ISSEDONES
The
Issedones were an ancient people of Central Asia at the end of the
trade route leading north-east from Scythia, described in the lost
Arimaspeia of Aristeas, by Herodotus in his History (IV.16-25) and
by Ptolemy in his Geography. Like the Massagetae to the south, the
Issedones are described by Herodotus as similar to, yet distinct
from, the Scythians.
Location
:
Issedones
seen on Ancient Greek world map
The exact location of their country in Central Asia is unknown.
The Issedones are "placed by some in Western Siberia and by
others in Chinese Turkestan," according to E. D. Phillips.
Herodotus,
who allegedly got his information through both Greek and Scythian
sources, describes them as living east of Scythia and north of the
Massagetae, while the geographer Ptolemy (VI.16.7) appears to place
the trading stations of Issedon Scythica and Issedon Serica in the
Tarim Basin. Some speculate that they are the people described in
Chinese sources as the Wusun. J.D.P. Bolton places them further
north-east, on the south-western slopes of the Altay mountains.
Another
location of the land of the Issedones can be inferred from the account
of Pausanias. According to what the Greek traveller was told at
Delos in the second century CE, the Arimaspi were north of the Issedones,
and the Scythians were south of them:
At
Prasiai [in Attika] is a temple of Apollo. Hither they say are sent
the first-fruits of the Hyperboreans, and the Hyperboreans are said
to hand them over to the Arimaspoi, the Arimaspoi to the Issedones,
from these the Skythians bring them to Sinope, thence they are carried
by Greeks to Prasiai, and the Athenians take them to Delos."
- Pausanias 1.31.2
Description
:
The Issedones were known to Greeks as early as the late seventh
century BCE, for Stephanus Byzantinus reports that the poet Alcman
mentioned "Essedones" and Herodotus reported that a legendary
Greek of the same time, Aristeas son of Kaustrobios of Prokonnessos
(or Cyzicus), had managed to penetrate the country of the Issedones
and observe their customs first-hand. Ptolemy relates a similar
story about a Syrian merchant.
The
Byzantine scholiast John Tzetzes, who sites the Issedones generally
"in Scythia", quotes some lines to the effect that the
Issedones "exult in long flowing hair" and mentions the
one-eyed men to the north.
According
to Herodotus, the Issedones practiced ritual cannibalism of their
elderly males, followed by a ritual feast at which the deceased
patriarch's family ate his flesh, gilded his skull, and placed it
in a position of honor much like a cult image. In addition, the
Issedones were supposed to have kept their wives in common. This
may indicate institutionalized polyandry and a high status for women
(Herodotus IV.26: "and their women have equal rights with the
men").
Cannibalism
controversy :
The archeologists E. M. Murphy and J. P. Mallory of the Queen's
University of Belfast have argued (Antiquity, 74 (2000):388-94)
that Herodotus was mistaken in his interpretation of what he imagined
to be cannibalism. Recently excavated sites in southern Siberia,
such as the large cemetery at Aymyrlyg in Tuva containing more than
1,000 burials of the Scythian period, have revealed accumulations
of bones often arranged in anatomical order. This indicates burials
of semi-decomposed corpses or defleshed skeletons, sometimes associated
with leather bags or cloth sacks. Marks on some bones show cut-marks
of a nature indicative of defleshing, but most appear to suggest
disarticulation of adult skeletons. Murphy and Mallory suggest that,
since the Issedones were nomads living with cattle herds, they moved
up the mountains in summer, but they wanted their dead to be buried
at their winter camp; defleshing and dismemberment of the people
who died in summer would have been more hygienic than allowing the
corpses to decompose naturally in the summer heat. Burial of the
dismembered remains would have taken place in fall after returning
to winter camp, but before the ground was frozen completely. Such
procedures of defleshing and dismemberment may have been mistaken
for evidence of cannibalism by foreign onlookers.
Murphy
and Mallory do not exclude the possibility that the flesh removed
from the bodies was consumed. Archeologically these activities remain
invisible. But they point out that elsewhere, Herodotus names another
tribe (Androphagi) as the only group to eat human flesh.
On
the other hand, Dr. Timothy Taylor points out :
1.
Herodotus reports that the so-called "Androphagoi" are
the "only" people in the region to practice cannibalism.
However, a distinction should be drawn between "aggressive
gustatory cannibalism" (i.e., hunting humans for food) and
the ritualized, reverential practices reported among the Issedones
and Massagetae.
2. Scythian-type peoples were renowned embalmers and presumably
would have no need for funerary defleshing to delay decomposition
of the corpse.
3. Herodotus specifically describes the removal of the meat and
mixing it with other foodstuffs to make a funerary stew.
Dr. Taylor concludes : "Inferring reverential funerary cannibalism
in this case is thus the most academically cautious approach".
Source
:
https://en.wikipedia.org/
wiki/Issedones