I
was a fan of Wonder Woman as a comics-reading child, just as I was a
fan of Batman and Superman. Being a kid, I figured the land of the
Amazons was in the Amazon Rainforest. The legendary Amazons actually
came from ancient Greek tales. Homer included them in the
Iliad,
and from there mentions of a warrior class of women were peppered into
many epic stories. But were those tales based on fact or fiction?
The
more important the Amazons became to Athenian national identity, the
more the Greeks searched for evidence of their vanquished foe. The fifth
century B.C. historian Herodotus did his best to fill in the missing
gaps. The “father of history,” as he is known, located the Amazonian
capital as Themiscyra, a fortified city on the banks of the Thermodon
River near the coast of the Black Sea in what is now northern Turkey.
The women divided their time between pillaging expeditions as far afield
as Persia and, closer to home, founding such famous towns as Smyrna,
Ephesus, Sinope and Paphos. Procreation was confined to an annual event
with a neighboring tribe. Baby boys were sent back to their fathers,
while the girls were trained to become warriors. An encounter with the
Greeks at the Battle of Thermodon ended this idyllic existence. Three
shiploads of captured Amazons ran aground near Scythia, on the southern
coast of the Black Sea. At first, the Amazons and the Scythians were
braced to fight each other. But love indeed conquered all and the two
groups eventually intermarried. Their descendants became nomads,
trekking northeast into the steppes where they founded a new race of
Scythians called the Sauromatians. “The women of the Sauromatae have
continued from that day to the present,” wrote Herodotus, “to observe
their ancient customs, frequently hunting on horseback with their
husbands...in war taking the field and wearing the very same dress as
the men....Their marriage law lays it down, that no girl shall wed until
she has killed a man in battle.”
The Amazon women
were presumed to be legendary, until a Sauromatian graveyard was found
in the early 1990s. The 2,000-year-old graves found in southern Russia
near the border with Kazakhstan were excavated and threw an entirely new
light onto the legends.
Read about what they found, and what it means for the Amazon legend, at Smithsonian.
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