by a dice game the initiated youths were cast away in the wild for four years to live as dogs stealing animals women goods and territory until the summer solstice ended the raiding season 81 The young warriors then returned to their forest residence where they held a Vratyastoma sacrifice to thank the gods for their success 82 At the end the four year initiation a final Vratyastoma sacrifice was performed to transform the dog warrior into a responsible adult man then the newly initiated males destroyed their old clothes to become human once again ready to return to their family and to live by the rules of their host community 83 The Vratyas dog priests were known for performing the Ekastaka ceremony at the winter solstice when Indra the god of war is said to have been born with his band of Maruts The term Vrata is used in particular the Rigveda to describe the Maruts 84 85 Iranian tradition Edit Main article Javanmardi The Scythians probably led military expeditions as a mandatory initiation into manhood which lasted for several years as suggested by historical raids in Anatolia 86 87 In the Ossetic tradition a compulsory initiation into manhood involved a military expedition known as the balc and lasting for one year Groups were formed during a spring feast Styr Tutyr dedicated to Wastyrgi the deity of wolves and warriors in Varkazana the month of men wolves October November 88 According to scholar Touraj Daryaee figures from the Iranian folkore such as Hosein the Kord or Gord 89 exhibit archetype Mannerbund traits 90 Greek tradition Edit Main articles Ephebos and Krypteia In Ancient Greece the traditional war bands lost some of the frenzy attributes that characterize shape shifters in other Indo European cultures but they still maintained the terror inspiring appearance and the tricky war tactics of the original koryos 91 From 17 to 20 years old the Athenian ephebos had to live during the 2 years in the ephebeia ἐfhbeia 92 48 Relegated to the edges of society they were given a marginal status without a full citizenship Their duty was to guard the limit of their community during peaceful times generally as guards of fields forests and orchards Leading ambushes and skirmishes in war time the ephebos wore black tunics and were lightly armed 92 48 An essential part of their training was the traditional hunt conducted at night with the use of snares and traps In the case of the Spartan krypteia it was even a human hunt 93 The Spartan krypteia consisted of young men called agelai herds and led by a boagos leader of cattle 94 Similar formations the Irenas ἰrenas were in charge of overseeing Helots and assisting the krypteia 92 43 The Greek colony of Taras is said to have been founded by a group of 20 year old Spartan Partheniae who were refused citizenship in order to encourage them to leave their hometown and found a new settlement 95 Herodotus mentions the myth of Aristodemus who fought courageously but was refused the recognition as best fighter by the Spartans because he got mad lyssonta and abandoned the formation suggesting that Ancient Greeks thought that berserk acting warriors had no place in the phalanx formation 74 Germanic tradition Edit The Romano Germanic deity Hercules Magusanus has been interpreted as the patron figure of the Batavian koryos 226 AD 96 During the first centuries of the Common Era the Celto Germanic tribal societies of Gallia Belgica and Germania Inferior probably included formations of young men which represented a significant political force within their host communities because of their military nature Among the Batavi the Romano Germanic god Hercules Magusanus was likely regarded as the patron and protector of the Batavorum iuventus a sort of paramilitary organization preparing young men for the soldier s life 96 Vikings were made up of groups of young people led by an adult male during a three year campaign overseas The social group consisting of the grown up men the former youths only joined the formation when the time had come to settle in the conquered lands Indeed during the Viking Age the raids lasted for two centuries before a definite colonization occurred in regions like modern day Britain France or Russia 97 In the 13th century Icelandic Volsunga Saga Sigmund trains his nephew Sinfjotli to harden him for later conflicts by sneaking with him through the forest dressed in wolf skins thieving and killing In a scene that can be compared to the Vedic tradition and the archeological site of Krasnosamarskoe they removed their wolf skins and burned them at the end of the initiation since they were ready to return to the host community and follow a life constrained by its social taboos 29 Italic tradition Edit Main article Ver sacrum The Italic ver sacrum involved the departure of an entire age group in order to found a colony In particular the story of the Mamertines and the Roman ver sacrum dedicated in 217 AD by the decimviri sacris faciundis explicitly state that participating members were young people 95 Celtic tradition Edit In the Fenian Cycle of Irish mythology the fianna are depicted as bands of young male warriors and guards led by the mythical hunter warrior Finn They had to live outdoors in the woods and hills of Ireland during the warmer months from May Beltane until October Samhain feeding themselves only by hunting During the colder months from November to April the fianna went back to their family farms 98 The early Irish diberga or feindidi were bands of young unmarried men who lived off the country raiding and hunting their behaviour was explicitly that of a wolf or dog 27 The Gaesatae a group Gallic mercenary warriors said to fight naked and mentioned in the late 3rd century BC may also be related 99 Armenian tradition Edit The manuks young warriors are mentioned in the story of the legendary founder of Armenia Hayk His descendant Aram interpreted as the second image of Hayk heads an army of 50 000 norati youths warriors extending the borders of the territory on every side to create a new superior Armenia 100 Contrary to Hayk who is fighting his adversary within the territory of Armenia Aram makes war in the borderlands and beyond the borders of Armenia According to Armen Petrosyan this suggests that the young warriors of Aram can be interpreted as a reflex of the koryos while Hayk s soldiers may be the depiction of the adult men in arms 69 See also EditBerserkr Werewolf Indo European migrations Proto Indo European society Rite of passage Ver Sacrum Ephebos Krypteia Fianna MarutsReferences EditFootnotes Old Prussian kargis army and caryago military campaign Lithuanian karias war army regiment Latvian kars war army 5 Gaulish corios troop army Middle Irish cuire troop host Welsh cordd tribe clan 6 7 Gothic harjis army Old Norse herr army Old English here army Old High German hari army crowd Old Saxon heri army 8 Scholar Blanca Maria Prosper cites an Iranian personal name Khrpaths found in Galatia The name probably stems from a compound kar i a pati lord of the troop Citations Mallory amp Adams 2006 pp 278 282 284 a b c Ringe 2006 p 76 a b Mallory amp Adams 2006 p 284 Kroonen 2013 p 212 Derksen 2015 p 226 Matasovic 2009 p 218 a b c Delamarre 2003 p 126 Kroonen 2013 p 211 Kershaw 1997 p 22 Mallory amp Adams 2006 p 282 Kershaw 1997 p 15 a b West 2007 p 449 Gysseling Maurits 1990 Herbillon Jules Les noms des communes de Wallonie Revue belge de Philologie et d Histoire 68 2 464 467 Haubrichs Wolfgang Pitz Martina 2009 Tradition onomastique et construction de mythes Les noms des prologues de la loi salique Nouvelle revue d onomastique 51 1 131 166 doi 10 3406 onoma 2009 1513 a b Lambert Pierre Yves 2008 Gaulois Solitumaros Etudes celtiques 36 1 96 doi 10 3406 ecelt 2008 2303 Prosper Blanca Maria 2014 Garcia Alonso Juan Luis ed Continental Celtic Word Formation The Onomastic Data Ediciones Universidad de Salamanca p 184 ISBN 978 84 9012 383 6 Falileyev Alexander 2010 Dictionary of Continental Celtic Place names A Celtic Companion to the Barrington Atlas of the Greek and Roman World CMCS entry 1002b ISBN 978 0955718236 Prosper Blanca Maria Varia Palaeohispanica Occidentalia III Indoeuropeo kor y o ejercito en Hispania In Palaeohispanica Revista sobre lenguas y culturas de la Hispania antigua Nº 4 2004 pp 183 185 ISSN 1578 5386 Santos Maria Joao Correia Inscricoes rupestres do Norte de Portugal novos dados e problematica In Sylloge Epigraphica Barcinonensis SEBarc VIII 2010 p 141 footnore nr 28 ISSN 2013 4118 Ruiz Jose Maria Vallejo La composicion en la antroponimia antigua de la Peninsula Iberica In Palaeohispanica Revista sobre lenguas y culturas de la Hispania antigua Nº 5 2005 Actas del IX coloquio sobre lenguas y culturas paleohispanicas Barcelona 20 24 de octubre de 2004 pp 103 104 115 116 ISSN 1578 5386 Prosper Blanca Maria Sifting the evidence New interpretations on celtic and non celtic personal names of western hispania in the light of phonetics composition and suffixation In Continental Celtic word formation the onomastic data Coord por Juan Luis Garcia Alonso 2013 pp 183 186 ISBN 978 84 9012 378 2 Sergent 2003 p 12 Falk 1986 a b Anthony amp Brown 2019 p 101 Sergent 2003 pp 11 12 a b c Nordvig Mathias 2022 From Barbarian to Lord The Influence of Mannerbund Theories on Alt Right Religionsvidenskabeligt Tidsskrift 74 743 763 doi 10 7146 rt v74i 132138 ISSN 1904 8181 a b Mallory amp Adams 1997 p 31 McCone 1987 pp 107 108 Mallory 2006 p 93 Kristiansen et al 2017 p 339 Anthony amp Brown 2019 p 111 a b c d Anthony amp Brown 2019 p 111 Sergent 2003 p 16 Mallory 2006 p 94 Anthony amp Brown 2019 p 111 a b Kristiansen et al 2017 p 339 Cebrian 2010 p 343 a b Anthony amp Brown 2019 p 116 a b c Sergent 2003 p 16 Sergent 2003 p 16 Loma 2019 p 3 McCone 1987 p 111 114 Anthony amp Brown 2019 p 117 Gibbons Ann 21 February 2017 Thousands of horsemen may have swept into Bronze Age Europe transforming the local population Science Sergent 2003 p 23 Anthony amp Ringe 2015 p 214 Kristiansen et al 2017 p 339 Sergent 2003 p 23 Anthony amp Brown 2019 p 111 Anthony amp Ringe 2015 p 214 Kershaw 1997 pp 257 262 a b Cebrian 2010 p 355 a b c Mallory 2006 p 94 Anthony amp Brown 2019 p 111 West 2007 p 450 Loma 2019 p 2 Sergent 2003 p 16 Anthony amp Ringe 2015 p 213 Loma 2019 p 3 Loma 2019 p 3 a b c Cebrian 2010 p 352 a b Ivancik 1993 p 313 a b Ivancik 1993 p 314 Kershaw 1997 p 13 West 2007 p 450 Speidel 2002 p 15 McCone 1987 Loma 2019 p 2 a b c Cebrian 2010 p 344 a b West 2007 pp 449 450 Speidel 2002 p 277 Lincoln 1991 p 131 Cebrian 2010 p 346 Sergent 2003 pp 18 19 Speidel 2002 p 262 a b c Anthony 2007 p 364 365 a b Speidel 2002 p 264 Speidel 2002 p 266 a b Kershaw 1997 pp 203 210 Speidel 2002 pp 266 267 a b c Sergent 2003 p 17 a b c Petrosyan 2011 p 345 Vidal Naquet 1986 Vidal Naquet 1986 p 119 Petrosyan 2011 p 348 Kershaw 1997 pp 66 67 a b Cebrian 2010 p 347 Kershaw 1997 p 68 a b Anthony amp Brown 2019 p 97 Anthony amp Brown 2019 p 103 a b Anthony amp Brown 2019 p 100 Anthony amp Brown 2019 p 98 Anthony amp Brown 2019 pp 97 100 Kershaw 1997 p 251 Kershaw 1997 p 209 Kershaw 1997 p 63 Kershaw 1997 p 231 Anthony amp Brown 2019 p 112 Sergent 2003 p 9 Ivancik 1993 p 318 Ivancik 1993 p 319 ḤOSAYN E KORD E SABESTARI Encyclopaedia Iranica Vol XII August 21 2022 pp 515 516 Daryaee 2018 Cebrian 2010 p 356 a b c Sergent 2003 p 22 Cebrian 2010 p 353 Cebrian 2010 p 354 a b Sergent 2003 p 10 a b Roymans 2009 p 233 Sergent 2003 pp 10 22 23 Sergent 2003 p 15 MacKillop 2004 s v Fianna An antecedent body may be the Gaulish gaesatae from the Upper Rhone as described by the Greek historian Polybius 2nd cent bc Irish chronicles indicate that the first fianna were approximately contemporary with the gaesatae as when they protected the ard ri high king Fiachach Petrosyan 2011 pp 343 344 Bibliography Edit Anthony David W 2007 The Horse the Wheel and Language Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691058870 Anthony David W Ringe Donald 2015 The Indo European Homeland from Linguistic and Archaeological Perspectives Annual Review of Linguistics 1 1 199 219 doi 10 1146 annurev linguist 030514 124812 Anthony David W Brown Dorcas R 2019 Late Bronze Age midwinter dog sacrifices and warrior initiations at Krasnosamarskoe Russia In Olsen Birgit A Olander Thomas Kristiansen Kristian eds Tracing the Indo Europeans New evidence from archaeology and historical linguistics Oxbow Books ISBN 978 1 78925 273 6 Cebrian Reyes B 2010 Some Greek Evidence for Indo European Youth Contingents of Shape Shifters The Journal of Indo European Studies 38 3 4 343 358 ISSN 0092 2323 Daryaee Touraj 2018 The Iranian Mannerbund Revisited Iran and the Caucasus 22 1 38 49 doi 10 1163 1573384X 20180104 ISSN 1573 384X Delamarre Xavier 2003 Dictionnaire de la langue gauloise Une approche linguistique du vieux celtique continental Errance ISBN 9782877723695 Derksen Rick 2015 Etymological Dictionary of the Baltic Inherited Lexicon Brill ISBN 978 90 04 27898 1 Falk Harry 1986 Bruderschaft und Wurfelspiel Untersuchungen zur Entwicklungsgeschichte des vedischen Opfers in German Hedwig Falk ISBN 978 3 925270 00 0 Ivancik Askold I 1993 Les Guerriers Chiens Loups garous et invasions scythes en Asie Mineure Revue de l histoire des religions 210 3 305 330 doi 10 3406 rhr 1993 1478 ISSN 0035 1423 JSTOR 23671794 Kershaw Priscilla K 1997 The One eyed God Odin and the Indo Germanic Mannerbunde Monograph Series Vol 36 Journal of Indo European Studies ISBN 978 0941694742 Kristiansen Kristian Allentoft Morten E Frei Karin M Iversen Rune Johannsen Niels N Kroonen Guus Pospieszny Lukasz Price T Douglas Rasmussen Simon Sjogren Karl Goran Sikora Martin 2017 Re theorising mobility and the formation of culture and language among the Corded Ware Culture in Europe Antiquity 91 356 334 347 doi 10 15184 aqy 2017 17 ISSN 0003 598X Kroonen Guus 2013 Etymological Dictionary of Proto Germanic Brill ISBN 9789004183407 Lincoln Bruce 1991 Death War and Sacrifice Studies in Ideology amp Practice University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 48199 9 Loma Aleksandar 2019 Problems of chronological and social stratification in the historical anthroponomastics The case of lupine and equine proper names among the Indo European peoples PDF Personal Names and Cultural Reconstruction University of Helsinki Mallory James P Adams Douglas Q 1997 Encyclopedia of Indo European Culture Fitzroy Dearborn ISBN 978 1 884964 98 5 Mallory James P Adams Douglas Q 2006 The Oxford Introduction to Proto Indo European and the Proto Indo European World Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 929668 2 Mallory James P 2006 Indo European Warfare Journal of Conflict Archaeology 2 1 77 98 doi 10 1163 157407706778942312 ISSN 1574 0773 S2CID 162297933 Matasovic Ranko 2009 Etymological Dictionary of Proto Celtic Brill ISBN 9789004173361 McCone Kim R 1987 Hund Wolf und Krieger bei den Indogermanen In Meid Wolfgang ed Studien zum indogermanischen Wortschatz in German Institut fur Sprachwissenschaft pp 101 154 ISBN 978 3 85124 591 2 MacKillop James 2004 A dictionary of Celtic mythology Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 860967 1 Petrosyan Armen 2011 Armenian Traditional Black Youths the Earliest Sources Journal of Indo European Studies 2019 ed 39 3 4 155 164 Ringe Donald 2006 From Proto Indo European to Proto Germanic A Linguistic History of English Vol 1 2017 ed Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 153633 5 Roymans Nico 2009 Hercules and the construction of a Batavian identity in the context of the Roman empire In Roymans Nico Derks Ton eds The Role of Power and Tradition pp 219 238 ISBN 978 90 8964 078 9 JSTOR j ctt46n1n2 13 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Sergent Bernard 2003 Les troupes de jeunes hommes et l expansion indo europeenne Dialogues d Histoire Ancienne 29 2 9 27 doi 10 3406 dha 2003 1560 Speidel Michael P 2002 Berserks A History of Indo European Mad Warriors Journal of World History 13 2 253 290 ISSN 1045 6007 JSTOR 20078974 Vidal Naquet Pierre 1986 The Black Hunter Forms of Thought and Forms of Society in the Greek World Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 978 0 8018 5951 9 West Martin L 2007 Indo European Poetry and Myth Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 928075 9 Further reading EditDaryaee Touraj Mannerbund Aspects of Old Persian Anusiya In Achemenet Vingt Ans Apres Etudes Offertes a Pierre Briant a L occasion Des Vingt Ans Du Programme Achemenet Edited by Agut Labordere Damien Boucharlat Remy Joannes Francis Kuhrt Amelie and Stolper Matthew W LEUVEN PARIS BRISTOL CT Peeters Publishers 2021 pp 73 78 Accessed July 2 2021 doi 10 2307 j ctv1q26jhj 9 Das Raul Peter Meiser Gerhard eds 2002 Geregeltes Ungestum Bruderschaften und Jugendbunde bei altindogermanischen Volkern Hempen Verlag Harris Joseph C 1993 Love and Death in the Mannerbund An Essay with Special Reference to the Bjarkamal and The Battle of Maldon Heroic Poetry in the Anglo Saxon Period Studies in Honor of Jess B Bessinger Western Michigan University Medieval Institute Publications ISBN 978 1879288287 McCone Kim 2021 Age grades coevals age sets and the Roman curiae Power Gender and Mobility Features of Indo European Society University of Copenhagen Powell Eric A 2013 Wolf Rites of Winter Archaeology 66 5 33 36 ISSN 0003 8113 JSTOR 24363683 Ruck Carl Anton Paul 2019 The Beast Initiate The Lycanthropy of Heracles Athens Journal of History 5 4 225 246 doi 10 30958 ajhis 5 4 1 ISSN 2407 9677 Russell James R 1998 The Armenian Shrines of the Black Youth t ux manuk Le Museon 111 3 4 319 343 doi 10 2143 MUS 111 3 519500 Sergis Manolis G 2010 Dog Sacrifice in Ancient and Modern Greece From the sacrifice ritual to dog torture Kynomartyrion PDF Folklore 45 61 88 Vassilkov Y V 2019 The Armenian Epic Daredevils of Sassoun and the Mahabharata Similarity of the Ethnographic Substratum Archaeology Ethnology amp Anthropology of Eurasia in Russian 47 2 140 147 doi 10 17746 1563 0110 2019 47 2 140 147 ISSN 1563 0110 Youthbands Migrants and Wolves In Vukovic Kresimir Wolves of Rome The Lupercalia from Roman and Comparative Perspectives Berlin Boston De Gruyter Oldenbourg 2023 pp 146 172 https doi org 10 1515 9783110690118 010 Zoller Claus Peter 2017 Traditions of transgressive sacrality against blasphemy in Hinduism Acta Orientalia 78 78 1 162 doi 10 5617 ao 7265 ISSN 0001 6438 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Koryos amp oldid 1172312027, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.