SCYTHIA

sĭthˈēə, ancient region of Eurasia, extending from the Danube on the west to the borders of China on the east. The Scythians flourished from the 8th to the 4th cent. b.c. They spoke an Indo-Iranian language but had no system of writing. They were nomadic conquerors and skilled horsemen. They seem to be related to the Saka, another nomadic tribe that roamed the steppes of central Asia at about the same time. The so-called Royal Scyths established a kingdom in the E Crimea before the 9th cent. b.c. They seem to have maintained themselves as a ruling class while others (probably native inhabitants) worked the grain fields. The Scythians are traditionally associated with the area between the Danube and the Don, but modern excavations in the Altai Mts., particularly at the site of Pazyryk, suggest that their origins were in W Siberia before they moved E into S Russia in the early 1st millennium b.c. Scythian power was maintained in the 8th cent. b.c. in obscure warfare with the Cimmerians. The Scythians, considered barbarians by the Greeks, traded (7th cent. b.c.) grain and their service as mercenaries for Greek wine and luxury items. They invaded (7th cent. b.c.) upper Mesopotamia and Syria. They threatened Judah but never actually occupied Palestine. They also made incursions into the Balkan Peninsula, and a century later the mysterious campaign of Darius I against them (c.512 b.c.) may have checked their expansion, although it was no conquest. They destroyed (c.325 b.c.) an expedition sent against them by Alexander the Great. After 300 b.c. they were driven out of the Balkans by the invading Celts. In S Russia they were displaced (2d or 1st cent. b.c.) by the related Sarmatians, and part of their empire became Sarmatia.

See E. H. Minns, Scythians and Greeks (1913, repr. 1976); T. Rice, The Scythians (1957); H. W. Bailey, Indo-Scythian Studies (1985).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Scythia  - 1030 results

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middle of the description of Scythia 4, 46, 1 , but part of the geographical...ethnography of the tribes bordering on Scythia 4, 103-117 , as well as the dimensions of the Euxine 4, 86 and of Scythia 4, 99 f. , have deliberately been interspersed...
...Philip the Apostle tells us that he went to Scythia, which by some people is called "Sweden the Great". The same identification Scythia with Sweden the Great, is made in Alexanders...Icelandic writings of the thirteenth century. Scythia was located north and north-east of...
...declared war against King Idanthyrsus of Scythia, thus confining the war to the two kings...Idanthyrsus was himself born in the land of Scythia, just as frogs are born in the lands...his house or clan had been created in Scythia, just as mice make their holes in the...
...the point that Scota could be a place in Scythia, Petraea: also that Fenius Farsaid...records of the race. Fenius was a prince of Scythia. A variant of the story LGE 2.41...Nel who came to the tower of Nimrud from Scythia in order to separate out the Gaelic language...
...Sarmatians) devastated a considerable part of Scythia and, exterminating all the conquered to...statement of Diodoros about the devastation of Scythia should be connected (Diod. 2.43.7). Scythia was practically reduced to a wilderness then...
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journal articles on: Scythia  - 32 results

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...Scythians and the Slave-trade in Herodotus Scythia * by David Braund Herodotus has a lot...research on Herodotus engagement with Scythia continues to be marked by some important...he himself indicates, his knowledge of Scythia at large depends not on first hand experience...
...50v. Messei. See the Luculentissima f. 50v. Scythia intra imaum. Scythia within the Imaum. The phrase "within the Imaum...Scythae of Ptolemy 6.15, who live in northern Scythia extra Imaum. Tectosaces. From Ptolemy 6.14...
...example of the late Roman province of Scythia. First of all, the sample is incredibly...epigraphic sources of Moesia Inferior and Scythia Minor (Table 1). The data of such tables...51 to 55 and from 61 to 65. Also, in Scythia Minor, as a result of the reduced number...
...Rome, a theory laid out in the book From Scythia to Camelot, and reinforced by the historical...strikingly resembles the physical type From Scythia to Camelot postulates: blue-eyed...Arthurian legends as described in From Scythia to Camelot. There is no single reason...
...were systems of relay trade reaching through the steppes from Scythia to the Altai and beyond in Herodotuss time, they cannot have...regularly or systematically, for the number of goods found in Scythia from central or eastern Asia is small. 41 Under the Xiongnu...
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magazine articles on: Scythia  - 19 results

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...crossing the Danube in 513 BC, invading the northern steppes of Scythia. It also swept through Thrace and took control of the vital...his bridge across the Danube while the king was cut off in Scythia. The plan had failed, thanks to opposition from the top Ionian...
...and the Baltic, to which the draftsman affixed such names as Scythia, Muscovy, and Tartary. One can see that the mapmakers pushed...on the edge of Voltaires nord, which the poet thought of as Scythia, not as Asia. In central Germany, the Romans were closer...
...is near the Black Sea. Some recent research proves from archaeological and linguistic analyses that the Picts hailed from Scythia, the area between the Caspian and Black Seas--that is, near Colchis. A major trade route passes through this area, mixing...
...recruited male and female nomad fighters). Some 2,000 years ago Mithradates shocked the Romans by crossing the Caucasus into Scythia, across the River Don and around the Sea of Azov to his castle in ancient Kerch. Mithradates exact route has mystified ancient...
...tradition; no disciplined files of shock phalangites in Phoenicia; and no landed infantry of small property owners in ancient Scythia-and thus no military in the ancient Mediterranean like the Greeks at Thermopylae, Salamis, or Plataea. By the same token...
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newspaper articles on: Scythia  - 10 results

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...explained. Certainly, he never visited either country, his mission work being restricted to Asia Minor and Scythia, Scythia, Scythia, on the north shores of the Black Sea, was eventually incorporated into the Russian Empire, but centuries...
...000-ton Cunard White Star liner RMS Scythia, which was in service from 1921 until she was scrapped in 1958. The Scythia sailed between Liverpool and New York...000-ton Cunard White Star liner RMS Scythia The cargo ship Derrymore off Point...
...owning them and looking at them." ART LOVER: Peter Davenport COLLECTION: A watercolour of the Cunard White Star liner RMS Scythia by William John Patton McDowell (above) and oils on canvas by Gordon Ellis shows the cargo ship Derrymore off Point Lynas...
...two fish (Jn 6:1-10).The traditions about Andrew are various. It is said that he preached the Good News of Jesus in Scythia, in Greece, in Asia Minor, and Thrace. He is said to have made his last "manly" witness to Jesus when he was martyred...
...WILLIAM GIBBENS, of Bebington, joined Cunard as a boy waiter. Now 74, he says: ``My very first crossing was on the Scythia from Liverpool in 1948 taking displaced people from Europe to a new life in Canada. There were ten of us in a cabin, right...
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encyclopedia articles on: Scythia  - 7 results

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SCYTHIA sith e , ancient region of Eurasia, extending from the Danube on the west to the borders of China on the east. The Scythians...
...Chersonesus ne s s Gr.,=peninsula, name applied in ancient geography to several regions. See Crimea (Chersonesus Taurica or Scythia); Gallipoli Peninsula (Chersonesus Thracica); Malay Peninsula (Chersonesus Aurea); Jutland (Chersonesus Cimbrica...
...By the 7th cent. b.c. the northern shore of the Black Sea and the Crimea were controlled by the Scythians (see under Scythia ); in the 3d cent. b.c. the Scythians were displaced by the Sarmatians (see under Sarmatia ). Later the open steppes...
...Crimea). History Early History In ancient times a major part of present-day Ukraine was inhabited by the Scythians (see Scythia ), who were later displaced by the Sarmatians (see Sarmatia ). Early in the Christian era, a series of invaders (Goths...
...mentioned in Homer, but they emerge into history only in the 8th cent. b.c. when they were driven by the Scythians (see Scythia ) from their former home in Crimea and came to the region around Lake Van (in present-day E Turkey). Defeated (634 b...
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