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Thracian horseman

The Thracian horseman (also "Thracian Rider" or "Thracian Heros") is a recurring motif depicted in reliefs of the Hellenistic and Roman periods in the Balkans—mainly Thrace, Macedonia,[1][2] Thessaly[3] and Moesia—roughly from the 3rd century BC to the 3rd century AD. Inscriptions found in Romania identify the horseman as Heros and Eros (Latin transcriptions of Ἥρως) and also Herron and Eron (Latin transcriptions of Ἥρων), apparently the word heroes used as a proper name.[3] He is sometimes addressed in inscriptions merely as κύριος, δεσπότης or ἥρως.[4]

"Thracian horseman" votive tablet with the standard iconographic elements: the rider is holding a lance in his right hand aiming at a boar attacked by a hunting dog.
Fragment from a Thracian horseman marble relief: the hunting dog attacking the boar

The Thracian horseman is depicted as a hunter on horseback, riding from left to right. Between the horse's hooves is depicted either a hunting dog or a boar. In some instances, the dog is replaced by a lion. Its depiction is in the tradition of the funerary steles of Roman cavalrymen, with the addition of syncretistic elements from Hellenistic and Paleo-Balkanic religious or mythological tradition.

Name edit

The original Palaeo-Balkan word for 'horseman' has been reconstructed as *Me(n)zana-, with the root *me(n)za- 'horse'. It is based on evidence provided by:[5]

  • Albanian: mëz or mâz 'foal', with the original meaning of 'horse' that underwent a later semantic shift 'horse' > 'foal' after the loan from Latin caballus into Albanian kalë 'horse'; the same root is also found in Albanian: mazrek 'horse breeder';[6]
  • Messapic: menzanas, appearing as an epithet in Zis Menzanas, found in votive inscriptions, and in Iuppiter Menzanas, mentioned in a passage written by Festus in relation to a Messapian horse sacrifice;
  • Romanian: mînz;
  • Thracian: ΜΕΖΗΝΑ̣Ι mezēnai, found in the inscription of the Duvanli gold ring also bearing the image of a horseman.

Interpretation edit

The horseman was a common Palaeo-Balkan hero.[7]

The motif depicted on reliefs most likely represents a composite figure, a Thracian heroes[clarification needed] possibly based on Rhesus, the Thracian king mentioned in the Iliad,[8] to which Scythian, Hellenistic and possibly other elements had been added.[9]

Late Roman syncretism edit

The Cult of the Thracian horseman was especially important in Philippi, where the Heros had the epithets of Hero Auloneites,[10] soter ('saviour') and epekoos 'answerer of prayers'. Funerary stelae depicting the horseman belong to the middle or lower classes (while the upper classes preferred the depiction of banquet scenes).[11]

Under the Roman Emperor Gordian III the god on horseback appears on coins minted at Tlos, in neighboring Lycia, and at Istrus, in the province of Lower Moesia, between Thrace and the Danube.[12]

In the Roman era, the "Thracian horseman" iconography is further syncretised. The rider is now sometimes shown as approaching a tree entwined by a serpent, or as approaching a goddess. These motifs are partly of Greco-Roman and partly of possible Scythian origin. The motif of a horseman with his right arm raised advancing towards a seated female figure is related to Scythian iconographic tradition. It is frequently found in Bulgaria, associated with Asclepius and Hygeia.[13]

Stelai dedicated to the Thracian Heros Archegetas have been found at Selymbria.[14]

Inscriptions from Bulgaria give the names Salenos and Pyrmerula/Pirmerula.[15]

Epithets edit

Apart from syncretism with other deities (such as Asclepios, Apollo, Sabatius), the figure of the Thracian Horseman was also found with several epithets: Karabasmos, Keilade(i)nos, Manimazos, Aularchenos, Aulosadenos, Pyrmeroulas. One in particular was found in Avren, dating from the III century CE, with a designation that seems to refer to horsemanship: Outaspios, and variations Betespios, Ephippios and Ouetespios.[16]

Bulgarian linguist Vladimir I. Georgiev proposed the following interpretations to its epithets:[17]

  • Ouetespios (Betespios) - related to Albanian vetë 'own, self' and Avestan aspa- 'horse', meaning 'der selbst Pferd ist'.
  • Outaspios - corresponds to Greek epihippios 'on a horse'.
  • Manimazos - related to Latin mani 'good' and Romanian mînz; meaning 'the good horse'.
  • Karabasmos - related to Old Bulgarian gora 'mountain' and Greek phasma 'phantom'; meaning 'mountain-phantom' ("Berg-geist", in German).

Bulgarian linguist Ivan Duridanov [bg] interpreted the following theonyms:

  • Руrumērulаs (Variations: Руrmērulаs, Руrymērulаs, Pirmerulas) - linked to Greek pyrós 'maize, corn'; and PIE stem *mer 'great'.[18]

Related imagery edit

Twin horsemen edit

Related to the Dioscuri motif is the so-called "Danubian Horsemen" motif of two horsemen flanking a standing goddess.[19][20] These "Danubian horsemen" are thus called due to their reliefs being found in the Roman province of Danube. However, some reliefs have also been found in Roman Dacia - which gives the alternate name for the motif: "Dacian Horseman".[21] Scholarship locates its diffusion across Moesia, Dacia, Pannonia and Danube, and, to a lesser degree, in Dalmatia and Thracia.[22][20]

The motif of a standing goddess flanked by two horsemen, identified as Artemis flanked by the Dioscuri, and a tree entwined by a serpent flanked by the Dioscuri on horseback was transformed into a motif of a single horseman approaching the goddess or the tree.[23]

Madara Rider edit

The Madara Rider is an early medieval large rock relief carved on the Madara Plateau east of Shumen, in northeastern Bulgaria. The monument is dated in the c. 7th/8th century, during the reign of Bulgar Khan Tervel. In 1979 became enlisted on the UNESCO World Heritage Site.[24] The relief incorporates elements of the autochthonous Thracian cult.[25]

Legacy edit

The motif of the Thracian horseman was continued in Christianised form in the equestrian iconography of both Saint George and Saint Demetrius.[26][27][28][29][30]

The motif of the Thracian horseman is not to be confused with the depiction of a rider slaying a barbarian enemy on funerary stelae, as on the Stele of Dexileos, interpreted as depictions of a heroic episode from the life of the deceased.[31]

Gallery edit

Hunter motif
Serpent-and-tree
Rider and goddess
Greco-Roman comparanda
Medieval comparanda

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Samsaris, Dimitrios C. (1984). Le culte du Cavalier thrace dans la vallée du Bas-Strymon à l' époque romaine: Recherches sur la localisation de ses sanctuaires. Dritter Internationaler Thrakologischer Kongress, Wien, 2-6 Juni 1980. Sofia. Bd. II, p. 284 sqq.
  2. ^ Samsaris, Dimitrios C. (1982–1983). "Le culte du Cavalier thrace dans la colonie romaine de Philippes et dans son territoire". Ponto-Baltica. 2–3: 89–100.
  3. ^ a b Hampartumian, Nubar (2015) [1979]. Corpus Cultus Equitis Thracii (CCET). Vol. 4: Moesia Inferior (Romanian Section) and Dacia. Leiden, The Netherlands: Brill. p. 16. doi:10.1163/9789004295520.
  4. ^ Liapis, Vayos. "The Thracian Cult of Rhesus and the Heros Equitans". In: Kernos 24 (2011): 95-104. Mis en ligne le 01 février 2014, consulté le 31 décembre 2023. URL: http://journals.openedition.org/kernos/1938 ; doi:10.4000/kernos.1938
  5. ^ Oreshko 2020, p. 118.
  6. ^ Malaj, Edmond (2013). "Familje fisnike të Drishtit mesjetar (Noble Families of Medieval Drivasto". Studime Historike. 3–4. p. 45.
  7. ^ Garašanin 1976, pp. 278–279.
  8. ^ West, Rebecca (21 December 2010). Black Lamb and Grey Falcon: A Journey Through Yugoslavia. Open Road Media. p. 455. ISBN 978-1-4532-0746-8.
  9. ^ Hoddinott, R.F. (1963). Early Byzantine Churches in Macedonia & Southern Serbia. Palgrave Macmillan, 1963. pp. 58–62.
  10. ^ Brélaz, Cédric (2021). "Thracian, Greek, or Roman? Ethnic and Social Identities of Worshippers (and Gods) in Roman Philippi". Philippi, from Colonia Augusta to Communitas Christiana. Leiden, The Netherlands: Brill. pp. 71, 74. doi:10.1163/9789004469334_005.
  11. ^ Ascough, Richard S. (2003). Paul's Macedonian Associations: The Social Context of Philippians and 1 Thessalonians. p. 159.
  12. ^ Sabazios on coins, illustrated in the M. Halkam collection.
  13. ^ Hoddinott (1963:58)
  14. ^ Byzantium and the Bosporus: A Historical Study, from the Seventh Century BC Until the Foundation of Constantinople, p. 203
  15. ^ Petrova, S. et al. (2015). Thrаcian, Greek, Roman And Medieval Cities, Residences & Fortresses In Bulgaria. p. 370.
  16. ^ Petraccia, Maria Federica. "La dedica di uno stationarius all’ Heros Outaspios". In: Culti e religiosità nelle province danubiane: Atti del II Convegno Internazionale (Ferrara 20-22 Novembre 2013), a cura di Livio Zerbini. Pubblicazione del LAD (Laboratorio di studi e ricerche sulle Antiche province Danubiane) - Università degli Studi di Ferrara - Dipartimento di Studi Umanistici. Bologna: I libri di Emil. 2015. pp. 594-595, 601. ISBN 978-88-6680-130-6.
  17. ^ Georgiev, Vladimir I.. "Thrakisch und Dakisch". Band 29/2. Teilband Sprache und Literatur (Sprachen und Schriften [Forts.]), edited by Wolfgang Haase, Berlin, Boston: De Gruyter, 1983. p. 1180. doi:10.1515/9783110847031-016
  18. ^ Duridanov, Ivan (1985). Die Sprache der Thraker. Bulgarische Sammlung (in German). Vol. 5. Hieronymus Verlag. p. 69. ISBN 3-88893-031-6.
  19. ^ "Relief Of Danubian Horseman Found In Viminacium". Archeology News Network. Online: 14-12-2014. Retrieved: 08-12-2021.
  20. ^ a b Vladimirovich, Shchemelev Artem. "К ВОПРОСУ О КЛАССИФИКАЦИИ ИЗОБРАЖЕНИЙ ДУНАЙСКОГО ВСАДНИКА". [ON THE ISSUE OF CLASSIFYING THE DANUBIAN HORSEMAN IMAGES]. In: Historical, Philosophical, Political and Law Sciences, Culturology and Study of Art. Issues of Theory and Practice. Tambov: Gramota, 2015. № 10. Part 2. p. 216.
  21. ^ Vladimirovich, Shchemelev Artem. "ДУНАЙСКИЙ ВСАДНИК: СУЩНОСТЬ ФЕНОМЕНА И ОСОБЕННОСТИ ИКОНОГРАФИИ" [THE DANUBIAN HORSEMAN: ESSENCE OF THE PHENOMENON AND ITS ICONOGRAPHIC PECULIARITIES]. In: Historical, Philosophical, Political and Law Sciences, Culturology and Study of Art. Issues of Theory and Practice. Tambov: Gramota, 2015. № 8. Part 3. pp. 214-215.
  22. ^ Vladimirovich, Shchemelev Artem. "ДУНАЙСКИЙ ВСАДНИК: СУЩНОСТЬ ФЕНОМЕНА И ОСОБЕННОСТИ ИКОНОГРАФИИ" [THE DANUBIAN HORSEMAN: ESSENCE OF THE PHENOMENON AND ITS ICONOGRAPHIC PECULIARITIES]. In: Historical, Philosophical, Political and Law Sciences, Culturology and Study of Art. Issues of Theory and Practice. Tambov: Gramota, 2015. № 8. Part 3. p. 215.
  23. ^ Hoddinott (1963:59)
  24. ^ Donchev 1981, p. 46.
  25. ^ Donchev 1981, p. 43.
  26. ^ Hoddinott (1963:61)
  27. ^ de Laet, Sigfried J. (1994). History of Humanity: From the seventh to the sixteenth century. Routledge. pp. 233 ff. ISBN 978-92-3-102813-7.
  28. ^ Walter, Christopher (2003). The Warrior Saints in Byzantine Art and Tradition. Ashgate. pp. 88ff. ISBN 978-1-84014-694-3.
  29. ^ c.f. the badly damaged wall painting of St.George in the ruins of Đurđevi stupovi, Serbia (c. 1168)
  30. ^ Hoddinott (1963:61).
  31. ^ Hoddinott (1963:60)

Bibliography edit

  • Donchev, Slavi (1981). The Madara Horseman (PDF). Vol. 23–24. ICOMOS. pp. 41–46.
  • Dimitrova, Nora. "Inscriptions and Iconography in the Monuments of the Thracian Rider." Hesperia: The Journal of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens 71, no. 2 (2002): 209-29. Accessed June 26, 2020. www.jstor.org/stable/3182007.
  • Garašanin, Milutin V. (1976). "O problemu starobalkanskog konjanika" [About the Problem of Old Balkan Horseman]. Godišnjak Centra za balkanološka ispitivanja (in Serbo-Croatian). 13. Akademija Nauka i Umjetnosti Bosne i Hercegovine: 273–283.
  • Grbić Dragana (2013). "The Thracian hero on the Danube new interpretation of an inscription from Diana". Balcanica (44): 7–20. doi:10.2298/BALC1344007G.
  • Hoddinott, R. F. (1963). Early Byzantine Churches in Macedonia & Southern Serbia. Palgrave Macmillan, 1963. pp. 58–62.
  • Irina Nemeti, Sorin Nemeti, Heros Equitans in the Funerary Iconography of Dacia Porolissensis. Models and Workshops. In: Dacia LVIII, 2014, p. 241-255, http://www.daciajournal.ro/pdf/dacia_2014/art_10_nemeti_nemeti.pdf
  • Oreshko, Rostislav (2020). "The onager kings of Anatolia: Hartapus, Gordis, Muška and the steppe strand in early Phrygian culture" (PDF). Kadmos. 59 (1/2). De Gruyter: 77–128. doi:10.1515/kadmos-2020-0005. S2CID 235451836.

Further reading edit

  • Boteva, Dilyana (2000). "À propos des "secrets" du Cavalier thrace". Dialogues d'histoire ancienne. 26 (1): 109–118. doi:10.3406/dha.2000.2414.
  • Kirov, Slavtcho. "Sur la datation du culte du Cavalier thrace" [On the dating of the cult of the Thracian horseman]. In: Studia Academica Šumenensia 7 (2020): 172-186.
  • Mackintosh, Majorie Carol (1992). The divine horseman in the art of the western Roman Empire. PhD thesis. The Open University. pp. 132–159.
On the epigraphy of the Thracian Horseman
  • Boteva, Diliana. "Further considerations on the votive reliefs of the Thracian Horseman". In: Moesica et Christiana. Studies in honour of professor Alexandru Barnea. hrsg. v. Adriana Panaite, Romeo Cîrjan. Brăila: Istros, 2016. pp. 309–320. ISBN 978-606-654-181-7
  • Bottez, Valentin; Topoleanu, Florin. "A New Relief of the Thracian Horseman from Halmyris". In: Peuce (Serie Nouă) - Studii şi cercetari de istorie şi arheologie n. 19, XIX/2021, pp. 135–142.
  • DIMITROVA, Nora; CLINTON, Kevin. "Chapter 2. A new bilingual votive monument with a “Thracian rider” relief". In: Studies in Greek epigraphy and history in honor of Stefen V. Tracy [en ligne]. Pessac: Ausonius Éditions, 2010 (généré le 29 juin 2021). Disponible sur Internet: <http://books.openedition.org/ausonius/2108>. ISBN 9782356132819. DOI: https://doi.org/10.4000/books.ausonius.2108.
  • Gočeva, Zlatozara; Opperman, Manfred (2015) [1981]. Corpus Cultus Equitis Thracii (CCET) (in German). Vol. 2: Monumenta inter Danubium et Haemum reperta. Leiden, The Netherlands: Brill. doi:10.1163/9789004296442.
  • Grbić, Dragana (2013). "The Thracian Hero on the Danube: New Interpretation of an Inscription from Diana". Balcanica. XLIV: 7–20. doi:10.2298/BALC1344007G.
  • Krykin, S.M. "A Votive Bas-Relief of a Thracian Horseman From the Poltava Museum". In: Ancient Civilizations from Scythia to Siberia 2, 3 (1996): 283-288. doi: https://doi.org/10.1163/157005795X00164
  • Szabó, Csaba. "BEYOND ICONOGRAPHY. NOTES ON THE CULT OF THE THRACIAN RIDER IN APULUM". In: Studia Universitatis Babes-Bolyai - Historia n. 1, 61/2016, pp. 62–73.
  • Toporov, V. (1990). "The Thracian Horseman in an Indo-European Perspective". ORPHEUS. Journal of Indo-European and Thracian Studies. 18: 46–63.

On the "Danubian Horsemen" or "Danubian Riders":

  • Bondoc, Dorel. "The representation of Danubian Horsemen from Ciupercenii Vechi, Dolj County". In: La Dacie et l´Empire romain. Mélanges d´épigraphie et d´archéologie offerts à Constantin C. Petolescu. Eds. M. Popescu, I. Achim, F. Matei-Popescu. București: 2018, pp. 229–257.
  • Gočeva, Zlatozara. "Encore une Fois sur la “Déesse de Razgrad” et les Plus Anciens des “Cavaliers Danubiens”" [Again on the “Goddess from Razgrad” and the Most Ancient “Danube Horsemen”]. In: Thracia 19 (2011): 149-157.
  • Hadiji, Maria Vasinca. "CULTUL CAVALERILOR DANUBIENI: ORIGINI SI DENUMIRE (I)" [THE WORSHIP OF THE DANUBIAN HORSEMEN: ORIGINS AND DESIGNATION (I)]. In: Apulum n. 1, 43/2006, pp. 253–267.
  • Kremer, Gabrielle. "Some remarks about Domnus/Domna and the ‚Danubian Riders‘. In: S. Nemeti; E. Beu-Dachin; I. Nemeti; D. Dana (Hrsg.). The Roman Provinces. Mechanisms of Integration. Cluj-Napoca, 2019. pp. 275–290.
  • Nemeti, Sorin; Cristean, Ștefana. "New Reliefs Plaques from Pojejena (Caraș-Severin county) depicting the Danubian Riders". In: Ziridava. Studia Archaeologica n. 1, 34/2020. pp. 277-286.
  • Strokova, Lyudmila; Vitalii Zubar, and Mikhail Yu Treister. "Two Lead Plaques with a Depiction of a Danubian Horseman from the Collection of the National Museum of the History of the Ukraine". In: Ancient Civilizations from Scythia to Siberia 10, 1-2 (2004): 67-76. doi: https://doi.org/10.1163/1570057041963949
  • Szabó, Ádám. Domna et Domnus. CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE CULT-HISTORY OF THE ’DANUBIAN-RIDERS’ RELIGION. Hungarian Polis Studies 25, Phoibos Verlag, Wien, 2017. ISBN 978-3-85161-179-3.
  • Tudor, D. Corpus monumentorum religionis equitum danuvinorum (CMRED). Volume 1: Monuments. Leiden, The Netherlands: Brill. 24 Aug. 2015 [1969]. doi: https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004294745
  • Tudor, D. Corpus monumentorum religionis equitum danuvinorum (CMRED). Volume 2: Analysis and Interpretation of the Monuments; Leiden, The Netherlands: Brill, 24 Aug. 2015 [1976]. doi: https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004294752

thracian, horseman, also, thracian, rider, thracian, heros, recurring, motif, depicted, reliefs, hellenistic, roman, periods, balkans, mainly, thrace, macedonia, thessaly, moesia, roughly, from, century, century, inscriptions, found, romania, identify, horsema. The Thracian horseman also Thracian Rider or Thracian Heros is a recurring motif depicted in reliefs of the Hellenistic and Roman periods in the Balkans mainly Thrace Macedonia 1 2 Thessaly 3 and Moesia roughly from the 3rd century BC to the 3rd century AD Inscriptions found in Romania identify the horseman as Heros and Eros Latin transcriptions of Ἥrws and also Herron and Eron Latin transcriptions of Ἥrwn apparently the word heroes used as a proper name 3 He is sometimes addressed in inscriptions merely as kyrios despoths or ἥrws 4 Thracian horseman votive tablet with the standard iconographic elements the rider is holding a lance in his right hand aiming at a boar attacked by a hunting dog Fragment from a Thracian horseman marble relief the hunting dog attacking the boarThe Thracian horseman is depicted as a hunter on horseback riding from left to right Between the horse s hooves is depicted either a hunting dog or a boar In some instances the dog is replaced by a lion Its depiction is in the tradition of the funerary steles of Roman cavalrymen with the addition of syncretistic elements from Hellenistic and Paleo Balkanic religious or mythological tradition Contents 1 Name 2 Interpretation 3 Late Roman syncretism 4 Epithets 5 Related imagery 5 1 Twin horsemen 5 2 Madara Rider 6 Legacy 7 Gallery 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Bibliography 10 Further readingName editThe original Palaeo Balkan word for horseman has been reconstructed as Me n zana with the root me n za horse It is based on evidence provided by 5 Albanian mez or maz foal with the original meaning of horse that underwent a later semantic shift horse gt foal after the loan from Latin caballus into Albanian kale horse the same root is also found in Albanian mazrek horse breeder 6 Messapic menzanas appearing as an epithet in Zis Menzanas found in votive inscriptions and in Iuppiter Menzanas mentioned in a passage written by Festus in relation to a Messapian horse sacrifice Romanian minz Thracian MEZHNA I mezenai found in the inscription of the Duvanli gold ring also bearing the image of a horseman Interpretation editThe horseman was a common Palaeo Balkan hero 7 The motif depicted on reliefs most likely represents a composite figure a Thracian heroes clarification needed possibly based on Rhesus the Thracian king mentioned in the Iliad 8 to which Scythian Hellenistic and possibly other elements had been added 9 Late Roman syncretism editThe Cult of the Thracian horseman was especially important in Philippi where the Heros had the epithets of Hero Auloneites 10 soter saviour and epekoos answerer of prayers Funerary stelae depicting the horseman belong to the middle or lower classes while the upper classes preferred the depiction of banquet scenes 11 Under the Roman Emperor Gordian III the god on horseback appears on coins minted at Tlos in neighboring Lycia and at Istrus in the province of Lower Moesia between Thrace and the Danube 12 In the Roman era the Thracian horseman iconography is further syncretised The rider is now sometimes shown as approaching a tree entwined by a serpent or as approaching a goddess These motifs are partly of Greco Roman and partly of possible Scythian origin The motif of a horseman with his right arm raised advancing towards a seated female figure is related to Scythian iconographic tradition It is frequently found in Bulgaria associated with Asclepius and Hygeia 13 Stelai dedicated to the Thracian Heros Archegetas have been found at Selymbria 14 Inscriptions from Bulgaria give the names Salenos and Pyrmerula Pirmerula 15 Epithets editApart from syncretism with other deities such as Asclepios Apollo Sabatius the figure of the Thracian Horseman was also found with several epithets Karabasmos Keilade i nos Manimazos Aularchenos Aulosadenos Pyrmeroulas One in particular was found in Avren dating from the III century CE with a designation that seems to refer to horsemanship Outaspios and variations Betespios Ephippios and Ouetespios 16 Bulgarian linguist Vladimir I Georgiev proposed the following interpretations to its epithets 17 Ouetespios Betespios related to Albanian vete own self and Avestan aspa horse meaning der selbst Pferd ist Outaspios corresponds to Greek epihippios on a horse Manimazos related to Latin mani good and Romanian minz meaning the good horse Karabasmos related to Old Bulgarian gora mountain and Greek phasma phantom meaning mountain phantom Berg geist in German Bulgarian linguist Ivan Duridanov bg interpreted the following theonyms Rurumerulas Variations Rurmerulas Rurymerulas Pirmerulas linked to Greek pyros maize corn and PIE stem mer great 18 Related imagery editTwin horsemen edit Related to the Dioscuri motif is the so called Danubian Horsemen motif of two horsemen flanking a standing goddess 19 20 These Danubian horsemen are thus called due to their reliefs being found in the Roman province of Danube However some reliefs have also been found in Roman Dacia which gives the alternate name for the motif Dacian Horseman 21 Scholarship locates its diffusion across Moesia Dacia Pannonia and Danube and to a lesser degree in Dalmatia and Thracia 22 20 The motif of a standing goddess flanked by two horsemen identified as Artemis flanked by the Dioscuri and a tree entwined by a serpent flanked by the Dioscuri on horseback was transformed into a motif of a single horseman approaching the goddess or the tree 23 Madara Rider edit The Madara Rider is an early medieval large rock relief carved on the Madara Plateau east of Shumen in northeastern Bulgaria The monument is dated in the c 7th 8th century during the reign of Bulgar Khan Tervel In 1979 became enlisted on the UNESCO World Heritage Site 24 The relief incorporates elements of the autochthonous Thracian cult 25 Legacy editThe motif of the Thracian horseman was continued in Christianised form in the equestrian iconography of both Saint George and Saint Demetrius 26 27 28 29 30 The motif of the Thracian horseman is not to be confused with the depiction of a rider slaying a barbarian enemy on funerary stelae as on the Stele of Dexileos interpreted as depictions of a heroic episode from the life of the deceased 31 Gallery editHunter motif nbsp Thracian horseman with hound and boar Greek inscription 3rd century BC Teteven museum nbsp Thracian horseman attacking a lion which is in turn attacking its prey Madara Museum Bulgaria nbsp Statue of a Thracian horseman with lion 3rd century National History Museum of Bulgaria nbsp Thracian horseman funerary stele with Greek inscription Madara Museum Bulgaria nbsp Thracian horseman with hound marble votive tablet Stara Zagora regional history museumSerpent and tree nbsp Thracian horseman with hound and serpent entwined tree funerary stele for one Caius Cornelius at Philippi nbsp Thracian horseman with hounds a serpent entwined tree and a footman 3rd century Constanța History and Archaeology Museum nbsp Thracian horseman with hounds footman and tree Haskovo Historic Museum Bulgaria nbsp Thracian horseman with a serpent entwined tree Histria Museum Romania nbsp Thracian horseman with serpent and tree the National History Museum of Bulgaria nbsp Thracian horseman with serpent and tree 2nd century Burgas Archaeological Museum Bulgaria nbsp Thracian horseman with serpent and tree Expoziţia Cultura CucuteniRider and goddess nbsp Thracian rider of Scythian type with raised hand riding towards female figure Madara Museum Bulgaria nbsp Horseman approaching seated female figure under a tree Constanta MuseumGreco Roman comparanda nbsp Black figure Thracian cavalrymen vs armored Greek foot soldier Getty Villa Collection c 520 BC nbsp Stele of Dexileos c 390 BC nbsp Funerary relief of a Roman cavalryman 2nd 3rd century nbsp Funerary relief of a late 4th 5th century Roman cavalryman trampling a barbarian warrior Roman Britain Chester Grosvenor Museum nbsp A fragment of a decorated frieze at Felix Romuliana a palace built by the emperor Galerius in modern day Serbia The fragment depicts a rider wielding an ax and a shield bearing soldier on foot nbsp Danubian Horsemen Artemis flanked by the Dioscuri votive plate found in Demir Kapija North MacedoniaMedieval comparanda nbsp The Madara Rider equestrian rock relief in Bulgaria c 700 nbsp St George of Labechina Racha Georgia 11th century known as the oldest extant equestrian depiction of St George but note that the horseman is trampling a human opponent rather than a dragon nbsp Equestrian depiction of Saints George and DemetriusSee also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Thracian horseman Uastyrdzhi Tetri Giorgi Sabazios Medaurus Bellerophon Jupiter Column Pahonia Heros Peninsula in Antarctica is named after the Thracian Horseman Castor and Pollux sometimes linked to the Danubian Rider References edit Samsaris Dimitrios C 1984 Le culte du Cavalier thrace dans la vallee du Bas Strymon a l epoque romaine Recherches sur la localisation de ses sanctuaires Dritter Internationaler Thrakologischer Kongress Wien 2 6 Juni 1980 Sofia Bd II p 284 sqq Samsaris Dimitrios C 1982 1983 Le culte du Cavalier thrace dans la colonie romaine de Philippes et dans son territoire Ponto Baltica 2 3 89 100 a b Hampartumian Nubar 2015 1979 Corpus Cultus Equitis Thracii CCET Vol 4 Moesia Inferior Romanian Section and Dacia Leiden The Netherlands Brill p 16 doi 10 1163 9789004295520 Liapis Vayos The Thracian Cult of Rhesus and the Heros Equitans In Kernos 24 2011 95 104 Mis en ligne le 01 fevrier 2014 consulte le 31 decembre 2023 URL http journals openedition org kernos 1938 doi 10 4000 kernos 1938 Oreshko 2020 p 118 Malaj Edmond 2013 Familje fisnike te Drishtit mesjetar Noble Families of Medieval Drivasto Studime Historike 3 4 p 45 Garasanin 1976 pp 278 279 West Rebecca 21 December 2010 Black Lamb and Grey Falcon A Journey Through Yugoslavia Open Road Media p 455 ISBN 978 1 4532 0746 8 Hoddinott R F 1963 Early Byzantine Churches in Macedonia amp Southern Serbia Palgrave Macmillan 1963 pp 58 62 Brelaz Cedric 2021 Thracian Greek or Roman Ethnic and Social Identities of Worshippers and Gods in Roman Philippi Philippi from Colonia Augusta to Communitas Christiana Leiden The Netherlands Brill pp 71 74 doi 10 1163 9789004469334 005 Ascough Richard S 2003 Paul s Macedonian Associations The Social Context of Philippians and 1 Thessalonians p 159 Sabazios on coins illustrated in the M Halkam collection Hoddinott 1963 58 Byzantium and the Bosporus A Historical Study from the Seventh Century BC Until the Foundation of Constantinople p 203 Petrova S et al 2015 Thracian Greek Roman And Medieval Cities Residences amp Fortresses In Bulgaria p 370 Petraccia Maria Federica La dedica di uno stationarius all Heros Outaspios In Culti e religiosita nelle province danubiane Atti del II Convegno Internazionale Ferrara 20 22 Novembre 2013 a cura di Livio Zerbini Pubblicazione del LAD Laboratorio di studi e ricerche sulle Antiche province Danubiane Universita degli Studi di Ferrara Dipartimento di Studi Umanistici Bologna I libri di Emil 2015 pp 594 595 601 ISBN 978 88 6680 130 6 Georgiev Vladimir I Thrakisch und Dakisch Band 29 2 Teilband Sprache und Literatur Sprachen und Schriften Forts edited by Wolfgang Haase Berlin Boston De Gruyter 1983 p 1180 doi 10 1515 9783110847031 016 Duridanov Ivan 1985 Die Sprache der Thraker Bulgarische Sammlung in German Vol 5 Hieronymus Verlag p 69 ISBN 3 88893 031 6 Relief Of Danubian Horseman Found In Viminacium Archeology News Network Online 14 12 2014 Retrieved 08 12 2021 a b Vladimirovich Shchemelev Artem K VOPROSU O KLASSIFIKACII IZOBRAZhENIJ DUNAJSKOGO VSADNIKA ON THE ISSUE OF CLASSIFYING THE DANUBIAN HORSEMAN IMAGES In Historical Philosophical Political and Law Sciences Culturology and Study of Art Issues of Theory and Practice Tambov Gramota 2015 10 Part 2 p 216 Vladimirovich Shchemelev Artem DUNAJSKIJ VSADNIK SUShNOST FENOMENA I OSOBENNOSTI IKONOGRAFII THE DANUBIAN HORSEMAN ESSENCE OF THE PHENOMENON AND ITS ICONOGRAPHIC PECULIARITIES In Historical Philosophical Political and Law Sciences Culturology and Study of Art Issues of Theory and Practice Tambov Gramota 2015 8 Part 3 pp 214 215 Vladimirovich Shchemelev Artem DUNAJSKIJ VSADNIK SUShNOST FENOMENA I OSOBENNOSTI IKONOGRAFII THE DANUBIAN HORSEMAN ESSENCE OF THE PHENOMENON AND ITS ICONOGRAPHIC PECULIARITIES In Historical Philosophical Political and Law Sciences Culturology and Study of Art Issues of Theory and Practice Tambov Gramota 2015 8 Part 3 p 215 Hoddinott 1963 59 Donchev 1981 p 46 Donchev 1981 p 43 Hoddinott 1963 61 de Laet Sigfried J 1994 History of Humanity From the seventh to the sixteenth century Routledge pp 233 ff ISBN 978 92 3 102813 7 Walter Christopher 2003 The Warrior Saints in Byzantine Art and Tradition Ashgate pp 88ff ISBN 978 1 84014 694 3 c f the badly damaged wall painting of St George in the ruins of Đurđevi stupovi Serbia c 1168 Hoddinott 1963 61 Hoddinott 1963 60 Bibliography edit Donchev Slavi 1981 The Madara Horseman PDF Vol 23 24 ICOMOS pp 41 46 Dimitrova Nora Inscriptions and Iconography in the Monuments of the Thracian Rider Hesperia The Journal of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens 71 no 2 2002 209 29 Accessed June 26 2020 www jstor org stable 3182007 Garasanin Milutin V 1976 O problemu starobalkanskog konjanika About the Problem of Old Balkan Horseman Godisnjak Centra za balkanoloska ispitivanja in Serbo Croatian 13 Akademija Nauka i Umjetnosti Bosne i Hercegovine 273 283 Grbic Dragana 2013 The Thracian hero on the Danube new interpretation of an inscription from Diana Balcanica 44 7 20 doi 10 2298 BALC1344007G Hoddinott R F 1963 Early Byzantine Churches in Macedonia amp Southern Serbia Palgrave Macmillan 1963 pp 58 62 Irina Nemeti Sorin Nemeti Heros Equitans in the Funerary Iconography of Dacia Porolissensis Models and Workshops In Dacia LVIII 2014 p 241 255 http www daciajournal ro pdf dacia 2014 art 10 nemeti nemeti pdf Oreshko Rostislav 2020 The onager kings of Anatolia Hartapus Gordis Muska and the steppe strand in early Phrygian culture PDF Kadmos 59 1 2 De Gruyter 77 128 doi 10 1515 kadmos 2020 0005 S2CID 235451836 Further reading editBoteva Dilyana 2000 A propos des secrets du Cavalier thrace Dialogues d histoire ancienne 26 1 109 118 doi 10 3406 dha 2000 2414 Kirov Slavtcho Sur la datation du culte du Cavalier thrace On the dating of the cult of the Thracian horseman In Studia Academica Sumenensia 7 2020 172 186 Mackintosh Majorie Carol 1992 The divine horseman in the art of the western Roman Empire PhD thesis The Open University pp 132 159 On the epigraphy of the Thracian HorsemanBoteva Diliana Further considerations on the votive reliefs of the Thracian Horseman In Moesica et Christiana Studies in honour of professor Alexandru Barnea hrsg v Adriana Panaite Romeo Cirjan Brăila Istros 2016 pp 309 320 ISBN 978 606 654 181 7 Bottez Valentin Topoleanu Florin A New Relief of the Thracian Horseman from Halmyris In Peuce Serie Nouă Studii si cercetari de istorie si arheologie n 19 XIX 2021 pp 135 142 DIMITROVA Nora CLINTON Kevin Chapter 2 A new bilingual votive monument with a Thracian rider relief In Studies in Greek epigraphy and history in honor of Stefen V Tracy en ligne Pessac Ausonius Editions 2010 genere le 29 juin 2021 Disponible sur Internet lt http books openedition org ausonius 2108 gt ISBN 9782356132819 DOI https doi org 10 4000 books ausonius 2108 Goceva Zlatozara Opperman Manfred 2015 1981 Corpus Cultus Equitis Thracii CCET in German Vol 2 Monumenta inter Danubium et Haemum reperta Leiden The Netherlands Brill doi 10 1163 9789004296442 Grbic Dragana 2013 The Thracian Hero on the Danube New Interpretation of an Inscription from Diana Balcanica XLIV 7 20 doi 10 2298 BALC1344007G Krykin S M A Votive Bas Relief of a Thracian Horseman From the Poltava Museum In Ancient Civilizations from Scythia to Siberia 2 3 1996 283 288 doi https doi org 10 1163 157005795X00164 Szabo Csaba BEYOND ICONOGRAPHY NOTES ON THE CULT OF THE THRACIAN RIDER IN APULUM In Studia Universitatis Babes Bolyai Historia n 1 61 2016 pp 62 73 Toporov V 1990 The Thracian Horseman in an Indo European Perspective ORPHEUS Journal of Indo European and Thracian Studies 18 46 63 On the Danubian Horsemen or Danubian Riders Bondoc Dorel The representation of Danubian Horsemen from Ciupercenii Vechi Dolj County In La Dacie et l Empire romain Melanges d epigraphie et d archeologie offerts a Constantin C Petolescu Eds M Popescu I Achim F Matei Popescu București 2018 pp 229 257 Goceva Zlatozara Encore une Fois sur la Deesse de Razgrad et les Plus Anciens des Cavaliers Danubiens Again on the Goddess from Razgrad and the Most Ancient Danube Horsemen In Thracia 19 2011 149 157 Hadiji Maria Vasinca CULTUL CAVALERILOR DANUBIENI ORIGINI SI DENUMIRE I THE WORSHIP OF THE DANUBIAN HORSEMEN ORIGINS AND DESIGNATION I In Apulum n 1 43 2006 pp 253 267 Kremer Gabrielle Some remarks about Domnus Domna and the Danubian Riders In S Nemeti E Beu Dachin I Nemeti D Dana Hrsg The Roman Provinces Mechanisms of Integration Cluj Napoca 2019 pp 275 290 Nemeti Sorin Cristean Ștefana New Reliefs Plaques from Pojejena Caraș Severin county depicting the Danubian Riders In Ziridava Studia Archaeologica n 1 34 2020 pp 277 286 Strokova Lyudmila Vitalii Zubar and Mikhail Yu Treister Two Lead Plaques with a Depiction of a Danubian Horseman from the Collection of the National Museum of the History of the Ukraine In Ancient Civilizations from Scythia to Siberia 10 1 2 2004 67 76 doi https doi org 10 1163 1570057041963949 Szabo Adam Domna et Domnus CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE CULT HISTORY OF THE DANUBIAN RIDERS RELIGION Hungarian Polis Studies 25 Phoibos Verlag Wien 2017 ISBN 978 3 85161 179 3 Tudor D Corpus monumentorum religionis equitum danuvinorum CMRED Volume 1 Monuments Leiden The Netherlands Brill 24 Aug 2015 1969 doi https doi org 10 1163 9789004294745 Tudor D Corpus monumentorum religionis equitum danuvinorum CMRED Volume 2 Analysis and Interpretation of the Monuments Leiden The Netherlands Brill 24 Aug 2015 1976 doi https doi org 10 1163 9789004294752 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Thracian horseman amp oldid 1218379088, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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