SAGARTIANS
A
Sagartian, Apadana, Persepolis
Behistun
relief of Tritantaechmes. Label "This is Tritantaechmes.
He lied, saying "I am king of Sagartia, from the family of
Cyaxares.""
The
Sagartians (Latin: Sagartii; Ancient Greek: Sagártioi; Old
Persian: Asagartiya "Sagartian"; Elamite: Aš-ša-kar-ti-ia,
Babylonian: KURSa-ga-ar-ta-a-a) were an ancient Iranian tribe, dwelling
in the Iranian plateau. Their exact location is unknown; they were
probably neighbors of the Parthians in northeastern Iran. According
to Herodotus (1.125, 7.85) they were related to the Persians (Southwestern
Iranian), but they may also have entered a political union with
the Medians (Northwestern Iranian) at some point (J. van Wesendonk
in ZII 9, 1933, pp. 23f.). Ptolemy (6.2.6) locates them in Media,
while Stephanus of Byzantium claims that there was a peninsula in
the Caspian Sea called Sagartía. They were nomadic pastoralists,
their main weapon being the lasso (Herodotus 7.85).
It
is unclear whether they are identical to the Zikirti mentioned by
Sargon II as inhabitants of northern Zagros in the late 8th century
BC. They may have been granted the district of Arbela by Median
king Cyaxares as a reward for their aid in the capture of Niniveh.
According
to Herodotus (3.93), the Sagartians belonged to the 14th taxation
Province of the Achaemenid Empire. A Sagartian delegation appears
among the tribute bearers on the Apadana relief. Herodotus also
mentioned in the seventh book of his histories that the Sagartians
provided 8,000 horsemen for King Xerxes' massive army during the
Persian king's invasion of Greece in 480 BC.
Source
:
https://en.wikipedia.org/
wiki/Sagartians