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Amazons

Page 26

by John Man

psychological analysis, Kleist’s Penthesilea 186–90

  psychologists, repeating breast myth 47–8

  Purchas, Samuel, on Amazons as fantasy 150

  Qasim, Leyla, Saddam Hussein assassination attempt 266

  Quintus, on Trojan War 11–16

  Racine, Jean, Phèdre 176

  Radloff, Wilhelm (Vasily) 74

  Rakobolskaya, Irina

  on group solidarity 227

  on why no parachutes 224

  Raleigh, Sir Walter, on ‘Amazons’ 149–50

  Rambouillet, Catherine de Vivonne Marquise de, salon 172

  Raphael Santi, The Battle of Constantine Against Maxentius 165

  Raskova, Marina, air navigator 217–25, 229–32

  forms women’s combat aviation unit 219–25, 229–32

  killed en route to Stalingrad 231–2

  Notes of a Navigator 218

  state funeral in Moscow 232

  reality and myth 23–4

  Reformation 160

  Renaissance, and Amazons 124

  Rio Negro 138

  Rodina (Motherland) long-range bomber 217–19

  Rojava (Kurdish Syria)

  Women’s Defence Units (YPJ) 269–72

  Kurds liberate cities 271

  women in academic/public life 272–3

  Romans, and Greek art 25–6

  Rostov, Night Bombers and 225–6

  Rousseau, Jean-Jacques 175

  royal tombs, Uyuk Culture 57–61

  Royal Geographical Society, and Burton 195

  Royal Scythians 32

  Rubens, Peter Paul

  and Alethea Howard 168

  and Brueghel, The Battle of the Amazons 163–5

  as diplomat 165–6

  realism in own Battle of the Amazons 166–8

  engraves/publishes picture 167–8

  Rudenko, Sergei, and Pazyryk valley frozen graves 75–7, 81

  Rudneva, Zhenya 227

  Russell, Lord John 197–8

  Russia

  Bolshevik Revolution 216

  Night Bombers see Night Bombers

  southern

  Alans, as Ossetians 102

  Sarmatians dominate 101

  steppe 26, 32–4, 37, 42, 45, 58, 62, 95, 106, 117

  Night Bombers and 221, 226, 234

  Russian Academy of Sciences 96

  Saddam Hussein 266, 270

  Saka (Sacae) Kazakhstan 53, 100

  kurgans 67–74

  artefacts 69–73

  Sakarya River 11

  Salomatin, Alexei 234, 235

  salons 171–3, 178, 180

  Salsk, Night Bombers at 228

  Sanger, Margaret

  and contraception 244–5, 251

  Woman and the New Race 245, 257

  Sappho of Normandy, Voltaire on du Boccage as 173, 180

  Sappho of Lesbos 180, 204, 246, 257, 259

  Sarmatian people

  and Scythians 93–6

  and Persian invasion 94–6

  artefacts, Pokrovka 97–101

  imported 98–9

  history 93–103

  in Britain as Roman troops 102

  migrations 101–3

  become Alans (Aryans) 101

  push Scythians west 88

  Pokrovka kurgans evidence 96–101

  religion, Pokrovka evidence 100–1

  women, Pokrovka evidence 97–101

  girl with sword 99–100

  mounted archery 100

  religious roles 100–1

  see also Sauromatians

  Sauromatians 25

  early Sarmatians 93–4

  Herodotus on 51

  Hippocrates on 45–6

  see also Sarmatians

  Schiller, Friedrich von, ‘Das Lied von der Glocke’ 184

  Schlegel brothers, Shakespeare translation 182

  Scopasis, Scythian commander, and Persian invasion 94–6

  Scythian world 51–101

  descriptions

  Akkadian records 37

  Altai Mountains, frozen graves 74–7

  Herodotus on 31–7, 46, 51–2

  kurgans see kurgans

  palaeopathology 62–7

  cultures, extent 53–4

  become Hunno-Sarmatians 61

  displace Cimmerians 31, 37

  dynasties 37

  Indo-European languages 54

  merge with Turco-Mongolians 89

  trade routes 54

  Uyuk Culture 57–67

  homeland, extent 31, 32–4

  inner Asia 30–7

  Tuva heartland 56–74

  and Sarmatians 93–6

  Persian invasion 94–6

  attack Persia & Assyrian empire 87–8

  customs/religion

  artefacts 52–3

  bald/shaved/scalped 35, 54n10, 63, 76, 87

  cannibalism, Herodotus on 35

  congenital defects, tolerance 62, 63–7

  embalming, Herodotus on 35–6, 76–7

  gods, Herodotus on 35

  human sacrifice, Herodotus on 35–6

  milk products 34

  saunas 36–7

  wagon homes 34

  women fighters ‘Amazons’, 7–8, 25

  as children, learn to ride and shoot 105

  evidence for 65–7

  not distinct from society 213–14

  see also specific cultures

  Sebrova, Irina 233

  Shakespeare, in German 182

  Shakespeare, William, A Midsummer Night’s Dream 150

  shamans, Altai Republic 83

  Siberia 54

  Minusinsk Hollow kurgans 55–6

  Sinjar, Yazidi (Ezidi) people, IS and 269

  Skliros 17–20

  slave trade, Benin 193, 196, 197, 198, 206

  Slee, J. Noah 245, 246

  Smith, Adam, Wealth of Nations 169

  Solois and Antiope 9

  Southern Front, Night Bombers at 225–8, 229–33

  Soviet women air fighters WWII 216–40

  Spain and Portugal, and Americas 131–2

  Sparta, black (Dahomey) 191–212

  Speke, John Hanning 195

  Spenser, Edmund, The Faerie Queene 150

  spindle whorls, Pokrovka 98–9

  spondylolysis, in women 65

  Squire, Jane, on longitude 179

  St Petersburg, Hermitage Museum 60, 61

  Scythian gold 52

  Stalingrad

  Night Bombers defend 225–8, 229–33

  Germans surrender 233

  Star Trek 156

  Stearns, Katie, and horseback archery 120–1

  Steinem, Gloria 260–1

  stonework, Uyuk Culture 57

  Sturm und Drang movement 181, 183

  submission & dominance/compliance & inducement 246–7

  suffrage movement

  US 244–5

  UK 216

  Superman (Action Comics) xvi, 252

  Syria, Kurds

  Kurdish, Women’s Defence Units (YPJ) 269–73

  Qamishli uprising 270–1

  women, fighting Daesh/IS 263–4, 268–73

  Szegedi, Andrea 107

  Tabiti, Sarmatian/Scythian goddess 101

  Taman Peninsula campaign, Night Bombers shot down at 237–9

  Tanais, Kleist’s version 186

  Tauri Scythians 35

  Tegea, temple 18

  Teixeira, Pedro de 151

  Teletskoye Lake 75

  Termes, modern, Amazon festival 6

  Terracotta Army 99

  Thalestris, Amazon queen and Alexander, Curtius on 39–41

  Thatcher, Margaret, as Amazon 264

  Themiscyra (Termes), Amazon capital 5

  and Alexander the Great 38–42

  Wonder Woman version 256

  Thermodon (Terme) River 5–6

  Amazons 39–42

  Thersites, on Achilles 15

  Theseus, and Amazons 8–10, 42

  and Antiop
e (Amazon) 9

  du Boccage version 174–7

  possibly in Bassae Frieze 22

  Rubens/Brueghel version 164–5

  Thevet, André, Singularities of the French Antarctic 148–9

  Thirty Years’ War 160–3, 165–6, 168

  Thymnes, Scythian agent 32

  Tibetan plateau 32

  Tien Shan 32, 67

  Times, on Kleist/Vogel suicide 189–90

  Timofeyeva, Zhenya, leads Women’s Heavy Bombers 232–3

  Tiryns, walls 3

  titanomachies art theme 16

  Tomyris (Massagetae queen), defeats Persians 38, 42

  Trajan, conquers Alans 102

  Trojan Horse 11

  Troy (Hisarlik), Siege of 3, 10–16

  amazonomachies (‘Amazon battles’) art theme 16–17, 21

  as machismo prop 23–6

  du Boccage, Les Amazones 173–8

  Rubens/Brueghel version 164–5

  Rubens’ own Battle of the Amazons 166–8

  Turco-Mongolians, merge with Scythians 89

  Turkey

  Hittites 3, 5

  horseback archery 121

  Luwians 3

  Turkish government, and Bassae 19–20

  Tuva, Scythian heartland

  kurgans 56–74

  Xiongnu (Hunnu) replace Sarmatians 101

  Tyasmin River kurgan 54

  Tyras Greek colony 55

  Uffington White Horse 85

  Ukok people

  nationalism 82–3

  Plateau 79–88

  archaeologists banned 84

  Princess 72

  grave 79–88

  UNESCO World Heritage List, Ukok 82

  Union of Soviet Socialist Republics

  women air fighters WWII 216–40

  see also Russia

  United States

  Constitution

  19th Amendment 244–5

  Equal Rights Amendment 261

  feminist writings 241–4, 260–1

  Uyuk people

  tombs ‘Valley of the Kings’ 56–67

  Vandals, and Alans 103

  Vershinin, General Konstantin

  on Night Bombers 225

  issues underwear 230–1

  Vespucci, Amerigo, and Brazil 132–3

  Virgil, Aeneid 178

  Vogel, Henriette, suicide with Kleist 189–90

  Völkerwanderung 102

  Voltaire 169, 171

  and du Boccage 173, 178, 180

  denies Amazons 171, 173

  on Les Amazones 177

  Waorani (Huaorani) people, Ecuador 24, 135–6, 144, 215

  Weimar 182

  Wells, H. G., Sanger and 245

  Werther Effect 181

  Westphalia Treaty 168

  Whydah (Ouidah) viceroy 199

  Wilmott, Arthur, on Dahomey women’s army superior to men 193

  Winckelmann, Johann, on art 181

  Woman Rebel (magazine) 244

  women

  and aviation, USSR 216–40

  Greek men threatened by 25

  in French Revolution, Schiller on 184

  in science, Benedict XIV and 178–80

  warriors, kurgans 54–6

  Uyuk Culture 57–61, 65–7

  see also Amazons

  Women’s Battalion of Death (WWI) 216

  Women’s Christian Temperance Union 215–16

  Women’s Defence Units (YPJ), Kurdish Syria 269–73

  Wonder Woman xvi–xvii, 241–2, 253, 255–62

  70s TV series 261

  as role model 261

  bracelets 256, 258

  influence 260–2

  Lasso of Truth 258

  links to classical Greece 255–8

  UN ambassador for the Empowerment of Women and Girls 2016 261

  Woolley, Mary, and suffrage movement 244

  Wytfliet, Cornelius, puts Amazones on map 149

  Xinjiang oasis burials 86

  Yablonsky, Leonid, on Pokrovka kurgans 96–101

  Yak-1 fighter planes 222, 228, 229

  Yakovlev, Alexander, Yak-1 fighter planes 222

  Yanomamö people 145–6

  Yazidi (Ezidi) people, IS and 269

  Yenisei River 61

  Yevdokimov, Sasha 235–6

  Yisungge, flight archery 106

  Yoruba people, Nigeria 193, 206, 207

  Zakynthos 19–20

  Zen archery 111

  Zeus xvi, xviii, 5, 12, 188, 204

  About the Author

  John Man is a historian with a special interest in Asia and the nature of leadership. His books, published in over twenty languages, include bestselling biographies of Genghis Khan, Kublai Khan and Attila the Hun, as well as histories of the Great Wall of China and the Mongol Empire. He is fast becoming one of the world’s most widely read historians.

  Also by John Man

  Gobi

  Atlas of the Year 1000

  Alpha Beta

  The Gutenberg Revolution

  Genghis Khan

  Attila

  Kublai Khan

  The Terracotta Army

  The Great Wall

  The Leadership Secrets of Genghis Khan

  Xanadu

  Samurai

  The Mongol Empire

  Saladin

  TRANSWORLD PUBLISHERS

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  Transworld is part of the Penguin Random House group of companies whose addresses can be found at global.penguinrandomhouse.com

  First published in Great Britain in 2017 by Bantam Press

  an imprint of Transworld Publishers

  Copyright © John Man 2017

  Cover photograph © Getty Images/DeAgostini

  John Man has asserted his right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 to be identified as the author of this work.

  Map here by Liane Payne

  Every effort has been made to obtain the necessary permissions with reference to copyright material, both illustrative and quoted. We apologize for any omissions in this respect and will be pleased to make the appropriate acknowledgements in any future edition.

  A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

  Version 1.0 Epub ISBN 9781473541757

  ISBNs

  9780593077597 (hb)

  9780593077603 (tpb)

  This ebook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorized distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author’s and publisher’s rights and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.

  1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2

  1 A Legend and Its Meaning

  fn1 Luwian was written in both cuneiform, a widely used script invented in what is now Iraq, and hieroglyphic, from Egypt. Both predated Greek alphabetical script by over 3,000 years.

  fn2 Often misspelled ‘Themyscira’, especially online. Its etymology is Themis (with an i), ‘established by custom’, plus ‘cyra’ (with a hard c, as in ‘case’, and a y), which derives from the same root as kyros, ‘lord’. To Greeks, its name suggested it was the nation’s long-established place of government.

  fn3 From the English version, Travels in the Morea, Albania and other parts of the Ottoman Empire, 1813. The French original was published in 1805. Pouqueville had an astonishing life as adventurer, diplomat and scholar. Ex-priest, revolutionary and doctor, he accompanied Napoleon to Egypt in the fight against Nelson’s fleet, negotiated an exchange of prisoners, met Nelson, was captured by pirates, was handed over to Ali Pasha, the Albanian ex-bandit, mass-murderer and torturer who ruled semi-independent Turkey-in-Europe, became his physician, won enough freedom to explor
e the area (hence his book and this quote), spent two years in prison in a plague-ridden Constantinople, kept a secret journal in code, was again granted freedom for his skills as a doctor, studied and later wrote about the plague, won fame and fortune with an autobiography, served as France’s envoy to Ali Pasha, researched the archaeology of Greece, became a passionate advocate of all things Greek, wrote up his travels and researches in six meticulous volumes, and became an established figure in Parisian salons – and all this before his death at 68, in 1838.

  fn4 William Bell Dinsmoor, ‘The Temple of Apollo at Bassae’, Metropolitan Museum Studies, Vol. 4, No. 2 (March 1933), pp. 204–27.

  2 Close Encounters of the Scythian Kind

  fn1 Olbia lasted another 500 years, in steady decline, before it was ruined by one of the Scythians’ barbarian successors, the Goths.

  fn2 Herodotus mentions a spirit-wine called aschy, which he says is made of fruit mixed with milk. The word is similar to the modern Mongolian arkhi, which is distilled alcoholic drink of any sort.

  fn3 ‘The aromatic root of certain East Indian plants of the genera Alpinia and Kaempferia, formerly much used in medicine and cookery’ (Oxford English Dictionary). These are types of ginger, mostly found in south-east Asia. Hints here of extensive trading and expertise.

  3 A Short Chapter on Breasts

  fn1 Gail Kern Paster, The Body Embarrassed: Drama and the Disciplines of Shame in Early Modern England, Cornell, 1993, p. 238.

  fn2 Simon Richter, Missing the Breast: Gender, Fantasy and the Body in the German Enlightenment, University of Washington Press, 2006, p. 35.

  4 Treasures in Bone and Gold

  fn1 We’re getting into worlds of rumour again. Supposedly the Argippaei were all bald, lived under cherry trees, and were peaceful people ‘protected by a special sort of sanctity’.

  fn2 Valeri Guliaev. See Bibliography.

  fn3 The Pole of Inaccessibility – the point furthest from any coastline – is actually 700 kilometres to the south-west, in China.

  fn4 The finds have been meticulously recorded in a superb 500-page book kindly sent to me by Hermann Parzinger, from Germany. See Čugunov, Parzinger and Nagler in Bibliography for details.

  fn5 Details from ‘Masters of Gold’, National Geographic, June 2003.

  fn6 Murphy lists the names in a meticulous 242-page monograph. Her findings are summarized in my other references.

  fn7 Warrior Women, page 101. See Bibliography.

  fn8 Traditional tall hats are still worn. In Mongolia, they are known as bocht, and are made like the Issyk one, with felt over a wooden frame. Kublai Khan’s wife Chabui was portrayed in one in the thirteenth century. They haven’t changed much in 700 years.

  fn9 His classic book, Frozen Tombs of Siberia, appeared in Russian in 1953 and in English in 1970.

 

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