Did the Amazons really exist Adrienne Mayor

Since the time of Homer,

ancient stories told of fierce warriors
dwelling beyond the Mediterranean world,

striking fear into the mightiest
empires of antiquity.

Their exploits were
recounted by many epic poets.

They fought in the legendary Trojan War
and their grand army invaded Athens.

Jason and the Argonauts
passed by their shores,

barely avoiding their deadly arrows.

These formidable fighters faced off
against the greatest champions of myth:

Heracles,

Theseus,

and Achilles.

And every single one
of these warriors was a woman.

The war-loving Amazons,
“the equals of men” in courage and skill,

were familiar to everyone in
ancient Greece.

Amazon battle scenes decorated
the Parthenon on the Athenian Acropolis;

paintings and statues of Amazons
adorned temples and public spaces.

Little girls played with Amazon dolls,

and Amazons were a favorite subject
on Greek vase paintings.

In Greek art and literature,

they were depicted as daring
and desirable,

but also terrifying and deadly,

and doomed to die
at the hands of Greek heroes.

Were Amazons merely figures of myth,
or something more?

It was long assumed
that they were imaginary,

like the cyclops and centaurs.

But curiously enough,
stories from ancient Egypt,

Persia,

the Middle East,

Central Asia,

India,

and China

also featured Amazon-like warrior women.

And Amazons were described in ancient
historical accounts, not just myths.

Writers like Herodotus, Plato,
and Strabo never doubted their existence.

So who were the real women
warriors known as Amazons?

Ancient historians located
the Amazon homeland in Scythia,

the vast territory stretching from

the Black Sea across
the steppes of Central Asia.

This immense region was populated
by nomadic tribes

whose lives centered on horses,

archery,

and warfare.

Their culture flourished for about
1,000 years beginning around 800 BC.

Feared by Greeks, Persians, and
the Chinese, the Scythians left

no written records.
But we can find clues in how

their neighbors described them,
as well as in archaeology.

Scythians' ancestors were
the first to ride horses

and they invented the recurve bow.

And, because a female mounted archer
could be as fast and as deadly as a male,

all children were trained
to ride and shoot.

Women hunted and fought alongside men,
using the same weapons.

The harsh landscape
and their nomadic lifestyle

created its own form of equality.

This amazed the ancient Greeks,
whose women led restricted indoor lives.

The earliest stories of the Scythians,
and Amazons,

may have been exaggerated rumors.

But as the Greeks began to trade around
the Black Sea and further east,

their portrayals became more realistic.

Early depictions of Amazons showed them
with Greek weapons and armor.

But in later representations,

they wielded bows and battle-axes,

rode horses,

and wore pointed caps
and patterned trousers

characteristic of steppe nomads.

Until recently, no one was sure
how strong the links were

between Scythians
and the Amazons of Greek myth.

But recent archaeological discoveries
have provided ample evidence.

More than 1,000 ancient Scythian kurgans,
or burial mounds, have been excavated,

containing skeletons and weapons.

Archaeologists had previously assumed

that weapons could only
belong to male warriors.

But modern DNA analysis so far

has revealed that about 300 skeletons
buried with weapons

belong to females ranging
in age from 10 to 45,

and more are being found every year.

The women’s skeletons
show battle injuries:

ribs slashed by swords,

skulls bashed by battle-axes,

and arrows embedded in bones.

In classical art and writings,

the fearsome Amazons were always portrayed
as brave and heroic.

In male-dominated classical Greece,
however,

the very idea of strong women who gloried
in freedom and war aroused mixed feelings.

And yet, the Greeks were also drawn
to egalitarian ideals.

Is it possible that the mythic realm
of thrilling Amazon tales

was a way to imagine women
and men as equal companions?

自荷马时代以来,

古老的故事讲述了
居住在地中海世界之外的

凶猛战士,使古代最强大的帝国感到恐惧

许多史诗诗人都讲述了他们的事迹。

他们参加了传奇的特洛伊战争
,他们的大军入侵了雅典。

杰森和阿尔戈英雄们
经过他们的海岸,

几乎没有避开他们致命的箭矢。

这些强大的战士面对着
神话中最伟大的冠军:

赫拉克勒斯、

忒修斯

和阿喀琉斯。

这些战士中的每一个都是女人。

热爱战争的亚马逊人,
在勇气和技能上“与人不相上下”,


古希腊人人皆知。

亚马逊的战斗场景装饰
着雅典卫城的帕台农神庙;

亚马逊的绘画和雕像
装饰着寺庙和公共场所。

小女孩玩亚马逊娃娃

,亚马逊是
希腊花瓶画中最喜欢的主题。

在希腊艺术和文学中,

他们被描绘成大胆
而令人向往,

但也令人恐惧和致命

,注定要死
在希腊英雄的手中。

亚马逊仅仅是神话人物,
还是其他?

长期以来
,人们一直认为它们是虚构的,

就像独眼巨人和半人马一样。

但奇怪的是,
来自古埃及、

波斯

、中东、

中亚、

印度

和中国的故事

也以亚马逊般的女战士为主角。

古代历史记载中描述了亚马逊人
,而不仅仅是神话。

希罗多德、柏拉图
和斯特拉博等作家从不怀疑他们的存在。

那么谁是被称为亚马逊的真正女
战士?

古代历史学家
将亚马逊的家园定位在斯基泰,

这是一片

从黑海延伸
到中亚大草原的广阔领土。

这个广阔的地区居住
着游牧部落,

他们的生活以马匹、

射箭

和战争为中心。

他们的文化
从公元前 800 年左右开始繁荣了大约 1000 年。

由于希腊人、波斯人
和中国人的恐惧,斯基泰人

没有留下书面记录。
但我们可以从

他们的邻居如何描述他们
以及考古学中找到线索。

斯基泰人的祖先
是最早骑马的人

,他们发明了反曲弓。

而且,因为女性骑射手
可以像男性一样快速和致命,所以

所有的孩子都接受
了骑马和射击的训练。

女性与男性一起狩猎和战斗,
使用相同的武器。

恶劣的环境
和他们的游牧生活方式

创造了自己的平等形式。

这让古希腊人感到惊讶,
他们的女性过着受限的室内生活。

最早的斯基泰人和亚马逊人的故事

可能是夸大的谣言。

但随着希腊人开始
在黑海和更远的东部进行贸易,

他们的描绘变得更加真实。

亚马逊人的早期描述向他们展示
了希腊的武器和盔甲。

但在后来的表现形式中,

他们挥舞着弓和战斧,

骑着马

,戴着草原游牧民族特有的尖帽
和带图案的裤子

直到最近,没有人确定

斯基泰
人和希腊神话中的亚马逊人之间的联系有多紧密。

但最近的考古
发现提供了充分的证据。 已挖掘出

1000 多座古代斯基泰库尔干人
或墓葬,

其中包含骨骼和武器。

考古学家此前

认为武器只能
属于男性战士。

但迄今为止,现代 DNA 分析

显示,大约 300
具被武器埋葬的骷髅

属于
年龄从 10 岁到 45 岁不等的女性,

而且每年都会发现更多。

女性的骨骼
显示出战伤:

肋骨被剑割伤,

头骨被战斧击中

,箭头嵌入骨头。

在古典艺术和著作中

,可怕的亚马逊人总是被描绘
成勇敢和英勇的。 然而,

在男性主导的古典希腊,

以自由和战争为荣的坚强女性的想法引起了复杂的感情。

然而,希腊人也
被平等主义理想所吸引。 惊心动魄的亚马逊故事

的神话国度有没有可能

是一种将女性
和男性想象成平等伴侣的方式?