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Scythia is called the region to the north and
northeast of the Black Sea. Mount Caucasus, where
Prometheus 1 was
nailed and kept bound for many years, is a Scythian
mountain. Scythia is the abode of one of the
WINDS, the North Wind
Boreas 1. The inhabitants
of this region called themselves Skoloti, but the
Greeks called them Scythians. There were three main
clans among the Scythians, deriving from the three
sons of their ancestor Targitaus [see below].
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Scythia and Cimmeria
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Io, in her wanderings came
to Scythia and Cimmeria, which are in the same
region. The Cimmerians were driven from their
territory by the Scythians, who were a nomad
people, and when the Scythians had driven the
Cimmerians out of Europe, pursuing them in their
flight, they came to Media in Asia and destroyed
the kingdom of the Medes. In fact they pillaged
vast areas in the Middle East, reaching as far as
Egypt. During their rule, which lasted almost three
decades, they not only collected the regular
tribute, but also, riding the country, carried off
the common people's possessions, thus ruining the
whole territory with their violence. The Scythians
did not expand to the north because, as they said,
in the north both earth and sky are full of
feathers, and the showers of feathers hindered the
sight.
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The First Scythian
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The first of the Scythians is said to be
Targitaus, son of Zeus and
a daughter of the river god Borysthenes. This
Borysthenes is also said to be the father of Thoas
3, who was first king of
Lemnos and later king of
the Taurians, before whom
Orestes 2, son of
Agamemnon, was
brought. Thoas 3 was hidden by his daughter
Hypsipyle when the Lemnian women killed their
husbands, and later he fled to Tauris.
Orestes 2 came to
Tauris, which is a part of Scythia, and was there
in danger because the Scythians used to murder
strangers and throw them into the sacred fire.
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Colaxais becomes king by a marvel
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The sons of Targitaus, Lipoxais, Arpoxais, and
Colaxais ruled the country that their father had
found desolate. During their reign, a plough, a
yoke, a sword, and a flask, all made of gold, fell
down from the sky into Scythia. When either
Lipoxais or Arpoxais tried to approach the objects,
the gold began to burn, but when Colaxais came near
them the burning stopped. For this reason the two
brothers agreed to give all the royal power to
Colaxais, who was the youngest among them.
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Another First Scythian
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The Greeks dwelling in the Black Sea say,
however, that Heracles
1, driving the cattle of Geryon, came to
Scythia which was then an empty territory. As he
fell asleep in the frosty weather, he lost track of
his cattle. Looking for it, he discovered that it
had been stolen by a creature half damsel and half
serpent. When Heracles
1 asked for the cattle, she said that she would
not restore it unless he had intercourse with her.
Heracles 1 complied
with the demand, and later three children were
born: Agathyrsus, Gelonus, and Scythes 2. The
Scythian monster, following the instructions
Heracles 1 gave her
before he left, banished Agathyrsus and Gelonus,
and made Scythes 2 the first king of the Scythians.
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Opinion of the
AMAZONS
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The AMAZONS who lived
near the Scythians used to maim their male children
by removing a hand or a leg, and when the
Scythians, who desired to come to terms in their
war against the female nation, told them that they
would find in them no mutilated bedfellows, the
Amazon Antianira 2 replied that lame men make lusty
husbands.
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Other Scythian kings
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A Scythian king, Indus 1, is said to have been
the first to discover silver. Another king, Lyncus
1, was visited by
Triptolemus, who
came with Demeter's
grain; Lyncus 1 attacked him with a sword, but
before he could kill
Triptolemus,
Demeter turned him into
a lynx.
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Story of a Scythian princess
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Idaea 2, daughter of King Dardanus 3 of Scythia,
was the second wife of
Phineus 2, the blind
king and seer from Salmydessus in Thrace who
received the
ARGONAUTS.
Idaea 2 falsely accused the sons of
Phineus 2 by his former
wife Cleopatra 5 of corrupting her virtue. For this
chargetrying to rape their
mother-in-law, the children of
Phineus 2 (Plexippus 2
and Pandion 3) were shut within a burial vault
where they were continually whipped. At the time,
Heracles 1, who was
sailing with the Boreades (Calais and Zetes),
arrived to Thrace. Since the Boreades were the
brothers of Cleopatra 5 they demanded that both
their sister and the falsely accused youths were
released. An armed conflict broke out, during which
Phineus 2 was killed by
Heracles 1. The
released youths wished then to put Idaea 2 to death
under torture, but
Heracles 1 persuaded
them to send her to Scythia for punishment, and
there the Scythians condemned her to death.
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General opinion
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The Scythians were believed to lead a bestial
way of life; therefore, as they became the
proverbial barbarians, other people could express
themselves thus:
"It is not
Scythians who committed such deeds, but the people
who claim to excel in love of mankind have by their
decrees utterly destroyed these cities."
[Diodorus Siculus,
Library
of History 13.30.7]
Others add that the Scythians had a law that
sentenced all men of sixty years of age to death.
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Note
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[History registered the Scythians' exellence in
horsemanship, their conquest of the Kurdistan, how
they defeated a general of Alexander the Great and
stopped the invasion of Persian Darius by
scorched-earth strategy, but the Scythians
disappeared from its pages in c. AD 200.]
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