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THE ORIGIN OF THE PRE-IMPERIAL
IRANIAN PEOPLES
By: Dr Oric
Basirov
CAIS series of lectures
SOAS, 26/4/2001
Two
Ancient Iranian-Scythian Priest Warriors
INTRODUCTION
As late as the closing decades
of the 4th century B.C., the Iranian peoples were still the largest
and the most widespread group within the great Indo-European family;
this position must have been held for thousands of years by their
nomadic ancestors, and was not relinquished until well into the
Roman period; during those distant millennia, they roamed the vast,
limitless Eurasian steppes as pastoralist riders and charioteers;
towards the end of the second millennium B.C., some of them, lured
by the great civilisations of the Indus vally, Elam, Mesopotamia,
and Asia Minor, moved southwards and made permanent settlements; it
didn't take very long for one group of these settled people, the
Medes, to form the first of the four Iranian empires, and less than
500 years for the Persians, to become the absolute masters of the
known world; their nomadic ancestors, however, continued to roam the
steppes, unopposed, for a very long time; it was not until the 5th
century A.D. that the invading Turkic tribes pushed them out of
their homelands into central Europe and further west; by then, of
course, vast numbers of them had merged with eastern Europeans to
form the core of the modern Slavs ;
the rest were eventually assimilated in western Europe, especially
in France; the intention of this paper is to give a broad outline of
the history and the culture of these fascinating warriors, who for
many thousands of years remained the indisputed masters of the
steppes; throughout their long nomadic history, they are known to us
by a variety of names, both native and foreign.
THE AIRYAS
We owe a great deal to these
pre-historical Iranians, one of whom, i.e, Zoroaster, is generally
regarded as the first of the great prophets, and the earliest of the
great thinkers; his people, in the holy texts, are referred to as
Airyas, and their homeland, believed to have been somewhere
in Eastern Iran, as Airyana vaejah; the word Ariya,
noble, is also attested in the Inscriptions of Darius the
Great and his son, Xerxes; it is used both as a linguistic and a
racial designation. Darius refers to his Behistun inscription
(DBiv.89) as (written) in Ariyan; he and Xerxes state in their
surviving texts in Naqsh-i Rustam (DNa.14), Susa (DSe.13), and
Persepolis (XPh.13): (adam) P~rsa, P~rsahy~ puça; Ariya, Ariya ciça;
meaning: I am Persian, son of a Persian; an Aryan, belonging to the
Aryan race.
We meet this word again in Pahlavi literature, and
in many Sasanian inscriptions, coins, seals and other documents; it
is attested in Pahlavi as _r, meaning noble or hero; as
Īrān, Iran; as Īrān-Shahr, meaning the Iranian Empire;
as Īrān-vez, meaning the mythical original land of the
Aryans; as an‘r, meaning non-Aryan, barbarian; and as
anīrān, i.e., barbarity and ignobility.
The earliest reference to this word in an Iranian
context, however, predates Zoroaster and is attested in non-Gathic
Avesta; it appears as airya, meaning noble; as airya
dainhava (Yt.8.36, 52) meaning the land of the Aryans; and as
airyana vaejah, the original land of the Aryans; this term,
it seems, was adopted in remote antiquity by Iranians as their
national identity ;
hence other peoples were called Anairya, meaning
non-Aryan, probably a derogatory racial designation like the
other, more familiar, similar terms, such as, Greeks &
barbarians, Jews & Goyim, Arabs & Ajams
and Germans & Welsch.
The fact that Iranians, Indians, and probably some
Europeans also called themselves by this name, suggests that the
word Airya may have been an old native designation for the
racial group now called Indo-European, Indo-Germanic, European,
Caucasian, or simply, White; it was indeed adopted in the middle of
the 19th century as a collective designation for the above racial
group and their languages.
THE SAKA
It seems that both nomadic and sedentary Iranians
referred to themselves as Airyas; gradually, however, this
word became a self-imposed designation for the settled Iranians
only, who began to refer to their nomadic cousins in the East, i.e.,
Zoroaster's people, as the Saka, and some of those further
west as SKUDRA ;
the Saka probably did not call themselves exclusively by this name,
some may have retained the use of the term Airya.
Many Saka tribes left the northern steppes
intermittently to settle permanently in Central Asia, modern
Afghanistan, and Persia; these tribes are the direct forebears of
the imperial Western Iranians, the Medes, Persians and lastly, the
Parthians;
Once converted to Zoroastrianism, however, such
became their religious significance, that by the middle of the 1st
millennium B.C., the centre of the faith was neither in the homeland
of its founder, nor in any of the adjoining Eastern Iranian regions;
it was firmly established on the western side of the great salt
desert, amongst the people now called Western Iranians; from then
onwards, Eastern Iran fades into the background; we now deal almost
exclusively with Western Iran, and until very recently, were not
even aware of the fact that Eastern Iran had played such a vital
part in the genesis of the Iranian empires, and their great national
faith; most scientific facts, such as, the recorded history and Near
Eastern archaeological data, especially a large volume of deciphered
inscriptions, relate to the four great Western Iranian empires of
the Medes, Persians, Parthians & Sasanians; there is only a
small volume of classical sources, and more recent archaeological
data, which also deal with the nomadic Iranians of the northeast,
i.e., those Saka warriors who remained in the steppes, and were
never completely subdued by the settled Iranians of the imperial
period; these warriors remained, nonetheless, a very formidable
enemy of their settled cousins; not only did they conquer and rule
the Median Empire for 28 years in the 7th century B.C., but they
also defeated and killed Cyrus the Great, founder of the Achaemenian
Empire, in the following century; a generation later, they were
still engaging Darius the Great in many hard-fought battles; two
hundred and fifty years later, however, they became the saviours of
the Iranian culture and religion, and political integrity; they
gradually pushed the Macedonians out of the Iranian homeland, and
formed the Parthian Empire, which lasted for another 500 years.
The nomadic Iranians of the north western steppes,
however, especially those settled in Europe, are extensively covered
by the classical writers; they are also attested in a very large
number of archaeological excavations in Eastern Europe; these
Iranian peoples are known in the West as Cimmerians, Scythians,
Sarmatians, Alans, and finally Ossets; it must be emphasised that
all these names refer to the successive migratory waves of the same
people, who probably called themselves by a name derived from the
word Airya, as the Alans did, and the Ossets still do.
CIMMERIANS
The earliest recorded nomadic western Iranians are
the Cimmerians; they make their first appearance in Assyrian annals
at the beginning of the 8th century B.C., where they are referred to
as Gimmiri; they came down from modern Ukraine, and conquered
eastern Thrace, and most of modern Turkey, being pushed westwards by
another nomadic Iranian people, the Scythians (see below); they left
behind a wealth of archaeological material, including a vast number
of mound-burials in western Asia Minor; they later allied themselves
with the Medes against the Assyrian Empire; the word GIMMIRI
is attested in the Old Testament (Genesis I.x.12), as GOMER,
the name given to one of Japhet's sons (see below,
Scythian/Ashkenaz).
SCYTHIANS
This is by far the most important, and enduring
designation given by the classical sources to the nomadic Iranians
of the steppes; the name refers to the entire non-sedentary
Iranians, both in the West, and in the East (the Saka). Greek
records place them in southern Russia in the 8th century B.C.,
however, recent archaeological evidence testifies that they,
Cimmerians, and other Steppe Iranians may have been there far
earlier. Greek geographers of the 4th century B.C. also credit the
Scythians with inhabiting the largest part of the known world (map
Red 16).
Like other Iranians, these nomads probably called
themselves by the generic term "Airya"; this is testified inter
alia by the native name of their descendants in the present day
Europe (see below); it seems, however, that they, or at least some
of their powerful clans, also called themselves "SAKA" in the East,
and *SKUنA, SKUDA, or SKUDRA
in the West. SKUDA is believed to be related to the German word
"SACHS", meaning a type of throwing-dagger which the eponymic Saxons
used to carry and shoot with;
indeed, it is possible that like the historical Saxons, the Skuda
derived their name from their ability to shoot. [cf. Franks].
Their first appearance in recorded history is
again in the Assyrian annals, where they chase the Cimmerians, their
own kinsmen, first out of Europe, then out of Asia Minor into the
Median territory; in the 7th century B.C. they allied themselves
with the Assyrians, and attacked the combined forces of the invading
rebellious Median vassal king, Khshathrita (Phraortes in Greek,
Kashtariti in Akkadian) and his Cimmerians allies; the Assyrians
repelled the Medes, killing Phraortes, and routed the Cimmerians;
the real victors, however, were the Scythians; for the next 28
years, now allied with their erstwhile enemy, the Cimmerians, they
ravaged most of the Ancient Near East, including Media; later they
allied themselves with Khshathrita's son, the Median emperor,
Hvakhshathara II (Cyaxares in Greek, Uaksatar II in Akkadian), and
the Babylonian king, Nabopolassar, taking Nineveh in 612 B.C. and
destroying once and for all the mighty Assyrian Empire. (beginning
of the Kurdish calendar)
The Scythians were called by the Assyrians
Ashkuza or Ishkuza (A/Iڑ-k/gu-za-ai); as with the
Gimmiri, this word also appears to have found its way into the Old
Testament; one of Gomer's (Gimmiri) three sons, in Genesis I.x.12,
is called Ashkenaz, which has given us the modern Hebrew word,
Ashkenazi.
The Scythians were known by the Achaemenians, as
SAKA and SKUDRA, by the Greeks, SKغTHIA (سę?čéل), by the Romans,
SCYTHIAE (pron. SKITYAI), which has given us the English word
SCYTHIAN; they lived in a wide area stretching from the south and
west of the River Danube to the eastern and northeastern edges of
the Taklamakan Desert in China; this vast territory includes now
parts of Central Europe, the eastern half of the Balkans, the
Ukraine, northern Caucasus, southern Russia, southern Siberia,
Central Asia and western China.
Physiognomy
We know a great deal about their physical
appearance; they were long-headed giants with blond hair and blue
eyes; this well-known fact is attested by various classical sources
,
and by their skeletal and other remains in numerous archaeological
excavations, which give a fairly detailed description of these
ancient Iranians ;
recently, a large number of their mummified corpses were discovered
in western China; these mummies, which are extremely well-preserved
in the arid conditions of the Taklamakan desert, are now on display
at the museums of khotan, Urumchi, and Turfan in Sinkiang; they are
dressed in Scythian costume, i.e., leather tunic and trousers, and
are usually displayed in the sitting position, exactly as described
by Herodotus; what is extra ordinary apart from their northern
European features, however, is their gigantic heights, well over two
metres as they are now, in spite of the natural shrinkage expected
during the past thousands of years.
Equestrian skill
The Scythians, and other early steppe Iranians are
believed to have been the first Indo-Europeans to use domesticated
horses for riding (as opposed to eating); this theory has acquired
fresh credibility after the recent discovery of horse skeletons at
the Sredny Stog archaeological culture, east of the River
Dniepr, a well-known pre-historical Scythian site in eastern
Ukraine; these bones were identified as belonging to bitted,
therefore, ridden horses dating to 4000 B.C., at least 2500 years
older than the previously known examples.
More recent excavations east of the Ural Mountains
credit them also with the invention of the first two-wheeled chariot
;
such mobility, naturally, turned them into a formidable fighting
force; they never willingly fought on foot, and used armour both for
themselves and their mounts; they also developed the famous steppe
tactic of faked retreat, and the "Parthian shot", shooting backwards
while on mounted retreat; this tactic, named after their well-known
descendants, the Parthians, requires an amazing skill and balance in
the saddle, and a dazzling co-ordination of eyes, arms and breath
without the support of stirrups.
Their women
In this unique pastoralist equestrian warrior
society, women fought alongside their men; not only they were held
in an equal status with men, but also periodically they actually
ruled them;
this so called upside-down society both fascinated
and horrified the male dominated Greek culture; later, the Romans
expressed the same horror, when they encountered the Celtic and
Germanic female warriors. Greek writers called the fighting Iranian
women they met in the Ukrainian steppes, the Amazons; later Greek
sources placed them further east, in northeastern parts of
Iran.
This incredible social equality, at such an early
age, is irrefutably attested, not only by a host of classical
writers, but also by a wealth of archaeological evidence; in many
mound- burials in the former Soviet Union, it is by no means unusual
to find remains of women warriors dressed in full armour, lying on a
war chariot, surrounded by their weaponry, and significantly,
accompanied by a host of male subordinates specially sacrificed in
their honour; nonetheless, these young Iranian warriors, as
evidenced by the archaeological remains of their costumes and
jewellery, do not seem
to have lost their femininity; they remained "feminine as well as
female" as a great contemporary German scholar puts it
.
Archaeological excavations also testify to the
amazing skill of these people in making jewellery; some of the finds
are so dazzling in quality and advanced in technique that it is hard
to imagine that they are produced by an unsettled, nomadic culture;
we are indeed very fortunate that these early steppe Iranians
practised elaborate funerary rituals and interred their treasures
with their dead in huge impregnable burial mounds; hence, the vast
majority of the steppe Iranians' artifacts known to the learned
world is attributed to the Scythians.
SARMATIANS AND ALANS
As it has been emphasised throughout this paper
these two names probably refer to the same people, who, in all
likelihood, called themselves by a name similar to the word Alan.
Herodotus, who has devoted most of his Book IV to
Scythians, is the earliest source on Sarmatians, whom he refers to
as a branch of the Scythians; by the 3rd century B.C., the
Sarmatians (Greek SARMATAI [سلٌىلôله]), had replaced Scythians in
Europe, and settled in western Ukraine, the Danube Valley and
Thrace.
The earliest known reference to the Alans (Greek
ALANOI, Latin ALANI), however, is not until the mid 1st century A.D
;
it appears that by then the Alans, in turn, had taken the place of
the Sarmatians in Eastern Europe; both these Iranian peoples are
frequently mentioned in Greek, Roman, and Byzantine sources as late as the middle of the
fifth century A.D.
Alans, with an identical etymological origin with
the word Iran, are extensively covered, especially by Ammianus
Marcellinus who states inter alia, that "Almost all of the
Alans are tall and good looking, their hair is generally blond" (AM,
XXX,2,21); they
once ruled a vast territory stretching from the
Caucasus to the Danube, but were gradually driven westwards by the
invading Huns; however, unlike their predecessors the Cimmerians,
Scythians and the Sarmatians, the Alans did not vanish from the
history; indeed they settled in the Byzantine Empire and Western
Europe, playing a vital role in the subsequent European affairs;
nonetheless, one finds it very odd that they are not given the full
credit they truly deserve for being an important force in medieval
Europe. Rostovtzeff, the great
Russian expert in Iranians of the steppes, once complained that "In
most of the work on the period of migrations, the part played by the
Sarmatians and especially by the Alans in conquest of Europe is
almost ignored; but we must never forget that the Alans long resided
in Gaul, that they invaded Italy, and that they came with the
Vandals to Spain and conquered North Africa" ;
one can easily sympathise with the frustration of the great Russian
scholar; unlike various German tribes and Slavs and hoards of Huns,
Avars, Magyars and Bulgars, who dominate the historical literature
dealing with the early Middle Ages, the Alans hardly receive a
mention; yet, they were in fact the only non-Germanic people of the
migration period to make important settlements in Western Europe,
and for many years dominated the affairs of the late Roman
Empire.
In 421, soon after their arrival in
Constantinople, the Alan general, Ardaburius (Ardapur), fighting for
the Byzantine emperor Theodosius, defeated the army of the Sasanian
Emperor, Bahram V (Gمr), and took the fortified frontier city of
Nisibus; after several more victorious campaigns in Italy he was
made consul for the year 427; his son, Asp~r (aspwar, Saw~r), in 431
commanded a large army against Vandals and Alans in Africa, and was
made consul for the year 434. Asp~r's son, Ardaburius (named after
his grandfather) was also made consul in 447; in 450 when the
emperor Theodosius II died, Asp~r was offered the imperial throne by
the senate of Constantinople; he declined the throne, but gave it to
his subordinate, Marcian.
In 451 Attila the Hun laid siege to Orleans the
capital city of the Alans in central Gaul; their new king, with the
remarkably Modern Persian name of Sangiban, successfully defended
the city, and with the help of his Roman and Visigoth allies pushed
Attila to Chalons in eastern France; in the famous battle of Chalons
Western Europe was saved from the ravage of the Huns.
From the mid fifth century A.D. onwards, Alans,
now fully Christianised, gradually lost their Iranian language, and
were eventually absorbed into the population of medieval Europe; as
late as 575 one still comes across Iranian names, such as Gersasp in
southern France, and Aspidius (Aspapati, Asppat) in northern Spain,
and of course the word Alan itself, which is still a very popular
name in western Europe.
Alans are credited for importing into western
Europe their steppe tactics of warfare; these include never fighting
on foot out of choice, having armour both for men and their mounts,
and most significantly, the practice of tactical fake retreat; these
Iranian steppe tactics were passed on to the Bretons, Visigoths and
later, to the Normans, who used the fake retreat at many battles
including the Battle of Hastings.
Alans are also credited with teaching western
Europeans the still popular sport of hunting on horseback with
hunting dogs ;
a famous breed of medieval hunting dogs was called
Alan (med. Latin Alanus) which, according to a 19th century
authority on the history and origin of canine breeds, "derived
originally from the Caucasus, whence it accompanied the fierce,
fairhaired, and warlike Alani" ;
the town of Alano in Spain to this day bears two Alan dogs on its
coat of arms.
OSSETS
Fortunately for us, the Huns could not push all
the Alans out of their homeland; their descendants, known as Ossets,
are the only Iranians who still live in Europe; they call their
country "Iron", which is a variation of Alan, Iran, as well as Eran.
Eran was the name of the Iranian Transcaucasia before it was lost to
the Russians in the 19th century and subsequently renamed
Azarbaijan.
Ossets are mostly Christian, speaking Ossetic, or
as they themselves call it "Ironig", or "Ironski", which is
classified as an Eastern Iranian language. Ossetic maintains on the
one hand, some remarkable features of the Gathic Avestan, and
possesses on the other, a number of words, such as, thau
(tauen, to thaw, as in snow) and gau (region, district) which
are remarkably similar to their modern Germanic equivalents.
This modern Iranian nation, still provides a
physical link between the Indo-Europeans of the East, and those of
the West, that is, most people of Europe; such a romantic link, it
will be remembered, had already been established thousands of years
ago by their blond and blue-eyed ancestors.
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