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Scythians

The Scythians or Scyths,[note 1][note 2] and sometimes also referred to as the Classical Scythians and the Pontic Scythians,[1][2] were an ancient Eastern[3] Iranian[4] equestrian nomadic people who had migrated from Central Asia to the Pontic Steppe in modern-day Ukraine and Southern Russia from approximately the 7th century BC until the 3rd century BC.

Scythians
Skuδatā (earlier)
Skulatā (later)
The approximate extent of the Scythian culture, which was dominated by the Scythians.
Regions with significant populations
Central Asia (9th-7th centuries BC)

West Asia (7th–6th centuries BC)
Pontic Steppe (6th–3rd centuries BC)

Crimea and Dobruja (3rd century BC–2nd century AD)
Languages
Scythian
Religion
Scythian religion
Related ethnic groups
Agathyrsi, Amardi, Cimmerians, Massagetae, Ossetians, Saka, Sarmatians
Scythian comb from Solokha, early 4th century BC

Skilled in mounted warfare,[5] the Scythians replaced the Cimmerians as the dominant power on the Pontic Steppe in the 8th century BC.[6] In the 7th century BC, the Scythians crossed the Caucasus Mountains and frequently raided West Asia along with the Cimmerians.[6][7] After being expelled from West Asia by the Medes, the Scythians retreated back into the Pontic Steppe and were gradually conquered by the Sarmatians.[8] In the late 2nd century BC, the capital of the largely Hellenized Scythians at Scythian Neapolis in the Crimea was captured by Mithridates VI and their territories incorporated into the Bosporan Kingdom.[9] By the 3rd century AD, the Sarmatians and last remnants of the Scythians were overwhelmed by the Goths, and by the early Middle Ages, the Scythians and the Sarmatians had been largely assimilated and absorbed by early Slavs.[10][11] The Scythians were instrumental in the ethnogenesis of the Ossetians, who are believed to be descended from the Alans.[12]

After the Scythians' disappearance, authors of the ancient, mediaeval, and early modern periods used the name "Scythian" to refer to various populations of the steppes unrelated to them.[13]

The Scythians played an important part in the Silk Road, a vast trade network connecting Greece, Persia, India and China, perhaps contributing to the prosperity of those civilisations.[14] Settled metalworkers made portable decorative objects for the Scythians, forming a history of Scythian metalworking. These objects survive mainly in metal, forming a distinctive Scythian art.[15]

Names

Etymology

Arzhan kurgan (8-7th century BC)
 
 
 
Some of the earliest Scythian artefacts in Animal style, Arzhan kurgan, Southern Siberia, dated to 8-7th century BC.

The English name Scythians or Scyths is derived from the Ancient Greek name Skuthēs (Σκυθης) and Skuthoi (Σκυθοι), derived from the Scythian endonym Skuδatā,[16][17] which, due to a sound change from /δ/ to /l/ in the Scythian, evolved into the form *Skulatā.[17] This designation was recorded in Greek as Skōlotoi (Σκωλοτοι), which, according to Herodotus of Halicarnassus, was the self-designation of the tribe of the Royal Scythians.[16]

The Assyrians rendered the name of the Scythians as Ishkuzai (Akkadian:       , romanized: Iškuzaya)[18][19] or Askuzai (Akkadian:       , romanized: Asguzaya,       , romanized: mat Askuzaya,       , romanized: mat Ášguzaya).[18][20]

The ancient Persians meanwhile called the Scythians "Sakā who live beyond the Sea" (𐎿𐎣𐎠 𐏐 𐎫𐎹𐎡𐎹 𐏐 𐎱𐎼𐎭𐎼𐎹, romanized: Sakā tayaiy paradraya) in Old Persian and simply Sakā (𓋴𓎝𓎡𓈉, romanized: sk; 𓐠𓎼𓈉, romanized: sꜣg) in Ancient Egyptian, from which was derived the Graeco-Roman name Sacae (Ancient Greek: Σακαι, romanizedSakai; Latin: Sacae).[21][22]

Modern terminology

 
Scythian vessel from Voronezh, 4th century BC. Hermitage Museum.

The Scythians were part of the wider Scytho-Siberian world, stretching across the Eurasian Steppes[16][23] of Kazakhstan, the Russian steppes of the Siberian, Ural, Volga and Southern regions, and eastern Ukraine.[24] In a broader sense, Scythians has also been used to designate all early Eurasian nomads,[23] although the validity of such terminology is controversial,[16] and other terms such as "Early nomadic" have been deemed preferable.[25]

Although the Scythians, Saka and Cimmerians were closely related nomadic Iranian peoples, and the ancient Babylonians, ancient Persians and ancient Greeks respectively used the names "Cimmerian," "Saka," and "Scythian" for all the steppe nomads, and early modern historians such as Edward Gibbon used the term Scythian to refer to a variety of nomadic and semi-nomadic peoples across the Eurasian Steppe,[26] the name "Scythian" in contemporary modern scholarship generally refers to the nomadic Iranian people who dominated the Pontic Steppe from the 7th century BC to the 3rd century BC,[22] while the name "Saka" is used specifically for their eastern members who inhabited the northern and eastern Eurasian Steppe and the Tarim Basin;[22][27][better source needed][28][29] and while the Cimmerians were often described by contemporaries as culturally Scythian, they formed a different tribe from the Scythians proper, to whom the Cimmerians were related, and who also displaced and replaced the Cimmerians in the Pontic Steppe.[30]

The Scythians share several cultural similarities with other populations living to their east, in particular similar weapons, horse gear and Scythian art, which has been referred to as the Scythian triad.[16][25] Cultures sharing these characteristics have often been referred to as Scythian cultures, and its peoples called Scythians.[23][31] Peoples associated with Scythian cultures include not only the Scythians themselves, who were a distinct ethnic group,[32] but also Cimmerians, Massagetae, Saka, Sarmatians and various obscure peoples of the East European Forest Steppe,[16][23] such as early Slavs, Balts and Finnic peoples.[33][34] Within this broad definition of the term Scythian, the actual Scythians have often been distinguished from other groups through the terms Classical Scythians, Western Scythians, European Scythians or Pontic Scythians.[23]

Scythologist Askold Ivantchik notes with dismay that the term "Scythian" has been used within both a broad and a narrow context, leading to a good deal of confusion. He reserves the term "Scythian" for the Iranian people dominating the Pontic Steppe from the 7th century BC to the 3rd century BC.[16] Nicola Di Cosmo writes that the broad concept of "Scythian" to describe the early nomadic populations of the Eurasian Steppe is "too broad to be viable," and that the term "early nomadic" is preferable.[25]

History

Early history

 
The 5th-century BC Greek historian Herodotus of Halicarnassus is the most important literary source on the origins of the Scythians

The Scythians originated in the region of the Volga-Ural steppes of Central Asia, possibly around the 9th century BC,[35] as a section of the population of the Srubnaya culture,[36] to which the Scythians themselves belonged,[37] and continuity between the Scythians and the Srubnaya culture is suggested by both archaeological, genetic and anthropological evidence.[38][39][40]

During the 9th to 8th centuries BC, some Scythian tribes had migrated westwards into the steppe adjacent to the northern shore of the Black Sea, which they occupied along with the Cimmerians, who were also a nomadic Iranian people closely related to the Scythians;[36] and over the course of the 8th and 7th centuries BC, the Scythians migrated in several waves became the dominant population of the Caucasian Steppe as part of a significant movement of the nomadic peoples of the Eurasian Steppe which started when another nomadic Iranian tribe closely related to the Scythians from eastern Central Asia, either the Massagetae[41] or the Issedones,[42] migrated westwards, forcing the early Scythians of the to the west across the Araxes river,[43] following which the Scythians moved into the Caspian Steppe, where they conquered the territory of the Cimmerians and assimilated most of this latter people and displaced the rest, before settling in the area between the Araxes, the Caucasus and the Lake Maeotis.[43][44][36][41][45]

The Scythian migration destroyed earlier cultures, with the settlements of the Sabatynivka culture [uk] in the Dnipro valley being largely destroyed and the centre of Cimmerian bronze production stopping existing at the time, and the Chernogorovka-Novocherkassk being disturbed during the 8th to 7th centuries BC. The migration of the Scythians also displaced other populations, including some North Caucasian groups who retreated to the west and settled in Transylvania and the Hungarian Plain where they introduced Novocherkassk culture type swords, daggers, horse harnesses, and other objects:[46] among these displaced populations from the Caucasus were the Sigynnae, who were displaced westward into the eastern part of the Pannonian Basin.[47][41]

During this early migratory period, some groups of Scythians settled in Ciscaucasia and the Caucasus Mountains' foothills to the east of the Kuban river, where they settled among the native populations of this region, and did not migrate to the south into West Asia.[48]

Under Scythian pressure, the Cimmerians migrated to the south along the coast of the Black Sea and reached Anatolia, and the Scythians in turn later expanded to the south, following the coast of the Caspian Sea and arrived in the Ciscaucasian steppes, from where they expanded into the region of present-day Azerbaijan, where they settled and turned eastern Transcaucasia into their centre of operations in West Asia until the early 6th century BC,[49][50][48][51] with this presence in West Asia being an extension of the Scythian kingdom of the steppes.[16] During this period, the Scythian kings' headquarters were located in the Ciscaucasian steppes, and contact with the civilisation of West Asia would have an important influence on the formation of Scythian culture.[41] This presence in Transcaucasia influenced Scythian culture: the akīnakēs sword and socketed bronze arrowheads with three edges, which are considered as typically "Scythian weapons," were of Transcaucasian origin and had been adopted by the Scythians during their stay in the Caucasus.[36][48]

From their base in the Caucasian Steppe, during the period of the 8th to 7th centuries BC itself, the Scythians conquered the Pontic Steppe to the north of the Black Sea up to the Danube river, which formed the western boundary of Scythian territory onwards, although the Scythians may also have had access to the Wallachian and Moldavian plains.[41][35] This expansion displaced another nomadic Iranian people related to the Scythians, the Agathyrsi, who were the oldest Iranian population[52] to have dominated the Pontic Steppe, and who were pushed westwards by the Scythians, away from the steppes and from their original home around Lake Maeotis,[41][52] after which the relations between the two populations remained hostile.[41] In the Pontic Steppe, the Scythians spread throughout the territory of the Early Iranian populations of the Catacomb culture and intermarried with them.[48]

The westward migration of the Scythians was accompanied by the introduction into the north Pontic region of articles originating in the Siberian Karasuk culture and which were characteristic of Early Scythian archaeological culture, consisting of cast bronze cauldrons, daggers, swords, and horse harnesses.[45] Several smaller groups were likely also displaced by the Scythian expansion.[35]

Beginning in this period, remains associated with the early Scythians started appearing within interior Europe, especially in the Thracian and Hungarian plains, although it is yet unclear whether these represent any actual Scythian migration into these regions or whether these arrived there through trade or raids.[35]

West Asia

 
Gold Scythian belt title, Mingəçevir (ancient Scythian kingdom), Azerbaijan, 7th-4th century BC.[53][54]
 
The Scythian kingdom in West Asia at its maximum extent, under the reign of the king Madyes.

During the earliest phase of their presence in West Asia, the Scythians under their king Išpakaia were allied with the Cimmerians, and the two groups, in alliance with the Medes, who were an Iranian people of West Asia to whom the Scythians and Cimmerians were distantly related, as well as the Mannaeans, were threatening the eastern frontier of the kingdom of Urartu[55] and the then superpower of West Asia, the Neo-Assyrian Empire.[56] These allied forces were defeated by the Assyrian king Esarhaddon,[57][58] and Išpakaia was later killed in a retaliatory military campaign by Esarhaddon.[58][59]

Išpakaia was succeeded by Bartatua,[59] who sought a rapprochement with the Assyrians and married Esarhaddon's daughter Serua-eterat.[60][36][61][62] Bartatua's marriage to Serua-eterat required that he would pledge allegiance to Assyria as a vassal, with the territories ruled by him would be his fief granted by the Assyrian king, thus making the Scythian presence in West Asia an extension of the Neo-Assyrian Empire,[45] and henceforth, the Scythians remained allies of the Assyrian Empire,[45] with Bartatua helping the Assyrians by defeating the state of Mannai and imposing Scythian hegemony over it.[63]

The marital alliance between the Scythian king and the Assyrian ruling dynasty, as well as the proximity of the Scythians with the Assyrian-influenced Mannai and Urartu, placed the Scythians under the strong influence of Assyrian culture.[45]

Bartatua was succeeded by his son with Serua-eterat, Madyes,[36][45] who in 653 BC invaded the Medes who were engaged in a war against Assyria, thus starting a period which Herodotus of Halicarnassus called the "Scythian rule over Asia."[64][51][45] Madyes soon expanded the Scythian hegemony to the state of Urartu,[64] and, soon after 635 BC, with Assyrian approval[65] and in alliance with the Lydians,[66] the Scythians under Madyes entered Anatolia and defeated the Cimmerians.[67] Scythian power in West Asia thus reached its peak under Madyes, with the territories ruled by the Scythians extending from the Halys river in Anatolia in the west to the Caspian Sea and the eastern borders of Media in the east, and from Transcaucasia in the north to the northern borders of the Neo-Assyrian Empire in the south.[51][68]

By the 620s BC, the Assyrian Empire began unravelling after the death of Esarhaddon's son and successor, Ashurbanipal: in addition to internal instability within Assyria itself, Babylon revolted against the Assyrians in 626 BC under the leadership of Nabopolassar,[69] and in 625 BC the Median king Cyaxares overthrew the Scythian yoke over the Medes by assassinating the Scythian leaders, including Madyes.[70][69][45] The Scythians soon took advantage of the power vacuum created by the crumbling of the power of their former Assyrian allies to overrun the Levant and Palestine until the borders of Egypt, from where they turned back after their advance was stopped by the marshes of the Nile Delta and the pharaoh Psamtik I met them and convinced them to turn back by offering them gifts;[71][51] they retreated through Askalōn largely without any incident, although some stragglers looted the temple of Astarte in the city; the perpetrators of this sacrilege and their descendants were allegedly afflicted by the goddess with a "female disease," due to which they became a class of transvestite diviners called the Anarya (meaning "unmanly" in Scythian).[16][51] Starting around 615 BC, the Scythians were operating as allies of Cyaxares and the Medes in their war against Assyria.[45]

The Scythians were finally expelled from West Asia by the Medes in the 600s BC, after which they retreated to the Pontic Steppe.[45] Some splinter Scythian groups nevertheless remained in West Asia and settled in Transcaucasia,[41] and one group formed a kingdom in the area corresponding to modern-day Azerbaijan[72] in eastern Transcaucasia.[45] By the middle of the 6th century BC, the Scythians who had remained in West Asia had completely assimilated culturally and politically into Median society and no longer existed as a distinct group.[73]

The Pontic Steppe

 
The Scythian kingdom in the Pontic Steppe at its maximum extent.

After their expulsion from West Asia, and beginning in the later 7th and lasting throughout much of the 6th century BC, the majority of the Scythians, including the Royal Scythians, migrated into the Kuban Steppe around 600 BC,[74] and from Ciscaucasia into the Pontic Steppe, which became the centre of Scythian power,[41] and in the western Ciscaucasia, from where the Scythians, not large in number enough to spread throughout Ciscaucasia, instead took over the steppe to the south of the Kuban river's middle course; the northwards migration of the Scythians continued throughout the 6th century BC. Using the Pontic Steppe as their base, the Scythians often raided into the adjacent regions, with Central Europe being a frequent target of their raids.[41] In many parts of their north Pontic kingdom, the Scythians established themselves as a ruling class over already present sedentary populations, including Thracians in the western regions, Maeotians on the eastern shore of Lake Maeotis, and later the Greeks on the north coast of the Black Sea.[16][75]

Outside of the Pontic Scythian kingdom itself, some splinter Scythian groups formed the Vorskla and Sula-Donets groups of the Scythian Culture in the East European Forest Steppe.[76]

Between 650 and 625 BC, the Scythians of the northern Pontic region came into contact with the Greeks, who were starting to create colonies in the areas under Scythian rule; the Greeks carried out thriving commercial ties with the sedentary peoples of the East European Forest Steppe who lived to the north of the Scythians, with the large rivers of eastern Europe which flowed into the Black Sea forming the main access routes to these northern markets. This process put the Scythians into permanent contact with the Greeks, and the relations between the latter and the Greek colonies remained peaceful.[16]

In 513 BC, the king Darius I of the Persian Achaemenid Empire, which had succeeded the Median, Lydian, Egyptian, and Neo-Babylonian empires which the Scythians had once interacted with, carried out a campaign against the Pontic Scythians, with the reasons for this campaign being unclear. Darius's invasion was resisted by the Scythian king Idanthyrsus, and the results of this campaign were also unclear, with the Persian inscriptions themselves referring to the Pontic Scythians as having been conquered by Darius, while Greek authors instead claimed that Darius's campaign failed and from then onwards developed a tradition of idealising the Scythians as being invincible thanks to their nomadic lifestyle.[16]

In the 5th century BC, the Scythians embarked on expansionist ventures, including in the west, where they raided south of the Danube into Thrace until the formation of the Thracian Odrysian kingdom blocked their advances, after which the Scythians formed an alliance with the Odrysians; as well as in the north, where they imposed their rule on the peoples of the forest steppe; and in the south, where they brought the Greek colonies on the northern shores of the Black Sea under their power.[35][16]

The peak of the Scythian kingdom of the Pontic Steppe happened in the 4th century BC, at the same time when the Greek cities of the coast were prospering, and the relations between the two were mostly peaceful; the rule of the Spartocid dynasty in the Bosporan Kingdom was also favourable for the Scythians, and the Bosporan aristocracy had contacts with the Scythians. This period saw Scythian culture not only thriving, with most known Scythian monuments date from then, but also rapidly undergoing significant Hellenisation.[35][16]

The most famous Scythian king of the 4th century BC was Ateas, whose rule started around the 360s BC, and under whom the Greek cities to the south of the Danube were brought under Scythian hegemony; Ateas's main activities in Thrace and south-west Scythia, such as his wars against the Triballi and the Histriani, attest of the power that the Scythians held to the south of the Danube in his time. Ateas initially allied with Philip II of Macedonia, but eventually this alliance fell apart and Ateas was killed during a war with the Macedonians in 339 BC.[35][16]

In the 3rd century BC, the expansion in the northern Pontic region of the Sarmatians, who were another nomadic Iranian people related to the Scythians, as well as of the Thracian Getae, the Germanic Bastarnae and Sciri, and of the Celts, the Scythian kingdom disappeared from the Pontic Steppe and the Sarmatians replaced the Scythians as the dominant power of the Pontic Steppe, due to which the appellation of "Scythia" for the region became replaced by that of "Sarmatia Europea" (European Sarmatia).[41][16][35]

 
Skilurus, king of Scythia Minor in Crimea. Relief from Scythian Neapolis, Crimea, 2nd century BC

Scythia Minor

The Scythians fled to the Scythia Minor in Crimea, where they were able to securely establish themselves against the Sarmatian invasion despite tensions with the Greeks, and to the Scythia Minor in Dobrugea, as well as in nearby regions, where they became limited in enclaves. The remnants of the Scythians on the Pontic Steppe settled down in a series of fortified settlements located along the main rivers of the region. By then, these Scythians were no longer nomadic: they had become sedentary farmers and were Hellenised, and the only places where the Scythians could still be found by the 2nd century BC were in the Scythia Minors of Crimea and Dobrugea, as well as in the lower reaches of the Dnipro river.[41][16][35]

 
The territory of the Scythae Basilaei ("Royal Scyths") along the north shore of the Black Sea around 125 AD

By 50 to 150 AD, most of the Scythians had been assimilated by the Sarmatians.[16] The remaining Scythians of Crimea, who had mixed with the Tauri and the Sarmatians, were conquered in the 3rd century AD by the Goths and other Germanic tribes who were then migrating from the north into the Pontic Steppe.[77]

Legacy

In subsequent centuries, remaining Scythians and Sarmatians were largely assimilated by early Slavs.[11] The Scythians and Sarmatians played an instrumental role in the ethnogenesis of the Ossetians, who are considered direct descendants of the Alans.[12]

In Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages, the name "Scythians" was used in Greco-Roman and Byzantine literature for various groups of nomadic "barbarians" living on the Pontic-Caspian Steppe who were not related to the actual Scythians, such as the Huns, Goths, Ostrogoths, Turkic peoples, Pannonian Avars, Slavs, and Khazars.[13][16] For example, Byzantine sources referred to the Rus' raiders who attacked Constantinople in 860 AD in contemporary accounts as "Tauroscythians" because of their geographical origin, and despite their lack of any ethnic relation to Scythians.[78] Scythian descent claims have been frequent throughout history.

The New Testament includes a single reference to Scythians in Colossians 3:11.[79]

Culture and society

 
Kurgan stelae of a Scythian at Khortytsia, Ukraine

Since the Scythians did not have a written language, their non-material culture can only be pieced together through writings by non-Scythian authors, parallels found among other Iranian peoples, and archaeological evidence.[16]

In a fragment from the comic writer Euphron quoted in Deipnosophistae poppy seeds are mentioned as a "food which the Scythians love."

Language

The Scythians spoke a language belonging to the Scythian languages, most probably[80] a branch of the Eastern Iranian languages.[3] Whether all the peoples included in the "Scytho-Siberian" archaeological culture spoke languages from this family is uncertain.

The Scythian languages may have formed a dialect continuum: "Scytho-Sarmatian" in the west and "Scytho-Khotanese" or Saka in the east.[81] The Scythian languages were mostly marginalised and assimilated as a consequence of the late antiquity and early Middle Ages Slavic and Turkic expansion. The western (Sarmatian) group of ancient Scythian survived as the medieval language of the Alans and eventually gave rise to the modern Ossetian language.[82]

Lifestyle

The early Scythians tribes were nomadic pastoralists, and their lifestyle and customs were inextricably linked to their nomadic way of life; the Scythians were able to raise large herds of horses, cattle and sheep thanks to the abundance of grass growing in the steppe, while hunting was primarily done for sport and entertainment; among the more nomadic Scythian tribes, the women and children spent their time in wagons where they lived, while the men spent their lives on horseback and were trained as fighters and in archery since an early age. But by the time the Scythians were living in the Pontic Steppe, beginning in the 7th century BC, they had become semi-nomadic and practised both nomadism and farming, although the Scythian tribes living in the steppe zone remained primarily nomadic.[35][83][84]

The Scythians did not use saddles or stirrups, which were a later Sarmatian invention, and they rode their horses sitting only on a piece of cloth.[85]

Unlike the other Scythic peoples such as the Sarmatians, where women were allowed to go hunting, ride horses, learn archery and fight with spears just like the men, the society of the Scythians proper was patriarchal and Scythian women possessed little freedom.[84] Due to the Scythians' nomadic pastoralist lifestyle, Scythian women nevertheless learnt to use weapons because they were in charge of the herds and the home when the men were away fighting in wars.[36]

The tribe of the Alazones, who were a population of either Scythian or mixed Thracian and Scythian origin, were sedentary farmers who cultivated wheat, onions, garlic, lentils and millet.[75]

Wine was primarily consumed by the Scythian aristocracy during the earlier phase of their kingdom in the Pontic Steppe, and its consumption became more prevalent among the wealthier members of the populace in the Late Scythian period.[84]

Clothing

Kul-Oba vase
 
 
Scythian warriors, drawn after figures on an electrum cup from the Kul-Oba kurgan burial near Kerch, Crimea. The warrior on the right strings his bow, bracing it behind his knee; note the typical pointed hood, long jacket with fur or fleece trimming at the edges, decorated trousers, and short boots tied at the ankle. Scythians apparently wore their hair long and loose, and all adult men apparently bearded. The gorytos appears clearly on the left hip of the bare-headed spearman. The shield of the central figure may be made of plain leather over a wooden or wicker base. (Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg).

The Scythians wore clothing typical of the steppe nomads: the clothing of Scythian men included trousers and belts, they wore pointed caps during earlier periods, but they went bareheaded in later times; Scythian women wore long dresses and mantles decorated with triangular or round metallic plates, which were made of gold for wealthier women and of bronze for poorer women, and women belonging to the upper classes wore kandus cloaks over their dresses and a veil over their head.[84]

Scythian men and women both wore golden and brazen jewellery: both wore bracelets made of silver or bronze wire and neckrings and torcs made of gold and whose terminals were shaped like animal figures or animal heads; necklaces worn by the Scythians were made of gold and semi-precious stone beads; men wore only one earring. Scythian men also grew their hair long and their beards to significant sizes.[86]

Costume has been regarded as one of the main identifying criteria for Scythians. Women wore a variety of different headdresses, some conical in shape others more like flattened cylinders, also adorned with metal (golden) plaques.[87]

Men and women wore long trousers, often adorned with metal plaques and often embroidered or adorned with felt appliqués; trousers could have been wider or tight fitting depending on the area. Materials used depended on the wealth, climate and necessity.[88]

Men and women wore belts. Warrior belts were made of leather, often with gold or other metal adornments and had many attached leather thongs for fastening of the owner's gorytos, sword, whet stone, whip etc. Belts were fastened with metal or horn belt-hooks, leather thongs and metal (often golden) or horn belt-plates.[89]

Scythian women used mirrors, and many Scythian women's burials contained Greek-made bronze mirrors. Bronze mirrors made in Pontic Olbia and whose handles were decorated with animal figures such as those of stags, panthers, and rams, were popular during the early Scythian periods.[86]

Social organisation

Scythian society was stratified along class lines, and was composed of a tribal aristocracy and freemen. A rudimentary form of slavery existed in Scythia, and slaves were only used domestically by the Scythians.[36]

The Scythians were monarchical, and the Scythians were ruled by tribal kings who held power over their respective tribes and who in turn owed allegiance to the king of the Royal Scythians, with the subject tribes paying tribute to the Royal Scythians and provided servants to the king and the Scythian tribal aristocracy.[36] The power of the king among the Scythians was passed on hereditarily, although it was limited by an assembly of warriors. Royal power among the Scythians was considered as having been divinely ordained: this conception of royal power, which is well documented in the ritual symbols depicted on Late Scythian toreutics, was initially foreign to Scythian culture and originated in West Asia during the period of Scythian presence there in the 7th century BC.[84][90][36] According to the Scythologists Askold Ivantchik and Mikhail Bukharin, the Scythians had been ruled by at least three dynasties, including that of Bartatua, that of Spargapeithes, and that of Ariapeithes.[16][91] The historian and anthropologist Anatoly Khazanov instead suggested that the Scythians had been ruled by the same dynasty from the time of their stay in West Asia until the end of their kingdom in the Pontic Steppe.[92]

By the 4th century BC, the Scythians had become organised into a rudimentary state after the king Ateas united all the Scythian tribes. This early state was itself based on the exploitation of the freemen within its social community.[36]

The tribe of the Aroteres consisted of a large sedentary populace of Thracian origin over which ruled an Iranic Scythian ruling class. These Aroteres were a war-like people who were organised into small territorial units settled in who lived in open undefended settlements and strongholds covering between sixteen and twenty-four hectares, each possessing a large industrial centre, and which each functioned as industrial centres, attesting of the complexity of the Tiasmyn group's society. The earthworks of the Aroteres contained within them kurgan cemeteries, lasting from the 6th to 3rd centuries, that each included up to 400 kurgans where their inhabitants were buried, showing that these sites had dense populations. Among the Aroteres, the sedentary Thracians were cremated or buried, usually laid on their backs or sometimes crouched, in poorly furnished shaft tombs, while the Scythian ruling class were buried in large, almost square, underground burial chambers with timber sepulchres and wooden posts in each corner and in the centre supporting their rooves, with some having a corridor and steps cut from the ground, and whose grave goods included Greek pottery, weapons, and jewellery. During the Early Scythian period, the country of the Scythian Husbandsmen had close connections to the Greek colony of Pontic Olbia which ended during the late 5th century BC, when the Scythians imposed their rule over the Greek cities on the Black Sea shore.[93][94]

The Callipidae also consisted of a large settled Thracian population with a Scythian ruling class who were considerably Hellenised. The Callipidae lived in open settlements and earthworks, and cultivated crops including wheat and millet, and also engaged in animal husbandry and fishing at sea. The Callipidae lived in rammed earth houses built on stone foundations, and they buried their dead in flat graves while their Scythian ruling class were buried in kurgans.[94]

The class and social differences among the Scythians were reflected in Scythian art, which primarily represented concepts of importance for the aristocracy, but not for the commoner population.[36]

Warfare

 
Scythian archers using the Scythian bow, Kerch (ancient Panticapeum), Crimea, 4th century BC. The Scythians were skilled archers whose style of archery influenced that of the Persians and subsequently other nations, including the Greeks.[95]
 
Scythian bronze arrowheads, c700-300 BC

The Scythians were a warlike people. When engaged at war, almost the entire adult population, including a large number of women, participated in battle.[96] The Athenian historian Thucydides noted that no people in either Europe or Asia could resist the Scythians without outside aid.[96]

The main Scythian weapon was the short composite recurve bow. The earliest known "Scythian type" arrowheads were found in the kurgan burial Arzhan-1, dated to the late ninth or early eighth century BCE.[97][98][99] These arrowheads typically had either two or three blades and sockets with which to affix the arrowhead to the wooden or reed shaft of the arrow.[100] The combination of the arrowheads' shape and short recurve bow used by the Scythians constituted the most powerful firing weapon of their time, which consequently led to their adoption by ancient West Asian armies during the late 7th century BCE.[101] When not used, Scythian bows were carried in a combined quiver-bowcase, made of bark or leather and decorated with golden or bronze plaque, called a gorutos, of which each could contain up to 300 arrows. The akīnakēs sword, which was a 50 to 70 centimetres short iron dagger, which whose haft was richly decorated, and shaft-hole war axes, which are also considered to be "typically Scythian" weapons, were also adopted by the Scythians from the Transcaucasian populations, and more specifically were derived from Georgian Bronze Age weapons. The Scythians also used long swords during their earlier history, and both the akīnakai and the Scythian long swords had heart- or similarly "butterfly"- or "kidney"-shaped cross-guards and bar-shaped terminals. The sagaris battle-pickaxes, which had bronze sockets and iron blades, were among the many types of war axes used by the Scythians. Other Scythian weapons included spears which were between 1.70 and 2.20 metres in length and had a bay leaf-shaped spearhead and sometimes a ferrule at the bottom, as well as lances, darts, lassoes, and slings.[85][16]

 
Golden decorative plate shaped like a stag from a Scythian shield.
 
Golden decorative plate shaped like a panther from a Scythian shield.

The Scythians used leather or hide armour, although the aristocracy commonly used scale armour made of scales of iron, bronze, or bone sewn onto leather, which the Scythians had adopted from the West Asian peoples during the 7th century BC and made into a prevalent aspect of the Scythian culture of the northern Pontic region. Sometimes, instead of armour, the Scythians used battle-belts, which were made of scales sewn onto wide strips of either iron sheet, hide, or leather. The Scythians also small hide or wicker shields reinforced with iron strips, with the shields of Scythian aristocrats often being decorated with decorative central plaques. The Scythians sometimes also protected their horses, most especially their chests, with scale armour.[85]

Other defensive armour used by the Scythians included "Kuban"-type cast bronze helmets made by the native Caucasian peoples in the 6th and early 5th centuries BC in western Ciscaucasia, which had openings for the face. By the 5th century BC, these Caucasian helmets had been replaced by Greek-made Attic helmets, and the Scythians also imported Greek-made greaves.[85]

Scythians were particularly known for their equestrian skills, and their early use of composite bows shot from horseback. With great mobility, the Scythians could absorb the attacks of more cumbersome footsoldiers and cavalry, just retreating into the steppes. Such tactics wore down their enemies, making them easier to defeat. The Scythians were notoriously aggressive warriors. Ruled by small numbers of closely allied elites, Scythians had a reputation for their archers, and many gained employment as mercenaries. Scythian elites had kurgan tombs: high barrows heaped over chamber-tombs of larch wood, a deciduous conifer that may have had special significance as a tree of life-renewal, for it stands bare in winter.[102]

The Greek historian Herodotus of Halicarnassus said that the Scythians scalped their enemies.[103] Herodotus related that Scythian warriors would behead the enemies they defeated in battle and present the heads to their king to claim their share of the plunder. Then, the warrior would skin the head “by making a circular cut round the ears and shaking out the skull; he then scrapes the flesh off the skin with the rib of an ox, and when it is clean works it with his fingers until it is supple, and fit to be used as a sort of handkerchief. He hangs these handkerchiefs on the bridle of his horse, and is very proud of them. The best man is the man who has the greatest number.”[104] A skull from an Iron Age cemetery in South Siberia shows evidence of scalping. It lends physical evidence to the practice of scalp taking by the Scythians living there.[105]

Some Scythian-Sarmatian cultures may have given rise to Greek stories of Amazons. Graves of armed females have been found in southern Ukraine and Russia. David Anthony notes, "About 20% of Scythian-Sarmatian 'warrior graves' on the lower Don and lower Volga contained females dressed for battle as if they were men, a style that may have inspired the Greek tales about the Amazons."[106]

Religion

The religion of the Scythians was a variant of the Pre-Zoroastrian Iranian religion which differed from Zoroastrian and the post-Zoroastrian Iranian religions, and instead belonged to a more archaic stage of Indo-Iranian religious development than the Zoroastrian and Hindu systems.[9] The use of cannabis to induce trance and divination by soothsayers was a characteristic of the Scythian belief system.[9]

Our most important literary source on Scythian religion is Herodotus of Halicarnassus. According to him the leading deity in the Scythian pantheon was Tabiti, whom he compared to the Greek god Hestia.[16] Tabiti was eventually replaced by Atar, the fire-pantheon of Iranian tribes, and Agni, the fire deity of Indo-Aryans.[9] Other deities mentioned by Halicarnassus include Papaios, Api, Goitosyros/Oitosyros, Argimpasa and Thagimasadas, whom he identified with Zeus, Gaia, Apollo, Aphrodite and Poseidon, respectively. The Scythians are also said by Halicarnassus to have worshipped equivalents of Heracles and Ares, but he does not mention their Scythian names.[16] An additional Scythian deity, the goddess Dithagoia, is mentioned in the a dedication by Senamotis, daughter of King Skiluros, at Panticapaeum. Most of the names of Scythian deities can be traced back to Iranian roots.[16]

Halicarnassus states that Thagimasadas was worshipped by the Royal Scythians only, while the remaining deities were worshipped by all. He also states that "Ares," the god of war, was the only god to whom the Scythians dedicated statues, altars or temples. Tumuli were erected to him in every Scythian district, and both animal sacrifices and human sacrifices were performed in honor of him. At least one shrine to "Ares" has been discovered by archaeologists.[16]

The Scythians had professional priests, but it is not known if they constituted a hereditary class. Among the priests there was a separate group, the Enarei, who worshipped the goddess Argimpasa and assumed feminine identities.[16]

Scythian mythology gave much importance to myth of the "First Man," who was considered the ancestor of them and their kings. Similar myths are common among other Iranian peoples. Considerable importance was given to the division of Scythian society into three hereditary classes, which consisted of warriors, priests and producers. Kings were considered part of the warrior class. Royal power was considered holy and of solar and heavenly origin.[9] The Iranian principle of royal charisma, known as khvarenah in the Avesta, played a prominent role in Scythian society. It is probable that the Scythians had a number of epic legends, which were possibly the source for Halicarnassus's writings on them.[16] Traces of these epics can be found in the epics of the Ossetians of the present day.[9]

In Scythian cosmology the world was divided into three parts, with the warriors, considered part of the upper world, the priests of the middle level, and the producers of the lower one.[16]

Tribal divisions

The Scythians were composed of a number of tribal units, including:[35][75][107][108][36]

  • the Royal Scythians, also called the Skōlotoi (Σκωλοτοι) and the Paralatai (Παραλαται), were an Iranian tribe who nomadised in the Pontic Steppe, in an area limited by the Dnipro river in the west, and the Don river and the port of Kremnoi in the east, as well in Crimea up to the Cimmerian Bosporus in its east. The Royal Scythians were the main Scythian tribe, and they were the ruling tribe of the whole of Scythia.[109] The Royal Scythians and the Nomad Scythians were the only fully nomadic tribes within Scythia.
    • the name Paralatai corresponds to the Young Avestan name Paraδāta (𐬞𐬀𐬭𐬀𐬜𐬁𐬙𐬀‎), meaning “placed at the front.”[110]
    • the name Skōlotoi is the Greek form of the Scythian endonym Skulatā, formed by the addition of the plural suffix -tā to the Scythian endonym Skula[16][17]
  • the Nomad Scythians, who lived to the west of the Royal Scythians, between the Inhul and the bend of the Dnipro, were a mixed Thracian and Iranic Scythian nomadic tribe. The Nomad Scythians and the Royal Scythians were the only fully nomadic tribes in Scythia.
  • the Free Scythians, who were a tribe of mixed Scythian-Sauromatian origin, lived in the southeastern Pontic Steppe, between the port of Kremnoi and the Don or the Donets river.
  • the Alazones (Ancient Greek: Αλαζονες) or Alizōnes (Ancient Greek: Αλιζωνες), who were the westernmost Scythian tribe, were semi-nomads who occupied the steppe between the Inhul and the Dnister around the region where the Dnister and the Southern Buh flow the closest to each other. The Alazones led semi-nomadic lives, with those of them who lived in the steppe being pastoral nomads and those who lived in the valleys of the Southern Buh and nearby rivers being farmers who cultivated wheat, onions, garlic, lentils and millet. The Alazones were the southern neighbours of the Aroteres and, like them, might have been of mixed Thracian and Iranic origins. The Alazones were themselves in turn the northern neighbours of the Callipidae.
  • the Scythian Ploughmen or Arotēres (Ancient Greek: Αροτηρες) or Gerrhoi (Ancient Greek: Γερροι),[111] who were the northern neighbours of the Alazones, were sedentary agriculturists who lived in a region with fertile black earth corresponding to the modern-day part of Ukraine which lies to the west of the Dnipro river until the region of Vinnytsia. Their neighbours to the north were the Baltic Neuri, and to the south were the Alazones.
    • The Aroteres were a Thracian or Proto-Slavic population of Scythia who descended from the Late Bronze Age Sabatynivka Culture, over whom had established themselves an Iranian ruling class during the late 2nd millennium BC, and who later came under the rule of the Scythians during the 6th century BC.
  • the Callipidae (Ancient Greek: Καλλιπιδαι, romanizedKallipidai) were a semi-nomadic population of Thracian origin who lived across a wide section of land adjacent to the shores of the Black sea ranging from the estuary of the Southern Buh river to the area of modern-day Odesa or even until the estuary of the Dnister. The western neighbours of the Callipadae across the Dnister river were Thracian tribe of the Getae in Bessarabia, while Thracian populations under Scythian rule lived on the coast. Their northern neighbours were the Alazones.
  • the Scythians Agriculturalists or Geōrgoi (Ancient Greek: Γεωργοι) were another population of Thracian origin. The Scythian Agriculturalists lived in the valley of the lower Dnipro river, in the wooded country of Hylaea, and they may have been sedendaty or semi-nomadic.
  • a tribe not named by the Greek authors lived on the north-west shore of Lake Maeotis, and corresponded to the archaeological "Obytichna 12 type" settlements.

The Royal Scythians were the dominant tribe within Scythia to whom all the other tribes were subjects, with the various tribes being each led by their own lords who were all subservient to the lord of the Royal Scythians, who was the Scythian king.[36]

Herodotus of Halicarnassus relates that three main tribes of the Scythians descended from three sons of Targitaos:[112]

  • the Auchatae (Ancient Greek: Αυχαται, romanizedAukhatai) descended from Lipoxais
  • the Catiari (Ancient Greek: Κατιαροι, romanizedKatiaroi) and Traspies (Ancient Greek: Τρασπιες, romanizedTraspies) descended from Arpoxais
  • the Royal Scythians, also called the Skōlotoi (Σκωλοτοι) and the Paralatai (Παραλαται), descended from Kolaxais

Although scholars have traditionally treated the three tribes as geographically distinct, Georges Dumézil interpreted the divine gifts as the symbols of social occupations, illustrating his trifunctional vision of early Indo-European societies: the plough and yoke symbolised the farmers, the axe—the warriors, the bowl—the priests. The first scholar to compare the three strata of Scythian society to the Indian castes was Arthur Christensen. According to Dumézil, "the fruitless attempts of Arpoxais and Lipoxais, in contrast to the success of Colaxais, may explain why the highest strata was not that of farmers or magicians, but, rather, that of warriors."[113]

There were few differences between the many Scythian tribes and tribal groupings in the early period of the Pontic Scythian kingdom, which later became more pronounced as these eventually conquered various native populations.[114]

Neighbouring populations

The neighbours of the Scythians included:[75][36]

  • the Thracian Getae, who lived to the west of Scythia, across the Danube river.
  • the Melanchlaeni and the Androphagi, who lived to the east of the middle Dnipro river, in the forest steppe bordering the territory of the Royal Scythians to the north. These populations were either of Scythic or of mixed Scythic and native origin.
  • the Sauromatians, who lived to the east of the Scythians, in the steppe between the Don and the Volga, were another Scythic people. They were the immediate neighbours of the Royal Scythians to the east, across the Don river.
  • the Neuri, who were a Baltic population of the region of the forest steppe corresponding to modern-day Belarus, lived to the north of the Aroteres. They corresponded to the Milograd culture.
  • the Agathyrsi lived to the west of the Aroteres and of the Neuri.
  • the Budini, to the east of the Neuroi and to the north of the Sauromatians, were one of the many Finno-Ugric populations living in the eastern forest steppe until the Ural Mountains.
  • the Gelonians, to the north of the Sauromatians.
  • the Maeotians lived on the eastern coast of Lake Maeotis.
  • the Tauri lived in the Crimean Mountains.

Related populations

Herodotus of Halicarnassus and other classical historians listed quite a number of tribes who lived near the Scythians, and presumably shared the same general milieu and nomadic steppe culture, often called "Scythian culture," even though scholars may have difficulties in determining their exact relationship to the "linguistic Scythians". A partial list of these tribes includes:

Crafts

Though a predominantly nomadic people for much of their history, the Scythians were skilled metalworkers. Knowledge of bronze working was present when the Scythian people formed, by the 8th century BC Scythian mercenaries fighting in the Near East had begun to spread knowledge of iron working to their homeland. Archeological sites attributed to the Scythians have been found to contain the remnants of workshops, slag piles, and discarded tools, all of which imply some Scythian settlements were the site of organized industry.[115][116]

Scythian bronze-working products included large bronze semi-spheric cauldrons with truncated cones as their stands. These were decorated in cast and had either two or four animal-shaped handles on their rims. Such cauldrons were placed in burials along with deceased individuals, containing within them remains of horse and mutton bones, which were remnants of food for the deceased in the afterlife. Also manufactured by this bronze industry were socketed bronze finials which were placed at the top of poles and decorated with various animal figures.[117]

The centre of early Scythian industry was located in the region of the Tiasmyn group of the Scythian culture, which corresponded the country of the Scythian Husbandsmen where an Iranic Scythian elite ruled over a sedentary Thracian population; the Scythians also obtained simple tools and ornamentations and some weapon types from the sedentary Thracians who lived in their kingdom, and who manufactured products such as pottery, woodwork, and weaving, as well as bronze metal-working made out of raw materials imported from Transylvania. By the Late Scythian period, its principal centre was at a site corresponding to present-day Kamianka-Dniprovska, where bog iron ores were smelted to produce iron, and various tools, ornaments, and weapons were made.[117]

Art

 
Gold pectoral, or neckpiece, from an aristocratic kurgan in Tovsta Mohyla, Pokrov, Ukraine, dated to the second half of the 4th century BCE, of Greek workmanship. The central lower tier shows three horses, each being torn apart by two griffins. Scythian art was especially focused on animal figures.

The art of the Scythians and related peoples of the Scythian cultures is known as Scythian art. It is particularly characterized by its use of the animal style.[16]

The various groups of Scythian art across the Eurasian Steppe developed independently from each other: the populations of the Srubnaya and Andronovo cultures from which initially originated the early Scythians used solely geometric patterns on their pottery and cheek-pieces made of bone, and the art of the Scythians proper was developed under the influence of the art of West Asian cultures during the Scythian presence in West Asia and later under the influence of the naturalistic art of the inhabitants of the forested regions of Eastern Europe, as well as of Thracian and Greek art.[16][118]

The art of the Scythians proper originated between 650 and 600 BC for the needs of the aristocracy of the Royal Scythians at the time when they ruled over large swathes of West Asia, with the objects of the Ziwiye hoard being the first example of this art. Later examples of this West Asian-influenced art from the 6th century BC were found in western Ciscaucasiam burials, as well as in the Melhuniv kurhan [uk] in what is presently Ukraine and in the Witaszkowo kurgan [pl] in what is modern-day Poland. This art style was initially restricted to the Scythian upper classes, and the Scythian lower classes in both West Asia and the Pontic Steppe had not yet adopted it, with the latter group's bone cheek-pieces and bronze buckles being plain and without decorations, while the Pontic group were still using Srubnaya- and Andronovo-type geometric patterns.[118] Scythian art continued to represent the interests of the Scythian aristocracy until the end of the Pontic Scythian kingdom, and depicted elements of prestige, the divine nature of royal power, and the cults of ancestral heroes and military valour; thus, Scythian art also reflected the class and cultural differences within Scythia which separated the aristocracy from the rest of the population.[36]

In the earlier phases of the art of the Scythians proper, West Asian motifs dominated the earlier Srubnaya-inherited Scythian elements; Greek elements were later incorporated into this artistic tradition in the regions corresponding to modern-day Ukraine and Georgia; in addition to this, the art of the Scythians was also influenced by that of the peoples of the East European Forest Steppe. This Scythian art formed out of various influences later spread to the west, in the region which corresponds to present Romania, and eventually to Western Europe too, where it brought influences from Iranian and West Asian art into Celtic art.[119]

Scythian animal style appears in an already established form Eastern Europe in the 8th century BC along with the Early Scythian archaeological culture itself. It bears little resemblance to the art of pre-Scythian cultures of the area. Some scholars suggest the art style developed under Near Eastern influence during the military campaigns of the 7th century BC, but the more common theory is that it developed on the eastern part of the Eurasian Steppe under Chinese influence. Others have sought to reconcile the two theories, suggesting that the animal style of the west and eastern parts of the steppe developed independently of each other, under Near Eastern and Chinese influences, respectively. Regardless, the animal style art of the Scythians differs considerable from that of peoples living further east.[16]

Scythian animal style works are typically divided into birds, ungulates and beasts of prey. This probably reflects the tripatriate division of the Scythian cosmos, with birds belonging to the upper level, ungulates to the middle level and beasts of prey in the lower level.[16]

Images of mythological creatures such a griffins are not uncommon in Scythian animal style, but these are probably the result of Near Eastern influences. By the late 6th century BC, as Scythian activity in the Near East was reduced, depictions of mythological creatures largely disappears from Scythian art. It, however, reappears again in the 4th century BC as a result of Greek influence.[16]

Anthropomorphic depictions in Early Scythian art is known only from kurgan stelae. These depict warriors with almond-shaped eyes and mustaches, often including weapons and other military equipment.[16]

Since the 5th century BC, Scythian art changed considerably. This was probably a result of Greek and Persian influence, and possibly also internal developments caused by an arrival of a new nomadic people from the east. The changes are notable in the more realistic depictions of animals, who are now often depicted fighting each other rather than being depicted individually. Kurgan stelae of the time also display traces of Greek influences, with warriors being depicted with rounder eyes and full beards.[16]

Scythian art of the 4th century BC shows additional Greek influence, and while the animal style was still in use, it appears that much Scythian art by this point was being made by Greek craftsmen on behalf of Scythians. Such objects are frequently found in aristocratic Scythian burials of the period. Depictions of human beings become more prevalent. Many objects of Scythian art made by Greeks are probably illustrations of Scythian legends. Several objects are believed to have been of religious significance.[16]

By the late 3rd century BC, original Scythian art disappears through ongoing Hellenization. The creation of anthropomorphic gravestones continued, however.[16]

Works of Scythian art are held at many museums and has been featured at many exhibitions. The largest collections of Scythian art are found at the Hermitage Museum in Saint Petersburg and the Museum of Historical Treasures of the Ukraine in Kyiv, while smaller collections are found at the Staatliche Antikensammlungen in Berlin, the Ashmolean Museum of Oxford, and the Louvre of Paris.[16]

Trade

The Pontic Scythians practised trade extensively, and beginning in the 7th and 6th centuries BC, they had been importing luxuries such as personal ornaments, gold and silver vases, carved semi-precious and gem stones, wine, oil, and offensive and defensive weapons made in the workshops of Pontic Olbia or in mainland Greece, as well as pottery made by the Greeks of the Aegean islands; during the Classical Scythian period of the 5th century BC, the Scythians were importing Corinthian and Athenian pottery; and by the Late Scythian period of the 4th to 3rd centuries BC the market for Pontic Olbia was limited to a small part of western Scythia, while the rest of the kingdom's importations came from the Bosporan kingdom, especially from Panticapaeum, from where came most of Scythia's imported pottery, as well as richly decorated fine vases, rhyta, and decorative toreutic plaques for gorutoi.[117]

An important trade route existed in Scythia during the Early Scythian period which started in Pontic Olbia and followed the course of the Inhul river and crossed the Dnipro, after which it turned east until the country of the Gelonians and, after crossing the Don and the Volga, passed through the Ural Mountains and continued into Asia until the Altai Mountains. Gold was traded from eastern Eurasia until Pontic Olbia through this route, and the Scythian tradesmen went to the distant regions on its course to carry out commerce. The conquest of the north Pontic region by the Scythians and their imposition of a "Pax Scythica" created the conditions of safety for traders which enabled the establishment of this route. This location provided to Pontic Olbia the important position of being a commercial and cultural centre in the northern Pontic region, and the city itself maintained friendly relations with the populations neighbouring it.[117][94]

As a consequence of these flourishing trade relations, which were themselves possibly only thanks to the protection and cooperation of the Scythian kings, the Greek colonies on the northern shores of the Black Sea rapidly grew during the 6th century BC, and the Scythian upper classes were also able to significantly enrich themselves.[117]

The relations between the Scythians and the Greek cities became more hostile during the 5th century BC, with the former destroying the latter's khōrai and rural settlements and therefore their grain-producing hinterlands, with the result being that the Scythians instituted an economic policy under their control whereby the sedentary peoples of the forest steppe to their north became the primary producers of grain, which was then transported through the Buh and Dnipro rivers to the Greek cities to their south such as Tyras, Niconium and Pontic Olbia, from where the cities exported it to mainland Greece at a profit for themselves. This arrangement came to an end sometime between 435 and 400 BC, with the Greek cities regaining their independence and rebuilding their khōrai.[16]

Another consequence of trade between the Greeks and the Scythians was that Greek art significantly influenced Scythian art and artistic preferences, and by the Late Scythian period most of the artwork in the Scythian tombs consisted of Scythian motifs and scenes representing Scythian life which had been done by Greek artisans.[117]

During the 4th century BC, the Scythians became the middlemen in the trade routes supplying grains produced in the forest steppe and within Scythian itself to the Bosporan Kingdom, who in turn sold these to Greece itself. The Scythian royalty and aristocracy were able to derive immense revenue and profits from their role in these commercial activities.[36]

Physical appearance

 
An Attic vase-painting of a Scythian archer (a police force in Athens) by Epiktetos, 520–500 BC

In Histories, the 5th-century BC Greek historian Halicarnassus describes the Budini of Scythia as red-haired and grey-eyed.[120] In the 5th century BC, Greek physician Hippocrates argued that the Scythians were light skinned[120][121] as well as having a particularly high rate of hypermobility, to a point of affecting warfare.[122] In the 3rd century BC, the Greek poet Callimachus described the Arismapes (Arimaspi) of Scythia as fair-haired.[120][123] The 2nd-century BC Han Chinese envoy Zhang Qian described the Sai (Saka), an eastern people closely related to the Scythians, as having yellow (probably meaning hazel or green) and blue eyes.[120] In the late 2nd century AD, the Christian theologian Clement of Alexandria says that the Scythians and the Celts have long auburn hair.[120][124] The 2nd-century Greek philosopher Polemon includes the Scythians among the northern peoples characterised by red hair and blue-grey eyes.[120] In the late 2nd or early 3rd century AD, the Greek physician Galen writes that Scythians, Sarmatians, Illyrians, Germanic peoples and other northern peoples have reddish hair.[120][125] The fourth-century bishop Gregory of Nyssa wrote that the Scythians were fair skinned and blond haired.[126] The 5th-century physician Adamantius, who often followed Polemon, describes the Scythians as fair-haired.[120][127]

Archaeology

 
Scythian defence line 339 BC reconstruction in Polgár, Hungary

Scythian archaeology can be divided into three stages:[16]

  • Early Scythian – from the mid-8th or the late 7th century BC to about 500 BC
  • Classical Scythian or Mid-Scythian – from about 500 BC to about 300 BC
  • Late Scythian – from about 200 BC to the mid-3rd century AD, in the Crimea and the Lower Dnipro, by which time the population was settled.

Archaeological remains of the Scythians include kurgan tombs (ranging from simple exemplars to elaborate "Royal kurgans" containing the "Scythian triad" of weapons, horse-harness, and Scythian-style wild-animal art), gold, silk, and animal sacrifices, in places also with suspected human sacrifices.[128] Mummification techniques and permafrost have aided in the relative preservation of some remains. Scythian archaeology also examines the remains of cities and fortifications.[129][130][131]

List of rulers

Kings of Early Scythians

Kings of Pontic Scythians

Kings of Crimean Scythians

Kings of Danubian Scythians

  • Tanusakos, reigned c. 2nd century BC
  • Kanitos, reigned c. 2nd century BC
  • Sariakos, reigned c. 2nd century BC
  • Akrosakos, reigned c. 2nd century BC
  • Kharaspos, reigned c. 2nd century BC
  • Ailios, reigned c. 2nd century BC

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Scythian /ˈsɪθiən/ or /ˈsɪðiən/, Scyth /ˈsɪθ/, but note Scytho- /ˈsaɪθoʊ/ in composition (OED).
  2. ^ see section about names below

References

  1. ^ Jacobson 1995, p. 32.
  2. ^ Cunliffe 2019, p. 42.
  3. ^ a b
    • Dandamayev 1994, p. 37: "In modern scholarship the name 'Sakas' is reserved for the ancient tribes of northern and eastern Central Asia and Eastern Turkestan to distinguish them from the related Massagetae of the Aral region and the Scythians of the Pontic steppes. These tribes spoke Iranian languages, and their chief occupation was nomadic pastoralism."
    • Davis-Kimball, Bashilov & Yablonsky 1995, p. 91: "Near the end of the 19th century V.F. Miller (1886, 1887) theorized that the Scythians and their kindred, the Sauromatians, were Iranian-speaking peoples. This has been a popular point of view and continues to be accepted in linguistics and historical science [...]"
    • Melykova 1990, pp. 97–98: "From the end of the 7th century B.C. to the 4th century B.C. the Central- Eurasian steppes were inhabited by two large groups of kin Iranian-speaking tribes – the Scythians and Sarmatians [...]"
    • Melykova 1990, p. 117: "All contemporary historians, archeologists and linguists are agreed that since the Scythian and Sarmatian tribes were of the Iranian linguistic group [...]"
    • Sulimirski 1985, pp. 149–153: "During the first half of the first millennium B.C., c. 3,000 to 2,500 years ago, the southern part of Eastern Europe was occupied mainly by peoples of Iranian stock [...] The main Iranian-speaking peoples of the region at that period were the Scyths and the Sarmatians [...]"
    • Jacobson 1995, pp. 36–37: "When we speak of Scythians, we refer to those Scytho-Siberians who inhabited the Kuban Valley, the Taman and Kerch peninsulas, Crimea, the northern and northeastern littoral of the Black Sea, and the steppe and lower forest steppe regions now shared between Ukraine and Russia, from the seventh century down to the first century B.C [...] They almost certainly spoke an Iranian language [...]"
  4. ^
    • Ivantchik 2018: "Scythians, a nomadic people of Iranian origin [...]"
    • Harmatta 1996, p. 181: "[B]oth Cimmerians and Scythians were Iranian peoples."
    • Sulimirski 1985, pp. 149–153: "During the first half of the first millennium B.C., c. 3,000 to 2,500 years ago, the southern part of Eastern Europe was occupied mainly by peoples of Iranian stock [...] [T]he population of ancient Scythia was far from being homogeneous, nor were the Scyths themselves a homogeneous people. The country called after them was ruled by their principal tribe, the "Royal Scyths" (Her. iv. 20), who were of Iranian stock and called themselves "Skolotoi" [...]"
    • West 2002, pp. 437–440: "[T]rue Scyths seems to be those whom [Herodotus] calls Royal Scyths, that is, the group who claimed hegemony [...] apparently warrior-pastoralists. It is generally agreed, from what we know of their names, that these were people of Iranian stock [...]"
    • Rolle 1989, p. 56: "The physical characteristics of the Scythians correspond to their cultural affiliation: their origins place them within the group of Iranian peoples."
    • Rostovtzeff 1922, p. 13: "The Scythian kingdom [...] was succeeded in the Russian steppes by an ascendancy of various Sarmatian tribes — Iranians, like the Scythians themselves."
    • Minns 2011, p. 36: "The general view is that both agricultural and nomad Scythians were Iranian."
  5. ^ "Scythian". Encyclopædia Britannica Online. Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. Retrieved October 4, 2019.
  6. ^ a b Hambly, Gavin. "History of Central Asia: Early Western Peoples". Encyclopædia Britannica Online. Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. Retrieved October 4, 2019.
  7. ^ Beckwith 2009, p. 11.
  8. ^ "Sarmatian". Encyclopædia Britannica Online. Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. Retrieved October 4, 2019.
  9. ^ a b c d e f Harmatta 1996, pp. 181–182
  10. ^ Brzezinski & Mielczarek 2002, p. 39: "Indeed, it is now accepted that the Sarmatians merged in with pre-Slavic populations."
  11. ^ a b Mallory & Adams 1997, p. 523: "In their Ukrainian and Polish homeland the Slavs were intermixed and at times overlain by Germanic speakers (the Goths) and by Iranian speakers (Scythians, Sarmatians, Alans) in a shifting array of tribal and national configurations."
  12. ^ a b Davis-Kimball, Bashilov & Yablonsky 1995, p. 165: "Iranian-speaking nomadic tribes, specifically the Scythians and Sarmatians, are special among the North Caucasian peoples. The Scytho-Sarmatians were instrumental in the ethnogenesis of some of the modern peoples living today in the Caucasus. Of importance in this group are the Ossetians, an Iranian-speaking group of people who are believed to have descended from the North Caucasian Alans."
  13. ^ a b Dickens 2018, p. 1346: "Greek authors [...] frequently applied the name Scythians to later nomadic groups who had no relation whatever to the original Scythians"
  14. ^ Beckwith 2009, pp. 58–70
  15. ^ "Scythian art". Encyclopædia Britannica Online. Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. Retrieved October 4, 2019.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap Ivantchik 2018.
  17. ^ a b c Novák, Ľubomír (2013). Problem of Archaism and Innovation in the Eastern Iranian Languages. Charles University. Retrieved 14 August 2022.
  18. ^ a b Parpola, Simo (1970). Neo-Assyrian Toponyms. Kevaeler: Butzon & Bercker. p. 178.
  19. ^ "Iškuzaya [SCYTHIAN] (EN)". oracc.museum.upenn.edu.
  20. ^ "Asguzayu [SCYTHIAN] (EN)". oracc.museum.upenn.edu.
  21. ^ Although ancient Persians and ancient Greeks respectively used the names "Saka" and "Scythian" for all the steppe nomads, the name "Scythian" is used specifically for the ancient nomads of the western steppe while "Saka" is used for a related group of nomads living in the eastern steppe.
  22. ^ a b c
    • Dandamayev 1994, p. 37: "In modern scholarship the name 'Sakas' is reserved for the ancient tribes of northern and eastern Central Asia and Eastern Turkestan to distinguish them from the related Massagetae of the Aral region and the Scythians of the Pontic steppes. These tribes spoke Iranian languages, and their chief occupation was nomadic pastoralism."
    • Cernenko 2012, p. 3: "The Scythians lived in the Early Iron Age, and inhabited the northern areas of the Black Sea (Pontic) steppes. Though the 'Scythian period' in the history of Eastern Europe lasted little more than 400 years, from the 7th to the 3rd centuries BC, the impression these horsemen made upon the history of their times was such that a thousand years after they had ceased to exist as a sovereign people, their heartland and the territories which they dominated far beyond it continued to be known as 'greater Scythia'."
    • Melykova 1990, pp. 97–98: "From the end of the 7th century B.C. to the 4th century B.C. the Central- Eurasian steppes were inhabited by two large groups of kin Iranian-speaking tribes – the Scythians and Sarmatians [...] "[I]t may be confidently stated that from the end of the 7th century to the 3rd century B.C. the Scythians occupied the steppe expanses of the north Black Sea area, from the Don in the east to the Danube in the West."
    • Ivantchik 2018: "Scythians, a nomadic people of Iranian origin who flourished in the steppe lands north of the Black Sea during the 7th–4th centuries BC (Figure 1). For related groups in Central Asia and India, see [...]"
    • Sulimirski 1985, pp. 149–153: "During the first half of the first millennium B.C., c. 3,000 to 2,500 years ago, the southern part of Eastern Europe was occupied mainly by peoples of Iranian stock [...] The main Iranian-speaking peoples of the region at that period were the Scyths and the Sarmatians [...] [T]he population of ancient Scythia was far from being homogeneous, nor were the Scyths themselves a homogeneous people. The country called after them was ruled by their principal tribe, the "Royal Scyths" (Her. iv. 20), who were of Iranian stock and called themselves "Skolotoi" (iv. 6); they were nomads who lived in the steppe east of the Dnieper up to the Don, and in the Crimean steppe [...] The eastern neighbours of the "Royal Scyths," the Sauromatians, were also Iranian; their country extended over the steppe east of the Don and the Volga."
    • Sulimirski & Taylor 1991, p. 547: "The name 'Scythian' is met in the classical authors and has been taken to refer to an ethnic group or people, also mentioned in Near Eastern texts, who inhabited the northern Black Sea region."
    • West 2002, pp. 437–440: "Ordinary Greek (and later Latin) usage could designate as Scythian any northern barbarian from the general area of the Eurasian steppe, the virtually treeless corridor of drought-resistant perennial grassland extending from the Danube to Manchuria. Herodotus seeks greater precision, and this essay is focussed on his Scythians, who belong to the North Pontic steppe [...] These true Scyths seems to be those whom he calls Royal Scyths, that is, the group who claimed hegemony [...] apparently warrior-pastoralists. It is generally agreed, from what we know of their names, that these were people of Iranian stock [...]"
    • Jacobson 1995, pp. 36–37: "When we speak of Scythians, we refer to those Scytho-Siberians who inhabited the Kuban Valley, the Taman and Kerch peninsulas, Crimea, the northern and northeastern littoral of the Black Sea, and the steppe and lower forest steppe regions now shared between Ukraine and Russia, from the seventh century down to the first century B.C [...] They almost certainly spoke an Iranian language [...]"
    • Di Cosmo 1999, p. 924: "The first historical steppe nomads, the Scythians, inhabited the steppe north of the Black Sea from about the eight century B.C."
    • Rice, Tamara Talbot. "Central Asian arts: Nomadic cultures". Encyclopædia Britannica Online. Retrieved October 4, 2019. [Saka] gold belt buckles, jewelry, and harness decorations display sheep, griffins, and other animal designs that are similar in style to those used by the Scythians, a nomadic people living in the Kuban basin of the Caucasus region and the western section of the Eurasian plain during the greater part of the 1st millennium bc.
  23. ^ a b c d e Unterländer, Martina (March 3, 2017). "Ancestry and demography and descendants of Iron Age nomads of the Eurasian Steppe". Nature Communications. 8: 14615. Bibcode:2017NatCo...814615U. doi:10.1038/ncomms14615. PMC 5337992. PMID 28256537. Contemporary descendants of western Scythian groups are found among various groups in the Caucasus and Central Asia, while similarities to eastern Scythian are found to be more widespread, but almost exclusively among Turkic language speaking (formerly) nomadic groups, particularly from the Kipchak branch of Turkic languages.
  24. ^ Järve, Mari; et al. (2019-07-22). "Shifts in the Genetic Landscape of the Western Eurasian Steppe Associated with the Beginning and End of the Scythian Dominance". Current Biology. 29 (14): 2430–2441. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2019.06.019. ISSN 0960-9822. PMID 31303491. S2CID 195887262. E10.
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  26. ^ "Welcome to Encyclopaedia Iranica".
  27. ^ Kramrisch, Stella. "Central Asian Arts: Nomadic Cultures". Encyclopædia Britannica Online. Retrieved September 1, 2018. The Śaka tribe was pasturing its herds in the Pamirs, central Tien Shan, and in the Amu Darya delta. Their gold belt buckles, jewelry, and harness decorations display sheep, griffins, and other animal designs that are similar in style to those used by the Scythians, a nomadic people living in the Kuban basin of the Caucasus region and the western section of the Eurasian plain during the greater part of the 1st millennium bc.
  28. ^ Lendering, Jona (February 14, 2019). "Scythians / Sacae". Livius.org. Retrieved October 4, 2019.
  29. ^ Unterländer 2017. "During the first millennium BC, nomadic people spread over the Eurasian Steppe from the Altai Mountains over the northern Black Sea area as far as the Carpathian Basin [...] Greek and Persian historians of the 1st millennium BC chronicle the existence of the Massagetae and Sauromatians, and later, the Sarmatians and Sacae: cultures possessing artefacts similar to those found in classical Scythian monuments, such as weapons, horse harnesses and a distinctive ‘Animal Style' artistic tradition. Accordingly, these groups are often assigned to the Scythian culture [...]"
  30. ^ Tokhtas’ev, Sergei R. (1991). "Cimmerians". Encyclopædia Iranica. As the Cimmerians cannot be differentiated archeologically from the Scythians, it is possible to speculate about their Iranian origins. In the Neo-Babylonian texts (according to D’yakonov, including at least some of the Assyrian texts in Babylonian dialect) Gimirri and similar forms designate the Scythians and Central Asian Saka, reflecting the perception among inhabitants of Mesopotamia that Cimmerians and Scythians represented a single cultural and economic group
  31. ^ Watson 1972, p. 142: "The term 'Scythic' has been used above to denote a group of basic traits which characterize material culture from the fifth to the first century B.C. in the whole zone stretching from the Transpontine steppe to the Ordos, and without ethnic connotation. How far nomadic populations in central Asia and the eastern steppes may be of Scythian, Iranic, race, or contain such elements makes a precarious speculation."
  32. ^ David & McNiven 2018: "Horse-riding nomadism has been referred to as the culture of 'Early Nomads'. This term encompasses different ethnic groups (such as Scythians, Saka, Massagetae, and Yuezhi) [...]"
  33. ^ West 2002, pp. 437–440
  34. ^ Davis-Kimball, Bashilov & Yablonsky 1995, p. 33
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  119. ^ Sulimirski 1985, pp. 169–171.
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  121. ^ Hippocrates 1886, 20 "The Scythians are a ruddy race because of the cold, not through any fierceness in the sun's heat. It is the cold that burns their white skin and turns it ruddy."
  122. ^ Beighton, Grahame & Bird 2011, p. 1.
  123. ^ Callimachus 1921, Hymn IV. To Delos. 291 "The first to bring thee these offerings fro the fair-haired Arimaspi [...]"
  124. ^ Clement 1885, Book 3. Chapter III "Of the nations, the Celts and Scythians wear their hair long, but do not deck themselves. The bushy hair of the barbarian has something fearful in it; and its auburn (ξανθόν) colour threatens war [...]"
  125. ^ Galen 1881, De Temperamentis. Book 2 "Ergo Aegyptii, Arabes, & Indi, omnes denique qui calidam & siccam regionem incolunt, nigros, exiguique incrementi, siccos, crispos, & fragiles pilos habent. Contra qui humidam, frigidamque regionem habitant, Illyrii, Germani, Sarmatae, & omnis Scytica plaga, modice auctiles, & graciles, & rectos, & rufos optinent. Qui uero inter hos temperatum colunt tractum, hi pilos plurimi incrementi, & robustissimos, & modice nigros, & mediocriter crassos, tum nec prorsus crispos, nec omnino rectos edunt."
  126. ^ Gregory 1995, p. 124: "[T]he Ethiopian's son black, but the Scythian white-skinned and with hair of a golden tinge."
  127. ^ Adamantius. Physiognomica. 2. 37
  128. ^ Hughes 1991, pp. 64–65, 118
  129. ^ Sulimirski & Taylor 1991, pp. 547–591
  130. ^ Tsetskhladze 2002
  131. ^ Tsetskhladze 2010

Early sources

Modern sources

Further reading

scythians, scythian, redirects, here, members, wider, cultures, which, were, part, scythian, cultures, other, uses, scythian, disambiguation, scyth, redirects, here, tool, scythe, other, uses, scythe, disambiguation, been, suggested, that, iškuza, scythia, mer. Scythian redirects here For members of the wider cultures of which the Scythians were part see Scythian cultures For other uses see Scythian disambiguation Scyth redirects here For the tool see Scythe For other uses see Scythe disambiguation It has been suggested that Iskuza and Scythia be merged into this article Discuss Proposed since September 2022 The Scythians or Scyths note 1 note 2 and sometimes also referred to as the Classical Scythians and the Pontic Scythians 1 2 were an ancient Eastern 3 Iranian 4 equestrian nomadic people who had migrated from Central Asia to the Pontic Steppe in modern day Ukraine and Southern Russia from approximately the 7th century BC until the 3rd century BC ScythiansSkudata earlier Skulata later The approximate extent of the Scythian culture which was dominated by the Scythians Regions with significant populationsCentral Asia 9th 7th centuries BC West Asia 7th 6th centuries BC Pontic Steppe 6th 3rd centuries BC Crimea and Dobruja 3rd century BC 2nd century AD LanguagesScythianReligionScythian religionRelated ethnic groupsAgathyrsi Amardi Cimmerians Massagetae Ossetians Saka SarmatiansScythian comb from Solokha early 4th century BC Skilled in mounted warfare 5 the Scythians replaced the Cimmerians as the dominant power on the Pontic Steppe in the 8th century BC 6 In the 7th century BC the Scythians crossed the Caucasus Mountains and frequently raided West Asia along with the Cimmerians 6 7 After being expelled from West Asia by the Medes the Scythians retreated back into the Pontic Steppe and were gradually conquered by the Sarmatians 8 In the late 2nd century BC the capital of the largely Hellenized Scythians at Scythian Neapolis in the Crimea was captured by Mithridates VI and their territories incorporated into the Bosporan Kingdom 9 By the 3rd century AD the Sarmatians and last remnants of the Scythians were overwhelmed by the Goths and by the early Middle Ages the Scythians and the Sarmatians had been largely assimilated and absorbed by early Slavs 10 11 The Scythians were instrumental in the ethnogenesis of the Ossetians who are believed to be descended from the Alans 12 After the Scythians disappearance authors of the ancient mediaeval and early modern periods used the name Scythian to refer to various populations of the steppes unrelated to them 13 The Scythians played an important part in the Silk Road a vast trade network connecting Greece Persia India and China perhaps contributing to the prosperity of those civilisations 14 Settled metalworkers made portable decorative objects for the Scythians forming a history of Scythian metalworking These objects survive mainly in metal forming a distinctive Scythian art 15 Contents 1 Names 1 1 Etymology 1 2 Modern terminology 2 History 2 1 Early history 2 2 West Asia 2 3 The Pontic Steppe 2 4 Scythia Minor 2 5 Legacy 3 Culture and society 3 1 Language 3 2 Lifestyle 3 3 Clothing 3 4 Social organisation 3 5 Warfare 3 6 Religion 3 7 Tribal divisions 3 7 1 Neighbouring populations 3 7 2 Related populations 3 8 Crafts 3 9 Art 3 10 Trade 4 Physical appearance 5 Archaeology 6 List of rulers 6 1 Kings of Early Scythians 6 2 Kings of Pontic Scythians 6 3 Kings of Crimean Scythians 6 4 Kings of Danubian Scythians 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 9 1 Early sources 9 2 Modern sources 9 3 Further readingNamesMain article Names of the Scythians Etymology Arzhan kurgan 8 7th century BC Some of the earliest Scythian artefacts in Animal style Arzhan kurgan Southern Siberia dated to 8 7th century BC The English name Scythians or Scyths is derived from the Ancient Greek name Skuthes Sky8hs and Skuthoi Sky8oi derived from the Scythian endonym Skudata 16 17 which due to a sound change from d to l in the Scythian evolved into the form Skulata 17 This designation was recorded in Greek as Skōlotoi Skwlotoi which according to Herodotus of Halicarnassus was the self designation of the tribe of the Royal Scythians 16 The Assyrians rendered the name of the Scythians as Ishkuzai Akkadian romanized Iskuzaya 18 19 or Askuzai Akkadian romanized Asguzaya romanized mat Askuzaya romanized mat Asguzaya 18 20 The ancient Persians meanwhile called the Scythians Saka who live beyond the Sea 𐎿𐎣𐎠 𐎫𐎹𐎡𐎹 𐎱𐎼𐎭𐎼𐎹 romanized Saka tayaiy paradraya in Old Persian and simply Saka 𓋴𓎝𓎡𓈉 romanized sk 𓐠𓎼𓈉 romanized sꜣg in Ancient Egyptian from which was derived the Graeco Roman name Sacae Ancient Greek Sakai romanized Sakai Latin Sacae 21 22 Modern terminology See also Scytho Siberian world Scythian vessel from Voronezh 4th century BC Hermitage Museum The Scythians were part of the wider Scytho Siberian world stretching across the Eurasian Steppes 16 23 of Kazakhstan the Russian steppes of the Siberian Ural Volga and Southern regions and eastern Ukraine 24 In a broader sense Scythians has also been used to designate all early Eurasian nomads 23 although the validity of such terminology is controversial 16 and other terms such as Early nomadic have been deemed preferable 25 Although the Scythians Saka and Cimmerians were closely related nomadic Iranian peoples and the ancient Babylonians ancient Persians and ancient Greeks respectively used the names Cimmerian Saka and Scythian for all the steppe nomads and early modern historians such as Edward Gibbon used the term Scythian to refer to a variety of nomadic and semi nomadic peoples across the Eurasian Steppe 26 the name Scythian in contemporary modern scholarship generally refers to the nomadic Iranian people who dominated the Pontic Steppe from the 7th century BC to the 3rd century BC 22 while the name Saka is used specifically for their eastern members who inhabited the northern and eastern Eurasian Steppe and the Tarim Basin 22 27 better source needed 28 29 and while the Cimmerians were often described by contemporaries as culturally Scythian they formed a different tribe from the Scythians proper to whom the Cimmerians were related and who also displaced and replaced the Cimmerians in the Pontic Steppe 30 The Scythians share several cultural similarities with other populations living to their east in particular similar weapons horse gear and Scythian art which has been referred to as the Scythian triad 16 25 Cultures sharing these characteristics have often been referred to as Scythian cultures and its peoples called Scythians 23 31 Peoples associated with Scythian cultures include not only the Scythians themselves who were a distinct ethnic group 32 but also Cimmerians Massagetae Saka Sarmatians and various obscure peoples of the East European Forest Steppe 16 23 such as early Slavs Balts and Finnic peoples 33 34 Within this broad definition of the term Scythian the actual Scythians have often been distinguished from other groups through the terms Classical Scythians Western Scythians European Scythians or Pontic Scythians 23 Scythologist Askold Ivantchik notes with dismay that the term Scythian has been used within both a broad and a narrow context leading to a good deal of confusion He reserves the term Scythian for the Iranian people dominating the Pontic Steppe from the 7th century BC to the 3rd century BC 16 Nicola Di Cosmo writes that the broad concept of Scythian to describe the early nomadic populations of the Eurasian Steppe is too broad to be viable and that the term early nomadic is preferable 25 HistorySee also Sintashta culture Srubnaya culture Andronovo culture and Indo European migrations Early history The 5th century BC Greek historian Herodotus of Halicarnassus is the most important literary source on the origins of the Scythians The Scythians originated in the region of the Volga Ural steppes of Central Asia possibly around the 9th century BC 35 as a section of the population of the Srubnaya culture 36 to which the Scythians themselves belonged 37 and continuity between the Scythians and the Srubnaya culture is suggested by both archaeological genetic and anthropological evidence 38 39 40 During the 9th to 8th centuries BC some Scythian tribes had migrated westwards into the steppe adjacent to the northern shore of the Black Sea which they occupied along with the Cimmerians who were also a nomadic Iranian people closely related to the Scythians 36 and over the course of the 8th and 7th centuries BC the Scythians migrated in several waves became the dominant population of the Caucasian Steppe as part of a significant movement of the nomadic peoples of the Eurasian Steppe which started when another nomadic Iranian tribe closely related to the Scythians from eastern Central Asia either the Massagetae 41 or the Issedones 42 migrated westwards forcing the early Scythians of the to the west across the Araxes river 43 following which the Scythians moved into the Caspian Steppe where they conquered the territory of the Cimmerians and assimilated most of this latter people and displaced the rest before settling in the area between the Araxes the Caucasus and the Lake Maeotis 43 44 36 41 45 The Scythian migration destroyed earlier cultures with the settlements of the Sabatynivka culture uk in the Dnipro valley being largely destroyed and the centre of Cimmerian bronze production stopping existing at the time and the Chernogorovka Novocherkassk being disturbed during the 8th to 7th centuries BC The migration of the Scythians also displaced other populations including some North Caucasian groups who retreated to the west and settled in Transylvania and the Hungarian Plain where they introduced Novocherkassk culture type swords daggers horse harnesses and other objects 46 among these displaced populations from the Caucasus were the Sigynnae who were displaced westward into the eastern part of the Pannonian Basin 47 41 During this early migratory period some groups of Scythians settled in Ciscaucasia and the Caucasus Mountains foothills to the east of the Kuban river where they settled among the native populations of this region and did not migrate to the south into West Asia 48 Under Scythian pressure the Cimmerians migrated to the south along the coast of the Black Sea and reached Anatolia and the Scythians in turn later expanded to the south following the coast of the Caspian Sea and arrived in the Ciscaucasian steppes from where they expanded into the region of present day Azerbaijan where they settled and turned eastern Transcaucasia into their centre of operations in West Asia until the early 6th century BC 49 50 48 51 with this presence in West Asia being an extension of the Scythian kingdom of the steppes 16 During this period the Scythian kings headquarters were located in the Ciscaucasian steppes and contact with the civilisation of West Asia would have an important influence on the formation of Scythian culture 41 This presence in Transcaucasia influenced Scythian culture the akinakes sword and socketed bronze arrowheads with three edges which are considered as typically Scythian weapons were of Transcaucasian origin and had been adopted by the Scythians during their stay in the Caucasus 36 48 From their base in the Caucasian Steppe during the period of the 8th to 7th centuries BC itself the Scythians conquered the Pontic Steppe to the north of the Black Sea up to the Danube river which formed the western boundary of Scythian territory onwards although the Scythians may also have had access to the Wallachian and Moldavian plains 41 35 This expansion displaced another nomadic Iranian people related to the Scythians the Agathyrsi who were the oldest Iranian population 52 to have dominated the Pontic Steppe and who were pushed westwards by the Scythians away from the steppes and from their original home around Lake Maeotis 41 52 after which the relations between the two populations remained hostile 41 In the Pontic Steppe the Scythians spread throughout the territory of the Early Iranian populations of the Catacomb culture and intermarried with them 48 The westward migration of the Scythians was accompanied by the introduction into the north Pontic region of articles originating in the Siberian Karasuk culture and which were characteristic of Early Scythian archaeological culture consisting of cast bronze cauldrons daggers swords and horse harnesses 45 Several smaller groups were likely also displaced by the Scythian expansion 35 Beginning in this period remains associated with the early Scythians started appearing within interior Europe especially in the Thracian and Hungarian plains although it is yet unclear whether these represent any actual Scythian migration into these regions or whether these arrived there through trade or raids 35 West Asia Main article Iskuza Gold Scythian belt title Mingecevir ancient Scythian kingdom Azerbaijan 7th 4th century BC 53 54 The Scythian kingdom in West Asia at its maximum extent under the reign of the king Madyes During the earliest phase of their presence in West Asia the Scythians under their king Ispakaia were allied with the Cimmerians and the two groups in alliance with the Medes who were an Iranian people of West Asia to whom the Scythians and Cimmerians were distantly related as well as the Mannaeans were threatening the eastern frontier of the kingdom of Urartu 55 and the then superpower of West Asia the Neo Assyrian Empire 56 These allied forces were defeated by the Assyrian king Esarhaddon 57 58 and Ispakaia was later killed in a retaliatory military campaign by Esarhaddon 58 59 Ispakaia was succeeded by Bartatua 59 who sought a rapprochement with the Assyrians and married Esarhaddon s daughter Serua eterat 60 36 61 62 Bartatua s marriage to Serua eterat required that he would pledge allegiance to Assyria as a vassal with the territories ruled by him would be his fief granted by the Assyrian king thus making the Scythian presence in West Asia an extension of the Neo Assyrian Empire 45 and henceforth the Scythians remained allies of the Assyrian Empire 45 with Bartatua helping the Assyrians by defeating the state of Mannai and imposing Scythian hegemony over it 63 The marital alliance between the Scythian king and the Assyrian ruling dynasty as well as the proximity of the Scythians with the Assyrian influenced Mannai and Urartu placed the Scythians under the strong influence of Assyrian culture 45 Bartatua was succeeded by his son with Serua eterat Madyes 36 45 who in 653 BC invaded the Medes who were engaged in a war against Assyria thus starting a period which Herodotus of Halicarnassus called the Scythian rule over Asia 64 51 45 Madyes soon expanded the Scythian hegemony to the state of Urartu 64 and soon after 635 BC with Assyrian approval 65 and in alliance with the Lydians 66 the Scythians under Madyes entered Anatolia and defeated the Cimmerians 67 Scythian power in West Asia thus reached its peak under Madyes with the territories ruled by the Scythians extending from the Halys river in Anatolia in the west to the Caspian Sea and the eastern borders of Media in the east and from Transcaucasia in the north to the northern borders of the Neo Assyrian Empire in the south 51 68 By the 620s BC the Assyrian Empire began unravelling after the death of Esarhaddon s son and successor Ashurbanipal in addition to internal instability within Assyria itself Babylon revolted against the Assyrians in 626 BC under the leadership of Nabopolassar 69 and in 625 BC the Median king Cyaxares overthrew the Scythian yoke over the Medes by assassinating the Scythian leaders including Madyes 70 69 45 The Scythians soon took advantage of the power vacuum created by the crumbling of the power of their former Assyrian allies to overrun the Levant and Palestine until the borders of Egypt from where they turned back after their advance was stopped by the marshes of the Nile Delta and the pharaoh Psamtik I met them and convinced them to turn back by offering them gifts 71 51 they retreated through Askalōn largely without any incident although some stragglers looted the temple of Astarte in the city the perpetrators of this sacrilege and their descendants were allegedly afflicted by the goddess with a female disease due to which they became a class of transvestite diviners called the Anarya meaning unmanly in Scythian 16 51 Starting around 615 BC the Scythians were operating as allies of Cyaxares and the Medes in their war against Assyria 45 The Scythians were finally expelled from West Asia by the Medes in the 600s BC after which they retreated to the Pontic Steppe 45 Some splinter Scythian groups nevertheless remained in West Asia and settled in Transcaucasia 41 and one group formed a kingdom in the area corresponding to modern day Azerbaijan 72 in eastern Transcaucasia 45 By the middle of the 6th century BC the Scythians who had remained in West Asia had completely assimilated culturally and politically into Median society and no longer existed as a distinct group 73 The Pontic Steppe Main article Scythia The Scythian kingdom in the Pontic Steppe at its maximum extent After their expulsion from West Asia and beginning in the later 7th and lasting throughout much of the 6th century BC the majority of the Scythians including the Royal Scythians migrated into the Kuban Steppe around 600 BC 74 and from Ciscaucasia into the Pontic Steppe which became the centre of Scythian power 41 and in the western Ciscaucasia from where the Scythians not large in number enough to spread throughout Ciscaucasia instead took over the steppe to the south of the Kuban river s middle course the northwards migration of the Scythians continued throughout the 6th century BC Using the Pontic Steppe as their base the Scythians often raided into the adjacent regions with Central Europe being a frequent target of their raids 41 In many parts of their north Pontic kingdom the Scythians established themselves as a ruling class over already present sedentary populations including Thracians in the western regions Maeotians on the eastern shore of Lake Maeotis and later the Greeks on the north coast of the Black Sea 16 75 Outside of the Pontic Scythian kingdom itself some splinter Scythian groups formed the Vorskla and Sula Donets groups of the Scythian Culture in the East European Forest Steppe 76 Between 650 and 625 BC the Scythians of the northern Pontic region came into contact with the Greeks who were starting to create colonies in the areas under Scythian rule the Greeks carried out thriving commercial ties with the sedentary peoples of the East European Forest Steppe who lived to the north of the Scythians with the large rivers of eastern Europe which flowed into the Black Sea forming the main access routes to these northern markets This process put the Scythians into permanent contact with the Greeks and the relations between the latter and the Greek colonies remained peaceful 16 In 513 BC the king Darius I of the Persian Achaemenid Empire which had succeeded the Median Lydian Egyptian and Neo Babylonian empires which the Scythians had once interacted with carried out a campaign against the Pontic Scythians with the reasons for this campaign being unclear Darius s invasion was resisted by the Scythian king Idanthyrsus and the results of this campaign were also unclear with the Persian inscriptions themselves referring to the Pontic Scythians as having been conquered by Darius while Greek authors instead claimed that Darius s campaign failed and from then onwards developed a tradition of idealising the Scythians as being invincible thanks to their nomadic lifestyle 16 In the 5th century BC the Scythians embarked on expansionist ventures including in the west where they raided south of the Danube into Thrace until the formation of the Thracian Odrysian kingdom blocked their advances after which the Scythians formed an alliance with the Odrysians as well as in the north where they imposed their rule on the peoples of the forest steppe and in the south where they brought the Greek colonies on the northern shores of the Black Sea under their power 35 16 The peak of the Scythian kingdom of the Pontic Steppe happened in the 4th century BC at the same time when the Greek cities of the coast were prospering and the relations between the two were mostly peaceful the rule of the Spartocid dynasty in the Bosporan Kingdom was also favourable for the Scythians and the Bosporan aristocracy had contacts with the Scythians This period saw Scythian culture not only thriving with most known Scythian monuments date from then but also rapidly undergoing significant Hellenisation 35 16 The most famous Scythian king of the 4th century BC was Ateas whose rule started around the 360s BC and under whom the Greek cities to the south of the Danube were brought under Scythian hegemony Ateas s main activities in Thrace and south west Scythia such as his wars against the Triballi and the Histriani attest of the power that the Scythians held to the south of the Danube in his time Ateas initially allied with Philip II of Macedonia but eventually this alliance fell apart and Ateas was killed during a war with the Macedonians in 339 BC 35 16 In the 3rd century BC the expansion in the northern Pontic region of the Sarmatians who were another nomadic Iranian people related to the Scythians as well as of the Thracian Getae the Germanic Bastarnae and Sciri and of the Celts the Scythian kingdom disappeared from the Pontic Steppe and the Sarmatians replaced the Scythians as the dominant power of the Pontic Steppe due to which the appellation of Scythia for the region became replaced by that of Sarmatia Europea European Sarmatia 41 16 35 Skilurus king of Scythia Minor in Crimea Relief from Scythian Neapolis Crimea 2nd century BC Scythia Minor Main articles Scythian kingdom in Crimea and Scythian kingdom on the lower Danube The Scythians fled to the Scythia Minor in Crimea where they were able to securely establish themselves against the Sarmatian invasion despite tensions with the Greeks and to the Scythia Minor in Dobrugea as well as in nearby regions where they became limited in enclaves The remnants of the Scythians on the Pontic Steppe settled down in a series of fortified settlements located along the main rivers of the region By then these Scythians were no longer nomadic they had become sedentary farmers and were Hellenised and the only places where the Scythians could still be found by the 2nd century BC were in the Scythia Minor s of Crimea and Dobrugea as well as in the lower reaches of the Dnipro river 41 16 35 The territory of the Scythae Basilaei Royal Scyths along the north shore of the Black Sea around 125 AD By 50 to 150 AD most of the Scythians had been assimilated by the Sarmatians 16 The remaining Scythians of Crimea who had mixed with the Tauri and the Sarmatians were conquered in the 3rd century AD by the Goths and other Germanic tribes who were then migrating from the north into the Pontic Steppe 77 Legacy In subsequent centuries remaining Scythians and Sarmatians were largely assimilated by early Slavs 11 The Scythians and Sarmatians played an instrumental role in the ethnogenesis of the Ossetians who are considered direct descendants of the Alans 12 In Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages the name Scythians was used in Greco Roman and Byzantine literature for various groups of nomadic barbarians living on the Pontic Caspian Steppe who were not related to the actual Scythians such as the Huns Goths Ostrogoths Turkic peoples Pannonian Avars Slavs and Khazars 13 16 For example Byzantine sources referred to the Rus raiders who attacked Constantinople in 860 AD in contemporary accounts as Tauroscythians because of their geographical origin and despite their lack of any ethnic relation to Scythians 78 Scythian descent claims have been frequent throughout history The New Testament includes a single reference to Scythians in Colossians 3 11 79 Culture and society Kurgan stelae of a Scythian at Khortytsia Ukraine Since the Scythians did not have a written language their non material culture can only be pieced together through writings by non Scythian authors parallels found among other Iranian peoples and archaeological evidence 16 In a fragment from the comic writer Euphron quoted in Deipnosophistae poppy seeds are mentioned as a food which the Scythians love Language Main article Scythian languages The Scythians spoke a language belonging to the Scythian languages most probably 80 a branch of the Eastern Iranian languages 3 Whether all the peoples included in the Scytho Siberian archaeological culture spoke languages from this family is uncertain The Scythian languages may have formed a dialect continuum Scytho Sarmatian in the west and Scytho Khotanese or Saka in the east 81 The Scythian languages were mostly marginalised and assimilated as a consequence of the late antiquity and early Middle Ages Slavic and Turkic expansion The western Sarmatian group of ancient Scythian survived as the medieval language of the Alans and eventually gave rise to the modern Ossetian language 82 Lifestyle The early Scythians tribes were nomadic pastoralists and their lifestyle and customs were inextricably linked to their nomadic way of life the Scythians were able to raise large herds of horses cattle and sheep thanks to the abundance of grass growing in the steppe while hunting was primarily done for sport and entertainment among the more nomadic Scythian tribes the women and children spent their time in wagons where they lived while the men spent their lives on horseback and were trained as fighters and in archery since an early age But by the time the Scythians were living in the Pontic Steppe beginning in the 7th century BC they had become semi nomadic and practised both nomadism and farming although the Scythian tribes living in the steppe zone remained primarily nomadic 35 83 84 The Scythians did not use saddles or stirrups which were a later Sarmatian invention and they rode their horses sitting only on a piece of cloth 85 Unlike the other Scythic peoples such as the Sarmatians where women were allowed to go hunting ride horses learn archery and fight with spears just like the men the society of the Scythians proper was patriarchal and Scythian women possessed little freedom 84 Due to the Scythians nomadic pastoralist lifestyle Scythian women nevertheless learnt to use weapons because they were in charge of the herds and the home when the men were away fighting in wars 36 The tribe of the Alazones who were a population of either Scythian or mixed Thracian and Scythian origin were sedentary farmers who cultivated wheat onions garlic lentils and millet 75 Wine was primarily consumed by the Scythian aristocracy during the earlier phase of their kingdom in the Pontic Steppe and its consumption became more prevalent among the wealthier members of the populace in the Late Scythian period 84 Clothing Main article Scythian clothing Kul Oba vase Scythian warriors drawn after figures on an electrum cup from the Kul Oba kurgan burial near Kerch Crimea The warrior on the right strings his bow bracing it behind his knee note the typical pointed hood long jacket with fur or fleece trimming at the edges decorated trousers and short boots tied at the ankle Scythians apparently wore their hair long and loose and all adult men apparently bearded The gorytos appears clearly on the left hip of the bare headed spearman The shield of the central figure may be made of plain leather over a wooden or wicker base Hermitage Museum St Petersburg The Scythians wore clothing typical of the steppe nomads the clothing of Scythian men included trousers and belts they wore pointed caps during earlier periods but they went bareheaded in later times Scythian women wore long dresses and mantles decorated with triangular or round metallic plates which were made of gold for wealthier women and of bronze for poorer women and women belonging to the upper classes wore kandus cloaks over their dresses and a veil over their head 84 Scythian men and women both wore golden and brazen jewellery both wore bracelets made of silver or bronze wire and neckrings and torcs made of gold and whose terminals were shaped like animal figures or animal heads necklaces worn by the Scythians were made of gold and semi precious stone beads men wore only one earring Scythian men also grew their hair long and their beards to significant sizes 86 Costume has been regarded as one of the main identifying criteria for Scythians Women wore a variety of different headdresses some conical in shape others more like flattened cylinders also adorned with metal golden plaques 87 Men and women wore long trousers often adorned with metal plaques and often embroidered or adorned with felt appliques trousers could have been wider or tight fitting depending on the area Materials used depended on the wealth climate and necessity 88 Men and women wore belts Warrior belts were made of leather often with gold or other metal adornments and had many attached leather thongs for fastening of the owner s gorytos sword whet stone whip etc Belts were fastened with metal or horn belt hooks leather thongs and metal often golden or horn belt plates 89 Scythian women used mirrors and many Scythian women s burials contained Greek made bronze mirrors Bronze mirrors made in Pontic Olbia and whose handles were decorated with animal figures such as those of stags panthers and rams were popular during the early Scythian periods 86 Social organisation Scythian society was stratified along class lines and was composed of a tribal aristocracy and freemen A rudimentary form of slavery existed in Scythia and slaves were only used domestically by the Scythians 36 The Scythians were monarchical and the Scythians were ruled by tribal kings who held power over their respective tribes and who in turn owed allegiance to the king of the Royal Scythians with the subject tribes paying tribute to the Royal Scythians and provided servants to the king and the Scythian tribal aristocracy 36 The power of the king among the Scythians was passed on hereditarily although it was limited by an assembly of warriors Royal power among the Scythians was considered as having been divinely ordained this conception of royal power which is well documented in the ritual symbols depicted on Late Scythian toreutics was initially foreign to Scythian culture and originated in West Asia during the period of Scythian presence there in the 7th century BC 84 90 36 According to the Scythologists Askold Ivantchik and Mikhail Bukharin the Scythians had been ruled by at least three dynasties including that of Bartatua that of Spargapeithes and that of Ariapeithes 16 91 The historian and anthropologist Anatoly Khazanov instead suggested that the Scythians had been ruled by the same dynasty from the time of their stay in West Asia until the end of their kingdom in the Pontic Steppe 92 By the 4th century BC the Scythians had become organised into a rudimentary state after the king Ateas united all the Scythian tribes This early state was itself based on the exploitation of the freemen within its social community 36 The tribe of the Aroteres consisted of a large sedentary populace of Thracian origin over which ruled an Iranic Scythian ruling class These Aroteres were a war like people who were organised into small territorial units settled in who lived in open undefended settlements and strongholds covering between sixteen and twenty four hectares each possessing a large industrial centre and which each functioned as industrial centres attesting of the complexity of the Tiasmyn group s society The earthworks of the Aroteres contained within them kurgan cemeteries lasting from the 6th to 3rd centuries that each included up to 400 kurgans where their inhabitants were buried showing that these sites had dense populations Among the Aroteres the sedentary Thracians were cremated or buried usually laid on their backs or sometimes crouched in poorly furnished shaft tombs while the Scythian ruling class were buried in large almost square underground burial chambers with timber sepulchres and wooden posts in each corner and in the centre supporting their rooves with some having a corridor and steps cut from the ground and whose grave goods included Greek pottery weapons and jewellery During the Early Scythian period the country of the Scythian Husbandsmen had close connections to the Greek colony of Pontic Olbia which ended during the late 5th century BC when the Scythians imposed their rule over the Greek cities on the Black Sea shore 93 94 The Callipidae also consisted of a large settled Thracian population with a Scythian ruling class who were considerably Hellenised The Callipidae lived in open settlements and earthworks and cultivated crops including wheat and millet and also engaged in animal husbandry and fishing at sea The Callipidae lived in rammed earth houses built on stone foundations and they buried their dead in flat graves while their Scythian ruling class were buried in kurgans 94 The class and social differences among the Scythians were reflected in Scythian art which primarily represented concepts of importance for the aristocracy but not for the commoner population 36 Warfare Scythian archers using the Scythian bow Kerch ancient Panticapeum Crimea 4th century BC The Scythians were skilled archers whose style of archery influenced that of the Persians and subsequently other nations including the Greeks 95 Scythian bronze arrowheads c700 300 BC The Scythians were a warlike people When engaged at war almost the entire adult population including a large number of women participated in battle 96 The Athenian historian Thucydides noted that no people in either Europe or Asia could resist the Scythians without outside aid 96 The main Scythian weapon was the short composite recurve bow The earliest known Scythian type arrowheads were found in the kurgan burial Arzhan 1 dated to the late ninth or early eighth century BCE 97 98 99 These arrowheads typically had either two or three blades and sockets with which to affix the arrowhead to the wooden or reed shaft of the arrow 100 The combination of the arrowheads shape and short recurve bow used by the Scythians constituted the most powerful firing weapon of their time which consequently led to their adoption by ancient West Asian armies during the late 7th century BCE 101 When not used Scythian bows were carried in a combined quiver bowcase made of bark or leather and decorated with golden or bronze plaque called a gorutos of which each could contain up to 300 arrows The akinakes sword which was a 50 to 70 centimetres short iron dagger which whose haft was richly decorated and shaft hole war axes which are also considered to be typically Scythian weapons were also adopted by the Scythians from the Transcaucasian populations and more specifically were derived from Georgian Bronze Age weapons The Scythians also used long swords during their earlier history and both the akinakai and the Scythian long swords had heart or similarly butterfly or kidney shaped cross guards and bar shaped terminals The sagaris battle pickaxes which had bronze sockets and iron blades were among the many types of war axes used by the Scythians Other Scythian weapons included spears which were between 1 70 and 2 20 metres in length and had a bay leaf shaped spearhead and sometimes a ferrule at the bottom as well as lances darts lassoes and slings 85 16 Golden decorative plate shaped like a stag from a Scythian shield Golden decorative plate shaped like a panther from a Scythian shield The Scythians used leather or hide armour although the aristocracy commonly used scale armour made of scales of iron bronze or bone sewn onto leather which the Scythians had adopted from the West Asian peoples during the 7th century BC and made into a prevalent aspect of the Scythian culture of the northern Pontic region Sometimes instead of armour the Scythians used battle belts which were made of scales sewn onto wide strips of either iron sheet hide or leather The Scythians also small hide or wicker shields reinforced with iron strips with the shields of Scythian aristocrats often being decorated with decorative central plaques The Scythians sometimes also protected their horses most especially their chests with scale armour 85 Other defensive armour used by the Scythians included Kuban type cast bronze helmets made by the native Caucasian peoples in the 6th and early 5th centuries BC in western Ciscaucasia which had openings for the face By the 5th century BC these Caucasian helmets had been replaced by Greek made Attic helmets and the Scythians also imported Greek made greaves 85 Scythians were particularly known for their equestrian skills and their early use of composite bows shot from horseback With great mobility the Scythians could absorb the attacks of more cumbersome footsoldiers and cavalry just retreating into the steppes Such tactics wore down their enemies making them easier to defeat The Scythians were notoriously aggressive warriors Ruled by small numbers of closely allied elites Scythians had a reputation for their archers and many gained employment as mercenaries Scythian elites had kurgan tombs high barrows heaped over chamber tombs of larch wood a deciduous conifer that may have had special significance as a tree of life renewal for it stands bare in winter 102 The Greek historian Herodotus of Halicarnassus said that the Scythians scalped their enemies 103 Herodotus related that Scythian warriors would behead the enemies they defeated in battle and present the heads to their king to claim their share of the plunder Then the warrior would skin the head by making a circular cut round the ears and shaking out the skull he then scrapes the flesh off the skin with the rib of an ox and when it is clean works it with his fingers until it is supple and fit to be used as a sort of handkerchief He hangs these handkerchiefs on the bridle of his horse and is very proud of them The best man is the man who has the greatest number 104 A skull from an Iron Age cemetery in South Siberia shows evidence of scalping It lends physical evidence to the practice of scalp taking by the Scythians living there 105 Some Scythian Sarmatian cultures may have given rise to Greek stories of Amazons Graves of armed females have been found in southern Ukraine and Russia David Anthony notes About 20 of Scythian Sarmatian warrior graves on the lower Don and lower Volga contained females dressed for battle as if they were men a style that may have inspired the Greek tales about the Amazons 106 Religion Main article Scythian religion The religion of the Scythians was a variant of the Pre Zoroastrian Iranian religion which differed from Zoroastrian and the post Zoroastrian Iranian religions and instead belonged to a more archaic stage of Indo Iranian religious development than the Zoroastrian and Hindu systems 9 The use of cannabis to induce trance and divination by soothsayers was a characteristic of the Scythian belief system 9 Our most important literary source on Scythian religion is Herodotus of Halicarnassus According to him the leading deity in the Scythian pantheon was Tabiti whom he compared to the Greek god Hestia 16 Tabiti was eventually replaced by Atar the fire pantheon of Iranian tribes and Agni the fire deity of Indo Aryans 9 Other deities mentioned by Halicarnassus include Papaios Api Goitosyros Oitosyros Argimpasa and Thagimasadas whom he identified with Zeus Gaia Apollo Aphrodite and Poseidon respectively The Scythians are also said by Halicarnassus to have worshipped equivalents of Heracles and Ares but he does not mention their Scythian names 16 An additional Scythian deity the goddess Dithagoia is mentioned in the a dedication by Senamotis daughter of King Skiluros at Panticapaeum Most of the names of Scythian deities can be traced back to Iranian roots 16 Halicarnassus states that Thagimasadas was worshipped by the Royal Scythians only while the remaining deities were worshipped by all He also states that Ares the god of war was the only god to whom the Scythians dedicated statues altars or temples Tumuli were erected to him in every Scythian district and both animal sacrifices and human sacrifices were performed in honor of him At least one shrine to Ares has been discovered by archaeologists 16 The Scythians had professional priests but it is not known if they constituted a hereditary class Among the priests there was a separate group the Enarei who worshipped the goddess Argimpasa and assumed feminine identities 16 Scythian mythology gave much importance to myth of the First Man who was considered the ancestor of them and their kings Similar myths are common among other Iranian peoples Considerable importance was given to the division of Scythian society into three hereditary classes which consisted of warriors priests and producers Kings were considered part of the warrior class Royal power was considered holy and of solar and heavenly origin 9 The Iranian principle of royal charisma known as khvarenah in the Avesta played a prominent role in Scythian society It is probable that the Scythians had a number of epic legends which were possibly the source for Halicarnassus s writings on them 16 Traces of these epics can be found in the epics of the Ossetians of the present day 9 In Scythian cosmology the world was divided into three parts with the warriors considered part of the upper world the priests of the middle level and the producers of the lower one 16 Tribal divisions See also Trifunctional hypothesis The Scythians were composed of a number of tribal units including 35 75 107 108 36 the Royal Scythians also called the Skōlotoi Skwlotoi and the Paralatai Paralatai were an Iranian tribe who nomadised in the Pontic Steppe in an area limited by the Dnipro river in the west and the Don river and the port of Kremnoi in the east as well in Crimea up to the Cimmerian Bosporus in its east The Royal Scythians were the main Scythian tribe and they were the ruling tribe of the whole of Scythia 109 The Royal Scythians and the Nomad Scythians were the only fully nomadic tribes within Scythia the name Paralatai corresponds to the Young Avestan name Paradata 𐬞𐬀𐬭𐬀𐬜𐬁𐬙𐬀 meaning placed at the front 110 the name Skōlotoi is the Greek form of the Scythian endonym Skulata formed by the addition of the plural suffix ta to the Scythian endonym Skula 16 17 the Nomad Scythians who lived to the west of the Royal Scythians between the Inhul and the bend of the Dnipro were a mixed Thracian and Iranic Scythian nomadic tribe The Nomad Scythians and the Royal Scythians were the only fully nomadic tribes in Scythia the Free Scythians who were a tribe of mixed Scythian Sauromatian origin lived in the southeastern Pontic Steppe between the port of Kremnoi and the Don or the Donets river the Alazones Ancient Greek Alazones or Alizōnes Ancient Greek Alizwnes who were the westernmost Scythian tribe were semi nomads who occupied the steppe between the Inhul and the Dnister around the region where the Dnister and the Southern Buh flow the closest to each other The Alazones led semi nomadic lives with those of them who lived in the steppe being pastoral nomads and those who lived in the valleys of the Southern Buh and nearby rivers being farmers who cultivated wheat onions garlic lentils and millet The Alazones were the southern neighbours of the Aroteres and like them might have been of mixed Thracian and Iranic origins The Alazones were themselves in turn the northern neighbours of the Callipidae the Scythian Ploughmen or Aroteres Ancient Greek Arothres or Gerrhoi Ancient Greek Gerroi 111 who were the northern neighbours of the Alazones were sedentary agriculturists who lived in a region with fertile black earth corresponding to the modern day part of Ukraine which lies to the west of the Dnipro river until the region of Vinnytsia Their neighbours to the north were the Baltic Neuri and to the south were the Alazones The Aroteres were a Thracian or Proto Slavic population of Scythia who descended from the Late Bronze Age Sabatynivka Culture over whom had established themselves an Iranian ruling class during the late 2nd millennium BC and who later came under the rule of the Scythians during the 6th century BC the Callipidae Ancient Greek Kallipidai romanized Kallipidai were a semi nomadic population of Thracian origin who lived across a wide section of land adjacent to the shores of the Black sea ranging from the estuary of the Southern Buh river to the area of modern day Odesa or even until the estuary of the Dnister The western neighbours of the Callipadae across the Dnister river were Thracian tribe of the Getae in Bessarabia while Thracian populations under Scythian rule lived on the coast Their northern neighbours were the Alazones the Scythians Agriculturalists or Geōrgoi Ancient Greek Gewrgoi were another population of Thracian origin The Scythian Agriculturalists lived in the valley of the lower Dnipro river in the wooded country of Hylaea and they may have been sedendaty or semi nomadic a tribe not named by the Greek authors lived on the north west shore of Lake Maeotis and corresponded to the archaeological Obytichna 12 type settlements The Royal Scythians were the dominant tribe within Scythia to whom all the other tribes were subjects with the various tribes being each led by their own lords who were all subservient to the lord of the Royal Scythians who was the Scythian king 36 Herodotus of Halicarnassus relates that three main tribes of the Scythians descended from three sons of Targitaos 112 the Auchatae Ancient Greek Ayxatai romanized Aukhatai descended from Lipoxais the Catiari Ancient Greek Katiaroi romanized Katiaroi and Traspies Ancient Greek Traspies romanized Traspies descended from Arpoxais the Royal Scythians also called the Skōlotoi Skwlotoi and the Paralatai Paralatai descended from KolaxaisAlthough scholars have traditionally treated the three tribes as geographically distinct Georges Dumezil interpreted the divine gifts as the symbols of social occupations illustrating his trifunctional vision of early Indo European societies the plough and yoke symbolised the farmers the axe the warriors the bowl the priests The first scholar to compare the three strata of Scythian society to the Indian castes was Arthur Christensen According to Dumezil the fruitless attempts of Arpoxais and Lipoxais in contrast to the success of Colaxais may explain why the highest strata was not that of farmers or magicians but rather that of warriors 113 There were few differences between the many Scythian tribes and tribal groupings in the early period of the Pontic Scythian kingdom which later became more pronounced as these eventually conquered various native populations 114 Neighbouring populations The neighbours of the Scythians included 75 36 the Thracian Getae who lived to the west of Scythia across the Danube river the Melanchlaeni and the Androphagi who lived to the east of the middle Dnipro river in the forest steppe bordering the territory of the Royal Scythians to the north These populations were either of Scythic or of mixed Scythic and native origin the Sauromatians who lived to the east of the Scythians in the steppe between the Don and the Volga were another Scythic people They were the immediate neighbours of the Royal Scythians to the east across the Don river the Neuri who were a Baltic population of the region of the forest steppe corresponding to modern day Belarus lived to the north of the Aroteres They corresponded to the Milograd culture the Agathyrsi lived to the west of the Aroteres and of the Neuri the Budini to the east of the Neuroi and to the north of the Sauromatians were one of the many Finno Ugric populations living in the eastern forest steppe until the Ural Mountains the Gelonians to the north of the Sauromatians the Maeotians lived on the eastern coast of Lake Maeotis the Tauri lived in the Crimean Mountains Related populations Herodotus of Halicarnassus and other classical historians listed quite a number of tribes who lived near the Scythians and presumably shared the same general milieu and nomadic steppe culture often called Scythian culture even though scholars may have difficulties in determining their exact relationship to the linguistic Scythians A partial list of these tribes includes Abii Amardi Hamaxobii Huns Ordos Scythians Saka Indo Scythians Apracharajas Massagetae Apasiacae Derbices Kambojas Amyrgians Dahae Parni Alans Sindi Spali Tapur Thyssagetae Crafts Main article Scythian metallurgy Though a predominantly nomadic people for much of their history the Scythians were skilled metalworkers Knowledge of bronze working was present when the Scythian people formed by the 8th century BC Scythian mercenaries fighting in the Near East had begun to spread knowledge of iron working to their homeland Archeological sites attributed to the Scythians have been found to contain the remnants of workshops slag piles and discarded tools all of which imply some Scythian settlements were the site of organized industry 115 116 Scythian bronze working products included large bronze semi spheric cauldrons with truncated cones as their stands These were decorated in cast and had either two or four animal shaped handles on their rims Such cauldrons were placed in burials along with deceased individuals containing within them remains of horse and mutton bones which were remnants of food for the deceased in the afterlife Also manufactured by this bronze industry were socketed bronze finials which were placed at the top of poles and decorated with various animal figures 117 The centre of early Scythian industry was located in the region of the Tiasmyn group of the Scythian culture which corresponded the country of the Scythian Husbandsmen where an Iranic Scythian elite ruled over a sedentary Thracian population the Scythians also obtained simple tools and ornamentations and some weapon types from the sedentary Thracians who lived in their kingdom and who manufactured products such as pottery woodwork and weaving as well as bronze metal working made out of raw materials imported from Transylvania By the Late Scythian period its principal centre was at a site corresponding to present day Kamianka Dniprovska where bog iron ores were smelted to produce iron and various tools ornaments and weapons were made 117 Art Main article Scythian art Gold pectoral or neckpiece from an aristocratic kurgan in Tovsta Mohyla Pokrov Ukraine dated to the second half of the 4th century BCE of Greek workmanship The central lower tier shows three horses each being torn apart by two griffins Scythian art was especially focused on animal figures The art of the Scythians and related peoples of the Scythian cultures is known as Scythian art It is particularly characterized by its use of the animal style 16 The various groups of Scythian art across the Eurasian Steppe developed independently from each other the populations of the Srubnaya and Andronovo cultures from which initially originated the early Scythians used solely geometric patterns on their pottery and cheek pieces made of bone and the art of the Scythians proper was developed under the influence of the art of West Asian cultures during the Scythian presence in West Asia and later under the influence of the naturalistic art of the inhabitants of the forested regions of Eastern Europe as well as of Thracian and Greek art 16 118 The art of the Scythians proper originated between 650 and 600 BC for the needs of the aristocracy of the Royal Scythians at the time when they ruled over large swathes of West Asia with the objects of the Ziwiye hoard being the first example of this art Later examples of this West Asian influenced art from the 6th century BC were found in western Ciscaucasiam burials as well as in the Melhuniv kurhan uk in what is presently Ukraine and in the Witaszkowo kurgan pl in what is modern day Poland This art style was initially restricted to the Scythian upper classes and the Scythian lower classes in both West Asia and the Pontic Steppe had not yet adopted it with the latter group s bone cheek pieces and bronze buckles being plain and without decorations while the Pontic group were still using Srubnaya and Andronovo type geometric patterns 118 Scythian art continued to represent the interests of the Scythian aristocracy until the end of the Pontic Scythian kingdom and depicted elements of prestige the divine nature of royal power and the cults of ancestral heroes and military valour thus Scythian art also reflected the class and cultural differences within Scythia which separated the aristocracy from the rest of the population 36 In the earlier phases of the art of the Scythians proper West Asian motifs dominated the earlier Srubnaya inherited Scythian elements Greek elements were later incorporated into this artistic tradition in the regions corresponding to modern day Ukraine and Georgia in addition to this the art of the Scythians was also influenced by that of the peoples of the East European Forest Steppe This Scythian art formed out of various influences later spread to the west in the region which corresponds to present Romania and eventually to Western Europe too where it brought influences from Iranian and West Asian art into Celtic art 119 Scythian animal style appears in an already established form Eastern Europe in the 8th century BC along with the Early Scythian archaeological culture itself It bears little resemblance to the art of pre Scythian cultures of the area Some scholars suggest the art style developed under Near Eastern influence during the military campaigns of the 7th century BC but the more common theory is that it developed on the eastern part of the Eurasian Steppe under Chinese influence Others have sought to reconcile the two theories suggesting that the animal style of the west and eastern parts of the steppe developed independently of each other under Near Eastern and Chinese influences respectively Regardless the animal style art of the Scythians differs considerable from that of peoples living further east 16 Scythian animal style works are typically divided into birds ungulates and beasts of prey This probably reflects the tripatriate division of the Scythian cosmos with birds belonging to the upper level ungulates to the middle level and beasts of prey in the lower level 16 Images of mythological creatures such a griffins are not uncommon in Scythian animal style but these are probably the result of Near Eastern influences By the late 6th century BC as Scythian activity in the Near East was reduced depictions of mythological creatures largely disappears from Scythian art It however reappears again in the 4th century BC as a result of Greek influence 16 Anthropomorphic depictions in Early Scythian art is known only from kurgan stelae These depict warriors with almond shaped eyes and mustaches often including weapons and other military equipment 16 Since the 5th century BC Scythian art changed considerably This was probably a result of Greek and Persian influence and possibly also internal developments caused by an arrival of a new nomadic people from the east The changes are notable in the more realistic depictions of animals who are now often depicted fighting each other rather than being depicted individually Kurgan stelae of the time also display traces of Greek influences with warriors being depicted with rounder eyes and full beards 16 Scythian art of the 4th century BC shows additional Greek influence and while the animal style was still in use it appears that much Scythian art by this point was being made by Greek craftsmen on behalf of Scythians Such objects are frequently found in aristocratic Scythian burials of the period Depictions of human beings become more prevalent Many objects of Scythian art made by Greeks are probably illustrations of Scythian legends Several objects are believed to have been of religious significance 16 By the late 3rd century BC original Scythian art disappears through ongoing Hellenization The creation of anthropomorphic gravestones continued however 16 Works of Scythian art are held at many museums and has been featured at many exhibitions The largest collections of Scythian art are found at the Hermitage Museum in Saint Petersburg and the Museum of Historical Treasures of the Ukraine in Kyiv while smaller collections are found at the Staatliche Antikensammlungen in Berlin the Ashmolean Museum of Oxford and the Louvre of Paris 16 Trade The Pontic Scythians practised trade extensively and beginning in the 7th and 6th centuries BC they had been importing luxuries such as personal ornaments gold and silver vases carved semi precious and gem stones wine oil and offensive and defensive weapons made in the workshops of Pontic Olbia or in mainland Greece as well as pottery made by the Greeks of the Aegean islands during the Classical Scythian period of the 5th century BC the Scythians were importing Corinthian and Athenian pottery and by the Late Scythian period of the 4th to 3rd centuries BC the market for Pontic Olbia was limited to a small part of western Scythia while the rest of the kingdom s importations came from the Bosporan kingdom especially from Panticapaeum from where came most of Scythia s imported pottery as well as richly decorated fine vases rhyta and decorative toreutic plaques for gorutoi 117 An important trade route existed in Scythia during the Early Scythian period which started in Pontic Olbia and followed the course of the Inhul river and crossed the Dnipro after which it turned east until the country of the Gelonians and after crossing the Don and the Volga passed through the Ural Mountains and continued into Asia until the Altai Mountains Gold was traded from eastern Eurasia until Pontic Olbia through this route and the Scythian tradesmen went to the distant regions on its course to carry out commerce The conquest of the north Pontic region by the Scythians and their imposition of a Pax Scythica created the conditions of safety for traders which enabled the establishment of this route This location provided to Pontic Olbia the important position of being a commercial and cultural centre in the northern Pontic region and the city itself maintained friendly relations with the populations neighbouring it 117 94 As a consequence of these flourishing trade relations which were themselves possibly only thanks to the protection and cooperation of the Scythian kings the Greek colonies on the northern shores of the Black Sea rapidly grew during the 6th century BC and the Scythian upper classes were also able to significantly enrich themselves 117 The relations between the Scythians and the Greek cities became more hostile during the 5th century BC with the former destroying the latter s khōrai and rural settlements and therefore their grain producing hinterlands with the result being that the Scythians instituted an economic policy under their control whereby the sedentary peoples of the forest steppe to their north became the primary producers of grain which was then transported through the Buh and Dnipro rivers to the Greek cities to their south such as Tyras Niconium and Pontic Olbia from where the cities exported it to mainland Greece at a profit for themselves This arrangement came to an end sometime between 435 and 400 BC with the Greek cities regaining their independence and rebuilding their khōrai 16 Another consequence of trade between the Greeks and the Scythians was that Greek art significantly influenced Scythian art and artistic preferences and by the Late Scythian period most of the artwork in the Scythian tombs consisted of Scythian motifs and scenes representing Scythian life which had been done by Greek artisans 117 During the 4th century BC the Scythians became the middlemen in the trade routes supplying grains produced in the forest steppe and within Scythian itself to the Bosporan Kingdom who in turn sold these to Greece itself The Scythian royalty and aristocracy were able to derive immense revenue and profits from their role in these commercial activities 36 Physical appearance An Attic vase painting of a Scythian archer a police force in Athens by Epiktetos 520 500 BC In Histories the 5th century BC Greek historian Halicarnassus describes the Budini of Scythia as red haired and grey eyed 120 In the 5th century BC Greek physician Hippocrates argued that the Scythians were light skinned 120 121 as well as having a particularly high rate of hypermobility to a point of affecting warfare 122 In the 3rd century BC the Greek poet Callimachus described the Arismapes Arimaspi of Scythia as fair haired 120 123 The 2nd century BC Han Chinese envoy Zhang Qian described the Sai Saka an eastern people closely related to the Scythians as having yellow probably meaning hazel or green and blue eyes 120 In the late 2nd century AD the Christian theologian Clement of Alexandria says that the Scythians and the Celts have long auburn hair 120 124 The 2nd century Greek philosopher Polemon includes the Scythians among the northern peoples characterised by red hair and blue grey eyes 120 In the late 2nd or early 3rd century AD the Greek physician Galen writes that Scythians Sarmatians Illyrians Germanic peoples and other northern peoples have reddish hair 120 125 The fourth century bishop Gregory of Nyssa wrote that the Scythians were fair skinned and blond haired 126 The 5th century physician Adamantius who often followed Polemon describes the Scythians as fair haired 120 127 ArchaeologyMain article Scythian culture Scythian defence line 339 BC reconstruction in Polgar Hungary Scythian archaeology can be divided into three stages 16 Early Scythian from the mid 8th or the late 7th century BC to about 500 BC Classical Scythian or Mid Scythian from about 500 BC to about 300 BC Late Scythian from about 200 BC to the mid 3rd century AD in the Crimea and the Lower Dnipro by which time the population was settled Archaeological remains of the Scythians include kurgan tombs ranging from simple exemplars to elaborate Royal kurgans containing the Scythian triad of weapons horse harness and Scythian style wild animal art gold silk and animal sacrifices in places also with suspected human sacrifices 128 Mummification techniques and permafrost have aided in the relative preservation of some remains Scythian archaeology also examines the remains of cities and fortifications 129 130 131 List of rulersKings of Early Scythians Ispakaia Scythian Spakaya reigned unknown 679 BC Bartatua Scythian Pr ϑutava reigned 679 c 658 9 BC Madyes Median Madava reigned c 658 9 625 BCKings of Pontic Scythians Spargapeithes Scythian Spargapaiϑah Lykos Scythian Lu ka Gnouros Saulios Idanthyrsus reigned c 513 BC Ariantas Scythian Ariya nta Ariapeithes Scythian Ariyapaiϑah Scyles Scythian Skula reigned c 430 BC Octamasadas Scythian Uxtamazata reigned c 420 BC Ateas reigned c 360s 339 BC Agaros reigned c 310 BCKings of Crimean Scythians Skilurus reigned c 2nd century BC Palacus reigned c 120 BCKings of Danubian Scythians Tanusakos reigned c 2nd century BC Kanitos reigned c 2nd century BC Sariakos reigned c 2nd century BC Akrosakos reigned c 2nd century BC Kharaspos reigned c 2nd century BC Ailios reigned c 2nd century BCSee alsoScythia Andronovo culture Scythian art Scythian languages Eurasian nomads Nomadic empire Pre Achaemenid Scythian kings of Iran Early SlavsNotes Scythian ˈ s ɪ 8 i e n or ˈ s ɪ d i e n Scyth ˈsɪ8 but note Scytho ˈsaɪ8oʊ in composition OED see section about names belowReferences Jacobson 1995 p 32 Cunliffe 2019 p 42 a b Dandamayev 1994 p 37 In modern scholarship the name Sakas is reserved for the ancient tribes of northern and eastern Central Asia and Eastern Turkestan to distinguish them from the related Massagetae of the Aral region and the Scythians of the Pontic steppes These tribes spoke Iranian languages and their chief occupation was nomadic pastoralism Davis Kimball Bashilov amp Yablonsky 1995 p 91 Near the end of the 19th century V F Miller 1886 1887 theorized that the Scythians and their kindred the Sauromatians were Iranian speaking peoples This has been a popular point of view and continues to be accepted in linguistics and historical science Melykova 1990 pp 97 98harvnb error no target CITEREFMelykova1990 help From the end of the 7th century B C to the 4th century B C the Central Eurasian steppes were inhabited by two large groups of kin Iranian speaking tribes the Scythians and Sarmatians Melykova 1990 p 117harvnb error no target CITEREFMelykova1990 help All contemporary historians archeologists and linguists are agreed that since the Scythian and Sarmatian tribes were of the Iranian linguistic group Sulimirski 1985 pp 149 153 During the first half of the first millennium B C c 3 000 to 2 500 years ago the southern part of Eastern Europe was occupied mainly by peoples of Iranian stock The main Iranian speaking peoples of the region at that period were the Scyths and the Sarmatians Jacobson 1995 pp 36 37 When we speak of Scythians we refer to those Scytho Siberians who inhabited the Kuban Valley the Taman and Kerch peninsulas Crimea the northern and northeastern littoral of the Black Sea and the steppe and lower forest steppe regions now shared between Ukraine and Russia from the seventh century down to the first century B C They almost certainly spoke an Iranian language Ivantchik 2018 Scythians a nomadic people of Iranian origin Harmatta 1996 p 181 B oth Cimmerians and Scythians were Iranian peoples Sulimirski 1985 pp 149 153 During the first half of the first millennium B C c 3 000 to 2 500 years ago the southern part of Eastern Europe was occupied mainly by peoples of Iranian stock T he population of ancient Scythia was far from being homogeneous nor were the Scyths themselves a homogeneous people The country called after them was ruled by their principal tribe the Royal Scyths Her iv 20 who were of Iranian stock and called themselves Skolotoi West 2002 pp 437 440 T rue Scyths seems to be those whom Herodotus calls Royal Scyths that is the group who claimed hegemony apparently warrior pastoralists It is generally agreed from what we know of their names that these were people of Iranian stock Rolle 1989 p 56 The physical characteristics of the Scythians correspond to their cultural affiliation their origins place them within the group of Iranian peoples Rostovtzeff 1922 p 13 The Scythian kingdom was succeeded in the Russian steppes by an ascendancy of various Sarmatian tribes Iranians like the Scythians themselves Minns 2011 p 36 The general view is that both agricultural and nomad Scythians were Iranian Scythian Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc Retrieved October 4 2019 a b Hambly Gavin History of Central Asia Early Western Peoples Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc Retrieved October 4 2019 Beckwith 2009 p 11 Sarmatian Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc Retrieved October 4 2019 a b c d e f Harmatta 1996 pp 181 182 Brzezinski amp Mielczarek 2002 p 39 Indeed it is now accepted that the Sarmatians merged in with pre Slavic populations a b Mallory amp Adams 1997 p 523 In their Ukrainian and Polish homeland the Slavs were intermixed and at times overlain by Germanic speakers the Goths and by Iranian speakers Scythians Sarmatians Alans in a shifting array of tribal and national configurations a b Davis Kimball Bashilov amp Yablonsky 1995 p 165 Iranian speaking nomadic tribes specifically the Scythians and Sarmatians are special among the North Caucasian peoples The Scytho Sarmatians were instrumental in the ethnogenesis of some of the modern peoples living today in the Caucasus Of importance in this group are the Ossetians an Iranian speaking group of people who are believed to have descended from the North Caucasian Alans a b Dickens 2018 p 1346 Greek authors frequently applied the name Scythians to later nomadic groups who had no relation whatever to the original Scythians Beckwith 2009 pp 58 70 Scythian art Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc Retrieved October 4 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap Ivantchik 2018 a b c Novak Ľubomir 2013 Problem of Archaism and Innovation in the Eastern Iranian Languages Charles University Retrieved 14 August 2022 a b Parpola Simo 1970 Neo Assyrian Toponyms Kevaeler Butzon amp Bercker p 178 Iskuzaya SCYTHIAN EN oracc museum upenn edu Asguzayu SCYTHIAN EN oracc museum upenn edu Although ancient Persians and ancient Greeks respectively used the names Saka and Scythian for all the steppe nomads the name Scythian is used specifically for the ancient nomads of the western steppe while Saka is used for a related group of nomads living in the eastern steppe a b c Dandamayev 1994 p 37 In modern scholarship the name Sakas is reserved for the ancient tribes of northern and eastern Central Asia and Eastern Turkestan to distinguish them from the related Massagetae of the Aral region and the Scythians of the Pontic steppes These tribes spoke Iranian languages and their chief occupation was nomadic pastoralism Cernenko 2012 p 3 The Scythians lived in the Early Iron Age and inhabited the northern areas of the Black Sea Pontic steppes Though the Scythian period in the history of Eastern Europe lasted little more than 400 years from the 7th to the 3rd centuries BC the impression these horsemen made upon the history of their times was such that a thousand years after they had ceased to exist as a sovereign people their heartland and the territories which they dominated far beyond it continued to be known as greater Scythia Melykova 1990 pp 97 98harvnb error no target CITEREFMelykova1990 help From the end of the 7th century B C to the 4th century B C the Central Eurasian steppes were inhabited by two large groups of kin Iranian speaking tribes the Scythians and Sarmatians I t may be confidently stated that from the end of the 7th century to the 3rd century B C the Scythians occupied the steppe expanses of the north Black Sea area from the Don in the east to the Danube in the West Ivantchik 2018 Scythians a nomadic people of Iranian origin who flourished in the steppe lands north of the Black Sea during the 7th 4th centuries BC Figure 1 For related groups in Central Asia and India see Sulimirski 1985 pp 149 153 During the first half of the first millennium B C c 3 000 to 2 500 years ago the southern part of Eastern Europe was occupied mainly by peoples of Iranian stock The main Iranian speaking peoples of the region at that period were the Scyths and the Sarmatians T he population of ancient Scythia was far from being homogeneous nor were the Scyths themselves a homogeneous people The country called after them was ruled by their principal tribe the Royal Scyths Her iv 20 who were of Iranian stock and called themselves Skolotoi iv 6 they were nomads who lived in the steppe east of the Dnieper up to the Don and in the Crimean steppe The eastern neighbours of the Royal Scyths the Sauromatians were also Iranian their country extended over the steppe east of the Don and the Volga Sulimirski amp Taylor 1991 p 547 The name Scythian is met in the classical authors and has been taken to refer to an ethnic group or people also mentioned in Near Eastern texts who inhabited the northern Black Sea region West 2002 pp 437 440 Ordinary Greek and later Latin usage could designate as Scythian any northern barbarian from the general area of the Eurasian steppe the virtually treeless corridor of drought resistant perennial grassland extending from the Danube to Manchuria Herodotus seeks greater precision and this essay is focussed on his Scythians who belong to the North Pontic steppe These true Scyths seems to be those whom he calls Royal Scyths that is the group who claimed hegemony apparently warrior pastoralists It is generally agreed from what we know of their names that these were people of Iranian stock Jacobson 1995 pp 36 37 When we speak of Scythians we refer to those Scytho Siberians who inhabited the Kuban Valley the Taman and Kerch peninsulas Crimea the northern and northeastern littoral of the Black Sea and the steppe and lower forest steppe regions now shared between Ukraine and Russia from the seventh century down to the first century B C They almost certainly spoke an Iranian language Di Cosmo 1999 p 924 The first historical steppe nomads the Scythians inhabited the steppe north of the Black Sea from about the eight century B C Rice Tamara Talbot Central Asian arts Nomadic cultures Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Retrieved October 4 2019 Saka gold belt buckles jewelry and harness decorations display sheep griffins and other animal designs that are similar in style to those used by the Scythians a nomadic people living in the Kuban basin of the Caucasus region and the western section of the Eurasian plain during the greater part of the 1st millennium bc a b c d e Unterlander Martina March 3 2017 Ancestry and demography and descendants of Iron Age nomads of the Eurasian Steppe Nature Communications 8 14615 Bibcode 2017NatCo 814615U doi 10 1038 ncomms14615 PMC 5337992 PMID 28256537 Contemporary descendants of western Scythian groups are found among various groups in the Caucasus and Central Asia while similarities to eastern Scythian are found to be more widespread but almost exclusively among Turkic language speaking formerly nomadic groups particularly from the Kipchak branch of Turkic languages Jarve Mari et al 2019 07 22 Shifts in the Genetic Landscape of the Western Eurasian Steppe Associated with the Beginning and End of the Scythian Dominance Current Biology 29 14 2430 2441 doi 10 1016 j cub 2019 06 019 ISSN 0960 9822 PMID 31303491 S2CID 195887262 E10 a b c Di Cosmo 1999 p 891 Even though there were fundamental ways in which nomadic groups over such a vast territory differed the terms Scythian and Scythic have been widely adopted to describe a special phase that followed the widespread diffusion of mounted nomadism characterized by the presence of special weapons horse gear and animal art in the form of metal plaques Archaeologists have used the term Scythic continuum in a broad cultural sense to indicate the early nomadic cultures of the Eurasian Steppe The term Scythic draws attention to the fact that there are elements shapes of weapons vessels and ornaments as well as lifestyle common to both the eastern and western ends of the Eurasian Steppe region However the extension and variety of sites across Asia makes Scythian and Scythic terms too broad to be viable and the more neutral early nomadic is preferable since the cultures of the Northern Zone cannot be directly associated with either the historical Scythians or any specific archaeological culture defined as Saka or Scytho Siberian Welcome to Encyclopaedia Iranica Kramrisch Stella Central Asian Arts Nomadic Cultures Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Retrieved September 1 2018 The Saka tribe was pasturing its herds in the Pamirs central Tien Shan and in the Amu Darya delta Their gold belt buckles jewelry and harness decorations display sheep griffins and other animal designs that are similar in style to those used by the Scythians a nomadic people living in the Kuban basin of the Caucasus region and the western section of the Eurasian plain during the greater part of the 1st millennium bc Lendering Jona February 14 2019 Scythians Sacae Livius org Retrieved October 4 2019 Unterlander 2017 During the first millennium BC nomadic people spread over the Eurasian Steppe from the Altai Mountains over the northern Black Sea area as far as the Carpathian Basin Greek and Persian historians of the 1st millennium BC chronicle the existence of the Massagetae and Sauromatians and later the Sarmatians and Sacae cultures possessing artefacts similar to those found in classical Scythian monuments such as weapons horse harnesses and a distinctive Animal Style artistic tradition Accordingly these groups are often assigned to the Scythian culture Tokhtas ev Sergei R 1991 Cimmerians Encyclopaedia Iranica As the Cimmerians cannot be differentiated archeologically from the Scythians it is possible to speculate about their Iranian origins In the Neo Babylonian texts according to D yakonov including at least some of the Assyrian texts in Babylonian dialect Gimirri and similar forms designate the Scythians and Central Asian Saka reflecting the perception among inhabitants of Mesopotamia that Cimmerians and Scythians represented a single cultural and economic group Watson 1972 p 142 The term Scythic has been used above to denote a group of basic traits which characterize material culture from the fifth to the first century B C in the whole zone stretching from the Transpontine steppe to the Ordos and without ethnic connotation How far nomadic populations in central Asia and the eastern steppes may be of Scythian Iranic race or contain such elements makes a precarious speculation David amp McNiven 2018 Horse riding nomadism has been referred to as the culture of Early Nomads This term encompasses different ethnic groups such as Scythians Saka Massagetae and Yuezhi West 2002 pp 437 440 Davis Kimball Bashilov amp Yablonsky 1995 p 33 a b c d e f g h i j k Batty 2007 p 204 214 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Melyukova 1990 pp 97 110 Sulimirski 1985 pp 168 169 Dolukhanov 1996 p 125 Juras Anna March 7 2017 Diverse origin of mitochondrial lineages in Iron Age Black Sea Scythians Nature Communications 7 43950 Bibcode 2017NatSR 743950J doi 10 1038 srep43950 PMC 5339713 PMID 28266657 Krzewinska Maja October 3 2018 Ancient genomes suggest the eastern Pontic Caspian steppe as the source of western Iron Age nomads Science Advances 4 10 eaat4457 Bibcode 2018SciA 4 4457K doi 10 1126 sciadv aat4457 PMC 6223350 PMID 30417088 a b c d e f g h i j k l Olbrycht Marek Jan 2000 Remarks on the Presence of Iranian Peoples in Europe and Their Asiatic Relations In Pstrusinska Jadwiga Fear Andrew eds Collectanea Celto Asiatica Cracoviensia Krakow Ksiegarnia Akademicka pp 101 140 ISBN 978 8 371 88337 8 Olbrycht Marek Jan 2000 The Cimmerian Problem Re Examined the Evidence of the Classical Sources In Pstrusinska Jadwiga Fear Andrew eds Collectanea Celto Asiatica Cracoviensia Krakow Ksiegarnia Akademicka pp 71 99 ISBN 978 8 371 88337 8 a b Sulimirski amp Taylor 1991 p 553 Harmatta 1996 a b c d e f g h i j k Sulimirski amp Taylor 1991 p 560 590 Sulimirski amp Taylor 1991 p 560 554 Batty 2007 p 200 202 a b c d Sulimirski amp Taylor 1991 p 560 564 Ivantchik 1993 p 127 154 Diakonoff 1985 p 97 a b c d e Phillips E D 1972 The Scythian Domination in Western Asia Its Record in History Scripture and Archaeology World Archaeology 4 2 129 138 doi 10 1080 00438243 1972 9979527 JSTOR 123971 Retrieved 5 November 2021 a b Batty 2007 p 202 203 Baumer Christoph 26 August 2021 History of the Caucasus Volume 1 At the Crossroads of Empires Bloomsbury Publishing p 98 ISBN 978 0 7556 3969 4 Manoledakis Manolis 20 May 2021 Peoples in the Black Sea Region from the Archaic to the Roman Period Proceedings of the 3rd International Workshop on the Black Sea in Antiquity held in Thessaloniki 21 23 September 2018 Archaeopress Publishing Ltd p 13 ISBN 978 1 78969 868 8 Barnett 1991 pp 356 365 Grayson 1991 p 128 Sulimirski amp Taylor 1991 p 564 a b Diakonoff 1985 p 89 109 a b Sulimirski amp Taylor 1991 p 564 568 Sulimirski amp Taylor 1991 p 566 567 Ivantchik 2018 In approximately 672 BC the Scythian king Partatua Protothyes of Hdt 1 103 asked for the hand of the daughter of the Assyrian king Esarhaddon promising to conclude a treaty of alliance with Assyria It is probable that this marriage took place and the alliance also came into being SAA IV no 20 Ivantchik 1993 pp 93 94 205 9 Bukharin Mikhail Dmitrievich 2011 Kolaksaj i ego bratya antichnaya tradiciya o proishozhdenii carskoj vlasti u skifov Kolaxais and his Brothers Classical Tradition on the Origin of the Royal Power of the Scythians Aristej vestnik klassicheskoj filologii i antichnoj istorii in Russian 3 20 80 Retrieved 2022 07 27 S odnoj storony Madij veroyatno poluassiriec dazhe buduchi etnicheskim poluskifom ego predshestvennik i veroyatno otec car skifov Prototij zhenoj kotorogo byla doch assirijskogo carya Assarhaddona On the one hand Madyes is probably a half Assyrian even being an ethnic half Scythian his predecessor and probably father is the king of the Scythians Protothyes whose wife was the daughter of the Assyrian king Essarhaddon Diakonoff 1985 p 110 119 a b Diakonoff 1985 p 117 118 Grousset 1970 p 9 A Scythian army acting in conformity with Assyrian policy entered Pontis to crush the last of the Cimmerians Diakonoff 1985 p 126 Spalinger Anthony J 1978 The Date of the Death of Gyges and Its Historical Implications Journal of the American Oriental Society 98 4 400 409 doi 10 2307 599752 JSTOR 599752 Retrieved 25 October 2021 Vaggione Richard P 1973 Over All Asia The Extent of the Scythian Domination in Herodotus Journal of Biblical Literature 92 4 523 530 doi 10 2307 3263121 JSTOR 3263121 Retrieved 22 August 2022 a b Diakonoff 1985 p 119 Diakonoff I M 1993 CYAXARES Encyclopaedia Iranica Spalinger Anthony 1978 Psammetichus King of Egypt II Journal of the American Research Center in Egypt 15 49 57 doi 10 2307 40000130 JSTOR 40000130 Retrieved 2 November 2021 Diakonoff 1985 p 125 126 Young 1988 Sulimirski amp Taylor 1991 p 568 573 a b c d Sulimirski 1985 pp 150 153 Sulimirski 1985 pp 174 179 Sulimirski 1985 p 199 Vasilʹev Aleksandr Aleksandrovich 1946 The Russian Attack on Constantinople in 860 Cambridge United States Mediaeval Academy of America p 187 Colossians 3 11 New International Version NIV BibleGateway com Zondervan Retrieved October 4 2019 Here there is no Gentile or Jew circumcised or uncircumcised barbarian Scythian slave or free but Christ is all and is in all Lubotsky 2002 p 190 Lubotsky 2002 pp 189 202 Testen 1997 p 707 Sulimirski 1985 pp 149 150 a b c d e Sulimirski 1985 pp 153 154 a b c d Sulimirski 1985 pp 155 156 a b Sulimirski 1985 pp 154 155 Margarita Gleba January 2008 You Are What You Wear Scythian Costume as Identity Dressing the Past Academia Retrieved October 19 2020 Youngsoo Yi Chang 2016 The Study on the Scythian Costume III Focaused on the Scythian of the Pazyryk region in Altai Fashion amp Textile Research Journal 한국의류산업학회지 Korea Institute of Science and Technology 18 4 424 437 doi 10 5805 SFTI 2016 18 4 424 Retrieved October 19 2020 Jacobson 1995 pp 11 Sulimirski 1985 pp 170 173 Bukharin 2011 Khazanov Anatoly 1975 Socialnaya Istoriya Skifov Social History of Scythians The Social History of the Scythians Main Problems of the Development of the Ancient Nomads of the Eurasian Steppes in Russian Moscow Soviet Union Nauka 191 192 Sulimirski 1985 pp 180 181 a b c Sulimirski amp Taylor 1991 p 580 586 Potts 1999 p 345 a b Cernenko 2012 p 20 Hellmuth Anja 2014 Horse Bow and Arrow A Comparison between the Scythian Impact on the Mediterranean and on Eastern Middle Europe Mediterranean Review 7 1 1 38 Dugaw Sean Lipschits Oded Stiebel Guy 2020 A New Typology of Arrowheads from the Late Iron Age and Persian Period and its Historical Implications Israel Exploration Journal 70 1 64 89 doi https doi org 10 1017 S0033822200042545 Dugaw Sean Lipschits Oded Stiebel Guy 2020 A New Typology of Arrowheads from the Late Iron Age and Persian Period and its Historical Implications Israel Exploration Journal 70 1 64 89 Dugaw Sean Lipschits Oded Stiebel Guy 2020 A New Typology of Arrowheads from the Late Iron Age and Persian Period and its Historical Implications Israel Exploration Journal 70 1 64 89 What do false beards weed saunas and cheese have in common The British Museum Frederici 2008 p 180 Herodotus 2003 pp 260 261 Murphy Eileen Gokhman Ilia Chistov Yuri Barkova Ludmilla 2002 Prehistoric Old World Scalping New Cases from the Cemetery of Aymyrlyg South Siberia American Journal of Archaeology 106 1 1 10 doi 10 2307 507186 JSTOR 507186 S2CID 161894416 Anthony 2010 p 329 Sulimirski 1985 pp 173 174 Sulimirski amp Taylor 1991 p 573 586 Sulimirski amp Taylor 1991 p 573 577 Schmitt Rudiger 2018 Scythian language Encyclopaedia Iranica Retrieved 9 August 2022 Sulimirski 1985 pp 181 182 Sulimirski 1985 pp 165 168 Belier 1991 p 69 Sulimirski amp Taylor 1991 p 589 590 Armbruster Barbara 2009 12 31 Gold technology of the ancient Scythians gold from the kurgan Arzhan 2 Tuva ArcheoSciences Revue d archeometrie 33 187 193 doi 10 4000 archeosciences 2193 ISSN 1960 1360 Jettmar Karl 1971 Metallurgy in the Early Steppes PDF Artibus Asiae 33 1 2 5 16 doi 10 2307 3249786 JSTOR 3249786 a b c d e f Sulimirski 1985 pp 156 158 a b Sulimirski 1985 pp 160 162 Sulimirski 1985 pp 169 171 a b c d e f g h Day 2001 pp 55 57 Hippocrates 1886 20 The Scythians are a ruddy race because of the cold not through any fierceness in the sun s heat It is the cold that burns their white skin and turns it ruddy Beighton Grahame amp Bird 2011 p 1 Callimachus 1921 Hymn IV To Delos 291 The first to bring thee these offerings fro the fair haired Arimaspi Clement 1885 Book 3 Chapter III Of the nations the Celts and Scythians wear their hair long but do not deck themselves The bushy hair of the barbarian has something fearful in it and its auburn 3an8on colour threatens war Galen 1881 De Temperamentis Book 2 Ergo Aegyptii Arabes amp Indi omnes denique qui calidam amp siccam regionem incolunt nigros exiguique incrementi siccos crispos amp fragiles pilos habent Contra qui humidam frigidamque regionem habitant Illyrii Germani Sarmatae amp omnis Scytica plaga modice auctiles amp graciles amp rectos amp rufos optinent Qui uero inter hos temperatum colunt tractum hi pilos plurimi incrementi amp robustissimos amp modice nigros amp mediocriter crassos tum nec prorsus crispos nec omnino rectos edunt Gregory 1995 p 124 T he Ethiopian s son black but the Scythian white skinned and with hair of a golden tinge Adamantius Physiognomica 2 37 Hughes 1991 pp 64 65 118 Sulimirski amp Taylor 1991 pp 547 591 Tsetskhladze 2002 Tsetskhladze 2010 Early sources Callimachus 1921 Callimachus Hymns and Epigrams Lycophron Aratus Translated by Mair A W Mair G W Heinemann Camden William 1701 Camden s Britannia J B Clement 1885 The Instructor Book 1 In Roberts Alexander Donaldson James eds The Instructor Ante Nicene Christian Library Translated by Wilson William T amp T Clark Galen 1881 Galeni pergamensis de temperamentis et de inaequali intemperie in Latin Translated by Linacre Thomas Cambridge University Press Gregory 1995 Book II Against Eunomius Nicene and Post Nicene Fathers Second series Translated by Wilson Rev H A Hendrickson pp 101 135 ISBN 1 56563 121 8 Herodotus 1910 The History of Herodotus Translated by Rawlinson George J M Dent Herodotus 2003 The Histories Translated by De Selincourt Aubrey London Penguin Books ISBN 9780140449082 Hippocrates 1886 Peri aerwn ydatwn topwn Airs Waters Places Translated by Jones W H S Harvard University Press Marcellinus Ammianus 1862 Roman History Translated by Yonge Charles Duke Bohn Pliny 1855 The Natural History Translated by Bostock John Taylor amp Francis Spenser Edmund 1970 A View of the Present State of Ireland Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0 19 812408 5 Modern sources Anthony David W 2010 The Horse the Wheel and Language How Bronze Age Riders from the Eurasian Steppes Shaped the Modern World Princeton University Press ISBN 978 1 4008 3110 4 Barnett R D 1991 Urartu In Boardman John Edwards I E S Hammond N G L Sollberger E eds The Cambridge Ancient History Vol 3 Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 314 371 ISBN 978 1 139 05428 7 Batty Roger 2007 Rome and the Nomads The Pontic Danubian Realm in Antiquity Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 198 14936 1 Beckwith Christopher I 2009 Empires of the Silk Road A History of Central Eurasia from the Bronze Age to the Present Princeton University Press ISBN 978 1 4008 2994 1 Beighton Peter H Grahame Rodney Bird Howard A 2011 Hypermobility of Joints Springer ISBN 978 1 84882 085 2 Archived from the original on 2017 11 05 Belier Wouter W 1991 Decayed Gods Origin and Development of Georges Dumezil s Ideologie Tripartie BRILL ISBN 9004094873 Brzezinski Richard Mielczarek Mariusz 2002 The Sarmatians 600 BC AD 450 Bloomsbury USA ISBN 1 84176 485 X Cernenko E V 2012 The Scythians 700 300 BC Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 1 78096 773 8 Cook J M 1985 The Rise of the Achaemenids and Establishment of Their Empire In Gershevitch Ilya ed The Cambridge History of Iran Vol 2 Cambridge United Kingdom Cambridge University Press pp 200 291 ISBN 978 0 521 20091 2 Cunliffe Barry 2019 The Scythians Nomad Warriors of the Steppe Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 255186 3 Dandamayev Muhammad 1994 Media and Achaemenid Iran In Harmatta Janos Harmatta ed History of Civilizations of Central Asia The Development of Sedentary and Nomadic Civilizations 700 B C to A D 250 Vol 1 UNESCO pp 35 64 ISBN 9231028464 David Bruno McNiven Ian J 2018 The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology and Anthropology of Rock Art Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 060735 7 Davis Kimball Jeannine Bashilov Vladimir A Yablonsky Leonid T 1995 Nomads of the Eurasian Steppes in the Early Iron Age Zinat Press ISBN 978 1 885979 00 1 Day John V 2001 Indo European Origins The Anthropological Evidence Institute for the Study of Man ISBN 0 941694 75 5 Diakonoff I M 1985 Media In Gershevitch Ilya ed The Cambridge History of Iran Volume Vol 2 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 20091 2 Dickens Mark 2018 Scythians Saka In Nicholson Oliver ed The Oxford Dictionary of Late Antiquity Oxford University Press pp 1346 1347 ISBN 978 0 19 174445 7 Retrieved April 27 2020 Di Cosmo Nicola 1999 The Northern Frontier in Pre Imperial China 1 500 221 BC In Loewe Michael Shaughnessy Edward L eds The Cambridge History of Ancient China From the Origins of Civilization to 221 BC Cambridge University Press pp 885 996 ISBN 0 521 47030 7 Dolukhanov Pavel Markovich 1996 The Early Slavs Eastern Europe from the Initial Settlement to the Kievan Rus Longman ISBN 0 582 23618 5 Francfort Henri Paul 1988 Central Asia and Eastern Iran In Boardman John Hammond N G L Lewis D M Ostwald M eds The Cambridge Ancient History Vol 4 Cambridge United Kingdom Cambridge University Press pp 165 193 ISBN 978 0 521 22804 6 Frederici Georg 2008 1906 Griffin Anastasia M ed Scalping and Similar Warfare Customs in America with a critical introduction ISBN 9780549562092 Grousset Rene 1970 The Empire of the Steppes Rutgers University Press ISBN 0 8135 1304 9 Grayson A K 1991 Assyria Sennacherib and Esarhaddon In Boardman John Edwards I E S Hammond N G L Sollberger E Walker C B F eds The Cambridge Ancient History Vol 3 Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 103 141 ISBN 978 1 139 05429 4 Harmatta Janos 1996 The Scythians In Herrmann Joachim Zurcher Erik eds History of Humanity From the seventh century B C to the seventh century A D Vol 3 UNESCO pp 181 182 ISBN 923102812X Harmatta Janos 1999 Alexander the Great in Central Asia Acta Antiqua Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae 39 1 4 129 136 doi 10 1556 aant 39 1999 1 4 11 S2CID 162246561 Retrieved July 4 2022 Hughes Dennis D 1991 Human Sacrifice in Ancient Greece Psychology Press ISBN 0 415 03483 3 Ivantchik Askold 1993 Les Cimmeriens au Proche Orient The Cimmerians in the Near East PDF in French Fribourg Switzerland Gottingen Germany Editions Universitaires Switzerland Vandenhoeck amp Ruprecht Germany ISBN 978 3 727 80876 0 Ivantchik Askold April 25 2018 Scythians Encyclopaedia Iranica Jacobson Esther 1995 The Art of the Scythians The Interpenetration of Cultures at the Edge of the Hellenic World BRILL ISBN 90 04 09856 9 Lomazoff Amanda Ralby Aaron 2013 Scythians and Sarmatians The Atlas of Military History Simon amp Schuster p 63 ISBN 978 1 60710 985 3 Lubotsky Alexander 2002 Scythian Elements In Old Iranian PDF Proceedings of the British Academy Oxford University Press 116 2 189 202 Mallory J P 1991 The Iranians In Search of the Indo Europeans Language Archeology and Myth Thames amp Hudson pp 48 56 Mallory J P Adams Douglas Q 1997 Encyclopedia of Indo European Culture Taylor amp Francis ISBN 1 884964 98 2 Melyukova A I 1990 Sinor Denis ed The Cambridge History of Early Inner Asia Cambridge United Kingdom Cambridge University Press pp 97 117 ISBN 978 0 521 24304 9 Minns Ellis Hovell 2011 Scythians and Greeks A Survey of Ancient History and Archaeology on the North Coast of the Euxine from the Danube to the Caucasus Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 108 02487 7 Olbrycht Marek Jan 2021 Early Arsakid Parthia ca 250 165 B C At the Crossroads of Iranian Hellenistic and Central Asian History Leiden Netherlands Boston United States Brill ISBN 978 9 004 46076 8 Parfitt Tudor 2003 The Lost Tribes of Israel The History of a Myth Phoenix ISBN 1 84212 665 2 Potts Daniel T 1999 The Archaeology of Elam Formation and Transformation of an Ancient Iranian State Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 56496 4 Rolle Renate 1989 The World of the Scythians University of California Press ISBN 0 520 06864 5 Rostovtzeff Michael 1922 Iranians amp Greeks In South Russia Clarendon Press Sulimirski T 1985 The Scyths In Gershevitch I ed The Cambridge History of Iran Vol 2 Cambridge University Press pp 149 199 ISBN 978 1 139 05493 5 Sulimirski Tadeusz Taylor T F 1991 The Scythians In Boardman John Edwards I E S Hammond N G L Sollberger E Walker C B F eds The Cambridge Ancient History Vol 3 Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 547 590 ISBN 978 1 139 05429 4 Szemerenyi Oswald 1980 Four old Iranian ethnic names Scythian Skudra Sogdian Saka PDF Verlag der Osterreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften ISBN 0 520 06864 5 Testen David 1997 Ossetic Phonology In Kaye Alan S ed Phonologies of Asia and Africa including the Caucasus Vol 2 Eisenbrauns pp 707 733 ISBN 1 57506 019 1 Tsetskhladze Gocha R December 17 2002 1998 Who Built the Scythian and Thracian Royal and Elite Tombs Oxford Journal of Archaeology Wiley 17 1 55 92 doi 10 1111 1468 0092 00051 Tsetskhladze Gocha R 2010 North Pontic Archaeology Recent Discoveries and Studies BRILL ISBN 978 9004120419 Watson William October 1972 The Chinese Contribution to Eastern Nomad Culture in the Pre Han and Early Han Periods World Archaeology Taylor amp Francis Ltd 4 2 139 149 doi 10 1080 00438243 1972 9979528 JSTOR 123972 Wasko Andrzej April 1997 Sarmatism or the Enlightenment The Dilemma of Polish Culture Sarmatian Review Oxford University Press XVII 2 West Stephanie 2002 Scythians In Bakker Egbert J de Jong Irene J F van Wees Hans eds Brill s Companion to Herodotus Brill pp 437 456 ISBN 978 90 04 21758 4 Young T Cuyler 1988 The early history of the Medes and the Persians and the Achaemenid empire to the death of Cambyses In Boardman John Hammond N G L Lewis D M Ostwald M eds The Cambridge Ancient History Vol 4 Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 1 52 ISBN 978 0 521 22804 6 Further reading Baumer Christoph 2012 The History of Central Asia The Age of the Steppe Warriors I B Tauris ISBN 978 1 78076 060 5 Davis Kimball Jeannine 2003 Warrior Women An Archaeologist s Search for History s Hidden Heroines Grand Central Publishing ISBN 0 446 67983 6 Drews Robert 2004 Early Riders The Beginnings of Mounted Warfare in Asia and Europe Taylor amp Francis ISBN 0 203 07107 7 Gamkrelidze Thomas V Ivanov Vjaceslav V 2010 Indo European and the Indo Europeans A Reconstruction and Historical Analysis of a Proto Language and Proto Culture Walter de Gruyter ISBN 978 3 11 081503 0 Humbach Helmut Faiss Klauss 2012 Herodotus s Scythians and Ptolemy s Central Asia Semasiological and Onomasiological Studies Reichert Verlag ISBN 978 3 89500 887 0 Jaedtke Wolfgang 2008 Steppenkind Ein Skythen Roman in German Piper ISBN 978 3 492 25146 4 Johnson James William April 1959 The Scythian His Rise and Fall Journal of the History of Ideas University of Pennsylvania Press 20 2 250 257 doi 10 2307 2707822 JSTOR 2707822 Lebedynsky Iaroslav 2001 Les Scythes in French Ed Errance ISBN 2877722155 Rostovtzeff Michael 1993 Skythien und der Bosporus in German Vol 2 Franz Steiner Verlag ISBN 3 515 06399 4 Torday Laszlo 1998 Mounted Archers The Beginnings of Central Asian History Durham Academic Press ISBN 1 900838 03 6 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Scythians amp oldid 1130315570, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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