ABII
The
Abii were possibly an ancient people described by several ancient
authors. They were placed by Ptolemy in the extreme north of Scythia
extra Imaum, near the Hippophagi ("horse eaters"); but
there are very different opinions about whether they existed. Strabo
discourses on the various opinions respecting the Abii up to his
time.
In
the Iliad, Homer represents Zeus, on the summit of Mount Ida, as
turning away his eyes from the battle before the Greek camp, and
looking down upon the land of the Thracians. Ancient and modern
commentators have doubted greatly which of these words to take as
proper names, except the first two, which nearly all agree to refer
to the Mysians of Thrace. The fact would seem to be that the poet
had heard accounts of the great nomadic peoples who inhabited the
steppes northwest and north of the Euxine (the Black Sea), whose
whole wealth lay in their herds, especially of horses, on the milk
of which they lived, and who were supposed to preserve the innocence
of a state of nature; and of them, therefore, he speaks collectively
by epithets suited to such descriptions, and, among the rest, poor,
with scanty means of life. The people thus described answer to the
later notions respecting the Hyperboreans, whose name does not occur
in Homer. Afterwards, the epithets applied by Homer to this supposed
primitive people were taken as proper names, and were assigned to
different tribes of the Scythians, so that we have mention of the
Scythae Agavi, Hippemolgi, Galactophagi (and Galactopotae) and Abii.
The last are mentioned as a distinct people by Aeschylus, who prefixes
a guttural to the name, and describes the Gabii as the most just
and hospitable of men, living on the self-sown fruits of the untilled
earth; but we have no indication of where he placed them. Of those
commentators, who take the word in Homer for a proper name, some
place them in Thrace, some in Scythia, and some near the (also fabulous)
Amazons, who in vain urged them to take part in an expedition against
Asia.
Classicist
and linguist Steve Reece has proposed an interesting association
between Homer's Abii and Aeschylus' Gabii. He proposes that at Iliad
13.6 Homer dropped the gamma, the name of the tribe known to Aeschylus,
frag. 196, from a source other than Homer in its correct and original
form. That is to say, Homer understood an earlier name through metanalysis,
or reshaping, of the words. Homer's motivation may be due to his
penchant for finding etymological significance in proper names:
i.e., he derived from alpha-privative plus ("without violence"),
a suitable name for those he calls in the same passage "the
justest of men." If this is correct, the name Abii was derived
exclusively from Homer.
Like
the correspondent fabulous people, the Hyperborei, the locations
of the Abii seem to have been moved back, as knowledge advanced,
further and further into the unknown regions of the north. In the
histories of Alexander's expedition we are told that ambassadors
came to him at Maracanda (Samarkand) from the Abii Scythae, a tribe
who had been independent since the time of Cyrus, and were renowned
for their just and peaceful character; but the specific name of
the tribe of Scythians who sent this embassy is probably only an
instance of the attempts made to illustrate the old mythical geography
by Alexander's conquests. In these accounts their precise locality
is not indicated: Ammianus Marcellinus places them north of Hyrcania.
Stephanus of Byzantium places them on an otherwise unidentified
eponymously-named river, the Abianus, that drains to the Euxine.
Source
:
https://en.wikipedia.org/
wiki/Abii