AMAZON
WOMEN WARRIORS PART - 5
Amazons
in the Iranian world :
The Amazons of ancient Greek mythology were depicted in art and
literature as fierce, barbarian women of exotic lands east of the
Mediterranean (Mayor; David, pp. 203-25, 227-31). In myth, Amazons
were the archenemies of ancient Greek heroes such as Heracles and
Achilles; but Greek and Roman historians also described historical,
legendary, and contemporary warrior women of Eurasia whose lives
and exploits were like those of Amazons. Thanks to more than 300
archeological discoveries of battle-scarred female remains buried
with weapons in graves from the Black Sea to the Altai region, we
now know that the Amazons of myth and legend were influenced by
women of nomadic Saka-Scythian and related cultures of Eurasia (Mayor,
pp. 63-83).
In
2004, the Iranian archeologist, Alireza Hejebri Nobari, who had
excavated 109 graves of warriors with weapons in an ancient site
near the city of Tabriz in northwest Iran, pointed out in an interview
that one of the graves held the bones of a warrior woman. This attribution
was based on the DNA tests of the skeleton indicating that the skeleton
inside the tomb was of a woman warrior and not, as previously suggested,
that of a man because of the metal sword buried close by it (Hejebri
Nobari, quoted in Hambastegi News, 2004). Plans were made to conduct
DNA tests on the skeletons of other ancient warriors in the same
site, but no further reports have appeared (Reuters).
The
lives of Saka-Scythian and other related nomadic people centered
on horses and archery, and the women participated in hunting and
warfare alongside the men. Many Scythian groups from the Black Sea,
the Caucasus, and the Caspian regions spoke forms of Old Iranian
languages. More than 200 names of Amazons and women warriors have
survived from antiquity, preserved in texts, inscriptions, and traditional
epics. Most of the names are Greek, but other languages are represented,
including Egyptian, Caucasian, Turkic, and Iranian. The etymology
of the non-Greek word “Amazon” is unknown but may have
had multiple sources. Several theories have been suggested, ranging
from the Circassian (CARKAS) name a-mez-a-ne “forest [or moon]
mother” to ancient Iranian ha-mazon “warrior”
(Mayor, pp. 85-88; 234-46; AMAZONS i).
It
is often assumed that the ancient Greeks held a monopoly on Amazons.
But Greeks were not the only ancient culture to tell stories about
warlike women and thrill to accounts of legendary and historical
female warriors. The ancient Medes and Persians fought Scythians
from the north and Saka tribes on the eastern frontiers of their
empires. Beyond the Greek-influenced world, one can find intrepid
horsewomen-archers in oral traditions, art, and literature of Egypt,
Arabia, Persia, the Caucasus, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Central Asia,
and India. The exploits of these warrior women recall the Amazons
of Greco-Roman myth and history (see Kruk, pp. 16-21, on echoes
of Amazons in tales of Near Eastern warrior women).
Amazon-like
legends arose about the Assyrian warrior queen Semiramis (Akkadian
sa-mu-ra-mat; Iranian Šamiram), widow of the king Ninos (on
whom, see also CTESIAS), who ruled around 810-805 BCE. A colorful
frieze of glazed brick in Babylon described by Ctesias (the Greek
writer and physician in the Achaemenid court of Artaxerxes II, ca.
413-397 BCE) showed Semiramis, in about 470 BCE, on horseback spearing
a leopard. It was said that Semiramis rode her swift horse to conquer
Bactria, personally leading a band of mountaineers to scale a high
cliff to attack a citadel. In her campaigns, she survived arrow
and javelin wounds. Like Amazons of Greek myth, Semiramis rejected
marriage but enjoyed sexual partners of her own choosing. Disguised
as a boy on the battlefield, she only revealed her sex after victories.
To blur differences between men and women and provide protection
while riding, Semiramis designed a new style of practical clothing
for herself and her subjects (Diodorus, 2.4-20). The long-sleeved
tunics and trousers were so comfortable and attractive that the
Medes and Persians adopted the costume (CLOTHING ii. In the Median
and Achaemenid Periods; Gera, pp. 65-83; Justin, 1.12). Notably,
the sorceress Medea of Greek myth, from ancient Colchis, was also
credited with inventing the clothing worn by Saka-Scythians and
Persians (and Amazons in Greek vase paintings). According to Strabo
(11.13.7-10), to hide her sex, Medea donned trousers and a tunic
and covered her face when she and Jason of the Argonauts ruled jointly
over what is now Azerbaijan and Armenia.
Another
legendary warrior queen was said to be the first to invent trousers.
According to a lost history by Hellanikos (5th century BCE), Atossa,
whose ethnic origin is not clear, was raised as a boy by her father
King Ariaspes (the names are Persian but their origins and dates
are shrouded in mystery). After she inherited her father’s
kingdom, this Atossa “ruled over many tribes and was most
warlike and brave in all deeds” (Jacoby, frag. in Gera, p.
8). She created a new style of dress to be worn by men and women
alike, long sleeves and trousers that blurred gender differences
(Gera, pp. 8, 141-58). Amazons in ancient Greek art are depicted
wearing trousers. In fact, trousers were the invention of the first
people to domesticate and ride horses on the steppes (Mayor, pp.
191-208).
From
fragments of Ctesias’s Persica we learn of Persian accounts
of two Saka warrior queens, Zarinaia and Sparethra. Diodorus based
his biography of Zarinaia on Ctesias’s fuller account; a papyrus
fragment of the historian Nicolas of Damascus also relates her story
(Ctesias, frags. 5, 7, 8a and c; P. Oxy. 2330). According to Diodorus
(2.34), the powerful Saka “whose women were known to fight
like Amazons” were “ruled by a woman named Zarinaia,
who was devoted to warfare.” A daring, beautiful warrior queen
who subdued many enemy tribes, Zarinaia was honored after her death
with a colossal gold statue and a monumental pyramid tomb, 600 feet
high.
When
the Parthians (Irano-Scythians) rebelled against the Median Empire,
they allied with Zarinaia, who had assumed leadership of her Saka
tribe after the death of her husband. She married the Parthian ruler
Marmáres/Mérmeros and the Parthians “entrusted
their country and city” to Zarinaia in the long wars against
the Medes (Diodorus, 2.34). During one of the battles, Zarinaia
fought the Median commander Stryangaeus. The Mede wounded Zarinaia,
but struck by her valor, he spared her life. When Mérmeros
later captured Stryangaeus, Zarinaia defied her husband and freed
Stryangaeus and other Median prisoners of war. With their help,
she killed Mérmeros. After peace was declared between the
Medes and the Saka-Parthian alliance, Stryangaeus came to visit
his friend Zarinaia in Rhoxanake (“Shining City,” thought
to be in the Roshan area of the western Pamirs) and declared his
love (Gera, pp. 6, 84-100; Mayor, pp. 379-81). Scholars have compared
this Persian love story to the tragic Greek myth of Achilles, who
regretted killing the valiant Amazon Penthesilea at Troy and expressed
his love for her dead body. But the Persian tale offers a very different
scenario. Zarinaia and Stryangaeus had spared each other’s
lives in battle, and thus friendship and love were feasible.
It
has been suggested that the existence of Persian narratives about
“fighting a Scythian queen” may have formed part of
a conventional Iranian repertory of heroic feats, just as fighting
against Amazons seems to have been a required task for many Greek
heroes” (Sancisi-Weerdenburg, p. 32). But some accounts reflect
historical events and figures, such as Cyrus the Great.
After
his conquest of the Median Empire in 550 BCE, Cyrus II of Persia
made war on the Saka tribes between the Caspian Sea and Bactria.
In about 545 BCE, Cyrus battled the Amyrgioi of Sogdiana and Bactria,
known to the Persians as “haoma-drinking Saka.” When
Cyrus captured their chieftain Amorges (“Excellent Meadows”),
Amorges’ wife Sparethra (“Heroic Army”) became
the leader of the tribe. According to Ctesias, Sparethra called
up an immense force to attack Cyrus, made up of “300,000 horsemen
and 200,000 horsewomen” (Photius, 72: epitome of Ctesias,
Persica). The numbers may be exaggerated, but the detail provides
strong evidence that women and men rode to war side by side in Saka-Scythian
tribes (Mayor, pp. 282-83). It also supports the comments of Diodorus
(2.34.3) regarding the Saka: “These people, in general, have
courageous women who share with their men the dangers of war.”
Sparethra led her vast army of allied tribes against Cyrus, defeating
his troops and capturing many of Cyrus’s highest-ranking men,
including three sons or cousins. Sparethra negotiated a treaty with
Cyrus, who released her husband Amorges in exchange for the Persians
taken prisoner. Sparethra’s tribe became an ally of Cyrus
(Diodorus, 2.34).
Cyrus
was not so lucky with Queen Tomyris (“Iron,” Mongolic/Turkic
temur with Iranian suffix? or Tahm-rayis “Brave Glory”?).
In about 530 BCE, Cyrus was routed by Tomyris’s horde of mounted
archers, the Massagetae, a confederation of Saka-Scythians east
of the Caspian. The Massagetae were warlike archers on horseback
noted for the gender equality and the sexual freedom of their women.
After this defeat, Cyrus resorted to treachery, setting up an ambush
using wine as the bait. The kumis-drinking nomads, unused to wine,
were slaughtered and Tomyris’s son captured. Enraged by the
trick, Tomyris sent a message to Cyrus vowing to “give him
his fill of blood” (Herodotus, 1.214). In the next battle,
amid horrific mayhem, Tomyris’s army decimated the Persians.
Cyrus was mortally wounded. It was said that Tomyris found the king’s
corpse, hacked off his head, and plunged it into a wine jug brimming
with blood (Diodorus, 2.44; Herodotus, 1.211-14; Justin, 1.8; Strabo,
11.8.5-9; there are various versions of Cyrus’s death). Today
Kazakhstan claims Tomyris as its national heroine and issues coins
in her honor, and some have suggested that the magnificent “Golden
Warrior” of Issyk could be the remains of Tomyris (Mayor,
pp. 76, 143-44, 187, n. 2, fig. 24.3).
Herodotus
(7.99; 8.68-69, 87-101-3, 132, and 185), a native of Caria, described
a seafaring female commander from his Persian homeland in the 5th
century BCE. She was Xerxes’ trusted advisor and naval commander,
Artemisia I of Halicarnassus in Caria. Artemisia saw action in Euboea
and then bravely commanded a Persian warship in the Battle of Salamis,
480 BCE. A costly alabaster perfume jar, a gift from Xerxes to Artemisia,
was discovered in the Mausoleum of Halicarnassus (tomb of Mausolus
and Artemisia II); the jar is inscribed in Egyptian hieroglyphics,
Elamite, and Babylonian cuneiform (Mayor, pp. 314-15).
Another
historical female military leader was Tirgatao, leader of the Ixomatae,
a Maeotian tribe of the Azov-Don-Caucasus region northeast of the
Black Sea, in about 430-390 BCE. Tirgatao (Iranian tir arrow, tighra
tava, “Arrow Power”) won many victories with her army
of male infantry archers and cavalrywomen skilled with bows and
lariats. She married Hecataeus, king of the Sindi, a people of the
Taman Peninsula and adjacent Black Sea coast. At one point Tirgatao
was imprisoned in a tower in Sinda by order of Satyrus, king of
the Bosphorus. Tirgatao made a daring escape and returned to her
tribe on the Don River. She raised another army and took revenge,
crushing Satyrus and laying waste to his lands (Mayor, pp. 370-71;
Polyaenus 8.55; Strabo 11.2.11).
An
episode in the memoir of the Greek general and historian Xenophon
suggests that a group of captive Persian women helped defend his
army (Anabasis 4.3.18-19, 6.1.11-13). Xenophon recounts how his
large mercenary Greek army marched from Persia north through Anatolia
to the Black Sea and back to Greece, in about 400 BCE. On their
route through Persia, the soldiers seized women from local villages
to serve as concubines and servants. On the long trek through dangerous
territories and rugged terrain, the soldiers and the captive women
shared hardships and came to trust and depend on each other for
survival. They learned each other’s languages and formed bonds
of friendship, and the women helped to fend off attacks from hostile
tribes. Xenophon does not say that the women had been trained to
use weapons, but at a banquet hosted by Paphlagonian chieftains,
at least one of the Persian women performed a war dance with weapons.
Greek soldiers boasted to their hosts that “these very women
drove off the king of Persia!” (Xenophon, 6.1.13; Mayor, pp.
140-41).
Alexander
the Great was involved with several women identified as Amazons,
as described in his biographies and in the body of legends that
arose after his conquest of the Persian Empire and his death in
323 BCE. The most celebrated story, reported by several ancient
biographers, recounts his meeting with the queen of the Amazons,
Thalestris, who stalked the young conqueror from her home between
the Black Sea and the Caspian, catching up with Alexander in his
camp in Hyrcania. Alexander agreed with her request for intercourse
so that she could bear his child. Another encounter with warrior
women occurred upon Alexander’s meeting with Atropates, satrap
of Media, who presented him with a cavalry unit of horsewomen, identified
as “Amazons” by the historians Arrian (7.13.1-6) and
Curtius (10.4.3; Mayor, pp. 318-38). Amazons also appear in the
legends known collectively as the Alexander Romance (Greek, Armenian,
and other versions dating from the 3rd century BCE to the 6th century
CE). In the Persian epic poem Šah-nama by Ferdowsi (b. 940
CE), Eskandar (Alexander) meets the warrior queen Qaydafa of Andalusia
(Spain). In a later version of this meeting by epic poet Nezami
Ganjavi (1141-1209 CE), Eskandar disguised as an envoy visits the
court of Nušaba, the queen of Sakasena in Barda (Barda'a).
In both versions, Qaydafa and Nušaba recognize Eskandar from
his portrait, which they had secretly commissioned earlier. The
queens do not engage in battle but discuss philosophy with Eskandar
as equals. Near the end of his life, it was said that Eskandar corresponded
with the Amazons of Harum and they met in battle outside the city
of women. In other Islamic traditions, Eskandar meets with Amazon
queens named Baryanus and Radiya (Kruk, p. 17).
According
to the military historian Polyaenus (8.56), a warrior woman named
Amage (derived from Iranian magu “mage”?) was acclaimed
as ruler of the Roxolani, a tribe of Alan-Sarmatians in 165-140
BCE. She also won many victories. In one incident, Amage led 120
of her best warriors in an attack and personally killed the enemy
commander. She saved his son, however, and persuaded him to rule
peacefully (Mayor, pp. 371-72).
In
138 BCE, the Parthian queen Rhodogyne (Gk. “Woman in Red”)
married the Seleucid king Demetrius II Nicator. Apparently she did
not accompany him from exile in Hyrcania to Antioch in 131 BCE.
According to ancient traditions, she was “resplendent in scarlet
belted tunic and trousers woven with charming designs” (Tractatus
De Mulieribus 8, in Gera, p. 8), riding her black Nisaean mare to
defeat the Armenians (Gera, pp. 141-58; Philostratus, Imagines 2.5).
Rhodogyne was famous for rushing off to battle without braiding
her hair. Her image appeared on Persian royal seals with long flowing
hair, and she was honored with a golden statue showing her hair
half braided (Polyaenus, 8.27; Tractatus De Mulieribus).
In
about 66 BCE, during the Third Mithradatic War, Pompey’s Roman
army pursued King Mithradates VI after a crushing defeat in Pontus
to the southern foothills of the Caucasus in ancient Colchis. In
Caucasian Albania and Iberia, Pompey’s soldiers fought battles
against an aggressive coalition of tribes, numbering about 60,000,
allied with Mithradates. Plutarch (Pompey 35 and 45) and Appian
(Mithradatic Wars 12.15-17) reported that “Amazons”
fought alongside the male warriors. Pompey’s soldiers discovered
warrior women among the dead with wounds showing they had fought
courageously. Pompey even captured some of these women alive. In
his magnificent triumph of 61 BCE, Pompey paraded his most illustrious
prisoners of war, including a group of Amazons from the southern
Caucasus, labeled “queens of the Scythians.” Notably,
the Greek-Persian king Mithradates had fallen in love with Hypsicratea,
a horsewoman archer of an unknown Scythian tribe of the Caucasus
region. She had joined his cavalry in about 69 BCE. He praised her
courage and battle skills, and she became his last queen, as confirmed
by the discovery of a statue base inscribed with her name near ancient
Phanagoria, Taman Peninsula (Mayor, pp. 340-45, 349-53).
Roman
sources reported that horsewomen served in the Persian cavalry of
the Sasanian king Shapur I (240-270 CE; Harrel, p. 69; Zonaras 12.23.595).
In later times, European travelers in Persia and Mughal India told
of female battalions guarding royal harems. Like Amazons and Scythian
women, women in Persian harems were described in art and literature
riding horses, hunting with bows (and later with rifles), and playing
polo (Walther, pp. 95-97).
Legends
arose about female fighters of the Persian military nobility who
served as Sasanian savaran/aswaran, cavalrymen and “knights”
specializing in single combat on horseback or elephant. The anonymous
short epic Banu Gošasb-nama (see Gošasb Banu; variously
dated 5th to 12th centuries CE) and other poems featured the savar
heroine Banu Gošasb, Rostam’s daughter; she battles several
suitors and her own father and her husband Gev. Princess Datma was
described as an accomplished martial horsewoman-cavalier in One
Thousand and One Nights (Alf Layla Wa Layla, 597th night; Burton,
tr., V, pp. 94-98).
In
the Islamic period, legendary guerrilla heroine-archer, Banu Korramdin
(Korrami), fought beside her husband Babak Korrami for two decades
(816-837 CE) from their stronghold in Azerbaijan to overthrow the
Arab Caliphate. Never defeated, ultimately they were overcome by
treachery (Nafisi, p. 57).
As
noted, warrior women appear in the Šah-nama, where the warlike
Saka-Scythia nomads of Central Asia were known as Turanians. Ferdowsi’s
poems were drawn from pre-Islamic traditions (Walther, pp. 176-78).
In the first (mythic-legendary) half of the Šah-nama women
are presented very differently from the ways they are presented
in the “historical” (post-Alexander) half of the poem.
Dick Davis (2007, 2013) points out that the geography and names
of the Šah-nama centered on “Turan,” Parthia, a
land with strong traditions of powerful Amazon-like women. Gordia
(“Woman Warrior”) was one foreign female fighter in
the first half of the epic, but the most famous was champion horsewoman-archer
Gordafarid (“Created as a Hero”), daughter of Gadaham.
She defends their White Fortress (De-e Safid) from invasion
by the hero Sohrab, son of Rostam and Tahmina, princess of Samangam
(Bactria). In full armor, Gordafarid challenges Sohrab to single
combat. Her long hair hidden under her helmet, Gordafarid lets fly
a hail of arrows as her swift horse weaves back and forth. Sohrab’s
sword blow is deflected by her armored belt and she hacks his sword
in two. Only when his lance knocks off her helmet does he realize
that he is dueling a woman. He captures Gordafarid with his lasso,
but she tricks him into releasing her and she escapes with her people.
Source
:
http://www.iranicaonline.org/
articles/amazons-ii