SarmatiansSarmatians, Sarmatae or Sauromatae (the second form is mostly used by the earlier Greek writers, the other by the later Greeks and the Romans) were a people whom Herodotus (4.21-117) in the 5th century BC put on the eastern boundary of Scythia beyond the Tanais (Don). They were a proto-Iranian people akin to the Scythians (Saka.) Many historians believe that they were not pure Scythians, but, being descended from young Scythian men and Amazons, spoke an impure dialect and allowed their women to take part in war and to enjoy much freedom. Later writers call some of them the "woman-ruled Sarmatae." Hippocrates (De Aere, etc., 24) classes them as Scythian. From this we may infer that they spoke a language cognate with Scythian. Tacitus disparaged the Sarmatians (Germania, ch. 46) whom he placed in woodlands not steppes, and thought had a "degraded aspect" and pictured as "living on horseback and in wagons" which does sound likely. Later, Pausanias, viewing votive offerings near the Athenian Acropolis in the 2nd century AD (Description of Greece 1.21.5-6), found among them\n:"a Sauromatic breastplate. On seeing this a man will say that no less than Greeks are foreigners skilled in the arts: for the Sauromatae have no iron, neither mined by themselves nor yet imported. They have, in fact, no dealings at all with the foreigners around them. To meet this deficiency they have contrived inventions. In place of iron they use bone for their spear-blades, and cornel-wood for their bows and arrows, with bone points for the arrows. They throw a lasso round any enemy they meet, and then turning round their horses upset the enemy caught in the lasso.
The idea of "Sarmatians"\nIn the 16th century Polish gentry were wearing long coats trimmed with fur, sables if they could get them, and thigh-high boots, the "Sarmatian" costume they liked to be painted in, proclaiming their connections with a nobility on horseback, equals among themselves and invincible to foreigners. (accordinmg to Simon Schama, Landscape and Memory 1995, p. 38). This entry incorporates revised material from the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.References\n*R. Brzezinski et al, The Sarmatians 600 BC-AD 450 (in series Men-At-Arms 373)'' ISBN 184176485X Category:Ancient Roman enemies and allies\nCategory:Ancient Peoples |
||
"If you haven't got anything nice to say about anybody, come sit next to me." - Alice Roosevelt Longworth (1884-1980) |
