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+ PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd" >
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+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=UTF-8" />
+ <title>
+ The Seven Great Monarchies, by George Rawlinson, The Third Monarchy
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
+ body { margin:5%; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 2em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
+ H1,H2,H3,H4,H5,H6 { text-align: center; margin-left: 15%; margin-right: 15%; }
+ hr { width: 50%; text-align: center;}
+ .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; }
+ blockquote {font-size: 97%; font-style: italic; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;}
+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 20%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 25%;}
+ div.fig { display:block; margin:0 auto; text-align:center; }
+ pre { font-family: Times; font-style: italic; font-size: 90%; margin-left: 10%;}
+
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+ </head>
+ <body>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Seven Great Monarchies Of The Ancient
+Eastern World, Vol 3. (of 7): Media, by George Rawlinson
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Seven Great Monarchies Of The Ancient Eastern World, Vol 3. (of 7): Media
+ The History, Geography, And Antiquities Of Chaldaea,
+ Assyria, Babylon, Media, Persia, Parthia, And Sassanian
+ or New Persian Empire; With Maps and Illustrations.
+
+Author: George Rawlinson
+
+Illustrator: George Rawlinson
+
+Release Date: July 1, 2005 [EBook #16163]
+Last Updated: September 6, 2016
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SEVEN GREAT MONARCHIES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ THE SEVEN GREAT MONARCHIES
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ OF THE ANCIENT EASTERN WORLD; OR, THE HISTORY, GEOGRAPHY, AND ANTIQUITIES
+ OF CHALDAEA, ASSYRIA BABYLON, MEDIA, PERSIA, PARTHIA, AND SASSANIAN, OR
+ NEW PERSIAN EMPIRE. <b> BY </b> <b> GEORGE RAWLINSON, M.A., </b> CAMDEN
+ PROFESSOR OF ANCIENT HISTORY IN THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD IN THREE VOLUMES.
+ VOLUME II. WITH MAPS AND ILLUSTRATIONS <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <h2>
+ CONTENTS
+ </h2>
+ <p><a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I.</a> &nbsp;&nbsp;DESCRIPTION OF THE
+ COUNTRY.</p>
+
+ <p><a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II.</a> &nbsp;&nbsp;CLIMATE
+ AND PRODUCTIONS.</p>
+
+ <p><a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III.</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ CHARACTER, MANNERS AND CUSTOMS.</p>
+
+ <p><a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV.</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;RELIGION.</p>
+
+ <p><a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V.</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;LANGUAGE AND WRITING.</p>
+
+ <p><a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI.</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;CHRONOLOGY AND HISTORY.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ List of Illustrations
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#linkimage-0001"> Map </a><br /> <a href="#linkimage-0002">
+ Plate I. </a><br /> <a href="#linkimage-0003"> Plate II. </a><br /> <a
+ href="#linkimage-0004"> Plate III. </a><br /> <a href="#linkimage-0005">
+ Plate IV. </a><br /> <a href="#linkimage-0006"> Plate V. </a><br /> <a
+ href="#linkimage-0007"> Plate VI. </a><br /> <a href="#linkimage-0008">
+ Plate VII. </a>
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE THIRD MONARCHY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ MEDIA.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="linkimage-0001" id="linkimage-0001">
+ <!-- IMG --></a> <a href="images/map_vol2a.jpg">ENLARGE TO FULL SIZE</a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img alt="map_vol2b (129K)" src="images/map_vol2b.jpg" width="100%" />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a> <br /> <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I. DESCRIPTION OF THE COUNTRY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Along the eastern flank of the great Mesopotamian lowland, curving round
+ it on the north, and stretching beyond it to the south and the south-east,
+ lies a vast elevated region, or highland, no portion of which appears to
+ be less than 3000 feet above the sea-level. This region may be divided,
+ broadly, into two tracts, one consisting of lofty mountainous ridges,
+ which form its outskirts on the north and on the west; the other, in the
+ main a high flat table-land, extending from the foot of the mountain
+ chains, southward to the Indian Ocean, and eastward to the country of the
+ Afghans. The western mountain-country consists, as has been already
+ observed, of six or seven parallel ridges, having a direction nearly from
+ the north-west to the south-east, enclosing between them, valleys of great
+ fertility, and well watered by a large number of plentiful and refreshing
+ streams. This district was known to the ancients as Zagros, while in
+ modern geography it bears the names of Kurdistan and Luristan. It has
+ always been inhabited by a multitude of warlike tribes, and has rarely
+ formed for any long period a portion of any settled monarchy. Full of
+ torrents, of deep ravines, or rocky summits, abrupt and almost
+ inaccessible; containing but few passes, and those narrow and easily
+ defensible; secure, moreover, owing to the rigor of its climate, from
+ hostile invasion during more than half the year; it has defied all
+ attempts to effect its permanent subjugation, whether made by Assyrians,
+ Persians, Greeks, Parthians, or Turks, and remains to this day as
+ independent of the great powers in its neighborhood as it was when the
+ Assyrian armies first penetrated its recesses. Nature seems to have
+ constructed it to be a nursery of hardy and vigorous men, a
+ stumbling-block to conquerors, a thorn in the side of every powerful
+ empire which arises in this part of the great eastern continent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The northern mountain country&mdash;known to modern geographers as Eiburz&mdash;is
+ a tract of far less importance. It is not composed, like Zagros, of a
+ number of parallel chains, but consists of a single lofty ridge, furrowed
+ by ravines and valleys, from which spurs are thrown out, running in
+ general at right angles to its axis. Its width is comparatively slight;
+ and instead of giving birth to numerous large rivers, it forms only a
+ small number of insignificant streams, often dry in summer, which have
+ short courses, being soon absorbed either by the Caspian or the Desert.
+ Its most striking feature is the snowy peak of Demavend, which impends
+ over Teheran, and appears to be the highest summit in the part of Asia
+ west of the Himalayas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The elevated plateau which stretches from the foot of those two mountain
+ regions to the south and east is, for the most part, a flat sandy desert,
+ incapable of sustaining more than a sparse and scanty population. The
+ northern and western portions are, however, less arid than the east and
+ south, being watered to some distance by the streams that descend from
+ Zagros and Elburz, and deriving fertility also from the spring rains. Some
+ of the rivers which flow from Zagros on this side are large and strong.
+ One, the Kizil-Uzen, reaches the Caspian. Another, the Zenderud,
+ fertilizes a large district near Isfahan. A third, the Bendamir, flows by
+ Persepolis and terminates in a sheet of water of some size&mdash;lake
+ Bakhtigan. A tract thus intervenes between the mountain regions and the
+ desert which, though it cannot be called fertile, is fairly productive,
+ and can support a large settled population. This forms the chief portion
+ of the region which the ancients called Media, as being the country
+ inhabited by the race on whose history we are about to enter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Media, however, included, besides this, another tract of considerable size
+ and importance. At the north-western angle of the region above described,
+ in the corner whence the two great chains branch out to the south and to
+ the east, is a tract composed almost entirely of mountains, which the
+ Greeks called Atropatene, and which is now known as Azerbijan. This
+ district lies further to the north than the rest of Media, being in the
+ same parallels with the lower part of the Caspian Sea. It comprises the
+ entire basin of Lake Urumiyeh, together with the country intervening
+ between that basin and the high mountain chain which curves round the
+ south-western corner of the Caspian, It is a region generally somewhat
+ sterile, but containing a certain quantity of very, fertile territory,
+ more particularly in the Urumiyeh basin, and towards the mouth of the
+ river Araxes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boundaries of Media are given somewhat differently by different
+ writers, and no doubt they actually varied at different periods; but the
+ variations were not great, and the natural limits, on three sides at any
+ rate, may be laid down with tolerable precision. Towards the north the
+ boundary was at first the mountain chain closing in on that side the
+ Urumiyeh basin, after which it seems to have been held that the true limit
+ was the Araxes, to its entrance on the low country, and then the mountain
+ chain west and south of the Caspian. Westward, the line of demarcation may
+ be best regarded as, towards the south, running along the centre of the
+ Zagros region; and, above this, as formed by that continuation of the
+ Zagros chain which separates the Urumiyeh from the Van basin. Eastward,
+ the boundary was marked by the spur from the Elburz, across which lay the
+ pass known as the Pylse Caspise, and below this by the great salt desert,
+ whose western limit is nearly in the same longitude. Towards the south
+ there was no marked line or natural boundary; and it is difficult to say
+ with any exactness how much of the great plateau belonged to Media and how
+ much to Persia. Having regard, however, to the situation of Hamadan,
+ which, as the capital, should have been tolerably central, and to the
+ general account which historians and geographers give of the size of
+ Media, we may place the southern limit with much probability about the
+ line of the thirty-second parallel, which is nearly the present boundary
+ between Irak and Fars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The shape of Media has been called a square; but it is rather a long
+ parallelogram, whose two principal sides face respectively the north-east
+ and the south-west, while the ends or shorter sides front to the
+ south-east and to the northwest. Its length in its greater direction is
+ about 600 miles, and its width about 250 miles. It must thus contain
+ nearly 150,000 square miles, an area considerably larger than that of
+ Assyria and Chaldaea put together, and quite sufficient to constitute a
+ state of the first class, even according to the ideas of modern Europe. It
+ is nearly one-fifth more than the area of the British Islands, and half as
+ much again as that of Prussia, or of peninsular Italy. It equals three
+ fourths of France, or three fifths of Germany. It has, moreover, the great
+ advantage of compactness, forming a single solid mass, with no straggling
+ or outlying portions; and it is strongly defended on almost every side by
+ natural barriers offering great difficulties to an invader.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In comparison with the countries which formed the seats of the two
+ monarchies already described, the general character of the Median
+ territory is undoubtedly one of sterility. The high table-land is
+ everywhere intersected by rocky ranges, spurs from Zagros, which have a
+ general direction from west to east, and separate the country into a
+ number of parallel broad valleys, or long plains, opening out into the
+ desert. The appearance of these ranges is almost everywhere bare, arid,
+ and forbidding. Above, they present to the eye huge masses of gray rock
+ piled one upon another; below, a slope of detritus, destitute of trees or
+ shrubs, and only occasionally nourishing a dry and scanty herbage. The
+ appearance of the plains is little superior; they are flat and without
+ undulations, composed in general of gravel or hard clay, and rarely
+ enlivened by any show of water; except for two months in the spring, they
+ exhibit to the eye a uniform brown expanse, almost treeless, which
+ impresses the traveller with a feeling of sadness and weariness. Even in
+ Azerbijan, which is one of the least arid portions of the territory, vast
+ tracks consist of open undulating downs, desolate and sterile, bearing
+ only a coarse withered grass and a few stunted bushes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still there are considerable exceptions to this general aspect of
+ desolation. In the worst parts of the region there is a time after the
+ spring rains when nature puts on a holiday dress, and the country becomes
+ gay and cheerful. The slopes at the base of the rocky ranges are tinged
+ with an emerald green: a richer vegetation springs up over the plains,
+ which are covered with a fine herbage or with a variety of crops; the
+ fruit trees which surround the villages burst out into the most luxuriant
+ blossom; the roses come into bloom, and their perfume everywhere fills the
+ air. For the two months of April and May the whole face of the country is
+ changed, and a lovely verdure replaces the ordinary dull sterility.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a certain number of more favored spots beauty and fertility are found
+ during nearly the whole of the year. All round the shores of Lake
+ Urumiyeh, more especially in the rich plain of Miyandab at its southern
+ extremity, along the valleys of the Aras, the Kizil-uzen, and the Jaghetu,
+ in the great valley of Linjan, fertilized by irrigation from the Zenderud,
+ in the Zagros valleys, and in various other places, there is an excellent
+ soil which produces abundantly with very slight cultivation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The general sterility of Media arises from the scantiness of the water
+ supply. It has but few rivers, and the streams that it possesses run for
+ the most part in deep and narrow valleys sunk below the general level of
+ the country, so that they cannot be applied at all widely to purposes of
+ irrigation. Moreover, some of them are, unfortunately, impregnated with
+ salt to such an extent that they are altogether useless for this purpose;
+ and indeed, instead of fertilizing, spread around them desolation and
+ barrenness. The only Median streams which are of sufficient importance to
+ require description are the Aras, the Kizil-Uzen, the Jaghetu, the Aji-Su
+ and the Zenderud, or river of Isfahan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Aras is only very partially a Median stream. It rises from several
+ sources in the mountain tract between Kars and Erzeroum, and runs with a
+ generally eastern direction through Armenia to the longitude of Mount
+ Ararat, where it crosses the fortieth parallel and begins to trend
+ southward, flowing along the eastern side of Ararat in a south-easterly
+ direction, nearly to the Julfa ferry on the high road from Erivan to
+ Tabriz. From this point it runs only a little south of east to long. 46°
+ 30&rsquo; E. from Greenwich, when it makes almost a right angle and runs
+ directly north-east to its junction with the Kur at Djavat. Soon after
+ this it curves to the south, and enters the Caspian by several mouths in
+ lat. 39° 10&rsquo; nearly. The Aras is a considerable stream almost from its
+ source. At Hassan-Kaleh, less than twenty miles from Erzeroum, where the
+ river is forded in several branches, the water reaches to the
+ saddle-girths. At Keupri-Kieui, not much lower, the stream is crossed by a
+ bridge of seven arches. At the Julfa ferry it is fifty yards wide, and
+ runs with a strong current. At Megree, thirty miles further down, its
+ width is eighty yards. In spring and early summer the stream receives
+ enormous accessions from the spring rains and the melting of the snows,
+ which produce floods that often cause great damage to the lands and
+ villages along the valley. Hence the difficulty of maintaining bridges
+ over the Aras, which was noted as early as the time of Augustus, and is
+ attested by the ruins of many such structures remaining along its course.
+ Still, there are at the present day at least three bridges over the stream&mdash;one,
+ which has been already mentioned, at Keupri-Kieui, another a little above
+ Nakshivan, and the third at Khudoperinski, a little below Megree. The
+ length of the Aras, including only main windings, is 500 miles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Kizil-Uzen, or (as it is called in the lower part of its course) the
+ Sefid-Rud, is a stream of less size than the Aras, but more important to
+ Media, within which lies almost the whole of its basin. It drains a tract
+ of 180 miles long by 150 broad before bursting through the Elburz mountain
+ chain, and descending upon the low country which skirts the Caspian.
+ Rising in Persian Kurdistan almost from the foot of Zagros, it runs in a
+ meandering course with a general direction of north-east through that
+ province into the district of Khamseh, where it suddenly sweeps round and
+ flows in a bold curve at the foot of lofty and precipitous rocks, first
+ northwest and then north, nearly to Miana, when it doubles back upon
+ itself, and turning the flank of the Zenjan range runs with a course
+ nearly south-east to Menjil, after which it resumes its original direction
+ of north-east, and, rushing down the pass of Budbar, crosses Ghilan to the
+ Caspian. Though its source is in direct distance no more than 320 miles
+ from its mouth, its entire length, owing to its numerous curves and
+ meanders, is estimated at 490 miles. It is a considerable stream, forded
+ with difficulty, even in the dry season, as high up as Karagul, and
+ crossed by a bridge of three wide arches before its junction with the
+ Garongu river near Miana. In spring and early summer it is an impetuous
+ torrent, and can only be forded within a short distance of its source.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Jaghetu and the Aji-Su are the two chief rivers of the Urumiyeh basin.
+ The Jaghetu rises from the foot of the Zagros chain, at a very little
+ distance from the source of the Kizil-Uzen. It collects the streams from
+ the range of hills which divides the Kizil-Uzen basin from that of Lake
+ Urumiyeh, and flows in a tolerably straight course first north and then
+ north-west to the south-eastern shore of the lake. Side by side with it
+ for some distance flows the smaller stream of the Tatau, formed by
+ torrents from Zagros; and between them, towards their mouths, is the rich
+ plain of Miyandab, easily irrigated from the two streams, the level of
+ whose beds is above that of the plain, and abundantly productive even
+ under the present system of cultivation. The Aji-Su reaches the lake from
+ the north-east. It rises from Mount Sevilan, within sixty miles of the
+ Caspian, and flows with a course which is at first nearly due south, then
+ north-west, and finally south-west, past the city of Tabriz, to the
+ eastern shore of the lake, which it enters in lat. 37° 50&rsquo;. The waters of
+ the Aji-Su are, unfortunately, salt, and it is therefore valueless for
+ purposes of irrigation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Zenderud or river of Isfahan rises from the eastern flank of the
+ Kuh-i-Zerd (Yellow Mountain), a portion of the Bakhti-yari chain, and,
+ receiving a number of tributaries from the same mountain district, flows
+ with a course which is generally east or somewhat north of east, past the
+ great city of Isfahan&mdash;so long the capital of Persia&mdash;into the
+ desert country beyond, where it is absorbed in irrigation. Its entire
+ course is perhaps not more than 120 or 130 miles; but running chiefly
+ through a plain region, and being naturally a stream of large size, it is
+ among the most valuable of the Median rivers, its waters being capable of
+ spreading fertility, by means of a proper arrangement of canals, over a
+ vast extent of country, and giving to this part of Iran a sylvan
+ character, scarcely found elsewhere on the plateau.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It will be observed that of these streams there is not one which reaches
+ the ocean. All the rivers of the great Iranic plateau terminate in lakes
+ or inland seas, or else lose themselves in the desert. In general the
+ thirsty sand absorbs, within a short distance of their source, the various
+ brooks and streams which flow south and east into the desert from the
+ northern and western mountain chains, without allowing them to collect
+ into rivers or to carry fertility far into the plain region. The the river
+ of Isfahan forms the only exception to this rule within the limits of the
+ ancient Media. All its other important streams, as has been seen, flow
+ either into the Caspian or into the great lake of Urumiyeh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That lake itself now requires our attention. It is an oblong basin,
+ stretching in its greater direction from N.N.W. to S.S. E., a distance of
+ above eighty miles, with an average width of about twenty-five miles. On
+ its eastern side a remarkable peninsula, projecting far into its waters,
+ divides it into two portions of very unequal size&mdash;a northern and a
+ southern.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The southern one, which is the largest of the two, is diversified towards
+ its centre by a group of islands, some of which are of a considerable
+ size. The lake, like others in this part of Asia, is several thousand feet
+ above the sea level. Its waters are heavily impregnated with salt,
+ resembling those of the Dead Sea. No fish can live in them. When a storm
+ sweeps over their surface it only raises the waves a few feet; and no
+ sooner is it passed than they rapidly subside again into a deep, heavy,
+ death-like sleep. The lake is shallow, nowhere exceeding four fathoms, and
+ averaging about two fathoms&mdash;a depth which, however, is rarely
+ attained within two miles of the land. The water is pellucid. To the eye
+ it has the deep blue color of some of the northern Italian lakes, whence
+ it was called by the Armenians the Kapotan Zow or &ldquo;Blue Sea.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to the Armenian geography, Media contained eleven districts;
+ Ptolemy makes the number eight; but the classical geographers in general
+ are contented with the twofold division already indicated, and recognized
+ at the constituent parts of Media only Atropatene (now Azerbijan) and
+ Media Magna, a tract which nearly corresponds with the two provinces of
+ Irak Ajemj and Ardelan. Of the minor subdivisions there are but two or
+ three which seem to deserve any special notice. One of these is Ehagiana,
+ or the tract skirting the Elburz Mountains from the vicinity of the
+ Kizil-Uzen (or Sefid-Eud) to the Caspian Gates, a long and narrow slip,
+ fairly productive, but excessively hot in summer, which took its name from
+ the important city of Rhages. Another is Nissea, a name which the Medes
+ seem to have carried with them from their early eastern abodes, and to
+ have applied to some high upland plains west of the main chain of Zagros,
+ which were peculiarly favorable to the breeding of horses. As Alexander
+ visited these pastures on his way from Susa to Ecbatana, they must
+ necessarily have lain to the south of the latter city. Most probably they
+ are to be identified with the modern plains of Kbawah and Alishtar,
+ between Behistun and Khorramabad, which are even now considered to afford
+ the best summer pasturage in Persia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is uncertain whether any of these divisions were known in the time of
+ the great Median Empire. They are not constituted in any case by marked
+ natural lines or features. On the whole it is perhaps most probable that
+ the main division&mdash;that into Media Magna and Media Atropatene&mdash;was
+ ancient, Astro-patene being the old home of the Medes, and Media Magna a
+ later conquest; but the early political geography of the country is too
+ obscure to justify us in laying down even this as certain. The minor
+ political divisions are still less distinguishable in the darkness of
+ those ancient times.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the consideration of the districts which composed the Median
+ territory, we may pass to that of their principal cities, some of which
+ deservedly obtained a very great celebrity. Tho most important of all were
+ the two Ecbatanas&mdash;the northern and the southern&mdash;which seem to
+ have stood respectively in the position of metropolis to the northern and
+ the southern province. Next to these may be named Rhages, which was
+ probably from early times a very considerable place; while in the third
+ rank may be mentioned Bagistan&mdash;rather perhaps a palace than a town&mdash;Concobar,
+ Adrapan, Aspadan, Charax, Kudrus, Hyspaostes, Urakagabarna, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The southern Ecbatana or Agbatana&mdash;which the Medes and Persians
+ themselves knew as Hagmatan&mdash;was situated, as we learn from Polybius
+ and Diodorus, on a plan at the foot of Mont Orontes, a little to the east
+ of the Zagros range. The notices of these authors, combined with those of
+ Eratosthenes, Isidore, Pliny, Arrian, and others, render it as nearly
+ certain as possible that the site was that of the modern town of Hamadan,
+ the name of which is clearly but a slight corruption of the true ancient
+ appellation. <a href="#linkimage-0002">[PLATE I., Fig. 2.]</a> Mount
+ Orontes is to be recognized in the modern Elwend or Erwend&mdash;a word
+ etymologically identical with <i>Oront-es</i>&mdash;which is a long and
+ lofty mountains standing out like a buttress from the Zagros range, with
+ which it is connected towards the north-west, while on every other side it
+ stands isolated, sweeping boldly down upon the flat country at its base.
+ Copious streams descend from the mountain on every side, more particularly
+ to the north-east, where the plain is covered with a carpet of the most
+ luxuriant verdure, diversified with rills, and ornamented with numerous
+ groves of large and handsome forest trees. It is here, on ground sloping
+ slightly away from the roots of the mountain, that the modern town, which
+ lies directly at its foot, is built. The ancient city, if we may believe
+ Diodorus, did not approach the mountain within a mile or a mile and a
+ half. At any rate, if it began where Hamadan now stands, it most certainly
+ extended very much further into the plain. We need not suppose indeed that
+ it had the circumference, or even half the circumference, which the
+ Sicilian romancer assigns to it, since his two hundred and fifty stades
+ would give a probable area of fifty square miles, more than double that of
+ London! Ecbatana is not likely to have been at its most flourishing period
+ a larger city than Nineveh; and we have already seen that Nineveh covered
+ a space, within the walls, of not more than 1800 English acres.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0002" id="linkimage-0002">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/plate001.jpg" width="100%" alt="Plate I. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The character of the city and of its chief edifices has, unfortunately, to
+ be gathered almost entirely from unsatisfactory authorities. Hitherto it
+ has been found possible in these volumes to check and correct the
+ statements of ancient writers, which are almost always exaggerated, by an
+ appeal to the incontrovertible evidence of modern surveys and
+ explorations. But the Median capital has never yet attracted a scientific
+ expedition. The travellers by whom it has been visited have reported so
+ unfavorably of its character as a field of antiquarian research that
+ scarcely a spadeful of soil has been dug, either in the city or in its
+ vicinity, with a view to recover traces of the ancient buildings. Scarcely
+ any remains of antiquity are apparent. As the site has never been
+ deserted, and the town has thus been subjected for nearly twenty-two
+ centuries to the destructive ravages of foreign conquerors, and the still
+ more injurious plunderings of native builders, anxious to obtain materials
+ for new edifices at the least possible cost and trouble, the ancient
+ structures have everywhere disappeared from sight, and are not even
+ indicated by mounds of a sufficient size to attract the attention of
+ common observers. Scientific explorers have consequently been deterred
+ from turning their energies in this direction; more promising sites have
+ offered and still offer themselves; and it is as yet uncertain whether the
+ plan of the old town might not be traced and the position of its chief
+ edifices fixed by the means of careful researches conducted by fully
+ competent persons. In this dearth of modern materials we have to depend
+ entirely upon the classical writers, who are rarely trustworthy in their
+ descriptions or measurements, and who, in this instance, labor under the
+ peculiar disadvantage of being mere reporters of the accounts given by
+ others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ecbatana was chiefly celebrated for the magnificence of its palace, a
+ structure ascribed by Diodorus to Semiramis, but most probably constructed
+ originally by Cyaxares, and improved, enlarged, and embellished by the
+ Achaemenian monarchs. According to the judicious and moderate Polybius,
+ who prefaces his account by a protest against exaggeration and
+ over-coloring, the circumference of the building was seven stades, or 1420
+ yards, somewhat more than four fifths of an English mile. This size, which
+ a little exceeds that of the palace mound at Susa, while it is in its turn
+ a little exceeded by the palatial platform at Persepolis, may well be
+ accepted as probably close to the truth. Judging, however, from the
+ analogy of the above-mentioned palaces, we must conclude that the area
+ thus assigned to the royal residence was far from being entirely covered
+ with buildings. One half of the space, perhaps more, would be occupied by
+ large open courts, paved probably with marble, surrounding the various
+ blocks of buildings and separating them from one another. The buildings
+ themselves may be conjectured to have resembled those of the Achaemenian
+ monarchs at Susa and Persepolis, with the exception, apparently, that the
+ pillars, which formed their most striking characteristic, were for the
+ most part of wood rather than o£ stone. Polybius distinguishes the pillars
+ into two classes, those of the main buildings, and those which skirted the
+ courts, from which it would appear that at Ecbatana the courts were
+ surrounded by colonnades, as they were commonly in Greek and Roman houses.
+ These wooden pillars, all either of cedar or of cypress, supported beams
+ of a similar material, which crossed each other at right angles, leaving
+ square spaces between, which were then filled in with woodwork. Above the
+ whole a roof was placed, sloping at an angle, and composed (as we are
+ told) of silver plates in the shape of tiles. The pillars, beams, and the
+ rest of the woodwork were likewise coated with thin laminse of the
+ precious metals, even gold being used for this purpose to a certain
+ extent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such seems to have been the character of the true ancient Median palace,
+ which served probably as a model to Darius and Xerxes when they designed
+ their great palatial edifices at the more southern capitals. In the
+ additions which the palace received under the Achaemenian kings, stone
+ pillars may have been introduced; and hence probably the broken shafts and
+ bases, so nearly resembling the Persepolitan, one of which Sir E. Ker
+ Porter saw in the immediate neighborhood of Hamadan on his visit to that
+ place in 1818. <a href="#linkimage-0002">[PLATE I., Fig. 1.]</a> But to
+ judge from the description of Polybius, an older and ruder style of
+ architecture prevailed in the main building, which depended for its effect
+ not on the beauty of architectural forms, but on the richness and
+ costliness of the material. A pillar architecture, so far as appears,
+ began in this part of Asia with the Medes, who, however, were content to
+ use the more readily obtained and more easily worked material of wood;
+ while the Persians afterwards conceived the idea of substituting for these
+ inartificial props the slender and elegant stone shafts which formed the
+ glory of their grand edifices.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At a short distance from the palace was the &ldquo;Acra,&rdquo; or citadel, an
+ artificial structure, if we may believe Polybius, and a place of very
+ remarkable strength. Here probably was the treasury, from which Darius
+ Codomanus carried off 7000 talents of silver, when he fled towards Bactria
+ for fear of Alexander. And here, too, may have been the Record Office, in
+ which were deposited the royal decrees and other public documents under
+ the earlier Persian kings. Some travellers are of opinion that a portion
+ of the ancient structure still exists; and there is certainly a ruin on
+ the outskirts of the modern town towards the south, which is known to the
+ natives as &ldquo;the inner fortress,&rdquo; and which may not improbably occupy some
+ portion of the site whereon the original citadel stood. But the remains of
+ building which now exist are certainly not of an earlier date than the era
+ of Parthian supremacy, and they can therefore throw no light on the
+ character of the old Median stronghold. It may be thought perhaps that the
+ description which Herodotus gives of the building called by him &ldquo;the
+ palace of Deioces&rdquo; should be here applied, and that by its means we might
+ obtain an exact notion of the original structure. But the account of this
+ author is wholly at variance with the natural features of the
+ neighborhood, where there is no such conical hill as he describes, but
+ only a plain surrounded by mountains. It seems, therefore, to be certain
+ that either his description is a pure myth, or that it applies to another
+ city, the Ecbatana of the northern province. It is doubtful whether the
+ Median capital was at any time surrounded with walls. Polybius expressly
+ declares that it was an unwalled place in his day and there is some reason
+ to suspect that it had always been in this condition. The Medes and
+ Persians appear to have been in general content to establish in each town
+ a fortified citadel or stronghold, round which the houses were clustered,
+ without superadding the further defence of a town wall. Ecbatana
+ accordingly seems never to have stood a siege. When the nation which held
+ it was defeated in the open field, the city (unlike Babylon and Nineveh)
+ submitted to the conqueror without a struggle. Thus the marvellous
+ description in the book of Judith, which is internally very improbable,
+ would appear to be entirely destitute of any, even the slightest,
+ foundation in fact.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chief city of northern Media, which bore in later times the names of
+ Gaza, Gazaca, or Canzaca, is thought to have also been called Ecbatana,
+ and to have been occasionally mistaken by the Greeks for the southern or
+ real capital. The description of Herodotus, which is irreconcilably at
+ variance with the local features of the Hamadan site, accords sufficiently
+ with the existing remains of a considerable city in the province of
+ Azerbijan; and it seems certainly to have been a city in these parts which
+ was called by Moses of Chorene &ldquo;the second Ecbatana, the seven-walled
+ town.&rdquo; The peculiarity of this place was its situation on and about a
+ conical hill which sloped gently down from its summit to its base, and
+ allowed of the interposition of seven circuits of wall between the plain
+ and the hill&rsquo;s crest. At the top of the hill, within the innermost circle
+ of the defences, were the Royal Palace and the treasuries; the sides of
+ the hill were occupied solely by the fortifications; and at the base,
+ outside the circuit of the outermost wall, were the domestic and other
+ buildings which constituted the town. According to the information
+ received by Herodotus, the battlements which crowned the walls were
+ variously colored. Those of the outer circle were white, of the next
+ black, of the third scarlet, of the fourth blue, of the fifth orange, of
+ the sixth silver, and of the seventh gold. A pleasing or at any rate a
+ striking effect was thus produced&mdash;the citadel, which towered above
+ the town, presenting to the eye seven distinct rows of colors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If there was really a northern as well as a southern Ecbatana, and if the
+ account of Herodotus, which cannot possibly apply to the southern capital,
+ may be regarded as truly describing the great city of the north, we may
+ with much probability fix the site of the northern town at the modern
+ Takht-i-Suleiman, in the upper valley of the Saruk, a tributary of the
+ Jaghetu. <a href="#linkimage-0002">[PLATE I., Fig. 3.]</a> Here alone in
+ northern Media are there important ruins occupying such a position as that
+ which Herodotus describes. Near the head of a valley in which runs the
+ main branch of the Saruk, at the edge of the hills which skirt it to the
+ north, there stands a conical mound projecting into the vale and rising
+ above its surface to the height of 150 feet. The geological formation of
+ the mound is curious in the extreme. It seems to owe its origin entirely
+ to a small lake, the waters of which are so strongly impregnated with
+ calcareous matter that wherever they overflow they rapidly form a deposit
+ which is as hard and firm as natural rock. If the lake was originally on a
+ level with the valley, it would soon have formed incrustations round its
+ edge, which every casual or permanent overflow would have tended to raise;
+ and thus, in the course of ages, the entire hill may have been formed by a
+ mere accumulation of petrefactions. The formation would progress more or
+ less rapidly according to the tendency of the lake to overflow its bounds;
+ which tendency must have been strong until the water reached its present
+ natural level&mdash;the level, probably, of some other sheet of water in
+ the hills, with which it is connected by an underground siphon. The lake,
+ which is of an irregular shape, is about 300 paces in circumference. Its
+ water, notwithstanding the quantity of mineral matter held in solution, is
+ exquisitely clear, and not unpleasing to the taste. Formerly it was
+ believed by the natives to be unfathomable; but experiments made in 1837
+ showed the depth to be no more than 156 feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ruins which at present occupy this remarkable site consist of a strong
+ wall, guarded by numerous bastions and pierced by four gateways, which
+ runs round the brow of the hill in a slightly irregular ellipse, of some
+ interesting remains of buildings within this walled space, and of a few
+ insignificant traces of inferior edifices on the slope between the plain
+ and the summit. As it is not thought that any of these remains are of a
+ date anterior to the Sassanian kingdom, no description will be given of
+ them here. We are only concerned with the Median city, and that has
+ entirely disappeared. Of the seven walls, one alone is to be traced; and
+ even here the Median structure has perished, and been replaced by masonry
+ of a far later age. Excavations may hereafter bring, to light some
+ remnants of the original town, but at present research has done no more
+ than recover for us a forgotten site.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Median city next in importance to the two Ecbatanas was Raga or
+ Rhages, near the Caspian Gates, almost at the extreme eastern limits of
+ the territory possessed by the Medes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great antiquity of this place is marked by its occurrence in the
+ Zendavesta among the primitive settlements of the Arians. Its celebrity
+ during the time of the Empire is indicated by the position which it
+ occupies in the romances of Tobit and Judith. It maintained its rank under
+ the Persians, and is mentioned by Darius Hystaspis as the scene of the
+ struggle which terminated the great Median revolt. The last Darius seems
+ to have sent thither his heavy baggage and the ladies of his court, when
+ he resolved to quit Ecbatana and fly eastward. It has been already noticed
+ that Rhages gave name to a district; and this district maybe certainly
+ identified with the long narrow tract of fertile territory intervening
+ between the Elburz mountain-range and the desert, from about Kasvin to
+ Khaar, or from long. 30° to 52° 30&rsquo;. The exact site of the city of Rhages
+ within this territory is somewhat doubtful. All accounts place it near the
+ eastern extremity; and as there are in this direction ruins of a town
+ called Rhei or Rhey, it has been usual to assume that they positively fix
+ the locality. But similarity, or even identity, of name is an insufficient
+ proof of a site; and, in the present instance, there are grounds for
+ placing Rhages very much nearer to the Caspian Gates than the position of
+ Rhei. Arrian, whose accuracy is notorious, distinctly states that from the
+ Gates to Rhages was only a single day&rsquo;s march, and that Alexander
+ accomplished the distance in that time. Now from Rhei to the Girduni
+ Surdurrah pass, which undoubtedly represents the Pylae Cacpise of Arrian,
+ is at least fifty miles, a distance which no army could accomplish in less
+ time than two days. Rhages consequently must have been considerably to the
+ east of Rhei, about half-way between it and the celebrated pass which it
+ was considered to guard. Its probable position is the modern Kaleh Erij,
+ near Veramin, about 23 miles from the commencement of the Surdurrah pass,
+ where there are considerable remains of an ancient town.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the same neighborhood with Rhages, but closer to the Straits, perhaps
+ on the site now occupied by the ruins known as Uewanukif, or possibly even
+ nearer to the foot of the pass, was the Median city of Charax, a place not
+ to be confounded with the more celebrated city called Gharax Spasini, the
+ birthplace of Dionysius the geographer, which was on the Persian Gulf, at
+ the mouth of the Tigris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other Median cities, whose position can be determined with an approach
+ to certainty, were in the western portion of the country, in the range of
+ Zagros, or in the fertile tract between that range and the desert. The
+ most important of these are Bagistan, Adrapan, Concobar, and Aspadan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bagistan is described by Isidore as a &ldquo;city situated on a hill, where
+ there was a pillar and a statue of Semiramis.&rdquo; Diodorus has an account of
+ the arrival of Semiramis at the place, of her establishing a royal park or
+ paradise in the plain below the mountain, which was watered by an abundant
+ spring, of her smoothing the face of the rock where it descended
+ precipitously upon the low ground, and of her carving on the surface thus
+ obtained her own effigy, with an inscription in Assyrian characters. The
+ position assigned to Bagistan by both writers, and the description of
+ Diodorus, identify the place beyond a doubt with the now famous Behistun,
+ where the plain, the fountain, the precipitous rock, and the scarped
+ surface are still to be seen, through the supposed figure of Semiramis,
+ her pillar, and her inscription have disappeared. <a href="#linkimage-0003">[PLATE
+ II., Fig. 1.]</a> This remarkable spot, lying on the direct route between
+ Babylon and Ecbatana, and presenting the unusual combination of a copious
+ fountain, a rich plain, and a rock suitable for sculptures, must have
+ early attracted the attention of the great monarchs who marched their
+ armies through the Zagros range, as a place where they might conveniently
+ set up memorials of their exploits. The works of this kind ascribed by the
+ ancient writers to Semiramis were probably either Assyrian or Babylonian,
+ and (it is most likely) resembled the ordinary monuments which the kings
+ of Babylon and Nineveh delighted to erect in countries newly conquered.
+ The example set by the Mesopotamians was followed by their Arian
+ neighbors, when the supremacy passed into their hands; and the famous
+ mountain, invested by them with a sacred character, was made to subserve
+ and perpetuate their glory by receiving sculptures and inscriptions which
+ showed them to have become the lords of Asia. The practice did not even
+ stop here. When the Parthian kingdom of the Arsacidee had established
+ itself in these parts at the expense of the Seleucidse, the rock was once
+ more called upon to commemorate the warlike triumphs of a new race.
+ Gotarzes, the contemporary of the Emperor Claudius, after defeating his
+ rival Meherdates in the plain between Behistun and Kermanshah, inscribed
+ upon the mountain, which already bore the impress of the great monarchs of
+ Assyria and Persia, a record of his recent victory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0003" id="linkimage-0003">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/plate002.jpg" width="100%" alt="Plate II. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The name of Adrapan occurs only in Isidore, who places it between Bagistan
+ and Ecbatana, at the distance of twelve schoeni&mdash;36 Roman or 34
+ British miles from the latter. It was, he says, the site of an ancient
+ palace belonging to Ecbatana, which Tigranes the Armenian had destroyed.
+ The name and situation sufficiently identify Adrapan with the modern
+ village of Arteman, which lies on the southern face of Elwend near its
+ base, and is well adapted for a royal residence. Here, during the severest
+ winter, when Hamadan and the surrounding country are buried in snow, a
+ warm and sunny climate is to be found; whilst in the summer a thousand
+ rills descending from Elwend diffuse around fertility and fragrance.
+ Groves of trees grow up in rich luxuriance from the well-irrigated soil,
+ whose thick foliage affords a welcome shelter from the heat of the noonday
+ sun. The climate, the gardens, and the manifold blessings of the place are
+ proverbial throughout Persia; and naturally caused the choice of the site
+ for a retired palace, to which the court of Ecbatana might adjourn when
+ either the summer heat and dust or the winter cold made residence in the
+ capital irksome.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the neighborhood of Adrapan, on the road leading to Bagistan, stood
+ Concobar, which is undoubtedly the modern Kungawar, and perhaps the Chavon
+ of Diodorus. Here, according to the Sicilian historian, Semiramis built a
+ palace and laid out a paradise; and here, in the time of Isidore, was a
+ famous temple of Artemis. Colossal ruins crown the summit of the acclivity
+ on which the town of Kungawar stands, which may be the remains of this
+ latter building; but no trace has been found that can be regarded as
+ either Median or Assyrian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Median town of Aspadan, which is mentioned by no writer but Ptolemy,
+ would scarcely deserve notice here, if it were not for its modern
+ celebrity. Aspadan, corrupted into Isfahan, became the capital of Persia,
+ under the Sen kings, who rendered it one of the most magnificent cities of
+ Asia. It is uncertain whether it existed at all in the time of the great
+ Median empire. If so, it was, at best, an outlying town of little
+ consequence on the extreme southern confines of the territory, where it
+ abutted upon Persia proper. The district wherein it lay was inhabited by
+ the Median tribe of the Parastaceni.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon the whole it must be allowed that the towns of Media were few and of
+ no great account. The Medes did not love to congregate in large cities,
+ but preferred to scatter themselves in villages over their broad and
+ varied territory. The protection of walls, necessary for the inhabitants
+ of the low Mesopotamian regions, was not required by a people whose
+ country was full of natural fastnesses to which they could readily remove
+ on the approach of danger. Excepting the capital and the two important
+ cities of Gazaca and Rhages, the Median towns were insignificant. Even
+ those cities themselves were probably of moderate dimensions, and had
+ little of the architectural splendor which gives so peculiar an interest
+ to the towns of Mesopotamia. Their principal buildings were in a frail and
+ perishable material, unsuited to bear the ravages of time; they have
+ consequently altogether disappeared, and in the whole of Media modern
+ researches have failed to bring to light a single edifice which can be
+ assigned with any show of probability to the period of the Empire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The plan adopted in former portions of this work makes it necessary,
+ before concluding this chapter, to glance briefly at the character of the
+ various countries and districts by which Media was bordered&mdash;the
+ Caspian district upon the north, Armenia upon the north-west, the Zagros
+ region and Assyria upon the west, Persia proper upon the south, and upon
+ the east Sagartia and Parthia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ North and north-east of the mountain range which under different names
+ skirts the southern shores of the Caspian Sea and curves round its
+ south-western corner, lies a narrow but important strip of territory&mdash;the
+ modern Ghilan and Mazanderan. <a href="#linkimage-0003">[PLATE II., Fig.
+ 2.]</a> This is a most fertile region, well watered and richly wooded, and
+ forms one of the most valuable portions of the modern kingdom of Persia.
+ At first it is a low flat tract of deep alluvial soil, but little raised
+ above the level of the Caspian; gradually however it rises into swelling
+ hills which form the supports of the high mountains that shut in this
+ sheltered region, a region only to be reached by a very few passes over or
+ through them. The mountains are clothed on this side nearly to their
+ summit with dwarf oaks, or with shrubs and brushwood; while, lower down,
+ their flanks are covered with forests of elms, cedars, chestnuts, beeches,
+ and cypress trees. The gardens and orchards of the natives are of the most
+ superb character; the vegetation is luxuriant; lemons, oranges, peaches,
+ pomegranates, besides other fruits, abound; rice, hemp, sugar-canes,
+ mulberries are cultivated with success; vines grow wild; and the valleys
+ are strewn with flowers of rare fragrance, among which may be noted the
+ rose, the honeysuckle, and the sweetbrier. Nature, however, with her usual
+ justice, has balanced these extraordinary advantages with peculiar
+ drawbacks; the tiger, unknown in any other part of Western Asia, here
+ lurks in the thickets, ready to spring at any moment on the unwary
+ traveller; inundations are frequent, and carry desolation far and wide;
+ the waters, which thus escape from the river beds, stagnate in marshes,
+ and during the summer and autumn heats pestilential exhalations arise,
+ which destroy the stranger, and bring even the acclimatized native to the
+ brink of the grave. The Persian monarch chooses the southern rather than
+ the northern side of the mountains for the site of his capital, preferring
+ the keen winter cold and dry summer heat of the high and almost waterless
+ plateau to the damp and stifling air of the low Caspian region.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The narrow tract of which this is a description can at no time have
+ sheltered a very numerous or powerful people. During the Median period,
+ and for many ages afterwards, it seems to have been inhabited by various
+ petty tribes of predatory habits&mdash;Cadusians, Mardi, Tapyri, etc.,&mdash;who
+ passed their time in petty quarrels among themselves, and in plundering
+ raids upon their great southern neighbor. Of these tribes the Cadusians
+ alone enjoyed any considerable reputation. They were celebrated for their
+ skill with the javelin&mdash;a skill probably represented by the modern
+ Persian use of the <i>djereed</i>. According to Diodorus, they were
+ engaged in frequent wars with the Median kings, and were able to bring
+ into the field a force of 200,000 men! Under the Persians they seem to
+ have been considered good soldiers, and to have sometimes made a struggle
+ for independence. But there is no real reason to believe that they were of
+ such strength as to have formed at any time a danger to the Median
+ kingdom, to which it is more probable that they generally acknowledged a
+ qualified subjection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great country of Armenia, which lay north-west and partly north of
+ Media, has been generally described in the first volume; but a few words
+ will be here added with respect to the more eastern portion, which
+ immediately bordered upon the Median territory. This consisted of two
+ outlying districts, separated from the rest of the country, the triangular
+ basin of Lake Van, and the tract between the Kur and Aras rivers&mdash;the
+ modern Karabagh and Erivan. The basin of Lake Van, surrounded by high
+ ranges, and forming the very heart of the mountain system of this part of
+ Asia, is an isolated region, a sort of natural citadel, where a strong
+ military power would be likely to establish itself. Accordingly it is
+ here, and here alone in all Armenia, that we find signs of the existence,
+ during the Assyrian and Median periods, of a great organized monarchy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Van inscriptions indicate to us a line of kings who bore sway in the
+ eastern Armenia&mdash;the true Ararat&mdash;and who were both in
+ civilization and in military strength far in advance of any of the other
+ princes who divided among them the Armenian territory. The Van monarchs
+ may have been at times formidable enemies of the Medes. They have left
+ traces of their dominion, not only on the tops of the mountain passes
+ which lead into the basin of Lake Urumiyeh, but even in the comparatively
+ low plain of Miyandab on the southern shore of that inland sea. It is
+ probable from this that they were at one time masters of a large portion
+ of Media Atropatene, and the very name of Urumiyeh, which still attaches
+ to the lake, may have been given to it from one of their tribes. In the
+ tract between the Kur and Aras, on the other hand, there is no sign of the
+ early existence of any formidable power. Here the mountains are
+ comparatively low, the soil is fertile, and the climate temperate. The
+ character of the region would lead its inhabitants to cultivate the arts
+ of peace rather than those of war, and would thus tend to prevent them
+ from being formidable or troublesome to their neighbors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Zagros region, which in the more ancient times separated between Media
+ and Assyria, being inhabited by a number of independent tribes, but which
+ was ultimately absorbed into the more powerful country, requires no notice
+ here, having been sufficiently described among the tracts by which Assyria
+ was bordered. At first a serviceable shield to the weak Arian tribes which
+ were establishing themselves along its eastern base upon the high plateau,
+ it gradually passed into their possession as they increased in strength,
+ and ultimately became a main nursery of their power, furnishing to their
+ armies vast numbers both of men and horses. The great horse pastures, from
+ which the Medes first and the Persians afterwards, supplied their numerous
+ and excellent cavalry, were in this quarter; and the troops which it
+ furnished&mdash;hardy mountaineers accustomed to brave the severity of a
+ most rigorous climate&mdash;must have been among the most effective of the
+ Median forces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the south Media was bounded by Persia proper&mdash;a tract which
+ corresponded nearly with the modern province of Farsistan. The complete
+ description of this territory, the original seat of the Persian nation,
+ belongs to a future volume of this work, which will contain an account of
+ the &ldquo;Fifth Monarchy.&rdquo; For the present it is sufficient to observe that the
+ Persian territory was for the most part a highland, very similar to Media,
+ from which it was divided by no strongly marked line or natural boundary.
+ The Persian mountains are a continuation of the Zagros chain, and Northern
+ Persia is a portion&mdash;the southern portion&mdash;of the same great
+ plateau, whose western and north-western skirts formed the great mass of
+ the Median territory. Thus upon this side Media was placed in the closest
+ connection with an important country, a country similar in character to
+ her own, where a hardy race was likely to grow up, with which she might
+ expect to have difficult contests.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally, towards the east lay the great salt desert, sparsely inhabited by
+ various nomadic races, among which the most important were the Cossseans
+ and the Sagartians. To the latter people Herodotus seems to assign almost
+ the whole of the sandy region, since he unites them with the Sarangians
+ and Thamanseans on the one hand, with the Utians and Mycians upon the
+ other. They were a wild race, probably of Arian origin, who hunted with
+ the lasso over the great desert mounted on horses, and could bring into
+ the field a force of eight or ten thousand men. Their country, a waste of
+ sand and gravel, in parts thickly encrusted with salt, was impassable to
+ an army, and formed a barrier which effectively protected Media along the
+ greater portion of her eastern frontier. Towards the extreme north-east
+ the Sagartians were replaced by the Cossseans and the Parthians, the
+ former probably the people of the Siah-Koh mountain, the latter the
+ inhabitants of the tract known now as the Atak, or &ldquo;skirt,&rdquo; which extends
+ along the southern flank of the Elburz range from the Caspian Gates nearly
+ to Herat, and is capable of sustaining a very considerable population. The
+ Cossseans were plunderers, from whose raids Media suffered constant
+ annoyance; but they were at no time of sufficient strength to cause any
+ serious fear. The Parthians, as we learn from the course of events, had in
+ them the materials of a mighty people; but the hour for their elevation
+ and expansion was not yet come, and the keenest observer of Median times
+ could scarcely have perceived in them the future lords of Western Asia.
+ From Parthia, moreover, Media was divided by the strong rocky spur which
+ runs out from the Elburz into the desert in long. 52° 10&rsquo; nearly, over
+ which is the narrow pass already mentioned as the Caspian Gates. Thus
+ Media on most sides was guarded by the strong natural barriers of seas,
+ mountains, and deserts lying open only on the south, where she adjoined
+ upon a kindred people. Her neighbors were for the most part weak in
+ numbers, though warlike. Armenia, however, to the north-west, Assyria to
+ the west, and Persia to the south, were all more or less formidable. A
+ prescient eye might have foreseen that the great struggles of Media would
+ be with these powers, and that if she attained imperial proportions it
+ must be by their subjugation or absorption.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II. CLIMATE AND PRODUCTIONS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Media, like Assyria, is a country of such extent and variety that, in
+ order to give a correct description of its climate, we must divide it into
+ regions. Azerbijan, or Atropatene, the most northern portion, has a
+ climate altogether cooler than the rest of Media; while in the more
+ southern division of the country there is a marked difference between the
+ climate of the east and of the west, of the tracts lying on the high
+ plateau and skirting the Great Salt Desert, and of those contained within
+ or closely abutting upon the Zagros mountain range. The difference here is
+ due to the difference of physical conformation, which is as great as
+ possible, the broad mountainous plains about Kasvin, Koum, and Kashan,
+ divided from each other by low rocky ridges, offering the strongest
+ conceivable contrast to the perpetual alternations of mountain and valley,
+ precipitous height and deep wooded glen, which compose the greater part of
+ the Zagros region.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The climate of Azerbijan is temperate and pleasant, though perhaps
+ somewhat overwarm, in summer; while in winter it is bitterly severe,
+ colder than that of almost any other region in the same latitude. This
+ extreme rigor seems to be mainly owing to elevation, the very valleys and
+ valley plains of the tract being at a height of from 4000 to 5000 feet
+ above the sea level. Frost commonly sets in towards the end of November&mdash;or
+ at latest early in December; snow soon covers the ground to the depth of
+ several feet; the thermometer falls below zero; the sun shines brightly
+ except when from time to time fresh deposits of snow occur; but a keen and
+ strong wind usually prevails, which is represented as &ldquo;cutting like a
+ sword,&rdquo; and being a very &ldquo;assassin of life.&rdquo; Deaths from cold are of daily
+ occurrence; and it is impossible to travel without the greatest risk.
+ Whole companies or caravans occasionally perish beneath the drift, when
+ the wind is violent, especially if a heavy fall happen to coincide with
+ one of the frequent easterly gales. The severe weather commonly continues
+ till March, when travelling becomes possible, but the snow remains on much
+ of the ground till May, and on the mountains still longer. The spring,
+ which begins in April, is temperate and delightful; a sudden burst of
+ vegetation succeeds to the long winter lethargy; the air is fresh and
+ balmy, the sun pleasantly warm, the sky generally cloudless. In the month
+ of May the heat increases&mdash;thunder hangs in the air&mdash;and the
+ valleys are often close and sultry. Frequent showers occur, and the
+ hail-storms are sometimes so violent as to kill the cattle in the fields.
+ As the summer advances the heats increase, but the thermometer rarely
+ reaches 90° in the shade, and except in the narrow valleys the air is
+ never oppressive. The autumn is generally very fine. Foggy mornings are
+ common; but they are succeeded by bright pleasant days, without wind or
+ rain. On the whole the climate is pronounced healthy, though somewhat
+ trying to Europeans, who do not readily adapt themselves to a country
+ where the range of the thermometer is as much as 90° or 100°. In the part
+ of Media situated on the great plateau&mdash;the modern Irak Ajemi&mdash;in
+ which are the important towns of Teheran, Isfahan, Hamadan, Kashan,
+ Kasvin, and Koum. the climate is altogether warmer than in Azerbijan, the
+ summers being hotter, and the winters shorter and much less cold. Snow
+ indeed covers the ground for about three months, from early in December
+ till March; but the thermometer rarely shows more than ten or twelve
+ degrees of frost, and death from cold is uncommon. The spring sets in
+ about the beginning of March, and is at first somewhat cool, owing to the
+ prevalence of the <i>baude caucasan</i> or north wind,a which blows from
+ districts where the snow still lies. But after a little time the weather
+ becomes delicious; the orchards are a mass of blossom; the rose gardens
+ come into bloom; the cultivated lands are covered with springing crops;
+ the desert itself wears a light livery of green. Every sense is gratified;
+ the nightingale bursts out with a full gush of song; the air plays softly
+ upon the cheek, and comes loaded with fragrance. Too soon, however, this
+ charming time passes away, and the summer heats begin, in some places as
+ early as June 18 The thermometer at midday rises to 90 or 100 degrees. Hot
+ gusts blow from the desert, sometimes with great violence. The atmosphere
+ is described as choking; and in parts of the plateau it is usual for the
+ inhabitants to quit their towns almost in a body, and retire for several
+ months into the mountains. This extreme heat is, however, exceptional; in
+ most parts of the plateau the summer warmth is tempered by cool breezes
+ from the surrounding mountains, on which there is always a good deal of
+ snow. At Hamadan, which, though on the plain, is close to the mountains,
+ the thermometer seems scarcely ever to rise above 90°, and that degree of
+ heat is attained only for a few hours in the day. The mornings and
+ evenings are cool and refreshing; and altogether the climate quite
+ justifies the choice of the Persian monarchs, who selected Ecbatana for
+ their place of residence during the hottest portion of the year. Even at
+ Isfahan, which is on the edge of the desert, the heat is neither extreme
+ nor prolonged. The hot gusts which blow from the east and from the south
+ raise the temperature at times nearly to a hundred degrees; but these
+ oppressive winds alternate with cooler breezes from the west, often
+ accompanied by rain; and the average highest temperature during the day in
+ the hottest month, which is August, does not exceed 90°.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A peculiarity in the climate of the plateau which deserves to be noticed
+ is the extreme dryness of the atmosphere. In summer the rains which fall
+ are slight, and they are soon absorbed by the thirsty soil. There is a
+ little dew at nights, especially in the vicinity of the few streams; but
+ it disappears with the first hour of sunshine, and the air is left without
+ a particle of moisture. In winter the dryness is equally great; frost
+ taking the place of heat, with the same effect upon the atmosphere.
+ Unhealthy exhalations are thus avoided, and the salubrity of the climate
+ is increased; but the European will sometimes sigh for the soft, balmy
+ airs of his own land, which have come flying over the sea, and seem to
+ bring their wings still dank with the ocean spray.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another peculiarity of this region, produced by the unequal rarefaction of
+ the air over its different portions, is the occurrence, especially in
+ spring and summer, of sudden gusts, hot or cold, which blow with great
+ violence. These gusts are sometimes accompanied with, whirlwinds, which
+ sweep the country in different directions, carrying away with them leaves,
+ branches, stubble, sand, and other light substances, and causing great
+ annoyance to the traveller. They occur chiefly in connection with a change
+ of wind, and are no doubt consequent on the meeting of two opposite
+ currents. Their violence, however, is moderate, compared with that of
+ tropical tornadoes, and it is not often that they do any considerable
+ damage to the crops over which they sweep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One further characteristic of the flat region may be noticed. The intense
+ heat of the summer sun striking on the dry sand or the saline
+ efflorescence of the desert throws the air over them into such a state of
+ quivering undulation as produces the most wonderful and varying effects,
+ distorting the forms of objects, and rendering the most familiar strange
+ and hard to be recognized. A mud bank furrowed by the rain will exhibit
+ the appearance of a magnificent city, with columns, domes, minarets, and
+ pyramids; a few stunted bushes will be transformed into a forest of
+ stately trees; a distant mountain will, in the space of a minute, assume
+ first the appearance of a lofty peak, then swell out at the top, and
+ resemble a mighty mushroom, next split into several parts, and finally
+ settle down into a flat tableland. Occasionally, though not very often
+ that semblance of water is produced which Europeans are are apt to suppose
+ the usual effect of mirage. The images of objects are reflected at their
+ base in an inverted position; the desert seems converted into a vast lake;
+ and the thirsty traveller, advancing towards it, finds himself the victim
+ of an illusion, which is none the less successful because he has been a
+ thousand times forewarned of its deceptive power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the mountain range or Zagros and the tracts adjacent to it, the
+ climate, owing to the great differences of elevation, is more varied than
+ in the other parts of the ancient Media. Severe cold prevails in the
+ higher mountain regions for seven months out of the twelve, while during
+ the remaining five the heat is never more than moderate. In the low
+ valleys, on the contrary, and in other favored situations, the winters are
+ often milder than on the plateau; while in the summers, if the heat is not
+ greater, at any rate it is more oppressive. Owing to the abundance of the
+ streams and proximity of the melting snows, the air is moist; and the damp
+ heat, which stagnates in the valleys, broods fever and ague. Between these
+ extremes of climate and elevation, every variety is to be found; and,
+ except in winter, a few hours&rsquo; journey will almost always bring the
+ traveller into a temperate region.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In respect of natural productiveness, Media (as already observed) differs
+ exceedingly in different, and even in adjacent, districts. The rocky
+ ridges of the great plateau, destitute of all vegetable mold, are wholly
+ bare and arid, admitting not the slightest degree of cultivation. Many of
+ the mountains of Azerbijan, naked, rigid, and furrowed, may compare even
+ with these desert ranges for sterility. The higher parts of Zagros and
+ Elburz are sometimes of the same character; but more often they are
+ thickly clothed with forests, affording excellent timber and other
+ valuable commodities. In the Elburz pines are found near the summit, while
+ lower down there occur, first the wild almond and the dwarf oak, and then
+ the usual timber-trees of the country, the Oriental plane, the willow, the
+ poplar, and the walnut. The walnut grows to a large size both here and in
+ Azerbijan, but the poplar is the wood most commonly used for building
+ purposes. In Zagros, besides most of these trees, the ash and the
+ terebinth or turpentine-tree are common; the oak bears gall-nuts of a
+ large size; and the gum-tragacanth plant frequently clothes the
+ mountain-sides. The valleys of this region are full of magnificent
+ orchards, as are the low grounds and more sheltered nooks of Azerbijan.
+ The fruit-trees comprise, besides vines and mulberries, the apple, the
+ pear, the quince, the plum, the cherry, the almond, the nut, the chestnut,
+ the olive, the peach, the nectarine, and the apricot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the plains of the high plateau there is a great scarcity of vegetation.
+ Trees of a large size grow only in the few places which are well watered,
+ as in the neighborhood of Hamadan, Isfahan, and in a less degree of
+ Kashan. The principal tree is the Oriental plane, which flourishes
+ together with poplars and willows along the water-courses; cypresses also
+ grow freely; elms and cedars are found, and the orchards and gardens
+ contain not only the fruit-trees mentioned above, but also the jujube, the
+ cornel, the filbert, the medlar, the pistachio nut, the pomegranate, and
+ the fig. Away from the immediate vicinity of the rivers and the towns, not
+ a tree, scarcely a bush, is to be seen. The common thorn is indeed
+ tolerably abundant in a few places; but elsewhere the tamarisk and a few
+ other sapless shrubs are the only natural products of this bare and arid
+ region.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In remarkable contrast with the natural barrenness of this wide tract are
+ certain favored districts in Zagros and Azerbijan, where the herbage is
+ constant throughout the summer, and sometimes only too luxuriant. Such are
+ the rich and extensive grazing grounds of Khawah and Alishtar, near
+ Kermanshah, the pastures near Ojan and Marand, and the celebrated Chowal
+ Moghan or plain of Moghan, on the lower course of the Araxes river, where
+ the grass is said to grow sufficiently high to cover a man on horseback.
+ These, however, are rare exceptions to the general character of the
+ country, which is by nature unproductive, and scarcely deserving even of
+ the qualified encomium of Strabo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still Media, though deficient in natural products, is not ill adapted for
+ cultivation. The Zagros valleys and hillsides produce under a very rude
+ system of agriculture, besides the fruits already noticed, rice, wheat,
+ barley, millet, sesame, Indian corn, cotton, tobacco, mulberries,
+ cucumbers, melons, pumpkins, and the castor-oilplant. In Azerbijan the
+ soil is almost all cultivable, and if ploughed and sown will bring good
+ crops of the ordinary kinds of grain. Even on the side of the desert,
+ where Nature has shown herself most niggardly, and may seem perhaps to
+ deserve the reproach of Cicero, that she behaves as a step mother to a man
+ rather than as a mother, a certain amount of care and scientific labor may
+ render considerable tracts fairly productive. The only want of this region
+ is water; and if the natural deficiency of this necessary fluid can be
+ anyhow supplied, all parts of the plateau will bear crops, except those
+ which form the actual Salt Desert. In modern, and still more in ancient
+ times, this fact has been clearly perceived, and an elaborate system of
+ artifical irrigation, suitable to the peculiar circumstances of the
+ country, has been very widely established. The system of <i>kanats</i>, as
+ they are called at the present day, aims at utilizing to the uttermost all
+ the small streams and rills which descend towards the desert from the
+ surrounding mountains, and at conveying as far as possible into the plain
+ the spring water, which is the indispensable condition of cultivation in a
+ country where&mdash;except for a few days in the spring and autumn&mdash;rain
+ scarcely ever falls. As the precious element would rapidly evaporate if
+ exposed to the rays of the summer sun, the Iranian husbandman carries his
+ conduit underground, laboriously tunnelling through the stiff argillaceous
+ soil, at a depth of many feet below the surface. The mode in which he
+ proceeds is as follows. At intervals along the line of his intended
+ conduit he first sinks shafts, which he then connects with one another by
+ galleries, seven or eight feet in height, giving his galleries a slight
+ incline, so that the water may run down them freely, and continuing them
+ till he reaches a point where he wishes to bring the water out upon the
+ surface of the plain. Here and there, at the foot of his shafts, he digs
+ wells, from which the fluid can readily be raised by means of a bucket and
+ a windlass; and he thus brings under cultivation a considerable belt of
+ land along the whole line of the <i>kanat</i>, as well as a large tract at
+ its termination. These conduits, on which the cultivation of the plateau
+ depends, were established at so remote a date that they were popularly
+ ascribed to the mythic Semiramis, the supposed wife of Ninus. It is
+ thought that in ancient times they were longer and more numerous than at
+ present, when they occur only occasionally, and seldom extend more than a
+ few miles from the base of the hills.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By help of the irrigation thus contrived, the great plateau of Iran will
+ produce good crops of grain, rice, wheat, barley, Indian corn, doura,
+ millet, and sesame. It will also bear cotton, tobacco, saffron, rhubarb,
+ madder, poppies which give a good opium, senna, and assafoetida. Its
+ garden vegetables are excellent, and include potatoes, cabbages, lentils,
+ kidney-beans, peas, turnips, carrots, spinach, beetroot, and cucumbers.
+ The variety of its fruit-trees has been already noticed. The flavor of
+ their produce is in general good, and in some cases surpassingly
+ excellent. No quinces are so fine as those of Isfahan, and no melons have
+ a more delicate flavor. The grapes of Kasvin are celebrated, and make a
+ remarkably good wine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the flowers of the country must be noted, first of all, its roses,
+ which flourish in the most luxuriant abundance, and are of every variety
+ of hue. The size to which the tree will grow is extraordinary, standards
+ sometimes exceeding the height of fourteen or fifteen feet. Lilacs,
+ jasmines, and many other flowering shrubs are common in the gardens, while
+ among wild flowers may be noticed hollyhocks, lilies, tulips, crocuses,
+ anemones, lilies of the valley, fritillaries, gentians, primroses,
+ convolvuluses, chrysanthemums, heliotropes, pinks, water-lilies,
+ ranunculuses, jonquils, narcissuses, hyacinths, mallows, stocks, violets,
+ a fine campanula (Michauxia levigata), a mint (Nepeta longiflora), several
+ sages, salsolas, and fagonias. In many places the wild flowers during the
+ spring months cover the ground, painting it with a thousand dazzling or
+ delicate hues.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mineral products of Media are numerous and valuable. Excellent stone
+ of many kinds abounds in almost every part of the country, the most
+ important and valuable being the famous Tabriz marble. This curious
+ substance appears to be a petrifaction formed by natural springs, which
+ deposit carbonate of lime in large quantities. It is found only in one
+ place, on the flanks of the hills, not far from the Urumiyeh lake. The
+ slabs are used for tombstones, for the skirting of rooms, and for the
+ pavements of baths and palaces; when cut thin they often take the place of
+ glass in windows, being semi-transparent. The marble is commonly of a pale
+ yellow color, but occasionally it is streaked with red, green, or
+ copper-colored veins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In metals the country is thought to be rich, but no satisfactory
+ examination of it has been as yet made. Iron, copper, and native steel are
+ derived from mines actually at work; while Europeans have observed
+ indications of lead, arsenic, and antimony in Azerbijan, in Kurdistan, and
+ in the rocky ridges which intersect the desert. Tradition speaks of a time
+ when gold and silver were procured from mountains near Takht-i-Suleman,
+ and it is not unlikely that they may exist both there and in the Zagros
+ range. Quartz, the well-known matrix of the precious metal, abounds in
+ Kurdistan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of all the mineral products, none is more abundant than salt. On the side
+ of the desert, and again near Tabriz at the mouth of the Aji Su, are vast
+ plains which glisten with the substance, and yield it readily to all who
+ care to gather it up. Saline springs and streams are also numerous, from
+ which salt can be obtained by evaporation. But, besides these sources of
+ supply, rock salt is found in places, and this is largely quarried, and is
+ preferred by the natives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Other important products of the earth are saltpetre, which is found in the
+ Elburz, and in Azerbijan; sulphur, which abounds in the same regions, and
+ likewise on the high plateau; alum, which is quarried near Tabriz; naphtha
+ and gypsum, which are found in Kurdistan; and talc, which exists in the
+ mountains near Koum, in the vicinity of Tabriz, and probably in other
+ places.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chief wild animals which have been observed within the limits of the
+ ancient Media are the lion, the tiger, the leopard, the bear, the beaver,
+ the jackal, the wolf, the wild ass, the ibex or wild goat, the wild sheep,
+ the stag, the antelope, the wild boar, the fox, the hare, the rabbit, the
+ ferret, the rat, the jerboa, the porcupine, the mole, and the marmot. The
+ lion and tiger are exceedingly rare; they seem to be found only in
+ Azerbijan, and we may perhaps best account for their presence there by
+ considering that a few of these animals occasionally stray out of
+ Mazanderan, which is their only proper locality in this part of Asia. Of
+ all the beasts, the most abundant are the stag and the wild goat, which
+ are numerous in the Elburz, and in parts of Azerbijan, the wild boar,
+ which abounds both in Azerbijan, and in the country about Hamadan, and the
+ jackal, which is found everywhere. Bears flourish in Zagros, antelopes in
+ Azerbijan, in the Elburz, and on the plains near Sultaniyeh. The wild ass
+ is found only in the desert parts of the high plateau; the beaver only in
+ Lake Zeribar, near Sulefmaniyeh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Iranian wild ass differs in some respects from the Mesopotamian. His
+ skin is smooth, like that of a deer, and of a reddish color, the belly and
+ hinder parts partaking of a silvery gray; his head and ears are large and
+ somewhat clumsy; but his neck is fine, and his legs are beautifully
+ slender. His mane is short and black, and he has a black tuft at the end
+ of his tail, but no dark line runs along his back or crosses his
+ shoulders. The Persians call him the <i>gur-khur</i>, and chase him with
+ occasional success, regarding his flesh as a great delicacy. He appears to
+ be the <i>Asinus onager</i> of naturalists, a distinct species from the <i>Asinus
+ hemippus</i> of Mesopotamia, and the <i>Asinus hemionus</i> of Thibet and
+ Tartary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is doubtful whether some kind of wild cattle does not still inhabit the
+ more remote tracts of Kurdistan. The natives mention among the animals of
+ their country &ldquo;the mountain ox;&rdquo; and though it has been suggested that the
+ beast intended is the elk, it is perhaps as likely to be the Aurochs,
+ which seems certainly to have been a native of the adjacent country of
+ Mesopotamia in ancient times. At any rate, until Zagros has been
+ thoroughly explored by Europeans, it must remain uncertain what animal is
+ meant. Meanwhile we may be tolerably sure that, besides the species
+ enumerated, Mount Zagros contains within its folds some large and rare
+ ruminant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the birds the most remarkable are the eagle, the bustard, the
+ pelican, the stork, the pheasant, several kinds of partridges, the quail,
+ the woodpecker, the bee-eater, the hoopoe, and the nightingale. Besides
+ these, doves and pigeons, both wild and tame, are common; as are swallows,
+ goldfinches, sparrows, larks, blackbirds, thrushes, linnets, magpies,
+ crows, hawks, falcons, teal, snipe, wild ducks, and many other kinds of
+ waterfowl. The most common partridge is a red-legged species (<i>Caccabis
+ chukar</i> of naturalists), which is unable to fly far, and is hunted
+ until it drops. Another kind, common both in Azerbijan and in the Elburz,
+ is the black-breasted partridge (<i>Perdix nigra</i>)&mdash;a bird not
+ known in many countries. Besides these, there is a small gray partridge in
+ the Zagros range, which the Kurds call seslca. The bee-eater (<i>Merops
+ Persicus</i>) is rare. It is a bird of passage, and only visits Media in
+ the autumn, preparatory to retreating into the warm district of Mazandoran
+ for the winter months. The hoopoe (<i>Upupa</i>) is probably still rarer,
+ since very few travellers mention it. The woodpecker is found in Zagros,
+ and is a beautiful bird, red and gray in color.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Media is, on the whole, but scantily provided with fish. Lake Urumiyeh
+ produces none, as its waters are so salt that they even destroy all the
+ river-fish which enter them. Salt streams, like the Aji Su, are equally
+ unproductive, and the fresh-water rivers of the plateau fall so low in
+ summer that fish cannot become numerous in them. Thus it is only in
+ Zagros, in Azerbijan, and in the Elburz, that the streams furnish any
+ considerable quantity. The kinds most common are barbel, carp, dace,
+ bleak, and gudgeon. In a comparatively few streams, more especially those
+ of Zagros, trout are found, which are handsome and of excellent quality.
+ The river of Isfahan produces a kind of crayfish, which is taken in the
+ bushes along its banks, and is very delicate eating.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is remarkable that fish are caught not only in the open streams of
+ Media, but also in the <i>kanats</i> or underground conduits, from which
+ the light of day is very nearly excluded. They appear to be of one sort
+ only, viz., barbel, but are abundant, and often grow to a considerable
+ size. Chardin supposed them to be unfit for food; but a later observer
+ declares that, though of no great delicacy, they are &ldquo;perfectly sweet and
+ wholesome.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of reptiles, the most common are snakes, lizards, and tortoises. In the
+ long grass of the Moghan district, on the lower course of the Araxes, the
+ snakes are so numerous and venomous that many parts of the plain are
+ thereby rendered impassable in the summer-time. A similar abundance of
+ this reptile near the western entrance of the Girduni Siyaluk pass induces
+ the natives to abstain from using it except in winter. Lizards of many
+ forms and hues disport themselves about the rocks and stones, some quite
+ small, others two feet or more in length. They are quite harmless, and
+ appear to be in general very tame. Land tortoises are also common in the
+ sandy regions. In Kurdistan there is a remarkable frog, with a smooth skin
+ and of an apple-green color, which lives chiefly in trees, roosting in
+ them at night, and during the day employing itself in catching flies and
+ locusts, which it strikes with its fore paw, as a cat strikes a bird or a
+ mouse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among insects, travellers chiefly notice the mosquito, which is in many
+ places a cruel torment; the centipede, which grows to an unusual size; the
+ locust, of which there is more than one variety; and the scorpion, whose
+ sting is sometimes fatal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The destructive locust (the <i>Acridium peregrinum</i>, probably) comes
+ suddenly into Kurdistan and southern Media in clouds that obscure the air,
+ moving with a slow and steady flight and with a sound like that of heavy
+ rain, and settling in myriads on the fields, the gardens, the trees, the
+ terraces of the houses, and even the streets, which they sometimes cover
+ completely. Where they fall, vegetation presently disappears; the leaves,
+ and even the stems of the plants, are devoured; the labors of the
+ husbandman through many a weary month perish in a day; and the curse of
+ famine is brought upon the land which but now enjoyed the prospect of an
+ abundant harvest. It is true that the devourers are themselves devoured to
+ some extent by the poorer sort of people; but the compensation is slight
+ and temporary; in a few days, when all verdure is gone, either the swarms
+ move to fresh pastures, or they perish and cover the fields with their
+ dead bodies, while the desolation which they have created continues. <a
+ href="#linkimage-0004">[PLATE III., Fig. 2.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0004" id="linkimage-0004">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/plate003.jpg" width="100%" alt="Plate III. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Another kind of locust, observed by Mr. Rich in Kurdistan, is called by
+ the natives <i>shira-kulla</i>, a name seemingly identical with the <i>chargol</i>
+ of the Jews, and perhaps the best clue which we possess to the
+ identification of that species. Mr. Rich describes it as &ldquo;a large insect,
+ about four inches long, with no wings, but a kind of sword projecting from
+ the tail. It bites,&rdquo; he says, &ldquo;pretty severely, but does no harm to the
+ cultivation.&rdquo; We may recognize in this description a variety of the great
+ green grasshopper (<i>Locusta viridissima</i>), many species of which are
+ destitute of wings, or have wing-covers only, and those of a very small
+ size.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The scorpion of the country (<i>Scorpio crassicauda</i>) has been
+ represented as peculiarly venomous, more especially that which abounds in
+ the city and neighborhood of Kashan; but the most judicious observers deny
+ that there is any difference between the Kashan scorpion and that of other
+ parts of the plateau, while at the same time they maintain that if the
+ sting be properly treated, no danger need be apprehended from it. The
+ scorpion infests houses, hiding itself under cushions and coverlets, and
+ stings the moment it is pressed upon; some caution is thus requisite in
+ avoiding it; but it hurts no one unless molested, and many Europeans have
+ resided for years in the country without having ever been stung by it. <a
+ href="#linkimage-0004">[PLATE III., Fig. 3.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The domestic animals existing at present within the limits of the ancient
+ Media are the camel, the horse, the mule, the ass, the cow, the goat, the
+ sheep, the dog, the cat, and the buffalo. The camel is the ordinary beast
+ of burden in the flat country, and can carry an enormous weight. Three
+ kinds are employed&mdash;the Bactrian or two-humped camel, which is coarse
+ and low; the taller and lighter Arabian breed; and a cross between the
+ two, which is called <i>ner</i>, and is valued very highly. The ordinary
+ burden of the Arabian camel is from seven to eight hundredweight; while
+ the Bactrian variety is said to be capable of bearing a load nearly twice
+ as heavy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next to the camel, as a beast of burden, must be placed the mule the mules
+ of the country are small, but finely proportioned, and carry a
+ considerable weight. They travel thirty miles a day with ease, and are
+ preferred for journeys on which it is necessary to cross the mountains.
+ The ass is very inferior, and is only used by the poorer classes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two distinct breeds of horses are now found in Media, both of which seem
+ to be foreign&mdash;the Turkoman and the Arabian. The Turkoman is a large,
+ powerful, enduring animal, with long legs, a light body, and a big head.
+ The Arab is much smaller, but perfectly shaped, and sometimes not greatly
+ inferior to the very best produce of Nejd. A third breed is obtained by an
+ intermixture of those two, which is called the <i>bid-pai</i>, or &ldquo;wind
+ footed,&rdquo; and is the most prized of all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dogs are of various breeds, but the most esteemed is a large kind of
+ gray hound, which some suppose to have been introduced into this part of
+ Asia by the Macedonians, and which is chiefly employed in the chase of the
+ antelope. The animal is about the height of a full sized English
+ grayhound, but rather stouter; he is deep-chested, has long, smooth hair,
+ and the tail considerably feathered. His pace is inferior to that of our
+ grayhounds, but in strength and sagacity he far surpasses them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We do not find many of the products of Media celebrated by ancient
+ writers. Of its animals, those which had the highest reputation were its
+ horses, distinguished into two breeds, an ordinary kind, of which Media
+ produced annually many thousands, and a kind of rare size and excellence,
+ known under the name of Nisaean. These last are celebrated by Herodotus,
+ Strabo, Arrian, Ammianus Marcellinus, Suidas, and others. They are said to
+ have been of a peculiar shape; and they were equally famous for size,
+ speed, and stoutness. Strabo remarks that they resemble the horses known
+ in his own time as Parthian; and this observation seems distinctly to
+ connect them with the Turkoman breed mentioned above, which is derived
+ exactly from the old Parthian country. In color they were often, if not
+ always, white. We have no representation on the monuments which we can
+ regard as certainly intended for a Nissean horse, but perhaps the figure
+ from Persepolis may be a Persian sketch of the animal. <a
+ href="#linkimage-0004">[PLATE III., Fig. 4.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mules and small cattle (sheep and goats) were in sufficient repute to
+ be required, together with horses, in the annual tribute paid to the
+ Persian king.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of vegetable products assigned to Media by ancient writers, the most
+ remarkable is the &ldquo;Median apple,&rdquo; or citron. Pliny says it was the sole
+ tree for which Media was famous, and that it would only grow there and in
+ Persia. Theophrastus, Dioscorides, Virgil, and other writers, celebrate
+ its wonderful qualities, distinctly assigning it to the same region. The
+ citron, however, will not grow in the country which has been here termed
+ Media. It flourishes only in the warm tract between Shiraz and the Persian
+ Gulf, and in the low sheltered region, south of the Caspian, the modern
+ Ghilan and Mazanderan. No doubt it was the inclusion of this latter region
+ within the limits of Media by many of the later geographers that gave to
+ this product of the Caspian country an appellation which is really a
+ misnomer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another product whereto Media gave name, and probably with more reason,
+ was a kind of clover or lucerne, which was said to have been introduced
+ into Greece by the Persians in the reign of Darius, and which was
+ afterwards cultivated largely in Italy. Strabo considers this plant to
+ have been the chief food of the Median horses, while Dioscorides assigns
+ it certain medicinal qualities. Clover is still cultivated, in the Elburz
+ region, but horses are now fed almost entirely on straw and barley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Media was also famous for its silphium, or assafoetida, a plant which the
+ country still produces, though not in any large quantity. No drug was in
+ higher repute with the ancients for medicinal purposes; and though the
+ Median variety was a coarse kind, inferior in repute, not only to the
+ Cyrenaic, but also to the Parthian and the Syrian, it seems to have been
+ exported both to Greece and Borne, and to have been largely used by
+ druggists, however little esteemed by physicians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other vegetable products which Media furnished, or was believed to
+ furnish, to the ancient world, were bdellium, amomum, cardamomum, gum
+ tragacanth, wild-vine oil, and sagaponum, or the <i>Ferula persica</i>. Of
+ these, gum tragacanth is still largely produced, and is an important
+ article of commerce. Wild vines abound in Zagros and Elburz, but no oil is
+ at present made from them. Bdellium, if it is benzoin, amomum, and
+ cardamomum were perhaps rather imported through Media than the actual
+ produce of the country, which is too cold in the winter to grow any good
+ spices.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mineral products of Media noted by the ancient writers are nitre,
+ salt, and certain gems, as emeralds, lapis lazuli, and the following
+ obscurer kinds, the zathene, the gassinades, and the narcissitis. The
+ nitre of Media is noticed by Pliny, who says it was procured in small
+ quantities, and was called &ldquo;halmyraga.&rdquo; It was found in certain
+ dry-looking glens, where the ground was white with it, and was obtained
+ there purer than in other places. Saltpetre is still derived from the
+ Elburz range, and also from Azerbijan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The salt of Lake Urumiyeh is mentioned by Strabo, who says that it forms
+ naturally on the surface, which would imply a far more complete saturation
+ of the water than at present exists, even in the driest seasons. The gems
+ above mentioned are assigned to Media chiefly by Pliny. The Median
+ emeralds, according to him, were of the largest size; they varied
+ considerably, sometimes approaching to the character of the sapphire, in
+ which case they were apt to be veiny, and to have flaws in them. They were
+ far less esteemed than the emeralds of many other countries. The Median
+ lapis lazuli, on the other hand, was the best of its kind. It was of three
+ colors&mdash;light blue, dark blue, and purple. The golden specks,
+ however, with which it was sprinkled&mdash;really spots of yellow pyrites&mdash;rendered
+ it useless to the gem-engravers of Pliny&rsquo;s time. The zathene, the
+ gassinades, and the narcissitis were gems of inferior value. As they have
+ not yet been identified with any known species, it will be unnecessary to
+ prolong the present chapter by a consideration of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III. CHARACTER, MANNERS AND CUSTOMS, ARTS, ETC., OF THE PEOPLE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pugnatrix natio et formidanda.&rdquo;&mdash;Amm. Marc, xxiii. 6.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ethnic character of the Median people is at the present day scarcely a
+ matter of doubt. The close connection which all history, sacred and
+ profane, establishes between them and the Persians, the evidence of their
+ proper names and of their language, so far as it is known to us, together
+ with the express statements of Herodotus and Strabo, combine to prove that
+ they belonged to that branch of the human family known to us as the Arian
+ or Iranic, a leading subdivision of the great Indo-European race. The tie
+ of a common language, common manners and customs, and to a great extent a
+ common belief, united in ancient times all the dominant tribes of the
+ great plateau, extending even beyond the plateau in one direction to the
+ Jaxartes (Syhun) and in another to the Hyphasis (Sutlej). Persians, Medes,
+ Sagartians, Chorasmians, Bactrians, Sogdians, Hyrcanians, Sarangians,
+ Gandarians, and Sanskritic Indians belonged all to a single stock,
+ differing from one another probably not much more than now differ the
+ various subdivisions of the Teutonic or the Slavonic race. Between the
+ tribes at the two extremities of the Arian territory the divergence was no
+ doubt considerable; but between any two neighboring tribes the difference
+ was probably in most cases exceedingly slight. At any rate this was the
+ case towards the west, where the Medes and Persians, the two principal
+ sections of the Arian body in that quarter, are scarcely distinguishable
+ from one another in any of the features which constitute ethnic type.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The general physical character of the ancient Arian race is best gathered
+ from the sculptures of the Achsemenian kings, which exhibit to us a very
+ noble variety of the human species&mdash;a form tall, graceful, and
+ stately; a physiognomy handsome and pleasing, often somewhat resembling
+ the Greek; the forehead high and straight, the nose nearly in the same
+ line, long and well formed, sometimes markedly aquiline, the upper lip
+ short, commonly shaded by a moustache, the chin rounded and generally
+ covered with a curly beard. The hair evidently grew in great plenty, and
+ the race was proud of it. On the top of the head it was worn smooth, but
+ it was drawn back from the forehead and twisted into a row or two of crisp
+ curls, while at the same time it was arranged into a large mass of similar
+ small close ringlets at the back of the head and over the ears. <a
+ href="#linkimage-0005">[PLATE IV., Fig. 1.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0005" id="linkimage-0005">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/plate004.jpg" width="100%" alt="Plate IV. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Of the Median women we have no representations upon the sculptures; but we
+ are informed by Xenophon that they were remarkable for their stature and
+ their beauty. The same qualities were observable in the women of Persia,
+ as we learn from Plutarch, Ammianus Marcellinus, and others. The Arian
+ races seem in old times to have treated women with a certain chivalry,
+ which allowed the full development of their physical powers, and rendered
+ them specially attractive alike to their own husbands and to the men of
+ other nations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The modern Persian is a very degenerate representative of the ancient
+ Arian stock. Slight and supple in person, with quick, glancing eyes,
+ delicate features, and a vivacious manner, he lacks the dignity and
+ strength, the calm repose and simple grace of the race from which he is
+ sprung, Fourteen centuries of subjection to despotic sway have left their
+ stamp upon his countenance and his frame, which, though still retaining
+ some traces of the original type, have been sadly weakened and lowered by
+ so long a term of subservience. Probably the wild Kurd or Lur of the
+ present day more nearly corresponds in physique to the ancient Mede than
+ do the softer inhabitants of the great plateau.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the moral characteristics of the Medes the one most obvious is their
+ bravery. &ldquo;<i>Pugnatrix natio et formidanda</i>,&rdquo; says Ammianus Marcellinus
+ in the fourth century of our era, summing up in a few words the general
+ judgment of Antiquity. Originally equal, if not superior, to their close
+ kindred, the Persians, they were throughout the whole period of Persian
+ supremacy only second to them in courage and warlike qualities. Mardonius,
+ when allowed to take his choice out of the entire host of Xerxes, selected
+ the Median troops in immediate succession to the Persians. Similarly, when
+ the time for battle came he kept the Medes near himself, giving them their
+ place in the line close to that of the Persian contingent. It was no doubt
+ on account of their valor, as Diodorus suggests, that the Medes were
+ chosen to make the first attack upon the Greek position at Thermopylae,
+ where, though unsuccessful, they evidently showed abundant courage. In the
+ earlier times, before riches and luxury had eaten out the strength of the
+ race, their valor and military prowess must have been even more
+ conspicuous. It was then especially that Media deserved to be called, as
+ she is in Scripture, &ldquo;the mighty one of the heathen&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;the terrible
+ of the nations.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her valor, undoubtedly, was of the merciless kind. There was no
+ tenderness, no hesitancy about it. Not only did her armies &ldquo;dash to
+ pieces&rdquo; the fighting men of the nations opposed to her, allowing
+ apparently no quarter, but the women and the children suffered indignities
+ and cruelties at the hands of her savage warriors, which the pen
+ unwillingly records. The Median conquests were accompanied by the worst
+ atrocities which lust and hate combined are wont to commit when they
+ obtain their full swing. Neither the virtue of women nor the innocence of
+ children were a protection to them. The infant was slain before the very
+ eye of the parent. The sanctity of the hearth was invaded, and the matron
+ ravished beneath her own roof-tree. Spoil, it would seem, was disregarded
+ in comparison with insult and vengeance; and the brutal soldiery cared
+ little either for silver or gold, provided they could indulge freely in
+ that thirst for blood which man shares with the hyena and the tiger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The habits of the Medes in the early part of their career were undoubtedly
+ simple and manly. It has been observed with justice that the same general
+ features have at all times distinguished the rise and fall of Oriental
+ kingdoms and dynasties. A brave and adventurous prince, at the head of a
+ population at once poor, warlike, and greedy, overruns a vast tract, and
+ acquires extensive dominion, while his successors, abandoning themselves
+ to sensuality and sloth, probably also to oppressive and irascible
+ dispositions, become in process of time victims to those same qualities in
+ another prince and people which had enabled their own predecessor to
+ establish their power. It was as being braver, simpler, and so stronger
+ than the Assyrians that the Medes were able to dispossess them of their
+ sovereignty over western Asia. But in this, as in most other cases of
+ conquest throughout the East, success was followed almost immediately by
+ degeneracy. As captive Greece captured her fierce conqueror, so the
+ subdued Assyrians began at once to corrupt their subduers. Without
+ condescending to a close imitation of Assyrian manners and customs, the
+ Medes proceeded directly after their conquest to relax the severity of
+ their old habits and to indulge in the delights of soft and luxurious
+ living. The historical romance of Xenophon presents us probably with a
+ true picture when it describes the strong contrast which existed towards
+ the close of the Median period between the luxury and magnificence which
+ prevailed at Ecbatana, and the primitive simplicity of Persia Proper,
+ where the old Arian habits, which had once been common to the two races,
+ were still maintained in all their original severity. Xenophon&rsquo;s authority
+ in this work is, it must be admitted, weak, and little trust can be placed
+ in the historical accuracy of his details; but his general statement is
+ both in itself probable, and is also borne out to a considerable extent by
+ other authors. Herodotus and Strabo note the luxury of the Median dress,
+ while the latter author goes so far as to derive the whole of the later
+ Persian splendor from an imitation of Median practices. We must hold then
+ that towards the latter part of their empire the Medes became a
+ comparatively luxurious people, not indeed laying aside altogether their
+ manly habits, nor ceasing to be both brave men and good soldiers, but
+ adopting an amount of pomp and magnificence to which they were previously
+ strangers, affecting splendor in their dress and apparel, grandeur and
+ rich ornament in their buildings, variety in their banquets, and attaining
+ on the whole a degree of civilization not very greatly inferior to that of
+ the Assyrians. In taste and real refinement they seem indeed to have
+ fallen considerably below their teachers. A barbaric magnificence
+ predominated in their ornamentation over artistic effort, richness in the
+ material being preferred to skill in the manipulation. Literature, and
+ even letters, were very sparingly cultivated. But little originality was
+ developed. A stately dress, and a new style of architecture, are almost
+ the only inventions to which the Medes can lay claim. They were brave,
+ energetic, enterprising, fond of display, capable of appreciating to some
+ extent the advantages of civilized life; but they had little genius, and
+ the world is scarcely indebted to them for a single important addition to
+ the general stock of its ideas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the Median customs in war we know but little. Herodotus tells us that
+ in the army of Xerxes the Medes were armed exactly as the Persians,
+ carrying on their heads a soft felt cap, on their bodies a sleeved tunic,
+ and on their legs trousers. Their offensive arms, he says, were the spear,
+ the bow, and the dagger. They had large wicker shields, and bore their
+ quivers suspended at their backs. Sometimes their tunic was made into a
+ coat of mail by the addition to it on the outside of a number of small
+ iron plates arranged so as to overlap each other, like the scales of a
+ fish. They served both on horseback and on foot, with the same equipment
+ in both cases.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is no reason to doubt the correctness of this description of the
+ Median military dress under the early Persian kings. The only question is
+ how far the equipment was really the ancient warlike custom of the people.
+ It seems in some respects too elaborate to be the armature of a simple and
+ primitive race. We may reasonably suppose that at least the scale armor
+ and the unwieldy wicker shields (yeppa), which required to be rested on
+ the ground, were adopted at a somewhat late date from the Assyrians. At
+ any rate the original character of the Median armies, as set before us in
+ Scripture, and as indicated both by Strabo and Xenophon, is simpler than
+ the Herodotean description. The primitive Modes seem to have been a nation
+ of horse-archers. Trained from their early boyhood to a variety of
+ equestrian exercises, and well practised in the use of the bow, they
+ appear to have proceeded against their enemies with clouds of horse,
+ almost in Scythian fashion, and to have gained their victories chiefly by
+ the skill with which they shot their arrows as they advanced, retreated,
+ or manoeuvred about their foe. No doubt they also used the sword and the
+ spear. The employment of these weapons has been almost universal
+ throughout the East from a very remote antiquity, and there is some
+ mention of them in connection with the Medes and their kindred, the
+ Persians, in Scripture; but it is evident that the terror which the Medes
+ inspired arose mainly from their dexterity as archers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No representation of weapons which can be distinctly recognized as Median
+ has come down to us. The general character of the military dress and of
+ the arms appears, probably in the Persepolitan sculptures; but as these
+ reliefs are in most cases representations, not of Medes, but of Persians,
+ and as they must be hereafter adduced in illustration of the military
+ customs of the latter people, only a very sparing use of them can be made
+ in the present chapter. It would seem that the bow employed was short, and
+ very much curved, and that, like the Assyrian it was usually carried in a
+ bow-case, which might either be slung at the back, or hung from the
+ girdle. <a href="#linkimage-0006">[PLATE V., Fig. 1.]</a> The arrows,
+ which were borne in a quiver slung behind the right shoulder, must have
+ been short, certainly not exceeding the length of three feet. The quiver
+ appears to have been round; it was covered at the top, and was fastened by
+ means of a flap and strap, which last passed over, a button. <a
+ href="#linkimage-0006">[PLATE V. Fig. 1.]</a> The Median spear or lance
+ was from six to seven feet in length. Its head was lozenge-shaped and
+ flattish, but strengthened by a bar or line down the middle. It is
+ uncertain whether the head was inserted into the top of the shaft, or
+ whether it did not rather terminate in a ring or socket into which the
+ upper end of the shaft was itself inserted. The shaft tapered gradually
+ from bottom to top, and terminated below in a knob or ball, which was
+ perhaps sometimes carved into the shape of some natural object. <a
+ href="#linkimage-0005">[PLATE IV., Fig. 2.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0006" id="linkimage-0006">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/plate005.jpg" width="100%" alt="Plate V. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The sword was short, being in fact little more than a dagger. It depended
+ at the right thigh from a belt which encircled the waist, and was further
+ secured by a strap attached to the bottom of the sheath, and passing round
+ the soldier&rsquo;s right leg a little above the knee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Median shields were probably either round or oval. The oval specimens bore
+ a resemblance to the shield of the Boeotians, having a small oval aperture
+ at either side, apparently for the sake of greater lightness. They were
+ strengthened at the centre by a circular boss or disk, ornamented with
+ knobs or circles. They would seem to have been made either of metal or
+ wood. <a href="#linkimage-0005">[PLATE IV., Fig. 3.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The favorite dress of the Medes in peace is well known to us from the
+ sculptures; there can be no reasonable doubt that the long flowing robe so
+ remarkable for its graceful folds, which is the garb of the kings, the
+ chief nobles, and the officers of the court in all the Persian
+ bas-reliefs, and which is seen also upon the darics and the gems, is the
+ famous &ldquo;Median garment&rdquo; of Herodotus, Xenophon, and Strabo. <a
+ href="#linkimage-0006">[PLATE V., Fig. 2.]</a> This garment fits the chest
+ and shoulders closely, but falls over the arms in two large loose sleeves,
+ open at the bottom. At the waist it is confined by a cincture. Below it is
+ remarkably full and ample, drooping in two clusters of perpendicular folds
+ at the two sides, and between these hanging in festoons like a curtain. It
+ extends down to the ankles, where it is met by a high shoe or low boot,
+ opening in front, and secured by buttons. <a href="#linkimage-0005">[PLATE
+ IV., Fig. 4.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These Median robes were of many colors. Sometimes they were purple,
+ sometimes scarlet, occasionally a dark gray, or a deep crimson. Procopius
+ says that they were made of silk, and this statement is confirmed to some
+ extent by Justin, who speaks of their transparency. It may be doubted,
+ however, whether the material was always the same; probably it varied with
+ the season, and also with the wealth of the wearer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides this upper robe, which is the only garment shown in the
+ sculptures, the Medes wore as under garments a sleeved shirt or tunic of a
+ purple color, and embroidered drawers or trousers. They covered the head,
+ not only out of doors, but in their houses, wearing either felt caps like
+ the Persians, or a head-dress of a more elaborate character, which bore
+ the name of <i>tiara</i> or <i>cidaris</i>. This appears to have been, not
+ a turban, but rather a kind of high-crowned hat, either stiff or flexible,
+ made probably of felt or cloth, and dyed of different hues, according to
+ the fancy of the owner. <a href="#linkimage-0007">[PLATE VI., Fig. 1.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Medes took a particular delight in the ornamentation of their persons.
+ According to Xenophon, they were acquainted with most of the expedients by
+ the help of which vanity attempts to conceal the ravages of time and to
+ create an artificial beauty. They employed cosmetics, which they rubbed
+ into the skin, for the sake of improving the complexion. They made use of
+ an abundance of false hair. Like many other Oriental nations, both ancient
+ and modern, they applied dyes to enhance the brilliancy of the eyes, and
+ give them a greater apparent size and softness. They were also fond of
+ wearing golden ornaments. Chains or collars of gold usually adorned their
+ nocks, bracelets of the same precious metal encircled their wrists, and
+ earrings were inserted into their ears. <a href="#linkimage-0007">[PLATE
+ VI., Fig. 2.]</a> Gold was also used in the caparisons of their horses,
+ the bit and other parts of the harness being often of this valuable
+ material.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are told that the Medes were very luxurious at their banquets. Besides
+ plain meat and game of different kinds, with the ordinary accompaniments
+ of wine and bread, they were accustomed to place before their guests a
+ vast number of side-dishes, together with a great variety of sauces. They
+ ate with the hand, as is still the fashion in the East, and were
+ sufficiently refined to make use of napkins. Each guest had his own
+ dishes, and it was a mark of special honor to augment their number. Wine
+ was drunk both at the meal and afterwards, often in an undue quantity; and
+ the close of the feast was apt to be a scene of general turmoil and
+ confusion. At the Court it was customary for the king to receive his wine
+ at the hands of a cupbearer, who first tasted the draught, that the king
+ might be sure that it was not poisoned, and then presented it to his
+ master with much pomp and ceremony.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The whole ceremonial of the court seems to have been imposing. Under
+ ordinary circumstances the monarch kept himself secluded, and no one could
+ obtain admission to him unless he formally requested an audience, and was
+ introduced into the royal presence by the proper officer. On his admission
+ he prostrated himself upon the ground with the same signs of adoration
+ which were made on entering a temple. The king, surrounded by his
+ attendants, eunuchs, and others, maintained a haughty reserve, and the
+ stranger only beheld him from a distance. Business was transacted in a
+ great measure by writing. The monarch rarely quitted his palace,
+ contenting himself with such reports of the state of his empire as were
+ transmitted to him from time to time by his officers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chief amusement of the court, in which however the king rarely
+ partook, was hunting. Media always abounded in beasts of chase; and lions,
+ bears, leopards, wild boars, stags, gazelles, wild sheep, and wild asses
+ are mentioned among the animals hunted by the Median nobles. Of these the
+ first four were reckoned dangerous, the others harmless. It was customary
+ to pursue these animals on horseback, and to aim at them with the bow or
+ the javelin. We may gather a lively idea of some of these hunts from the
+ sculptures of the Parthians, who some centuries later inhabited the same
+ region. We see in these the rush of great troops of boars through marshes
+ dense with water-plants, the bands of beaters urging them on, the
+ sportsmen aiming at them with their bows, and the game falling transfixed
+ with two or three well-aimed shafts. Again we see herds of deer driven
+ within enclosures, and there slain by archers who shoot from horseback,
+ the monarch under his parasol looking on the while, pleased with the
+ dexterity of his servants. It is thus exactly that Xenophon portrays
+ Astyages as contemplating the sport of his courtiers, complacently viewing
+ their enjoyment, but taking no active part in the work himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Like other Oriental sovereigns, the Median monarch maintained a seraglio
+ of wives and concubines; and polygamy was commonly practised among the
+ more wealthy classes. Strabo speaks of a strange law as obtaining with
+ some of the Median tribes&mdash;a law which required that no man should be
+ content with fewer wives than five. It is very unlikely that such a burden
+ was really made obligatory on any: most probably five legitimate wives,
+ and no more, were allowed by the law referred to, just as four wives, and
+ no more, are lawful for Mohammedans. Polygamy, as usual, brought in its
+ train the cruel practice of castration; and the court swarmed with
+ eunuchs, chiefly foreigners purchased in their infancy. Towards the close
+ of the Empire this despicable class appears to have been all-powerful with
+ the monarch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus the tide of corruption gradually advanced; and there is reason to
+ believe that both court and people had in a great measure laid aside the
+ hardy and simple customs of their forefathers, and become enervated
+ through luxury, when the revolt of the Persians came to test the quality
+ of their courage, and their ability to maintain their empire. It would be
+ improper in this place to anticipate the account of this struggle, which
+ must be reserved for the historical chapter; but the well-known result&mdash;the
+ speedy and complete success of the Persians&mdash;must be adduced among
+ the proofs of a rapid deterioration in the Median character between the
+ accession of Cyaxares and the capture&mdash;less than a century later&mdash;of
+ Astyages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have but little information with respect to the state of the arts among
+ the Medes. A barbaric magnificence characterized, as has been already
+ observed, their architecture, which differed from the Assyrian in being
+ dependent for its effect on groups of pillars rather than on painting or
+ sculpture. Still sculpture was, it is probable, practised to some extent
+ by the Medes, who, it is almost certain, conveyed on to the Persians those
+ modifications of Assyrian types which meet us everywhere in the remains of
+ the Achsemenian monarch? The carving of winged genii, of massive forms of
+ bulls and lions, of various grotesque monsters, and of certain clumsy
+ representations of actual life, imitated from the bas-reliefs of the
+ Assyrians, may be safely ascribed to the Medes; since, had they not
+ carried on the traditions of their predecessors, Persian art could not
+ have borne the resemblance that it does to Assyrian. But these first
+ mimetic efforts of the Arian race have almost wholly perished, and there
+ scarcely seems to remain more than a single fragment which can be assigned
+ on even plausible grounds to the Median period. A portion of a colossal
+ lion, greatly injured by time, is still to be seen at Hamadan, the site of
+ the great Median capital, which the best judges regard as anterior to the
+ Persian period, and as therefore most probably Median. It consists of the
+ head and body of the animal, from which the four legs and the tail have
+ been broken off, and measures between eleven and twelve feet from the
+ crown of the head to the point from which the tail sprang. By the position
+ of the head and what remains of the shoulders and thighs, it is evident
+ that the animal was represented in a sitting posture, with the fore legs
+ straight and the hind legs gathered up under it. To judge of the feeling
+ and general character of the sculpture is difficult, owing to the worn and
+ mutilated condition of the work; but we seem to trace in it the same air
+ of calm and serene majesty that characterizes the colossal bulls and lions
+ of Assyria, together with somewhat more of expression and of softness than
+ are seen in the productions of that people. Its posture, which is unlike
+ that of any Assyrian specimen, indicates a certain amount of originality
+ as belonging to the Median artists, while its colossal size seems to show
+ that the effect on the spectator was still to be produced, not so much by
+ expression, finish, or truth to nature, as by mere grandeur of dimension.
+ <a href="#linkimage-0007">[PLATE VI., Fig. 3.]</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV. RELIGION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The earliest form of the Median religion is to be found in those sections
+ of the Zendavesta which have been pronounced on internal evidence to be
+ the most ancient portions of that venerable compilation; as, for instance,
+ the first Fargard of the Vendidad, and the Gathas, or &ldquo;Songs,&rdquo; which occur
+ here and there in the Yacna, or Book on Sacrifice. In the Gathas, which
+ belong to a very remote era indeed, we seem to have the first beginnings
+ of the Religion. We may indeed go back by their aid to a time anterior to
+ themselves&mdash;a time when the Arian race was not yet separated into two
+ branches, and the Easterns and Westerns, the Indians and Iranians, had not
+ yet adopted the conflicting creeds of Zoroastrianism and Brahminism. At
+ that remote period we seem to see prevailing a polytheistic nature-worship&mdash;a
+ recognition of various divine beings, called indifferently Asuras (Ahuras)
+ or Devas, each independent of the rest, and all seemingly nature-powers
+ rather than persons, whereof the chief are Indra, Storm or Thunder;
+ Mithra, Sunlight; Aramati (Armaiti), Earth; Vayu, Wind; Agni, Fire; and
+ Soma (Homa), Intoxication. Worship is conducted by priests, who are called
+ <i>kavi</i>, &ldquo;seers;&rdquo; <i>karapani</i>, &ldquo;sacriflcers,&rdquo; or <i>ricikhs</i>,
+ &ldquo;wise men.&rdquo; It consists of hymns in honor of the gods; sacrifices, bloody
+ and unbloody, some&rsquo; portion of which is burnt upon an altar; and a
+ peculiar ceremony, called that of Soma, in which an intoxicating liquor is
+ offered to the gods, and then consumed by the priests, who drink till they
+ are drunken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such, in outline, is the earliest phase of Arian religion, and it is
+ common to both branches of the stock, and anterior to the rise of the
+ Iranic, Median, or Persian system. That system is a revolt from this
+ sensuous and superficial nature-worship. It begins with a distinct
+ recognition of spiritual intelligences&mdash;real persons&mdash;with whom
+ alone, and not with powers, religion is concerned. It divides these
+ intelligences into good and bad, pure and impure, benignant and
+ malevolent. To the former it applies the term <i>Asuras</i> (<i>Ahuras</i>),
+ &ldquo;living&rdquo; or &ldquo;spiritual beings,&rdquo; in a good sense; to the latter, the term
+ <i>Devas</i>, in a bad one. It regards the &ldquo;powers&rdquo; hitherto worshipped as
+ chiefly <i>Devas</i>; but it excepts from this unfavorable view a certain
+ number, and, recognizing them as <i>Asuras</i>, places them above the <i>Izeds</i>,
+ or &ldquo;angels.&rdquo; Thus far it has made two advances, each of great importance,
+ the substitution of real &ldquo;persons&rdquo; for &ldquo;powers,&rdquo; as objects of the
+ religious faculty, and the separation of the persons into good and bad,
+ pure and impure, righteous and wicked. But it does not stop here. It
+ proceeds to assert, in a certain sense, monotheism against polytheism. It
+ boldly declares that, at the head of the good intelligences, is a single
+ great Intelligence, Ahuro-Mazdao, the highest object of adoration, the
+ true Creator, Preserver, and Governor of the universe. This is its great
+ glory. It sets before the soul a single Being as the source of all good
+ and the proper object of the highest worship. Ahuro-Mazdao is &ldquo;the creator
+ of life, the earthly and the spiritual;&rdquo; &ldquo;he has made the celestial
+ bodies, earth, water, and trees, all good creatures,&rdquo; and &ldquo;all good, true,
+ holy, pure, things.&rdquo; He is &ldquo;the Holy God, the Holiest, the essence of
+ truth, the father of all truth, the best being of all, the master of
+ purity.&rdquo; He is supremely &ldquo;happy,&rdquo; possessing every blessing, &ldquo;health,
+ wealth, virtue, wisdom, immortality.&rdquo; From him comes all good to man; on
+ the pious and the righteous he bestows not only earthly advantages, but
+ precious spiritual gifts, truth, devotion, &ldquo;the good mind,&rdquo; and
+ everlasting happiness; and as he rewards the good, so he punishes the bad,
+ though this is an aspect in which he is but seldom represented.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It has been said that this conception of Ahura-mazda as the Supreme Being
+ is &ldquo;<i>perfectly identical</i> with the notion of Elohim, or Jehovah,
+ which we find in the books of the Old Testament.&rdquo; This is, no doubt, an
+ over-statement. Ahura-mazda is less spiritual and less awful than Jehovah.
+ He is less remote from the nature of man. The very ascription to him of
+ health (<i>haurvat</i>) is an indication that he is conceived of as
+ possessing a sort of physical nature. Lucidity and brilliancy are assigned
+ to him, not (as it would seem) in a mere metaphorical sense. Again, he is
+ so predominantly the author of good things, the source of blessing and
+ prosperity, that he could scarcely inspire his votaries with any feeling
+ of fear. Still, considering the general failure of unassisted reason to
+ mount up to the true notion of a spiritual God, this doctrine of the early
+ Arians is very remarkable; and its approximation to the truth sufficiently
+ explains at once the favorable light in which its professors are viewed by
+ the Jewish prophets, and the favorable opinion which they form of the
+ Jewish system. Evidently, the Jews and Arians, when they became known to
+ one another, recognized mutually the fact that they were worshippers of
+ the same great Being. Hence the favor of the Persians towards the Jews,
+ and the fidelity of the Jews towards the Persians. The Lord God of the
+ Jews being recognized as identical with Ormazd, a sympathetic feeling
+ united the peoples. The Jews, so impatient generally of a foreign yoke,
+ never revolted from the Persians; and the Persians, so intolerant, for the
+ most part, of religions other than their own, respected and protected
+ Judaism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sympathy was increased by the fact that the religion of Ormazd was
+ anti-idolatrous. In the early nature-worship idolatry had been allowed;
+ but the Iranic system pronounced against it from the first. No images of
+ Ahura-mazda, or of the Izeds, profaned the severe simplicity of an Iranic
+ temple. It was only after a long lapse of ages that, in connection with a
+ foreign worship, idolatry crept in. The old Zoroastrianism was in this
+ respect as pure as the religion of the Jews, and thus a double bond of
+ religious sympathy united the Hebrews and the Arians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under the supreme God, Ahura-mazda or Ormazd, the ancient Iranic system
+ placed (as has been already observed) a number of angels. Some of these,
+ as <i>Vohu-mano</i>, &ldquo;the Good Mind;&rdquo; <i>Mazda</i>, &ldquo;the Wise&rdquo; (?); and <i>Asha</i>,
+ &ldquo;the True,&rdquo; are scarcely distinguishable from attributes of the Divinity.
+ Armaiti, however, the genius of the Earth, and Sraosha or Serosh, an
+ angel, are very clearly and distinctly personified. Sraosha is Ormazd&rsquo;s
+ messenger. He delivers revelations, shows men the paths of happiness, and
+ brings them the blessings which Ormazd has assigned to their share.
+ Another of his functions is to protect the true faith. He is called, in a
+ very special sense, &ldquo;the friend of Ormazd,&rdquo; and is employed by Ormazd not
+ only to distribute his gifts, but also to conduct to him the souls of the
+ faithful, when this life is over, and they enter on the celestial scene.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Armaiti is at once the genius of the Earth, and the goddess of Piety. The
+ early Ormazd worshippers were agriculturists, and viewed the cultivation
+ of the soil as a religious duty enjoined upon them by God. Hence they
+ connected the notion of piety with earth culture; and it was but a step
+ from this to make a single goddess preside over the two. It is as the
+ angel of Earth that Armaiti has most distinctly a personal character. She
+ is regarded as wandering from spot to spot, and laboring to convert
+ deserts and wildernesses into fruitful fields and gardens. She has the
+ agriculturist under her immediate protection, while she endeavors to
+ persuade the shepherd, who persists in the nomadic life, to give up his
+ old habits and commence the cultivation of the soil. She is of course the
+ giver of fertility, and rewards her votaries by bestowing upon them
+ abundant harvests. She alone causes all growth. In a certain cense she
+ pervades the whole material creation, mankind included, in whom she is
+ even sometimes said to &ldquo;reside.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Armaiti, further &ldquo;tells men the everlasting laws, which no one may
+ abolish&rdquo;&mdash;laws which she has learnt from converse with Ahura-mazda
+ himself. She is thus naturally the second object of worship to the old
+ Zoroastrian; and converts to the religion were required to profess their
+ faith in her in direct succession to Ahura-mazda.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From Armaiti must be carefully distinguished the <i>geus urva</i>, or
+ &ldquo;soul of the earth&rdquo;&mdash;a being who nearly resembles the &ldquo;anima mundi&rdquo;
+ of the Greek and Roman philosophers. This spirit dwells in the earth
+ itself, animating it as a man&rsquo;s soul animates his body. In old times, when
+ man first began to plough the soil, <i>geus urva</i> cried aloud, thinking
+ that his life was threatened, and implored the assistance of the
+ archangels. They however were deaf to his entreaties (since Ormazd had
+ decreed that there should be cultivation), and left him to bear his pains
+ as he best could. It is to be hoped that in course of time he became
+ callous to them, and made the discovery that mere scratches, though they
+ may be painful, are not dangerous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is uncertain whether in the most ancient form of the Iranic worship the
+ cult of Mithra was included or no. On the one hand, the fact that Mithra
+ is common to both forms of the Arian creed&mdash;the Indian and Iranic&mdash;would
+ induce the belief that his worship was adopted from the first by the
+ Zoroastrians; on the other, the entire absence of all mention of Mithra
+ from the Gathas would lead us to the conclusion that in the time when they
+ were composed his cult had not yet begun. Perhaps we may distinguish
+ between two forms of early Iranic worship&mdash;one that of the more
+ intelligent and spiritual&mdash;the leaders of the secession&mdash;in
+ whose creed Mithra had no place; the other that of the great mass of
+ followers, a coarser and more material system, in which many points of the
+ old religion were retained, and among them the worship of the Sun-god.
+ This lower and more materialistic school of thought probably conveyed on
+ into the Iranic system other points also common to the Zendavosta with the
+ Vedas, as the recognition of Airyaman (Aryaman) as a genius presiding over
+ marriages, of Vitraha as a very high angel, and the like.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vayu, &ldquo;the Wind,&rdquo; seems to have been regarded as a god from the first. He
+ appears, not only in the later portions of the Zenda vesta, like Mithra
+ and Aryaman, but in the Gathas themselves. His name is clearly identical
+ with that of the Vedic Wind-god, Vayu, and is apparently a sister form to
+ the ventus, or wind, of the more western Arians. The root is probably vi,
+ &ldquo;to go,&rdquo; which may be traced in vis, via, vado, venio, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ancient Iranians did not adopt into their system either Agni, &ldquo;Fire&rdquo;
+ (Lat. <i>ignis</i>), or Soma (Homa), &ldquo;Intoxication.&rdquo; Fire was indeed
+ retained for sacrifice; but it was regarded as a mere material agent, and
+ not as a mysterious Power, the proper object of prayer and worship. The
+ Soma worship, which formed a main element of the old religion, and which
+ was retained in Brahminism, was at the first altogether discarded by the
+ Zoroastrians; indeed, it seems to have been one of the main causes of that
+ disgust which split the Arian body in two, and gave rise to the new
+ religion. A ceremony in which it was implied that the intoxication of
+ their worshippers was pleasing to the gods, and not obscurely hinted that
+ they themselves indulged in similar excesses, was revolting to the
+ religious temper of those who made the Zoaroastrian reformation; and it is
+ plain from the Gathas that the new system was intended at first to be
+ entirely free from the pollution of so disgusting a practice. But the zeal
+ of religious reformers outgoes in most cases the strength and patience of
+ their people, whose spirit is too gross and earthly to keep pace with the
+ more lofty flights of the purer and higher intelligence. The Iranian
+ section of the Arians could not be weaned wholly from their beloved Soma
+ feasts; and the leaders of the movement were obliged to be content
+ ultimately with so far reforming and refining the ancient ceremony as to
+ render it comparatively innocuous. The portion of the rite which implied
+ that the gods themselves indulged in intoxication was omitted; and for the
+ intoxication of the priests was substituted a moderate use of the liquor,
+ which, instead of giving a religious sanction to drunkenness, merely
+ implied that the Soma juice was a good gift of God, one of the many
+ blessings for which men had to be thankful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With respect to the evil spirits or intelligences, which, in the
+ Zoroastrian system, stood over against the good ones, the teaching of the
+ early reformers seems to have been less clear. The old divinities, except
+ where adopted into the new creed, were in a general way called Devas,
+ &ldquo;fiends&rdquo; or &ldquo;devils,&rdquo; in contrast with the Ahuras, or &ldquo;gods.&rdquo; These devas
+ were represented as many in number, as artful, malicious, deceivers and
+ injurers of mankind, more especially of the Zoroastrians or
+ Ormazd-worshippers, as inventors of spells and lovers of the intoxicating
+ Soma draught. Their leading characteristics were &ldquo;destroying&rdquo; and &ldquo;lying.&rdquo;
+ They were seldom or never called by distinct names. No account was given
+ of their creation, nor of the origin of their wickedness. No single
+ superior intelligence, no great Principle of Evil, was placed at their
+ head. Ahriman (Angro-mainyus) does not occur in the Gathas as a proper
+ name. Far less is there any graduated hierarchy of evil, surrounding a
+ Prince of Darkness, with a sort of court, antagonistic to the angelic host
+ of Ormazd, as in the latter portions of the Zendavesta and in the modern
+ Parsee system.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus Dualism proper, or a belief in two uncreated and independent
+ principles, one a principle of good and the other a principal of evil, was
+ no part of the original Zoroastrianism. At the same time we find, even in
+ the Gathas, the earliest portions of the Zondavesta, the germ out of which
+ Dualism sprung. The contrast between good and evil is strongly and sharply
+ marked in the Gathas; the writers continually harp upon it, their minds
+ are evidently struck with this sad antithesis which colors the whole moral
+ world to them; they see everywhere a struggle between right and wrong,
+ truth and falsehood, purity and impurity; apparently they are blind to the
+ evidence of harmony and agreement in the universe, discerning nothing
+ anywhere but strife, conflict, antagonism. Nor is this all. They go a step
+ further, and personify the two parties to the struggle. One is a &ldquo;white&rdquo;
+ or holy &ldquo;Spirit&rdquo; (<i>cpento mainyus</i>), and the other a &ldquo;dark spirit&rdquo; (<i>angro
+ mainyus</i>). But this personification is merely poetical or metaphorical,
+ not real. The &ldquo;white spirit&rdquo; is not Ahura-mazda, and the &ldquo;dark spirit&rdquo; is
+ not a hostile intelligence. Both resolve themselves on examination into
+ mere figures of speech&mdash;phantoms of poetic imagery&mdash;abstract
+ notions, clothed by language with an apparent, not a real, personality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was natural that, as time went on, Dualism should develop itself out of
+ the primitive Zoroastrianism. Language exercises a tyranny over thought,
+ and abstractions in the ancient world were ever becoming persons. The
+ Iranian mind, moreover, had been strack, when it first turned to
+ contemplate the world, with a certain antagonism; and, having once entered
+ this track, it would be compelled to go on, and seek to discover the
+ origin of the antagonism, the cause (or causes) to which it was to be
+ ascribed. Evil seemed most easily accounted for by the supposition of an
+ evil Person; and the continuance of an equal struggle, without advantage
+ to either side, which was what the Iranians thought they beheld in the
+ world that lay around them, appeared to them to imply the equality of that
+ evil Person with the Being whom they rightly regarded as the author of all
+ good. Thus Dualism had its birth. The Iranians came to believe in the
+ existence of two co-eternal and co-equal Persons, one good and the other
+ evil, between whom there had been from all eternity a perpetual and
+ never-ceasing conflict, and between whom the same conflict would continue
+ to rage through all coming time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is impossible to say how this development took place. We have evidence,
+ however, that at a period considerably anterior to the commencement of the
+ Median Empire, Dualism, not perhaps in its ultimate extravagant form, but
+ certainly in a very decided and positive shape, had already been thought
+ out and become the recognized creed of the Iranians. In the first Fargard,
+ or chapter, of the Vendidad&mdash;the historical chapter, in which are
+ traced the only movements of the Iranic peoples, and which from the
+ geographical point whereat it stops must belong to a time when the Arians
+ had not yet reached Media Magna&mdash;-the Dualistic belief clearly shows
+ itself. The term Angro-mainyus has now become a proper name, and
+ designates the great spirit of evil as definitely and determinately as
+ Ahura-mazda designates the good spirit. The antagonism between Ahura-mazda
+ and Angro-mainyus is depicted in the strongest colors; it is direct,
+ constant and successful. Whatever good work Ahura-mazda in his benevolence
+ creates, Angro-mainyus steps forward to mar and blast it. If Ahura-mazda
+ forms a &ldquo;delicious spot&rdquo; in a world previously desert and uninhabitable to
+ become the first home of his favorites, the Arians, Angro-mainyus ruins it
+ by sending into it a poisonous serpent, and at the same time rendering the
+ climate one of the bitterest severity. If Ahura-mazda provides, instead of
+ this blasted region, another charming habitation, &ldquo;the second best of
+ regions and countries,&rdquo; Angro-mainyus sends there the curse of murrain,
+ fatal to all cattle. To every land which Ahura-mazda creates for his
+ worshippers, Angro-mainyus immediately assigns some plague or other. War,
+ ravages, sickness, fever, poverty, hail, earthquakes, buzzing insects,
+ poisonous plants, unbelief, witchcraft, and other inexpiable sins, are
+ introduced by him into the various happy regions created without any such
+ drawbacks by the good spirit; and a world, which should have been &ldquo;very
+ good,&rdquo; is by these means converted into a scene of trial and suffering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Dualistic principle being thus fully adopted, and the world looked on
+ as the battle-ground between two independent and equal powers engaged in
+ perpetual strife, it was natural that the imagination should complete the
+ picture by ascribing to those superhuman rivals the circumstantials that
+ accompany a great struggle between human adversaries. The two kings
+ required, in the first place, to have their councils, which were
+ accordingly assigned them, and were respectively composed of six
+ councillors. The councillors of Ahura-mazda&mdash;called Amesha Spentas,
+ or &ldquo;Immortal Saints,&rdquo; afterwards corrupted into Amshashpands&mdash;wore
+ Vohu-mano (Bahman), Asha-va-hista (Ardibehesht), Khshathra-vairya
+ (Shahravar), Qpenta-Armaiti (Isfand-armat), Haurvatat (Khordad), and
+ Ameretat (Amerdat). Those of Angro-mainyus were Ako-mano, Indra, Qaurva,
+ Naonhaitya, and two others whose names are interpreted as &ldquo;Darkness&rdquo; and
+ &ldquo;Poison.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vohu-mano (Bahman) means &ldquo;the Good Mind.&rdquo; Originally a mere attribute of
+ Ahura-mazda, Vohu-mano came to be considered, first as one of the high
+ angels attendant on him, and then formally as one of-his six councillors.
+ He had a distinct sphere or province assigned to him in Ahura-mazda&rsquo;s
+ kingdom, which was the maintenance of life in animals and of goodness in
+ man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Asha-vahista (Ardibehesht) means &ldquo;the Highest Truth&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Voritas
+ optima,&rdquo; or rather perhaps &ldquo;Veritas lucidissima.&rdquo; He was the &ldquo;Light&rdquo; of
+ the universe, subtle, all-pervading, omnipresent. His special business was
+ to maintain the splendor of the various luminaries, and thereby to
+ preserve all those things whose existence and growth depend on light.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Khshathra-vairya (Shahravar), whose name means simply &ldquo;possessions,&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;wealth,&rdquo; was regarded as presiding over metals and as the dispenser of
+ riches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Qoonta-Armaiti (Isfand-armat)&mdash;the &ldquo;white or holy Ar-maiti,&rdquo;
+ represented the Earth. She had from the first, as we have already seen, a
+ distinct position in the system of the Zoroastrians, where she was at once
+ the Earth goddess and the genius of piety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Haurvatat (Khordad) means &ldquo;health&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;sanitas&rdquo;&mdash;and was
+ originally one of the great and precious gifts which Ahura-mazda possessed
+ himself and kindly bestowed on his creatures. When personification, and
+ the needs of the theology, had made Haurvatat an archangel, he, together
+ with Ameretat (Amerdat), &ldquo;Immortality,&rdquo; took the presidency of the
+ vegetable world, which it was the business of the pair to keep in good
+ condition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the council of Angro-mainyus, Ako-mano stands in direct antithesis to
+ Vohu-mano, as &ldquo;the bad mind,&rdquo; or more literally, &ldquo;the naught mind&rdquo;&mdash;for
+ the Zoroastrians, like Plato, regarded good and evil as identical with
+ reality and unreality. Ako-mano&rsquo;s special sphere is the mind of man, where
+ he suggests evil thoughts and prompts to bad words and wicked deeds. He
+ holds the first place in the infernal council, as Vohu-mano does in the
+ heavenly one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Indra, who holds the second place in the infernal council, is evidently
+ the Vedic god whom the Zoroastrians regarded as a powerful demon, and
+ therefore made one of Angro-mainyus&rsquo;s chief councillors. He probably
+ retained his character as the god of the storm and of war, the destroyer
+ of crops and cities, the inspirer of armies and the wielder of the
+ thunder-bolt. The Zoroastrians, however, ascribed to him only destructive
+ actions; while the more logical Hindoos, observing that the same storm
+ which hurt the crops and struck down trees and buildings was also the
+ means of fertilizing the lands and purifying the air, viewed him under a
+ double aspect, as at once terrible in his wrath and the bestower of
+ numerous blessings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Qaurva, who stands next to Indra, is thought to be the Hindoo Shiva, who
+ has the epithet qarva in one of the Vedas. But the late appearance of
+ Shiva in the Hindoo system makes this highly uncertain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Naonhaitya, the fourth member of the infernal council, corresponds
+ apparently to the Vedic Nasatyas, a collective name given to the two
+ Aswins, the Dioscuri of Indian mythology. These were favorite gods of the
+ early Hindoos, to whose protection they very mainly ascribed their
+ prosperity. It was natural that the Iranians, in their aversion to their
+ Indian brethren, should give the Aswins a seat at Angro-mainyus&rsquo;s
+ council-table; but it is curious that they should represent the twin
+ deities by only a single councillor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Taric and Zaric, &ldquo;Darkness&rdquo; and &ldquo;Poison,&rdquo; the occupants of the fifth and
+ sixth places, are evidently personifications made for the occasion, to
+ complete the infernal council to its full complement of six members.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the two Principles of Good and Evil have their respective councils, so
+ have they likewise their armies. The Good Spirit has created thousands of
+ angelic beings, who everywhere perform his will and fight on his side
+ against the Evil One; and the Evil One has equally on his part called into
+ being thousands of malignant spirits who are his emissaries in the world,
+ doing his work continually, and fighting his battles. These are the Devas
+ or Dives, so famous in Persian fairy mythology. They are &ldquo;wicked, bad,
+ false, untrue, the originators of mischief, most baneful, destructive, the
+ basest of all beings.&rdquo; The whole universe is full of them. They aim
+ primarily at destroying all the good creations of Ahura-mazda; but if
+ unable to destroy they content themselves with perverting and corrupting.
+ They dog the steps of men, tempting them to sin; and, as soon as sin,
+ obtaining a fearful power over them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the head of Ahura-mazda&rsquo;s army is the angel Sraosha (Serosh). Serosh is
+ &ldquo;the sincere, the beautiful, the victorious, the true, the master of
+ truth.&rdquo; He protects the territories of the Iranians, wounds, and sometimes
+ even slays the demons, and is engaged in a perpetual struggle against
+ them, never slumbering night or day, but guarding the world with his drawn
+ sword, more particularly after sunset, when the demons have the greatest
+ power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Angro-mainyus appears not to possess any such general-in-chief. Besides
+ the six councillors above mentioned, there are indeed various demons of
+ importance, as Drukhs, &ldquo;destruction;&rdquo; Aeshemo, &ldquo;rapine;&rdquo; Daivis, &ldquo;deceit;&rdquo;
+ Driwis, &ldquo;poverty,&rdquo; etc.; but no one of these seems to occupy a parallel
+ place in the evil world to that which is assigned to Serosh in the good.
+ Perhaps we have here a recognition of the anarchic character of evil,
+ whose attacks are like those of a huge undisciplined host&mdash;casual,
+ fitful, irregular&mdash;destitute wholly of that principle of law and
+ order which gives to the resisting power of good a great portion of its
+ efficacy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the belief in a spiritual world composed of all these various
+ intelligences&mdash;one half of whom were good, and the other half evil&mdash;the
+ early Zoroastrians added notions with respect to human duties and human
+ prospects far more enlightened than those which have usually prevailed
+ among heathen nations. In their system truth, purity, piety, and industry
+ were the virtues chiefly valued and inculcated. Evil was traced up to its
+ root in the heart of man; and it was distinctly taught that no virtue
+ deserved the name but such as was co-extensive with the whole sphere of
+ human activity, including the thought, as well as the word and deed. The
+ purity required was inward as well as outward, mental as well as bodily.
+ The industry was to be of a peculiar character. Man was placed upon the
+ earth to preserve the good creation; and this could only be done by
+ careful tilling of the soil, eradication of thorns and weeds, and
+ reclamation of the tracts over which Angro-mainyus had spread the curse of
+ barrenness. To cultivate the soil was thus a religious duty; the whole
+ community was required to be agricultural; and either as proprietor, as
+ farmer, or as laboring man, each Zoroastrian must &ldquo;further the works of
+ life&rdquo; by advancing tillage. Piety consisted in the acknowledgment of the
+ One True God, Ahura-mazda, and of his holy angels, the Amesha Spentas or
+ Amshashpands, in the frequent offering of prayers, praises, and
+ thanksgivings, in the recitation of hymns, the performance of the reformed
+ Soma ceremony, and the occasional sacrifice of animals. Of the hymns we
+ have abundant examples in the Gathas of the Zendavesta, and in the Yagna
+ haptanhaiti, or &ldquo;Yaana of seven chapters,&rdquo; which belongs to the second
+ period of the religion. A specimen from the latter source is subjoined
+ below. The Soma or Homa ceremony consisted in the extraction of the juice
+ of the Homa plant by the priests during the recitation of prayers, the
+ formal presentation of the liquid extracted to the sacrificial fire, the
+ consumption of a small portion of it by one of the officiating priests,
+ and the division of the remainder among the worshippers. As the juice was
+ drunk immediately after extraction and before fermentation had set in, it
+ was not intoxicating. The ceremony seems to have been regarded, in part,
+ as having a mystic force, securing the favor of heaven; in part, as
+ exerting a beneficial influence upon the body of the worshipper through
+ the curative power inherent in the Homa plant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sacrifices of the Zoroastrians were never human. The ordinary victim
+ was the horse; and we hear of occasions on which a single individual
+ sacrificed as many as ten of these animals. Mares seem to have been
+ regarded as the most pleasing offerings, probably on account of their
+ superior value; and if it was desired to draw down the special favor of
+ the Deity, those mares were selected which were already heavy in foal.
+ Oxen, sheep, and goats were probably also used as victims. A priest always
+ performed the sacrifice, slaying the animal, and showing the flesh to the
+ sacred fire by way of consecration, after which it was eaten at a solemn
+ feast by the priest and worshippers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Zoroastrians were devout believers in the immortality of the soul and
+ a conscious future existence. They taught that immediately after death the
+ souls of men, both good and bad, proceeded together along an appointed
+ path to &ldquo;the bridge of the gatherer&rdquo; (chinvatperetu). This was a narrow
+ road conducting to heaven or paradise, over which the souls of the pious
+ alone could pass, while the wicked fell from it into the gulf below, where
+ they found themselves in the place of punishment. The good soul was
+ assisted across the bridge by the angel Serosh&mdash;&ldquo;the happy,
+ well-formed, swift, tall Serosh&rdquo;&mdash;who met the weary wayfarer and
+ sustained his steps as he effected the difficult passage. The prayers of
+ his friends in this world were of much avail to the deceased, and greatly,
+ helped him on his journey. As he entered, the archangel Vohu-mano or
+ Bahman rose from his throne and greeted him with the words, &ldquo;How happy art
+ thou who hast come here to us from the mortality to the immortality!&rdquo; Then
+ the pious soul went joyfully onward to Ahura-mazda, to the immortal
+ saints, to the golden throne, to Paradise. As for the wicked, when they
+ fell into the gulf, they found themselves in outer darkness, in the
+ kingdom of Angro-mainyus, where they were forced to remain and to feed
+ upon poisoned banquets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is believed by some that the doctrine of the resurrection of the body
+ was also part of the Zoroastrian creed. Theopompus assigned this doctrine
+ to the Magi; and there is no reason to doubt that it was held by the
+ priestly caste of the Arian nations in his day. We find it plainly stated
+ in portions of the Zendavesta, which, if not among the earliest, are at
+ any rate of very considerable antiquity, as in the eighteenth chapter of
+ the Vendidad. It is argued that even in the Gathas there is an expression
+ used which shows the doctrine to have been already held when they were
+ composed; but the phrase adduced is so obscure that its true meaning must
+ be pronounced in the highest degree uncertain. The absence of any plain
+ allusion to the resurrection from the earlier portions of the sacred
+ volume is a strong argument against its having formed any part of the
+ original Arian creed&mdash;an argument which is far from outweighed by the
+ occurrence of a more possible reference to it in a single ambiguous
+ passage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Around and about this nucleus of religious belief there grew up in course
+ of time a number of legends, some of which possess considerable interest.
+ Like other thoughtful races, the Iranians speculated upon the early
+ condition of mankind, and conceived a golden age, and a king then reigning
+ over a perfectly happy people, whom they called King Yima&mdash;Yima-khshaeta&mdash;the
+ modern Persian Jemshid. Yima, according to the legend, had dwelt
+ originally in Aryanem vaejo&mdash;the primitive seat of the Arians&mdash;and
+ had there reigned gloriously and peacefully for awhile; but the evils of
+ winter having come upon his country, he had removed from it with his
+ subjects, and had retired to a secluded spot where he and his people
+ enjoyed uninterrupted happiness. In this place was &ldquo;neither overbearing
+ nor mean-spiritedness, neither stupidity nor violence, neither poverty nor
+ deceit, neither puniness nor deformity, neither huge teeth nor bodies
+ beyond the usual meassure.&rdquo; The inhabitants suffered no defilement from
+ the evil spirit. They dwelt amid odoriferous trees and golden pillars;
+ their cattle were the largest, best, and most beautiful on the earth; they
+ were themselves a tall and beautiful race; their food was ambrosial, and
+ never failed them. No wonder that time sped fast with them, and that they,
+ not noting its night, thought often that what was really a year had been
+ no more than a single day. Yima was the great hero of the early Iranians.
+ His titles, besides &ldquo;the king&rdquo; (khshaeta), are &ldquo;the brilliant,&rdquo; &ldquo;the
+ happy,&rdquo; &ldquo;the greatly wealthy,&rdquo; &ldquo;the leader of the peoples,&rdquo; &ldquo;the renowned
+ in Aryanem vaejo.&rdquo; He is most probably identical with the Yama of the
+ Vedas, who was originally the first man, the progenitor of mankind and the
+ ruler of the blessed in Paradise, but who was afterwards transformed into
+ &ldquo;the god of death, the inexorable judge of men&rsquo;s doings, and the punisher
+ of the wicked.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next in importance to Yima among the heroes is Thraetona&mdash;the modern
+ Persian Feridun. He was born in Varena&mdash;which is perhaps Atropatene,
+ or Azerbijan&mdash;and was the son of a distinguished father, Athwyo. His
+ chief exploit was the destruction of Ajis-dahaka (Zohak), who is sometimes
+ represented as a cruel tyrant, the bitter enemy of the Iranian race,
+ sometimes as a monstrous dragon, with three mouths, three tails, six eyes,
+ and a thousand scaly rings, who threatened to ruin the whole of the good
+ creation. The traditional scene of the destruction was the mountain of
+ Demavend, the highest peak of the Elburz range south of the Caspian.
+ Thraetona, like Yima, appears to be also a Vedic hero. He may be
+ recognized in Traitana, who is said in the Rig-Veda to have slain a mighty
+ giant by severing his head from his shoulders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A third heroic personage known in the early times was Keresaspa, of the
+ noble Sama family. He was the son of Thrita&mdash;a distinct personage
+ from Thraetona&mdash;and brother of Urvakh-shaya the Just and was bred up
+ in the arid country of Veh-keret (Khorassan). The &ldquo;glory&rdquo; which had rested
+ upon Yima so many years became his in his day. He was the mightiest among
+ the mighty, and was guarded from all danger by the fairy (pairika)
+ Enathaiti, who followed him whithersoever he went. He slew Qravara, the
+ queen and venomous serpent, who swallowed up men and horses. He killed
+ Gandarewa with the golden heel, and also Cnavidhaka, who had boasted that,
+ when he grew up, he would make the earth his wheel and heaven his chariot,
+ that he would carry off Ahura-mazda from heaven and Angro-mainyus from
+ hell, and yoke them both as horses to his car. Keresaspa appears as
+ Gershasp in the modern Persian legends, where, however, but little is said
+ of his exploits. In the Hindoo books he appears as Krigagva, the son of
+ Samyama, and is called king of Vaigali, or Bengal!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From these specimens the general character of the early Iranic legends
+ appears sufficiently. Without affording any very close resemblances in
+ particular cases, they present certain general features which are common
+ to the legendary lore of all the Western Arians. They are romantic tales,
+ not allegories; they relate with exaggerations the deeds of men, not the
+ processes of nature. Combining some beauty with a good deal that is
+ bizarre and grotesque, they are lively and graphic, but somewhat childish,
+ having in no case any deep meaning, and rarely teaching a moral lesson. In
+ their earliest shape they appear, so far as we can judge, to have been
+ brief, disconnected, and fragmentary. They owe the full and closely
+ interconnected form which they assume in the Shahna-meh and other modern
+ Persian writings, partly to a gradual accretion during the course of
+ centuries, partly to the inventive genius of Firdausi, who wove the
+ various and often isolated legends into a pseudo-history, and amplified
+ them at his own pleasure. How much of the substance of Firdausi&rsquo;s poems
+ belongs to really primitive myth is uncertain. We find in the Zend texts
+ the names of Gayo-marathan, who corresponds to Kaiomars; of Haoshyanha, or
+ Hosheng; of Yima-shaeta, or Jemshid; of Ajisdahaka, or Zohak; of Athwya,
+ or Abtin; of Thraetona, or Feridun; of Keresaspa, or Gershasp; of Kava Uq,
+ or Kai Kavus; of Kava Hucrava, or Kai Khosroo; and of Kava Vistaspa, or
+ Gushtasp. But we have no mention of Tahomars; of Gava (or Gau) the
+ blacksmith; of Feridua&rsquo;s sons, Selm, Tur, and Irij; of Zal, or Mino&rsquo;chihr,
+ or Eustem; of Afrasiab, or Kai Kobad; of Sohrab, or Isfendiar. And of the
+ heroic names which actually occur in the Zendavesta, several, as
+ Gayo-marathan, Haoshyariha, Kava Uc, and Kava Hugrava, are met with only
+ in the later portions, which belong probably to about the fourth century
+ before our era. The only legends which we know to be primitive are those
+ above related, which are found in portions of the Zendavesta, whereto the
+ best critics ascribe a high antiquity. The negative argument is not,
+ however, conclusive; and it is quite possible that a very large proportion
+ of Firdausi&rsquo;s tale may consist of ancient legends dressed up in a garb
+ comparatively modern.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two phases of the early Iranic religion have been now briefly described;
+ the first a simple and highly spiritual creed, remarkable for its distinct
+ assertion of monotheism, its hatred of idolatry, and the strongly marked
+ antithesis which it maintained between good and evil; the second, a
+ natural corruption of the first, Dualistic, complicated by the importance
+ which it ascribed to angelic beings verging upon polytheism. It remains to
+ give an account of a third phase into which the religion passed in
+ consequence of an influence exercised upon it from without by an alien
+ system.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the Iranic nations, cramped for space in the countries east and south
+ of the Caspian, began to push themselves further to the west, and then to
+ the south, they were brought into contact with various Scythic tribes
+ inhabiting the mountain regions of Armenia, Azerbijan, Kurdistan, and
+ Luristan, whose religion appears to have been Magism. It was here, in
+ these elevated tracts, where the mountains almost seem to reach the skies,
+ that the most venerated and ancient of the fire-temples were established,
+ some of which remain, seemingly in their primitive condition, at the
+ present day. <a href="#linkimage-0007">[PLATE VI., Fig. 4.]</a> Here
+ tradition placed the original seat of the fire-worship; and from hence
+ many taught that Zoroaster, whom they regarded as the founder of Magism,
+ had sprung. Magism was, essentially, the worship of the elements, the
+ recognition of fire, air, earth, and water as the only proper objects of
+ human reverence. The Magi held no personal gods, and therefore naturally
+ rejected temples, shrines, and images, as tending to encourage the notion
+ that gods existed of a like nature with man, i.e., possessing personality&mdash;living
+ and intelligent beings. Theirs was a nature worship, but a nature worship
+ of a very peculiar kind. They did not place gods over the different parts
+ of nature, like the Greeks; they did not even personify the powers of
+ nature, like the Hindoos; they paid their devotion to the actual material
+ things themselves. Fire, as the most subtle and ethereal principle, and
+ again as the most powerful agent, attracted their highest regards; and on
+ their fire-altars the sacred flame, generally said to have been kindled
+ from heaven, was kept burning uninterruptedly from year to year and from
+ age to age by bands of priests, whose special duty it was to see that the
+ sacred spark was never extinguished. To defile the altar by blowing the
+ flame with one&rsquo;s breath was a capital offence; and to burn a corpse was
+ regarded as an act equally odious. When victims were offered to fire,
+ nothing but a small portion of the fat was consumed in the flame. Next to
+ fire, water was reverenced. Sacrifice was offered to rivers, lakes, and
+ fountains, the victim being brought near to them and then slain, while
+ great care was taken that no drop of their blood should touch the water
+ and pollute it. No refuse was allowed to be cast into a river, nor was it
+ even lawful to wash one&rsquo;s hands in one. Reverence for earth was shown by
+ sacrifice, and by abstention from the usual mode of burying the dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0007" id="linkimage-0007">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/plate006.jpg" width="100%" alt="Plate VI. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The Magian religion was of a highly sacerdotal type. No worshipper could
+ perform any religious act except by the intervention of a priest, or
+ Magus, who stood between him and the divinity as a Mediator. The Magus
+ prepared the victim and slew it, chanted the mystic strain which gave the
+ sacrifice all its force, poured on the ground the propitiatory libation of
+ oil, milk, and honey, held the bundle of thin tamarisk twigs&mdash;the
+ Zendic barsom (baregma)&mdash;the employment of which was essential to
+ every sacrificial ceremony. The Magi were a priest-caste, apparently
+ holding their office by hereditary succession. They claimed to possess,
+ not only a sacred and mediatorial character, but also supernatural
+ prophetic powers. They explained omens, expounded dreams, and by means of
+ a certain mysterious manipulation of the barsom, or bundle of twigs,
+ arrived at a knowledge of future events, which they communicated to the
+ pious inquirer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With such pretensions it was natural that the caste should assume a lofty
+ air, a stately dress, and an entourage of ceremonial magnificence. Clad in
+ white robes, and bearing Upon their heads tall felt caps, with long
+ lappets at the sides, which concealed the jaw and even the lips, each with
+ his barsom in his hand, they marched in procession to their pynetheia, or
+ fire altars, and standing around them performed for an hour at a time
+ their magical incantations. The credulous multitude, impressed by sights
+ of this kind, and imposed on by the claims to supernatural power which the
+ Magi advanced, paid them a willing homage; the kings and chiefs consulted
+ them; and when the Arian tribes, pressing westward, came into contact with
+ the races professing the Magian religion, they found a sacerdotal caste
+ all-powerful in most of the Scythic nations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The original spirit of Zoroastrianism was fierce and exclusive. The early
+ Iranians looked with contempt and hatred on the creed of their Indian
+ brethren; they abhorred idolatry; and were disinclined to tolerate any
+ religion except that which they had themselves worked out. But with the
+ lapse of ages this spirit became softened. Polytheistic creeds are far
+ less jealous than monotheism; and the development of Zoroastrianism had
+ been in a polytheistic direction. By the time that the Zoroastrians were
+ brought into contact with Magism, the first fervor of their religious zeal
+ had abated, and they were in that intermediate condition of religious
+ faith which at once impresses and is impressed, acts upon other systems,
+ and allows itself to be acted upon in return. The result which supervened
+ upon contact with Magism seems to have been a fusion, an absorption into
+ Zoroastrianism of all the chief points of the Magian belief, and all the
+ more remarkable of the Magian religious usages. This absorption appears to
+ have taken place in Media. It was there that the Arian tribes first
+ associated with themselves, and formally adopted into their body, the
+ priest-caste of the Magi, which thenceforth was recognized as one of the
+ six Median tribes. It is there that Magi are first found acting in the
+ capacity of Arian priests. According to all the accounts which have come
+ down to us, they soon acquired a predominating influence, which they no
+ doubt used to impress their own religious doctrines more and more upon the
+ nation at large, and to thrust into the background, so far as they dared,
+ the peculiar features of the old Arian belief. It is not necessary to
+ suppose that the Medes ever apostatized altogether from the worship of
+ Ormazd, or formally surrendered their Dualistic faith. But, practically,
+ the Magian doctrines and the Magian usages&mdash;elemental worship,
+ divination with the sacred rods, dream expounding, incantations at the
+ fire-altars, sacrifices whereat a Magus officiated&mdash;seem to have
+ prevailed; the new predominated over the old; backed by the power of an
+ organized hierarchy, Magism over-laid the primitive Arian creed, and, as
+ time went on, tended more and more to become the real religion of the
+ nation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the religious customs introduced by the Magi into Media there are
+ one or two which seem to require especial notice. The attribution of a
+ sacred character to the four so-called elements&mdash;earth, air, fire and
+ water&mdash;renders it extremely difficult to know what is to be done with
+ the dead. They cannot be burnt, for that is a pollution of fire; or
+ buried, for that is a pollution of earth; or thrown into a river, for that
+ is a defilement of water. If they are deposited in sarcophagi, or exposed,
+ they really pollute the air; but in this case the guilt of the pollution,
+ it may be argued, does not rest on man, since the dead body is merely left
+ in the element in which nature placed it. The only mode of disposal which
+ completely avoids the defilement of every element is consumption of the
+ dead by living beings; and the worship of the elements leads on naturally
+ to this treatment of corpses. At present the Guebres, or Fire-worshippers,
+ the descendants of the ancient Persians, expose all their dead, with the
+ intention that they shall be devoured by birds of prey. In ancient times,
+ it appears certain that the Magi adopted this practice with respect to
+ their own dead; but, apparently, they did not insist upon having their
+ example followed universally by the laity. Probably a natural instinct
+ made the Arians averse to this coarse and revolting custom; and their
+ spiritual guides, compassionating their weakness, or fearful of losing
+ their own influence over them if they were too stiff in enforcing
+ compliance, winked at the employment by the people of an entirely
+ different practice. The dead bodies were first covered completely with a
+ coating of wax, and were then deposited in the ground. It was held,
+ probably, that the coating of wax prevented the pollution which would have
+ necessarily resulted had the earth come into direct contact with the
+ corpse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The custom of divining by means of a number of rods appears to have been
+ purely Magian. There is no trace of it in the Gathas, in the Yagna
+ haptanhaiti, or in the older portions of the Vendidad. It was a Scythic
+ practice; and probably the best extant account of it is that which
+ Herodotus gives of the mode wherein it was managed by the Scyths of
+ Europe. &ldquo;Scythia,&rdquo; he says, &ldquo;has an abundance of soothsayers, who foretell
+ the future by means of a number of willow wands. A large bundle of these
+ rods is brought and laid on the ground. The soothsayer unties the bundle,
+ and places each wand by itself, at the same time uttering his prophecy:
+ then, while he is still speaking, he gathers the rods together again, and
+ makes them up once more into a bundle.&rdquo; A divine power seems to have been
+ regarded as resting in the wands; and they were supposed to be &ldquo;consulted&rdquo;
+ on the matter in hand, both severally and collectively. The bundle of
+ wands thus imbued with supernatural wisdom became naturally part of the
+ regular priestly costume, and was carried by the Magi on all occasions of
+ ceremony. The wands were of different lengths; and the number of wands in
+ the bundle varied. Sometimes there were three, sometimes five, sometimes
+ as many as seven or nine; but in every case, as it would seem, an odd
+ number.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another implement which the priests commonly bore must be regarded, not as
+ Magian, but as Zoroastrian. This is the khrafgthraghna, or instrument for
+ killing bad animals, frogs, toads, snakes, mice, lizards, flies, etc.,
+ which belonged to the bad creation, or that which derived its origin from
+ Angro-mainyus. These it was the general duty of all men, and the more
+ especial duty of the Zoroastrian priests, to put to death, whenever they
+ had the opportunity. The Magi, it appears, adopted this Arian usage, added
+ the khrafgthraghna to the barsom, and were so zealous in their performance
+ of the cruel work expected from them as to excite the attention, and even
+ draw upon themselves the rebuke, of foreigners.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A practice is assigned to the Magi by many classical and ecclesiastical
+ writers, which, if it were truly charged on them, would leave a very dark
+ stain on the character of their ethical system. It is said that they
+ allowed and even practised incest of the most horrible kind&mdash;such
+ incest as we are accustomed to associate with the names of Lot, OEdipus,
+ and Herod Agrippa. The charge seems to have been first made either by
+ Xanthus the Lydian, or by Ctesias. It was accepted, probably without much
+ inquiry, by the Greeks generally, and then by the Romans, was repeated by
+ writer after writer as a certain fact, and became finally a stock topic
+ with the early Christian apologists. Whether it had any real foundation in
+ fact is very uncertain. Herodotus, who collects with so much pains the
+ strange and unusual customs of the various nations whom he visits, is
+ evidently quite ignorant of any such monstrous practice. He regards the
+ Magian religion as established in Persia, yet he holds the incestuous
+ marriage of Cambyses with his sister to have been contrary to existing
+ Persian laws. At the still worst forms of incest of which the Magi and
+ those under their influence are accused, Herodotus does not even glance.
+ No doubt, if Xanthus Lydus really made the statement which Clemens of
+ Alexandria assigns to him, it is an important piece of evidence, though
+ scarcely sufficient to prove the Magi guilty. Xanthus was a man of little
+ judgment, apt to relate extravagant tales; and, as a Lydian, he may have
+ been disinclined to cast an aspersion on the religion of his country&rsquo;s
+ oppressors. The passage in question, however, probably did not come from
+ Xanthus Lydus, but from a much later writer who assumed his name, as has
+ been well shown by a living critic. The true original author of the
+ accusation against the Magi and their co-religionists seems to have been
+ Ctesias, whose authority is far too weak to establish a charge
+ intrinsically so improbable. Its only historical foundation seems to have
+ been the fact that incestuous marriages were occasionally contracted by
+ the Persian kings; not, however, in consequence of any law, or religious
+ usage, but because in the plenitude of their power they could set all law
+ at defiance, and trample upon the most sacred principles of morality and
+ religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A minor charge preferred against the Magian morality by Xanthus, or rather
+ by the pseudo-Xanthus, has possibly a more solid foundation. &ldquo;The Magi,&rdquo;
+ this writer said, &ldquo;hold their wives in common: at least they often marry
+ the wives of others with the free consent of their husbands.&rdquo; This is
+ really to say that among the Magians divorce was over-facile; that wives
+ were often put away, merely with a view to their forming a fresh marriage,
+ by husbands who understood and approved of the transaction. Judging by the
+ existing practice of the Persians, we must admit that such laxity is in
+ accordance with Iranic notions on the subject of marriage&mdash;notions
+ far less strict than those which have commonly prevailed among civilized
+ nations. There is, however, no other evidence, besides this, that divorce
+ was very common where the Magian system prevailed; and the mere assertion
+ of the writer who personated Xanthus Lydus will scarcely justify us in
+ affixing even this stigma on the religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon the whole, Magism, though less elevated and less pure than the old
+ Zoroastrian creed, must be pronounced to have possessed a certain
+ loftiness and picturesqueness which suited it to become the religion of a
+ great and splendid monarchy. The mysterious fire-altars on the
+ mountain-tops, with their prestige of a remote antiquity&mdash;the
+ ever-burning flame believed to have been kindled from on high&mdash;the
+ worship in the open air under the blue canopy of heaven&mdash;the long
+ troops of Magians in their white robes, with their strange caps, and their
+ mystic wands&mdash;the frequent prayers&mdash;the abundant sacrifices&mdash;the
+ long incantations&mdash;the supposed prophetic powers of the priest-caste&mdash;all
+ this together constituted an imposing whole at once to the eye and to the
+ mind, and was calculated to give additional grandeur to the civil system
+ that should be allied with it. Pure Zoroastrianism was too spiritual to
+ coalesce readily with Oriental luxury and magnificence, or to lend
+ strength to a government based on the ordinary principles of Asiatic
+ despotism. Magism furnished a hierarchy to support the throne, and add
+ splendor and dignity to the court, while they overawed the subject-class
+ by their supposed possession of supernatural powers, and of the right of
+ mediating between heaven and man. It supplied a picturesque worship which
+ at once gratified the senses and excited the fancy It gave scope to man&rsquo;s
+ passion for the marvellous by its incantations, its divining-rods, its
+ omen-reading, and its dream-expounding. It gratified the religious
+ scrupulosity which finds a pleasure in making to itself difficulties, by
+ the disallowance of a thousand natural acts, and the imposition of
+ numberless rules for external purity. At the same time it gave no offence
+ to the anti-idolatrous spirit in which the Arians had hitherto gloried,
+ but rather encouraged the iconoclasm which they always upheld and
+ practised. It thus blended easily with the previous creed of the people,
+ awaking no prejudices, clashing with no interests; winning its way by an
+ apparent meekness and unpresumingness, while it was quite prepared, when
+ the fitting time came, to be as fierce and exclusive as if it had never
+ worn the mask of humility and moderation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V. LANGUAGE AND WRITING.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ On the language of the ancient Medes a very few observations will be here
+ made. It has been noticed already that the Median form of speech was
+ closely allied to that of the Persians. The remark of Strabo quoted above,
+ and another remark which he cites from Nearchus, imply at once this fact,
+ and also the further fact of a dialectic difference between the two
+ tongues. Did we possess, as some imagine that we do, materials for tracing
+ out this diversity, it would be proper in the present place to enter fully
+ on the subject, and instead of contenting ourselves with asserting, or
+ even proving, the substantial oneness of the languages, it would be our
+ duty to proceed to the far more difficult and more complicated task of
+ comparing together the sister dialects, and noting their various
+ differences. The supposition that there exist means for such a comparison
+ is based upon a theory that in the language of the Zendavesta we have the
+ true speech of the ancient people of Media, while in the cuneiform
+ inscriptions of the Achasmenian kings it is beyond controversy that we
+ possess the ancient language of Persia. It becomes necessary, therefore,
+ to examine this theory, in order to justify our abstention from an inquiry
+ on which, if the theory were sound, we should be now called upon to enter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The notion that the Zend language was the idiom of ancient Media
+ originated with Anquetil du Perron. He looked on Zoroaster as a native of
+ Azerbijan, contemporary with Darius Hystaspis. His opinion was embraced by
+ Kleuker, Herder, and Eask; and again, with certain modifications, by
+ Tychsen and Heeren. These latter writers even gave a more completely
+ Median character to the Zendavesta, by regarding it as composed in Media
+ Magna, during the reign of the great Cyaxares. The main foundation of
+ these views was the identification of Zoroastrianism with the Magian
+ fire-worship, which was really ancient in Azerbijan, and flourished in
+ Media under the great Median monarch. But we have seen that Magianism and
+ Zoroastrianism were originally entirely distinct, and that the Zendavesta
+ in all its earlier portions belongs wholly to the latter system. Nothing
+ therefore is proved concerning the Zend dialect by establishing a
+ connection between the Medes and Magism, which was a corrupting influence
+ thrown in upon Zoroastrianism long after the composition of the great bulk
+ of the sacred writings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These writings themselves sufficiently indicate the place of their
+ composition. It was not Media, but Bactria, or at any rate the
+ north-eastern Iranic country, between the Bolor range and the Caspian.
+ This conclusion, which follows from a consideration of the various
+ geographical notices contained in the Zend books, had been accepted of
+ late years by all the more profound Zend scholars. Originated by Rhode, it
+ has also in its favor the names of Burnouf, Lassen, Westergaard, and Haug.
+ If then the Zend is to be regarded as really a local dialect, the idiom of
+ a particular branch of the Iranic people, there is far more reason for
+ considering it to be the ancient speech of Bactria than of any other Arian
+ country. Possibly the view is correct which recognizes two nearly-allied
+ dialects as existing side by side in Iran during its flourishing period&mdash;one
+ prevailing towards the west, the other towards the east&mdash;one
+ Medo-Persic, the other Sogdo-Bactrian&mdash;the former represented to us
+ by the cuneiform inscriptions, the latter by the Zend texts. Or it may be
+ closer to the truth to recognize in the Zendic and Achsemenian forms of
+ speech, not so much two contemporary idioms, as two stages of one and the
+ same language, which seems to be at present the opinion of the best
+ comparative philologists. In either case Media can claim no special
+ interest in Zend, which, if local, is Sogdo-Bactrian, and if not local is
+ no more closely connected with Media than with Persia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It appears then that we do not at present possess any means of
+ distinguishing the shades of difference which separated the. Median from
+ the Persian speech. We have in fact no specimens of the former beyond a
+ certain number of words, and those chiefly proper names, whereas we know
+ the latter tolerably completely from the inscriptions. It is proposed
+ under the head of the &ldquo;Fifth Monarchy&rdquo; to consider at some length the
+ general character of the Persian language as exhibited to us in these
+ documents. From the discussion then to be raised may be gathered the
+ general character of the speech of the Medes. In the present place all
+ that will be attempted is to show how far the remnants left us of Median
+ speech bear out the statement that, substantially, one and the same tongue
+ was spoken by both peoples.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many Median names are absolutely identical with Persian; e.g.,
+ Ariobarzanes, Artabazus, Artaeus, Artembares, Harpagus, Arbaces,
+ Tiridates, etc. Others which are not absolutely identical approach to the
+ Persian form so closely as to be plainly mere variants, like Theodoras and
+ Theodosius, Adelbert and Ethelbert, Miriam, Mariam, and Mariamne. Of this
+ kind are Intaphres, another form of Intaphernes, Artynes, another form of
+ Artanes, Parmises, another form of Parmys, and the like. A third class,
+ neither identical with any known Persian names, nor so nearly approaching
+ to them as to be properly considered mere variants, are made up of known
+ Persian roots, and may be explained on exactly the same principles as
+ Persian names. Such are Ophernes, Sitraphernes, Mitraphernes, Megabernes,
+ Aspadas, Mazares, Tachmaspates, Xathrites, Spitaces, Spitamas, Ehambacas,
+ and others. In Ophernes, Sitra-phernes, Mitra-phernes, and Mega-bernes,
+ the second element is manifestly the pharna or frana which is found in
+ Arta-phernes and Inta-phernes (Vida-frana), an active participial form
+ from pri, to protect. The initial element in O-phernes represents the Zend
+ hu, Sans, su, Greek ev, as the same letter does in O-manes, O-martes, etc.
+ The Sitra of Sitra-phernes has been explained as probably Ichshatra, &ldquo;the
+ crown,&rdquo; which is similarly represented in the Safro-pates of Curtius, a
+ name standing to Sitra-phernes exactly as Arta-patas to Arta-phernes. In
+ Mega-bernes the first element is the well-known baga, &ldquo;God,&rdquo; under the
+ form commonly preferred by the Greeks; and the name is exactly equivalent
+ to Curtius&rsquo;s Bagfo-phanes, which only differs from it by taking the
+ participle of pa, &ldquo;to protect,&rdquo; instead of the participle of pri, which
+ has the same meaning. In Aspa-das it is easy to recognize aspa, &ldquo;horse&rdquo; (a
+ common root in Persian names,) e.g., Aspa-thines, Aspa-mitras, Prex-aspes,
+ and the like, followed by the same element which terminates the name of
+ Oromaz-des, and which means either &ldquo;knowing&rdquo; or &ldquo;giving.&rdquo; Ma-zares
+ presents us with the root meh, &ldquo;much&rdquo; or &ldquo;great,&rdquo; which is found in the
+ name of the ilf-aspii, or &ldquo;Big Horses,&rdquo; a Persian tribe, followed by zara,
+ &ldquo;gold,&rdquo; which appears in Ctesias&rsquo;s &ldquo;Arto-awes,&rdquo; and perhaps also in
+ Zoro-aster. In Tachmaspates, the first element is takhma, &ldquo;strong,&rdquo; a root
+ found in the Persian names Ar-tochmes and Tritan-taechmes, while the
+ second is the frequently used pati, &ldquo;lord,&rdquo; which occurs as the initial
+ element in Pak-zeithes,&rdquo; Pafa-ramphes, etc., and as the terminal in
+ Pharna-jjates, Avio-peithes, and the like. In Xathrites we have clearly
+ khshatra (Zend khshathra), &ldquo;crown&rdquo; or &ldquo;king,&rdquo; with a participial suffix
+ -ita, corresponding to the Sanscrit participle in -it. Spita-ces and
+ Spita-mas contain the root spita, equivalent to spenta, &ldquo;holy,&rdquo; which is
+ found in Spitho-hates, Spita-mens, Spita-des, etc. This, in Spita-ces, is
+ followed by a guttural ending, which is either a diminutive corresponding
+ to the modern Persian -efc, or perhaps a suffixed article. In Spit-amas,
+ the suffix -mas is the common form of the superlative, and may be compared
+ with the Latin -mus in optimus, intimus, supremus, and the like. Ehambacas
+ contains the root rafno, &ldquo;joy, pleasure,&rdquo; which we find in Pati-ramphies,
+ followed by the guttural suffix.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There remains, finally, a class of Median names, containing roots not
+ found in any known names of Persians, but easily explicable from Zend,
+ Sanscrit, or other cognate tongues, and therefore not antagonistic to the
+ view that Median and Persian were two closely connected dialects. Such,
+ for instance, are the royal names mentioned by Herodotus, Deioces,
+ Phraortes, Astyages, and Cyaxares; and such also are the following, which
+ come to us from various sources; Amytis, Astibaras, Armamithres or
+ Harmamithres, Mandauces, Parsondas, Eama-tes, Susiscanes, Tithaous, and
+ Zanasanes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Deioces, or (as the Latins write it) Dejoces, there can be little doubt
+ that we have the name given as Djohak or Zohak in the Shahnameh and other
+ modern Persian writings, which is itself an abbreviation of the
+ Ajis-dahaka of the Zendavesta. Dahaka means in Zend &ldquo;biting,&rdquo; or &ldquo;the
+ biter,&rdquo; and is etymo-logically connected with the Greek.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Phraortes, which in old Persian was Fravartish, seems to be a mere variant
+ of the word which appears in the Zendavesta as fravashi, and designates
+ each man&rsquo;s tutelary genius. The derivation is certainly from fra, and
+ probably from a root akin to the German wahren, French garder, English
+ &ldquo;ward, watch,&rdquo; etc. The meaning is &ldquo;a protector.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyaxares, the Persian form of which was &ldquo;Uvakhshatara,&rdquo; seems to be formed
+ from the two elements it or hu, &ldquo;well, good,&rdquo; and akhsha (Zend arsnd),
+ &ldquo;the eye,&rdquo; which is the final element of the name Cyavarswa in the
+ Zendavesta. Cyavarsna is &ldquo;dark-eyed;&rdquo; Uvakhsha (= Zend Huvarsna) would be
+ &ldquo;beautiful-eyed.&rdquo; Uvakhshatara appears to be the comparative of this
+ adjective, and would mean &ldquo;more beautiful-eyed (than others).&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Astyages, which, according to Moses of Chorene, meant &ldquo;a dragon&rdquo; or
+ &ldquo;serpent,&rdquo; is almost certainly Ajis-dahaka, the full name whereof Dojoces
+ (or Zohak) is the abbreviation. It means &ldquo;the biting snake,&rdquo; from aji or
+ azi, &ldquo;a snake&rdquo; or &ldquo;serpent,&rdquo; and dahaka, &ldquo;biting.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amytis is probably ama, &ldquo;active, great,&rdquo; with the ordinary feminine suffix
+ -iti, found in Armaiti, Khnathaiti, and the like. Astibaras is perhaps
+ &ldquo;great of bone,&rdquo; from Zend agta (Sans, asthi), &ldquo;bone,&rdquo; and bereza, &ldquo;tall,
+ great.&rdquo; Harmamithres, if that is the true reading, would be
+ &ldquo;mountain-lover&rdquo; (monticolus), from hardam, ace. of hara, &ldquo;a mountain,&rdquo;
+ and mithra or mitra, &ldquo;fond of.&rdquo; If, however, the name should be read as
+ Armamithres, the probable derivation will be from rama, ace. of raman,
+ &ldquo;pleasure,&rdquo; which is also the root of Rama-tea. Armamithres may then be
+ compared with Rheomithres, Siromitras, and Sysimithres, which are
+ respectively &ldquo;fond of splendor,&rdquo; &ldquo;fond of beauty,&rdquo; and &ldquo;fond of light.&rdquo;
+ Mandauces is perhaps &ldquo;biting spirit&mdash;esprit mordant,&rdquo; from mand,
+ &ldquo;coeur, esprit,&rdquo; and dahaka, &ldquo;biting.&rdquo; M Parsondas can scarcely be the
+ original form, from the occurrence in it of the nasal before the dental.
+ In the original it must have been Parsodas, which would mean &ldquo;liberal,
+ much giving,&rdquo; from pourus, &ldquo;much,&rdquo; and da, &ldquo;to give.&rdquo; Ramates, as already
+ observed, is from rama, &ldquo;pleasure.&rdquo; It is an adjectival form, like Datis,
+ and means probably &ldquo;pleasant, agreeable.&rdquo; Susiscanes may be explained as
+ &ldquo;splendidus juvenis,&rdquo; from quc, &ldquo;splendere,&rdquo; pres. part, cao-cat, and
+ kainin, &ldquo;adolescens, juvenis.&rdquo; Tithaeus is probably for Tathaeus, which
+ would be readily formed from tatka, &ldquo;one who makes.&rdquo; Finally, Zanasanes
+ may be referred to the root zan or jan, &ldquo;to kill,&rdquo; which is perhaps simply
+ followed by the common appellative suffix -ana.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From these names of persons we may pass to those of places in Media, which
+ equally admit of explanation from roots known to have existed either in
+ Zend or in old Persian. Of these, Ecbatana, Bagistana, and Aspadana may be
+ taken as convenient specimens. Ecbatana (or Agbatana), according to the
+ orthography of the older Greeks was in the native dialect Hagmatana, as
+ appears from the Behistun inscription. This form, Hagmatana, is in all
+ probability derived from the three words ham, &ldquo;with&rdquo; (Sans, sam, Latin
+ cum), gam, &ldquo;to go&rdquo; (Zend gd, Sans, &lsquo;gam), and ctana (Mod. Pers. -stan) &ldquo;a
+ place.&rdquo; The initial ham has dropped the m and become ha, and cum becomes
+ co- in Latin; gam has become gma by metathesis; and gtan has passed into
+ -tan by phonetic corruption. Ha-gma-tana would be &ldquo;the place for
+ assembly,&rdquo; or for &ldquo;coming together&rdquo; (Lat. comitium); the place, i.e.,
+ where the tribes met, and where, consequently, the capital grew up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bagistan, which was &ldquo;a hill sacred to Jupiter&rdquo; according to Diodorus, is
+ clearly a name corresponding to the Beth-el of the Hebrews and the
+ Allahabad of the Mahometans. It is simply &ldquo;the house, or place, of God&rdquo;&mdash;from
+ baga, &ldquo;God,&rdquo; and gtana, &ldquo;place, abode,&rdquo; the common modern Persian terminal
+ (compare Farsi-stan, Khuzi-stan, Afghani-stan, Belochi-stan, Hindu-stan,
+ etc.), which has here not suffered any corruption.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Aspadana contains certainly as its first element the root acpa, &ldquo;horse.&rdquo;
+ The suffix dan may perhaps be a corruption of ctana, analogous to that
+ which has produced Hama-dan from Hagma-ctan; or it may be a contracted
+ form of danhu, or dairihu, &ldquo;a-province,&rdquo; Aspadana having been originally
+ the name of a district where horses were bred, and having thence become
+ the name of its chief town.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Median words known to us, other than names of persons or places, are
+ confined to some three or four. Herodotus tells us that the Median word
+ for &ldquo;dog&rdquo; was spaka; Xenophon implies, if he does not expressly state,
+ that the native name for the famous Median robe was candys; Nicolas of
+ Damascus informs us that the Median couriers were called Angari; and
+ Hesychius says that the artabe was a Median measure. The last-named writer
+ also states that artades and devas were Magian words, which perhaps
+ implies that they were common to the Medes with the Persians. Here, again,
+ the evidence, such as it is, favors a close connection between the
+ languages of Media and Persia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That artabe and angarus were Persian words no less than Median, we have
+ the evidence of Herodotus. Artades, &ldquo;just men&rdquo; (according to Hesychhis),
+ is probably akin to ars, &ldquo;true, just,&rdquo; and may represent the ars-data,
+ &ldquo;made just,&rdquo; of the Zendavesta. Devas (Seven), which Hesychius translates
+ &ldquo;the evil gods&rdquo; is clearly the Zendic daiva, Mod. Pers. div. (Sans, deva,
+ Lat. divus). In candys we have most probably a formation from qan, &ldquo;to
+ dress, to adorn.&rdquo; Spaka is the Zendic cpa, with the Scythic guttural
+ suffix, of which the Medes were so fond, cpa itself being akin to the
+ Sanscrit cvan, and so to hvoov and canis. Thus we may connect all the few
+ words which are known as Median with forms contained in the Zend, which
+ was either the mother or the elder sister of the ancient Persian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That the Medes were acquainted with the art of writing, and practised it&mdash;at
+ least from the time that they succeeded to the dominion of the Assyrians&mdash;scarcely
+ admits of a doubt. An illiterate nation, which conquers one in possession
+ of a literature, however it may despise learning and look down upon the
+ mere literary life, is almost sure to adopt writing to some extent on
+ account of its practical utility. It is true the Medes have left us no
+ written monuments; and we may fairly conclude from that fact that they
+ used writing sparingly; but besides the antecedent probability, there is
+ respectable evidence that letters were known to them, and that, at any
+ rate, their upper classes could both read and write their native tongue.
+ The story of the letter sent by Harpagus the Mede to Cyrus in the belly of
+ a hare, though probably apocryphal, is important as showing the belief of
+ Herodotus on the subject. The still more doubtful story of a despatch
+ written on parchment by a Median king, Artseus, and sent to Nanarus, a
+ provincial governor, related by Nicolas of Damascus, has a value, as
+ indicating that writer&rsquo;s conviction that the Median monarchs habitually
+ conveyed their commands to their subordinates in a written form. With
+ these statements of profane writers agree certain notices which we find in
+ Scripture. Darius the Mode, shortly after the destruction of the Median
+ empire, &ldquo;signs&rdquo; a decree, which his chief nobles have presented to him in
+ writing. He also himself &ldquo;writes&rdquo; another decree addressed to his subjects
+ generally. In later times we find that there existed at the Persian court
+ a &ldquo;book of the chronicles of the kings of Media and Persia,&rdquo; in which was
+ probably a work begun under the Median and continued under the Persian
+ sovereigns.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If then writing was practised by the Medes, it becomes interesting to
+ consider whence they obtained their knowledge of it, and what was the
+ system which they employed. Did they bring an alphabet with them from the
+ far East, or did they derive their first knowledge of letters from the
+ nations with whom they came into contact after their great migration? In
+ the latter case, did they adopt, with or without modifications, a foreign
+ system, or did they merely borrow the idea of written symbols from their
+ new neighbors, and set to work to invent for themselves an alphabet suited
+ to the genius of their own tongue? These are some of the questions which
+ present themselves to the mind as deserving of attention, when this
+ subject is brought before it. Unfortunately we possess but very scanty
+ data for determining, and can do little more than conjecture, the proper
+ answers to be given to them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The early composition of certain portions of the Zendavesta, which has
+ been asserted in this work, may seem at first sight to imply the use of a
+ written character in Bactria and the adjacent countries at a very remote
+ era. But such a conclusion is not necessary. Nations have often had an
+ oral literature, existing only in the memories of men, and have handed
+ down such a literature from generation to generation, through a long
+ succession of ages. The sacred lore of Zoroaster may have been brought by
+ the Modes from the East-Caspian country in an unwritten shape, and may not
+ have been reduced to writing till many centuries later. On the whole it is
+ perhaps most probable that the Medes were unacquainted with letters when
+ they made their great migration, and that they acquired their first
+ knowledge of them from the races with whom they came into collision when
+ they settled along the Zagros chain. In these regions they were brought
+ into contact with at least two forms of written speech, one that of the
+ old Armenians, a Turanian dialect, the other that of the Assyrians, a
+ language of the Semitic type. These two nations used the same alphabetic
+ system, though their languages were utterly unlike; and it would
+ apparently have been the easiest plan for the new comers to have adopted
+ the established forms, and to have applied them, so far as was possible,
+ to the representation of their own speech. But the extreme complication of
+ a system which employed between three and four hundred written signs, and
+ composed signs sometimes of fourteen or fifteen wedges, seems to have
+ shocked the simplicity of the Medes, who recognized the fact that the
+ varieties of their articulations fell far short of this excessive
+ luxuriance. The Arian races, so far as appears, declined to follow the
+ example set them by the Turanians of Armenia, who had adopted the Assyrian
+ alphabet, and preferred to invent a new system for themselves, which they
+ determined to make far more simple. It is possible that they found an
+ example already set them. In Achaemenian times we observe two alphabets
+ used through Media and Persia, both of which are simpler than the
+ Assyrian: one is employed to express the Turanian dialect of the people
+ whom the Arians conquered and dispossessed; the other, to express the
+ tongue of the conquerors. It is possible&mdash;though we have no direct
+ evidence of the fact&mdash;that the Turanians of Zagros and the
+ neighborhood had already formed for themselves the alphabet which is found
+ in the second columns of the Achaemenian tablets, when the Arian invaders
+ conquered them. This alphabet, which in respect of complexity holds an
+ intermediate position between the luxuriance of the Assyrian and the
+ simplicity of the Medo-Persic system, would seem in all probability to
+ have intervened in order of time between the two. It consists of no more
+ than about a hundred characters, and these are for the most part far less
+ complicated than those of Assyria. If the Medes found this form of writing
+ already existing in Zagros when they arrived, it may have assisted to give
+ them the idea of making for themselves an alphabet so far on the old model
+ that the wedge should be the sole element used in the formation, of
+ letters, but otherwise wholly new, and much more simple than those
+ previously in use.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Discarding then the Assyrian notion of a syllabarium, with the enormous
+ complication which it involves, the Medes strove to reduce sounds to their
+ ultimate elements, and to represent these last alone by symbols.
+ Contenting themselves with the three main vowel sounds, a,i, and u, and
+ with one breathing, a simple h, they recognized twenty consonants, which
+ were the following, b,d,f,g,j,k,kh,m,n,n (sound doubtful),
+ p,r,s,sh,t,v,y,z,ch (as in much), and tr, an unnecessary compound. Had
+ they stopped here, their characters should have been but twenty-four, the
+ number which is found in Greek. To their ears, however, it would seem,
+ each consonant appeared to carry with it a short a, and as this, occurring
+ before i and u, produced the diphthongs ai and au, sounded nearly as e and
+ o, it seemed necessary, where a consonant was to be directly followed by
+ the sounds i or u, to have special forms to which the sound of a should
+ not attach. This system, carried out completely, would have raised the
+ forms of consonants to sixty, a multiplication that was feared as
+ inconvenient. In order to keep down the number, it seems to have been
+ resolved, that one form should suffice for the aspirated letters and the
+ sibilants (viz., h,kh; ch,ph or f,s,sh, and z), and also for b,y, and tr;
+ that two forms should suffice for the tenues, k,p,t, for the liquids n and
+ r, and for v; and consequently that the full number of three forms should
+ be limited to some three or four letters, as d, m, j, and perhaps g. The
+ result is that the known alphabet of the Persians, which is assumed here
+ to have been the invention of the Medes, consists of some thirty-six or
+ thirty-seven forms, which are really representative of no more than
+ twenty-three distinct sounds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It appears then that, compared with the phonetic systems in vogue among
+ their neighbors, the alphabet of the Medes and Persians was marked by a
+ great simplicity. The forms of the letters were also very much simplified.
+ Instead of conglomerations of fifteen or sixteen wedges in a single
+ character, we have in the Medo-Persic letters a maximum of five wedges.
+ The most ordinary number is four, which is sometimes reduced to three or
+ even two. The direction of the wedges is uniformly either perpendicular or
+ horizontal, except of course in the case of the double wedge or
+ arrow-head, where the component elements are placed obliquely. The
+ arrow-head has but one position, the perpendicular, with the angle facing
+ towards the left hand. The only diagonal sign used is a simple wedge,
+ placed obliquely with the point towards the right, which is a mere mark of
+ separation between the words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The direction of the writing was, as with the Arian nations generally,
+ from left to right. Words were frequently divided, and part carried on to
+ the next line. The characters were inscribed between straight lines drawn
+ from end to end of the tablet on which they were written. Like the Hebrew,
+ they often closely resembled one another, and a slight defect in the stone
+ will cause one to be mistaken for another. The resemblance is not between
+ letters of the same class or kind; on the contrary, it is often between
+ those which are most remote from one another. Thus g nearly resembles u;
+ ch is like d; tr like p; and so on: while k and kh, s and sh, p and ph (or
+ J) are forms quite dissimilar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is supposed that a cuneiform alphabet can never have been employed for
+ ordinary writing purposes, but must have been confined to documents of
+ some importance, which it was desirable to preserve, and which were
+ therefore either inscribed on stone, or impressed on moist clay afterwards
+ baked. A cursive character, it is therefore imagined, must always have
+ been in use, parallel with a cuneiform one; and as the Babylonians and
+ Assyrians are known to have used a character of this kind from a very high
+ antiquity, synchronously with their lapidary cuneiform, so it is supposed
+ that the Arian races must have possessed, besides the method which has
+ been described as a cursive system of writing. Of this, however, there is
+ at present no direct evidence. No cursive writing of the Arian nations at
+ this time, either Median or Persian, has been found; and it is therefore
+ uncertain what form of character they employed on common occasions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The material used for ordinary purposes, according to Nicolas of Damascus
+ and Ctesias, was parchment. On this the kings wrote the despatches which
+ conveyed their orders to the officers who administered the government of
+ provinces; and on this were inscribed the memorials which each monarch was
+ careful to have composed giving an account of the chief events of his
+ reign. The cost of land carriage probably prevented papyrus from
+ superseding this material in Western Asia, as it did in Greece at a
+ tolerably early date. Clay, so much used for writing on both in Babylonia
+ and Assyria, appears never to have approved itself as a convenient
+ substance to the Iranians. For public documents the chisel and the rock,
+ for private the pen and the prepared skin, seem to have been preferred by
+ them; and in the earlier times, at any rate, they employed no other
+ materials.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI. CHRONOLOGY AND HISTORY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Media . . . quam ante regnum Cyri superlovis et incrementa Persidos
+ legimus Asiae reginam totius.&mdash;Amm. Marc, xxiii. 6.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The origin of the Median nation is wrapt in a profound obscurity.
+ Following the traces which the Zendavesta offers, taking into
+ consideration its minute account of the earlier Arian migrations, its
+ entire omission of any mention of the Medes, and the undoubted fact that
+ it was nevertheless by the Medes and Persians that the document itself was
+ preserved and transmitted to us, we should be naturally led to suppose
+ that the race was one which in the earlier times of Arian development was
+ weak and insignificant, and that it first pushed itself into notice after
+ the ethnological portions of the Zendavesta were composed, which is
+ thought to have been about B.C. 1000. Quite in accordance with this view
+ is the further fact that in the native Assyrian annals, so far as they
+ have been, recovered, the Medes do not make their appearance till the
+ middle of the ninth century B.C., and when they appear are weak and
+ unimportant, only capable of opposing a very slight resistance to the
+ attacks of the Ninevite kings. The natural conclusion from these data
+ would appear to be that until about B.C. 850 the Median name was unknown
+ in the world, and that previously, if Medes existed at all, it was either
+ as a sub-tribe of some other Arian race, or at any rate as a tribe too
+ petty and insignificant to obtain mention either on the part of native or
+ of foreign historians. Such early insignificance and late development of
+ what ultimately becomes the dominant tribe of a race is no strange or
+ unprecedented phenomenon to the historical inquirer; on the contrary, it
+ is among the facts with which he is most familiar, and would admit of
+ ample illustration, were the point worth pursuing, alike from the history
+ of the ancient and the modern world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, against the conclusion to which we could not fail to be led by the
+ Arian and Assyrian records, which agree together so remarkably, two
+ startling notices in works of great authority but of a widely different
+ character have to be set. In the Toldoth Beni Noah, or &ldquo;Book of the
+ Generation of the Sons of Noah,&rdquo; which forms the tenth chapter of Genesis,
+ and which, if the work of Moses, was probably composed at least as early
+ as B.C. 1500, we find the Madai&mdash;a word elsewhere always signifying
+ &ldquo;the Medes&rdquo;&mdash;in the genealogy of the sons of Japhet. The word is
+ there conjoined with several other important ethnic titles, as Gomer,
+ Magog, Javan, Tubal, and Meshech; and there can be no reasonable doubt
+ that it is intended to designate the Median people. If so, the people must
+ have had already a separate and independent existence in the fifteenth
+ century B.C., and not only so, but they must have by that time attained so
+ much distinction as to be thought worthy of mention by a writer who was
+ only bent on affiliating the more important of the nations known to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other notice is furnished by Berosus. That remarkable historian, in
+ his account of the early dynasties of his native Chaldaea, declared that,
+ at a date anterior to B.C. 2000, the Medes had conquered Babylon by a
+ sudden inroad, had established a monarchy there, and had held possession
+ of the city and neighboring territory for a period of 224 years. Eight
+ kings of their race had during that interval occupied the Babylonian
+ throne, It has been already observed that this narrative must represent a
+ fact. Berosus would not have gratuitously invented a foreign conquest of
+ his native land; nor would the earlier Babylonians, from whom he derived
+ his materials, have forged a tale which was so little flattering to their
+ national vanity. Some foreign conquest of Babylon must have taken place
+ about the period named; and it is certainly a most important fact that
+ Berosus should call the conquerors Medes. He may no doubt have been
+ mistaken about an event so ancient; he may have misread his authorities,
+ or he may have described as Medes a people of which he really knew nothing
+ except that they had issued from the tract which in his own time bore the
+ name of Media. But, while these axe mere possibilities, hypotheses to
+ which the mind resorts in order to escape a difficulty, the hard fact
+ remains that he has used the word; and this fact, coupled with the mention
+ of the Medes in the book of Genesis, does certainly raise a presumption of
+ no inconsiderable strength against, the view which it would be natural to
+ take if the Zendavesta and the Assyrian annals were our solo authorities
+ on the subject. It lends a substantial basis to the theories of those who
+ regard the Medes as one of the principal primeval races; who believe that
+ they were well known to the Semitic inhabitants of the Mesopotamian valley
+ as early as the twenty-third century before Christ&mdash;long ere Abraham
+ left Ur for Harran; and that they actually formed the dominant power in
+ Western Asia for more than two centuries, prior to the establishment of
+ the first Chaldaean kingdom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And if there are thus distinct historical grounds for the notion of an
+ early Median development, there are not wanting these obscurer but to many
+ minds more satisfactory proofs wherewith comparative philology and
+ ethnology are wont to illustrate and confirm the darker passages of
+ ancient history. Recent linguistic research has clearly traced among the
+ Arba Lisun, or, &ldquo;Four Tongues&rdquo; of ancient Chaldaea, which are so often
+ mentioned on the ancient monuments, an Arian formation, such as would
+ naturally have been left in the country, if it had been occupied for some
+ considerable period by a dominant Arian power. The early Chaldaean
+ ideographs have often several distinct values; and when this is the case,
+ one of the powers is almost always an Arian name of the object
+ represented. Words like nir, &ldquo;man&rdquo;, ar, &ldquo;river,&rdquo; (compare the names Aras,
+ Araxes, Endanus, Rha, Rhodanus, etc., the Slavonic rika, &ldquo;river,&rdquo; etc.),
+ san, &ldquo;sun,&rdquo; (compare German Sonne, Slavonic solnce, English &ldquo;sun,&rdquo; Dutch
+ zon, etc.), are seemingly Arian roots; and the very term &ldquo;Arian&rdquo; (Ariya,
+ &ldquo;noble&rdquo;) is perhaps contained in the name of a primitive Chaldaean
+ monarch, &ldquo;Arioch, king of Ellasar.&rdquo; There is nothing perhaps in these
+ scattered traces of Arian influence in in Lower Mesopotamia at a remote
+ era that points very particularly to the Medes; but at any rate they
+ harmonize with the historical account that has reached us of early Arian
+ power in these parts, and it is important that they should not be ignored
+ when we are engaged in considering the degree of credence that is to be
+ awarded to the account in question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again, there are traces of a vast expansion, apparently at a very early
+ date, of the Median race, such as seems to imply that they must have been
+ a great nation in Western Asia long previously to the time of the Iranic
+ movements in Bactria and the adjoining regions. In the Matieni of Zagros
+ and Cappadocia, in the Sauro-matae (or Northern Medes) of the country
+ between the Palus Maeotis and the Caspian, in the Maetae or Maeotae of the
+ tract about the mouth of the Don, and in the Maedi of Thrace, we have
+ seemingly remnants of a great migratory host which, starting from the
+ mountains that overhang Mesopotamia, spread itself into the regions of the
+ north and the north-west at a time which does not admit of being
+ definitely stated, but which is clearly anti-historic. Whether these races
+ generally retained any tradition of their origin, we do not know; but a
+ tribe which in the time of Herodotus dwelt still further to the west than
+ even the Maedi&mdash;to wit, the Sigynnae, who occupied the tract between
+ the Adriatic and the Danube&mdash;had a very distinct belief in their
+ Median descent, a belief confirmed by the resemblance which their national
+ dress bore to that of the Medes. Herodotus, who relates these facts
+ concerning them, appends an expression of his astonishment at the
+ circumstance that emigrants from Media should have proceeded to such a
+ distance from their original home; how it had been brought about he could
+ not conceive. &ldquo;Still,&rdquo; he sagaciously remarks, &ldquo;nothing is impossible in
+ the long lapse of ages.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A further argument in favor of the early development of Median power, and
+ the great importance of the nation in Western Asia at a period anterior to
+ the ninth century, is derivable from the ancient legends of the Greeks,
+ which seem to have designated the Medes under the two eponyms of Medea and
+ Andromeda. These legends indeed do not admit of being dated with any
+ accuracy; but as they are of a primitive type, and probably older than
+ Homer, we cannot well assign them to an age later than b.c. 1000. Now they
+ connect the Median name with the two countries of Syria and Colchis,
+ countries remote from each other, and neither of them sufficiently near
+ the true Median territory to be held from it, unless at a time when the
+ Medes were in possession of something like an empire. And, even apart from
+ any inferences to be drawn from the localties which the Greek Myths
+ connect with the Medes, the very fact that the race was known to the
+ Greeks at this early date&mdash;long before the movements which brought
+ them into contact with the Assyrians&mdash;would seem to show that there
+ was some remote period&mdash;prior to the Assyrian domination&mdash;when
+ the fame of the Medes was great in the part of Asia known to the Hellenes,
+ and that they did not first attract Hellenic notice (as, but for the
+ Myths, we might have imagined) by the conquests of Cyaxarea. Thus, on the
+ whole it would appear that we must acknowledge two periods of Median
+ prosperity, separated from each other by a lengthy interval, one anterior
+ to the rise of the Cushite empire in Lower Babylonia, the other parallel
+ with the decline and subsequently to the fall of Assyria.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the first period it cannot be said that we possess any distinct
+ historical knowledge. The Median dynasty of Berosus at Babylon appears, by
+ recent discoveries, to have represented those Susianian monarchs who bore
+ sway there from B.C. 2286 to 2052. The early Median preponderance in
+ Western Asia, if it is a fact, must have been anterior to this, and is an
+ event which has only left traces in ethnological names and in mythological
+ speculations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our historical knowledge of the Medes as a nation commences in the latter
+ half of the ninth century before our era. Shalmaneser II.&mdash;probably
+ the &ldquo;Shalman&rdquo; of Hosea,&mdash;who reigned from B.C. 859 to B.C. 824&mdash;relates
+ that in his twenty-fourth year (B.C. 885), after having reduced to
+ subjection the Zimri, who held the Zagros mountain range immediately to
+ the east of Assyria, and received tribute from the Persians, he led an
+ expedition into Media and Arazias, where he took and destroyed a number of
+ the towns, slaying the men, and carrying off the spoil. He does not
+ mention any pitched battle; and indeed it would seem that he met with no
+ serious resistance. The Medes whom he attacks are evidently a weak and
+ insignificant people, whom he holds in small esteem, and regards as only
+ deserving of a hurried mention. They seem to occupy the tract now known as
+ Ardelan&mdash;a varied region containing several lofty ridges, with broad
+ plains lying between them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is remarkable that the time of this first contact of Media with Assyria&mdash;a
+ contact taking place when Assyria was in her prime, and Media was only
+ just emerging from a long period of weakness and obscurity&mdash;is almost
+ exactly that which Ctesias selects as a day of the great revolution
+ whereby the Empire of the East passed from the hands of the Shemites into
+ those of the Arians. The long residence of Otesias among the Persians,
+ gave him a bias toward that people, which even extended to their close
+ kin, the Medes. Bent on glorifying these two Arian races, he determined to
+ throw back the commencement of their empire to a period long anterior to
+ the true date; and, feeling specially anxious to cover up their early
+ humiliation, he assigned their most glorious conquests to the very
+ century, and almost to the very time, when they were in fact suffering
+ reverses at the hands of the people over whom he represented them as
+ triumphant. There was a boldness in the notion of thus inverting history
+ which almost deserved, and to a considerable extent obtained, success. The
+ &ldquo;long chronology&rdquo; of Ctesias kept its ground until recently, not indeed
+ meeting with universal acceptance, but on the whole predominating over the
+ &ldquo;short chronology&rdquo; of Herodotus; and it may be doubted whether anything
+ less than the discovery that the native records of Assyria entirely
+ contradicted Ctesias would have sufficed to drive from the field his
+ figment of early Median dominion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The second occasion upon which we hear of the Medes in the Assyrian annals
+ is in the reign of Shalmanoser&rsquo;s son and successor, Shamas-Vul. Here
+ again, as on the former occasion, the Assyrians were the aggressors.
+ Shamas-Vul invaded Media and Arazias in his third year, and committed
+ ravages similar to those of his father, wasting the country with fire and
+ sword, but not (it would seem) reducing the Medes to subjection, or even
+ attempting to occupy their territory. Again the attack is a mere raid,
+ which produces no permanent impression.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is in the reign of the son and successor of Shamas-Vul that the Medes
+ appear for the first time to have made their submission and accepted the
+ position of Assyrian tributaries. A people which was unable to offer
+ effectual resistance when the Assyrian levies invaded their country, and
+ which had no means of retaliating upon their foe or making him suffer the
+ evils that he inflicted, was naturally tempted to save itself from
+ molestation by the payment of an annual tribute, so purchasing quiet at
+ the expense of honor and independence. Towards the close of the ninth
+ century B.C. the Medes seem to have followed the example set them very
+ much earlier by their kindred and neighbors, the Persians, and to have
+ made arrangements for an annual payment which should exempt their
+ territory from ravage. It is doubtful whether the arrangement was made by
+ the whole people. The Median tribes at this time hung so loosely together
+ that a policy adopted by one portion of them might be entirely repudiated
+ by another. Most probably the tribute was paid by those tribes only which
+ boarded on Zagros, and not by those further to the east or to the north,
+ into whose territories the Assyrian arms has not yet penetrated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No further change in the condition of the Medes is known to have occurred
+ until about a hundred years later, when the Assyrians ceased to be content
+ with the semi-independent position which had been hitherto allowed them,
+ and determined on their more complete subjugation. The great Sargon, the
+ assailant of Egypt and conqueror of Babylon, towards the middle of his
+ reign, invaded Media with a large army, and having rapidly overrun the
+ country, seized several of the towns, and &ldquo;annexed them to Assyria,&rdquo; while
+ at the same time he also established in new situations a number of
+ fortified posts. The object was evidently to incorporate Media into the
+ empire; and the posts wore stations in which a standing army was placed,
+ to overawe the natives and prevent them from offering an effectual
+ resistance. With the same view deportation of the people on a large scale
+ seems to have been practised and the gaps thus made in the population were
+ filled up&mdash;wholly or in part&mdash;by the settlement in the Median
+ cities of Samaritan captives. On the country thus re-organized and
+ re-arranged a tribute of a new character was laid. In lieu of the money
+ payment hitherto exacted, the Medes were required to furnish annually to
+ the royal stud a number of horses. It is probable that Media was already
+ famous for the remarkable breed which is so celebrated in later times; and
+ that the horses now required of her by the Assyrians were to be of the
+ large and highly valued kind known as &ldquo;Nisaean.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The date of this subjugation is about B.C. 710. And here, if we compare
+ the Greek accounts of Median history with those far more authentic ones
+ which have reached us through the Assyrian contemporary records, we are
+ struck by a repetition of the same device which came under our notice more
+ than a century earlier&mdash;the device of covering up the nation&rsquo;s
+ disgraces at a particular period by assigning to that very date certain
+ great and striking successes. As Ctesias&rsquo;s revolt of the Medes under
+ Arbaces and conquest of Nineveh synchronizes nearly with the first known
+ ravages of Assyria within the territories of the Medes, so Herodotus&rsquo;s
+ revolt of the same people and commencement of their monarchy under Deioces
+ falls almost exactly at the date when they entirely lose their
+ independence. As there is no reason to suspect Herodotus either of
+ partiality toward the Medes or of any wilful departure from the truth, we
+ must regard him as imposed upon by his informants, who were probably
+ either Medes or Persians. These mendacious patriots found little
+ difficulty in palming their false tale upon the simple Halicarnassian,
+ thereby at once extending the antiquity of their empire and concealing its
+ shame behind a halo of fictitious glory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After their subjugation by Sargon the Medes of Media Magna appear to have
+ remained the faithful subjects of Assyria for sixty or seventy years.
+ During this period we find no notices of the great mass of the nation in
+ the Assyrian records: only here and there indications occur that Assyria
+ is stretching out her arms towards the more distant and outlying tribes,
+ especially those of Azerbijan, and compelling them to acknowledge her as
+ mistress. Sennacherib boasts that early in his reign, about B.C. 702, he
+ received an embassy from the remoter parts of Media&mdash;&ldquo;parts of which
+ the kings his fathers had not even heard&rdquo;&mdash;which brought him presents
+ in sign of submission, and patiently accepted his yoke. His son,
+ Esar-haddon, relates that, about his tenth year (B.C. 671) he invaded
+ Bikni or Bikan, a distant province of Media, &ldquo;whereof the kings his
+ fathers had never heard the name;&rdquo; and, attacking the cities of the region
+ one after another, forced them to acknowledge his authority. The country
+ was held by a number of independent chiefs, each bearing sway in his own
+ city and adjacent territory. These chiefs have unmistakably Arian names,
+ as Sitriparna or Sitraphernes, Eparna or Orphernes, Zanasana or Zanasanes,
+ and Eamatiya or Ramates. Esar-haddon says that, having entered the country
+ with his army, he seized two of the chiefs and carried them off to
+ Assyria, together with a vast spoil and numerous other captives. Hereupon
+ the remaining chiefs, alarmed for their safety, made their submission,
+ consenting to pay an annual tribute, and admitting Assyrian officers into
+ their territories, who watched, if they did not even control, the
+ government.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are now approaching the time when Media seems to have been first
+ consolidated into a monarchy by the genius of an individual. Sober history
+ is forced to discard the shadowy forms of kings with which Greek writers
+ of more fancy than judgment have peopled the darkness that rests upon the
+ &ldquo;origines&rdquo; of the Medes. Arbaces, Maudaces, Sosarmus, Artycas, Arbianes,
+ Artseus, Deioces&mdash;Median monarchs, according to Ctesias or Herodotus,
+ during the space of time comprised within the years B.C. 875 and 655&mdash;have
+ to be dismissed by the modern writer without a word, since there is reason
+ to believe that they are mere creatures of the imagination, inventions of
+ unscrupulous romancers, not men who once walked the earth. The list of
+ Median kings in Ctesias, so far as it differs from the list in Herodotus,
+ seems to be a pure forgery&mdash;an extension of the period of the
+ monarchy by the conscious use of a system of duplication. Each king, or
+ period, in Herodotus occurs in the list of Ctesias twice&mdash;a
+ transparent device, clumsily cloaked by the cheap expedient of a liberal
+ invention of names. Even the list of Herodotus requires curtailment. His
+ Deioces, whose whole history reads more like romance than truth&mdash;the
+ organizer of a powerful monarchy in Media just at the time when Sargon was
+ building his fortified posts in the country and peopling with his
+ Israelite captives the old &ldquo;cities of the Medes&rdquo;&mdash;the prince who
+ reigned for above half a century in perfect peace with his neighbors, and
+ who, although contemporary with Sargon, Sennacherib, Esar-haddon, and
+ As-shur-bani-pal&mdash;all kings more or less connected with Media&mdash;is
+ never heard of in any of their annals, must be relegated to the historical
+ limbo in which repose so many &ldquo;shades of mighty names;&rdquo; and the Herodotean
+ list of Median kings must at any rate, be thus far reduced. Nothing is
+ more evident than that during the flourishing period of Assyria under the
+ great Sargonidae above named there was no grand Median kingdom upon the
+ eastern flank of the empire. Such a kingdom had certainly not been formed
+ up to B.C. 671, when Esar-haddon reduced the more distant Medes, finding
+ them still under the government of a number of petty chiefs. The earliest
+ time at which we can imagine the consolidation to have taken place
+ consistently with what we know of Assyria is about B.C. 760, or nearly
+ half a century later than the date given by Herodotus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cause of the sudden growth of Media in power about this period, and of
+ the consolidation which followed rapidly upon that growth, is to be
+ sought, apparently, in fresh migratory movements from the Arian
+ head-quarters, the countries east and south-east of the Caspian. The
+ Cyaxares who about the year B.C. 632 led an invading host of Medes against
+ Nineveh, was so well known to the Arian tribes of the north-east that,
+ when in the reign of Darius Hystaspis a Sagartian raised the standard of
+ revolt in that region he stated the ground of his claim to the Sagartian
+ throne to be descent from Cyaxares. This great chief, it is probable,
+ either alone, or in conjunction with his father (whom Herodotus calls
+ Phraortes), led a fresh emigration of Arians from the Bacterian and
+ Sagartian country to the regions directly east of the Zagros mountain
+ chain; and having thus vastly increased the strength of the Arian race in
+ that quarter, set himself to consolidate a mountain kingdom capable of
+ resisting the great monarchy of the plain. Accepted, it would seem, as
+ chief by the former Arian inhabitants of the tract, he proceeded to reduce
+ the scattered Scythic tribes which had hitherto held possession of the
+ high mountain region. The Zimri, Minni, Hupuska, etc., who divided among
+ them the country lying between Media Proper and Assyria, were attacked and
+ subdued without any great difficulty; and the conqueror, finding himself
+ thus at the head of a considerable kingdom, and no longer in any danger of
+ subjugation at the hands of Assyria, began to contemplate the audacious
+ enterprise of himself attacking the Great Power which had been for so many
+ hundred years the terror of Western Asia. The supineness of
+ Asshur-bani-pal, the Assyrian king, who must at this time have been
+ advanced in years, encouraged his aspirations; and about B.C. 634, when
+ that monarch had held the throne for thirty-four years, suddenly, without
+ warning, the Median troops debouched from the passes of Zagros, and spread
+ themselves over the rich country at its base, Alarmed by the nearness and
+ greatness of the peril, the Assyrian king aroused himself, and putting
+ himself at the head of his troops, marched out to confront the invader. A
+ great battle was fought, probably somewhere in Adiabene, in which the
+ Medes were completely defeated: their whole army was cut to pieces; and
+ the father of Cyaxares was among the slain. Such was the result of the
+ first Median expedition against Nineveh. The assailants had miscalculated
+ their strength. In their own mountain country, and so long as they should
+ be called upon to act only on the defensive, they might be right in
+ regarding themselves as a match for the Assyrians; but when they descended
+ into the plain, and allowed their enemy the opportunity of manoeuvering
+ and of using his war chariots, their inferiority was marked. Cyaxares,
+ now, if not previously, actual king, withdrew awhile from the war, and,
+ convinced that all the valor of his Medes would be unavailing without
+ discipline, set himself to organize the army on a new system, taking a
+ pattern from the enemy, who had long possessed some knowledge of tactics.
+ Hitherto, it would seem, each Median chief had brought into the field his
+ band of followers, some mounted, some on foot, foot and horse alike armed
+ variously as their means allowed them, some with bows and arrows, some
+ with spears, some perhaps with slings or darts; and the army had been
+ composed of a number of such bodies, each chief keeping his band close
+ about him. Cyaxares broke up these bands, and formed the soldiers who
+ composed them into distinct corps, according as they were horsemen or
+ footmen, archers, slingers, or lancers. He then, having completed his
+ arrangements at his ease, without disturbance (so far as appears) from the
+ Assyrians, felt himself strong enough to renew the war with a good
+ prospect of success. Collecting as large an army as he could, both from
+ his Arian and his Scythic subjects, he marched into Assyria, met the
+ troops of Asshur-bani-pal in the field, defeated them signally, and forced
+ them to take refuge behind the strong works which defended their capital.
+ He even ventured to follow up the flying foe and commence the siege of the
+ capital itself; but at this point he was suddenly checked in his career of
+ victory, and forced to assume a defensive attitude, by a danger of a novel
+ kind, which recalled him from Nineveh to his own country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The vast tracts, chiefly consisting of grassy plains, which lie north of
+ the Black Sea, the Caucasus, the Caspian, and the Jaxartes Syhun river,
+ were inhabited in ancient times by a race or races known to the Asiatics
+ as Saka, &ldquo;Scythians.&rdquo; These people appear to have been allied ethnically
+ with many of the more southern races, as with the Parthians, the Iberians,
+ the Alarodians, the tribes of the Zagros chain, the Susianians, and
+ others. It is just possible that they may have taken an interest in the
+ warfare of their southern brethren, and that, when Cyaxares brought the
+ tribes of Zagros under his yoke, the Scyths of the north may have felt
+ resentment, or compassion, If this view seem too improbable, considering
+ the distance, the physical obstacles, and the little communication that
+ there was between nations in those early times, we must suppose that by a
+ mere coincidence it happened that the subjugation of the southern Scyths
+ by Cyaxares was followed within a few years by a great irruption of Scyths
+ from the trans-Caucasian region. In that case we shall have to regard the
+ invasion as a mere example of that ever-recurring law by which the poor
+ and hardy races of Upper Asia or Europe are from time to time directed
+ upon the effete kingdoms of the south, to shake, ravage, or overturn them,
+ as the case may be, and prevent them from stagnating into corruption.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The character of the Scythians, and the general nature of their ravages,
+ have been described in a former portion of this work. If they entered
+ Southern Asia, as seems probable, by the Daghestan route, they would then
+ have been able to pass on without much difficulty, through Georgia into
+ Azerbijan, and from Azerbijan into Media Magna, where the Medes had now
+ established their southern capital. Four roads lead from Azerbijan to
+ Hamadan or the Greater Ecbatana, one through Menjil and Kasvin, and across
+ the Caraghan Hills; a second through Miana, Zenjan, and the province of
+ Khamseh; a third by the valley of the Jaghetu, through Chukli and
+ Tikan-Teppeh; and a fourth through Sefer-Khaneh and Sennah. We cannot say
+ which of the four the invaders selected; but, as they were passing
+ southwards, they met the army of Cyaxares, which had quitted Nineveh on
+ the first news of their invasion, and had marched in hot haste to meet and
+ engage them. The two enemies were not ill-matched. Both were hardy and warlike,
+ both active and full of energy; with both the cavalry was the chief arm,
+ and the bow the weapon on which they depended mainly for victory. The
+ Medes were no doubt the better disciplined; they had a greater variety of
+ weapons and of soldiers; and individually they were probably more powerful
+ men than the Scythians; but these last had the advantage of numbers, of
+ reckless daring, and of tactics that it was difficult to encounter.
+ Moreover, the necessity of their situation in the midst of an enemy&rsquo;s
+ country made it imperative on them to succeed, while their adversaries
+ might be defeated without any very grievous consequences. The Scytho had
+ not come into Asia to conquer so much as to ravage; defeat at their hands
+ involved damage rather than destruction; and the Medes must have felt
+ that, if they lost the battle, they might still hope to maintain a stout
+ defence behind the strong walls of some of their towns. The result was
+ such as might have been expected under these circumstances. Madyes, the
+ Scythian leader, obtained the victory, Cyaxares was defeated, and
+ compelled to make terms with the invader. Retaining his royal name, and
+ the actual government of his country, he admitted the suzerainty of the
+ Scyths, and agreed to pay them an annual tribute. Whether Media suffered
+ very seriously from their ravages, we cannot say. Neither its wealth nor
+ its fertility was such as to tempt marauders to remain in it very long.
+ The main complaint made against the Scythian conquerors is that, not
+ content with the fixed tribute which they had agreed to receive, and which
+ was paid them regularly, they levied contributions at their pleasure on
+ the various states under their sway, which were oppressed by repeated
+ exactions. The injuries suffered from their marauding habits form only a
+ subordinate charge against them, as though it had not been practically
+ felt to be so great a grievance. We can well imagine that the bulk of the
+ invaders would prefer the warmer and richer lands of Assyria, Mesopotamia,
+ and Syria; and that, pouring into them, they would leave the colder and
+ less wealthy Media comparatively free from ravage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The condition of Media and the adjacent countries under the Scythians must
+ have nearly resembled that of almost the same regions under the Seljukian
+ Turks during the early times of their domination. The conquerors made no
+ fixed settlements, but pitched their tents in any portion of the territory
+ that they chose. Their horses and cattle were free to pasture on all lands
+ equally. They were recognized as the dominant race, were feared and
+ shunned, but did not greatly interfere with the bulk of their subjects. It
+ was impossible that they should occupy at any given time more than a
+ comparatively few spots in the wide tract which they had overrun and
+ subjugated; and, consequently, there was not much contact between them and
+ the peoples whom they had conquered. Such contact as there was must no
+ doubt have been galling and oppressive. The right of free pasture in the
+ lands of others is always irksome to those who have to endure it, and,
+ even where it is exercised with strict fairness, naturally leads to
+ quarrels. The barbarous Scythians are not likely to have cared very much
+ about fairness. They would press heavily upon the more fertile tracts,
+ paying over-frequent visits to such spots, and remaining in them till the
+ region was exhausted. The chiefs would not be able to restrain their
+ followers from acts of pillage; redress would be obtained with difficulty;
+ and sometimes even the chiefs themselves may have been sharers in the
+ injuries committed. The insolence, moreover, of a dominant race so coarse
+ and rude as the Scyths must have been very hard to bear; and we can well
+ understand that the various nations which had to endure the yoke must have
+ looked anxiously for an opportunity of shaking it off, and recovering
+ their independence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among these various nations, there was probably none that fretted and
+ winced under its subjection more than the Medes. Naturally brave and
+ high-spirited, with the love of independence inherent in mountaineers, and
+ with a well-grounded pride in their recent great successes, they must have
+ chafed daily and hourly at the ignominy of their position, the
+ postponement of their hopes, and the wrongs which they continually
+ suffered. At first it seemed necessary to endure. They had tried the
+ chances of a battle, and had been defeated in fair fight&mdash;what reason
+ was there to hope that, if they drew the sword again, they would be more
+ successful? Accordingly they remained quiet but, as time went on, and the
+ Scythians dispersed themselves continually over a wider and a wider space,
+ invading Assyria, Mesopotamia, Syria, Palestine, and again Armenia and
+ Cappadocia, everywhere plundering and marauding, conducting sieges,
+ fighting battles, losing men from the sword, from sickness, from excesses,
+ becoming weaker instead of stronger, as each year went by, owing to the
+ drain of constant wars&mdash;the Medes by degrees took heart. Not
+ trusting, however, entirely to the strength of their right arms, a trust
+ which had failed them once, they resolved to prepare the way for an
+ outbreak by a stratagem which they regarded as justifiable. Cyaxares and
+ his court invited a number of the Scythian chiefs to a grand banquet, and,
+ having induced them to drink till they were completely drunk, set upon
+ them when they were in this helpless condition, and remorselessly slew
+ them all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This deed was the signal for a general revolt of the nation. The Medes
+ everywhere took arms, and, turning upon their conquerors, assailed them
+ with a fury the more terrible because it had been for years repressed. A
+ war followed, the duration and circumstances of which are unknown; for the
+ stories with which Ctesias enlivened this portion of his history can
+ scarcely be accepted as having any foundation in fact. According to him,
+ the Parthians made common cause with the Scythians on the occasion, and
+ the war lasted many years; numerous battles were fought with great loss to
+ both sides; and peace was finally concluded without either party having
+ gained the upper hand. The Scyths were commanded by a queen, Zarina or
+ Zarinsea, woman of rare beauty, and as brave as she was fair; who won the
+ hearts, when she could not resist the swords, of her adversaries. A
+ strangely romantic love-tale is told of this beauteous Amazon. It is not
+ at all clear what region Ctesias supposes her to govern. It has a capital
+ city, called Koxanace (a name entirely unknown to any other historian or
+ geographer), and it contains many other towns of which Zarina was the
+ foundress. Its chief architectural monument was the tomb of Zarina, a
+ triangular pyramid, six hundred feet high, and more than a mile round the
+ base, crowned by a colossal figure of the queen made of solid gold. But&mdash;to
+ leave these fables and return to fact&mdash;we can only say with certainty
+ that the result of the war was the complete defeat of the Scythians, who
+ not only lost their position of pre-eminence in Media and the adjacent
+ countries, but were driven across the Caucasus into their own proper
+ territory. Their expulsion was so complete that they scarcely left a trace
+ of their power or their presence in the geography or ethnography of the
+ country. One Palestine city only, as already observed, and one Armenian
+ province retained in their names a lingering memory of the great inroad
+ which but for them would have passed away without making any more
+ permanent mark on the region than a hurricane or a snowstorm. How long the
+ dominion of the Scyths endured is a matter of great uncertainty. It was no
+ doubt the belief of Herodotus that from their defeat of Cyaxares to his
+ treacherous murder of their chiefs was a period of exactly twenty-eight
+ years. During the whole of this space he regarded them as the undisputed
+ lords of Asia. It was not till the twenty-eight years were over that the
+ Medes were able, according to him, to renew their attacks on the
+ Assyrians, and once more to besiege Nineveh. But this chronology is open
+ to great objections. There is strong reason for believing that Nineveh
+ fell about B.C. 625 or 624; but according to the numbers of Herodotus the
+ fall would, at the earliest, have taken place in B.C. 602. There is great
+ unlikelihood that the Scyths, if they had maintained their rule for a
+ generation, should not have attracted some distinct notice from the Jewish
+ writers. Again, if twenty-eight out of the forty years assigned to
+ Cyaxares are to be regarded as years of inaction, all his great exploits,
+ his two sieges of Nineveh, his capture of that capital, his conquest of
+ the countries north and west of Media as far as the Halys, his six years&rsquo;
+ war in Asia Minor beyond that river, and his joint expedition with
+ Nebuchadnezzar into Syria, will have to be crowded most improbably into
+ the space of twelve years, two or three preceding and ten or nine
+ following the Scythian domination. These and other reasons lead to the
+ conclusion, which has the support of Eusebius, that the Scythian
+ domination was of much shorter duration than Herodotus imagined. It may
+ have been twenty-eight years from the original attack on Media to the
+ final expulsion of the last of the invaders from Asia&mdash;and this may
+ have been what the informants of Herodotus really intended&mdash;but it
+ cannot have been very long after the first attack before the Medes began
+ to recover themselves, to shake off the fear which had possessed them and
+ clear their territories of the invaders. If the invasion really took place
+ in the reign of Cyaxares, and not in the lifetime of his father, where
+ Eusebius places it, we must suppose that within eight years of its
+ occurrence Cyaxares found himself sufficiently strong, and his hands
+ sufficiently free, to resume his old projects, and for the second time to
+ march an army into Assyria.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The weakness of Assyria was such as to offer strong temptations to an
+ invader. As the famous inroad of the Gauls into Italy in the year of Rome
+ 365 paved the way for the Roman conquests in the peninsula by breaking the
+ power of the Etruscans, the Umbrians, and various other races, so the
+ Scythic incursion may have, really benefited, rather than injured, Media,
+ by weakening the great power to whose empire she aspired to succeed. The
+ exhaustion of Assyria&rsquo;s resources at the time is remarkably illustrated by
+ the poverty and meanness of the palace which the last king, Saracus, built
+ for himself at Calah. She lay, apparently, at the mercy of the first bold
+ assailant, her prestige lost, her army dispirited or disorganized, her
+ defences injured, her high spirit broken and subdued.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyaxaros, ere proceeding to the attack, sent, it is probable, to make an
+ alliance with the Susianians and Chaldaeans. Susiana was the last country
+ which Assyria had conquered, and could remember the pleasures of
+ independence. Chaldaea, though it had been now for above half a century an
+ Assyrian fief, and had borne the yoke with scarcely a murmur during that
+ period, could never wholly forget its old glories, or the long resistance
+ which it had made before submitting to its northern neighbor. The
+ overtures of the Median monarch seem to have been favorably received; and
+ it was agreed that an army from the south should march up the Tigris and
+ threaten Assyria from that quarter, while Cyaxares led his Medes from the
+ east, through the passes of Zagros against the capital. Rumor soon
+ conveyed the tidings of his enemies&rsquo; intentions to the Assyrian monarch,
+ who immediately made such a disposition of the forces at his command as
+ seemed best calculated to meet the double danger which threatened him.
+ Selecting from among his generals the one in whom he placed most
+ confidence&mdash;a man named Nabopolassar, most probably an Assyrian&mdash;he
+ put him at the head of a portion of his troops, and sent him to Babylon to
+ resist the enemy who was advancing from the sea. The command of his main
+ army he reserved for himself, intending to undertake in person the defence
+ of his territory against the Medes. This plan of campaign was not badly
+ conceived; but it was frustrated by an unexpected calamity, Nabopolassar,
+ seeing his sovereign&rsquo;s danger, and calculating astutely that he might gain
+ more by an opportune defection from a falling cause than he could look to
+ receive as the reward of fidelity, resolved to turn traitor and join the
+ enemies of Assyria. Accordingly he sent an embassy to Cyaxares, with
+ proposals for a close alliance to be cemented by a marriage. If the Median
+ monarch would give his daughter Amuhia (or Amyitis) to be the wife of his
+ son Nebuchadnezzar, the forces under his command should march against
+ Nineveh and assist Cyaxares to capture it. Such a proposition arriving at
+ such a time was not likely to meet with a refusal. Cyaxares gladly came
+ into the terms; the marriage took place; and Nabopolassar, who had now
+ practically assumed the sovereignty of Babylon, either led or sent a
+ Babylonian contingent to the aid of the Medes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The siege of Nineveh by the combined Medes and Babylonians was narrated by
+ Ctesias at some length. He called the Assyrian king Sardanapalus, the
+ Median commander Arbaces, the Babylonian Belesis. Though he thus disguised
+ the real names, and threw back the event to a period a century and a half
+ earlier than its true date, there can be no doubt that he intended to
+ relate the last siege of the city, that which immediately preceded its
+ complete destruction. He told how the combined army, consisting of
+ Persians and Arabs as well as of Medes and Babylonians, and amounting to
+ four hundred thousand men, was twice defeated with great loss by the
+ Assyrian monarch, and compelled to take refuge in the Zagros chain&mdash;how
+ after losing a third battle it retreated to Babylonia&mdash;how it was
+ there joined by strong reinforcements from Bactria, surprised the Assyrian
+ camp by night, and drove the whole host in confusion to Nineveh&mdash;how
+ then, after two more victories, it advanced and invested the city, which
+ was well provisioned for a siege and strongly fortified. The siege,
+ Ctesias said, had lasted two full years, and the third year had commenced&mdash;success
+ seemed still far off&mdash;when an unusually rainy season so swelled the
+ waters of the Tigris that they burst into the city, sweeping away more
+ than two miles of the wall. This vast breach it was impossible to repair;
+ and the Assyrian monarch, seeing that further resistance was vain, brought
+ the struggle to an end by burning himself, with his concubines and eunuchs
+ and all his chief wealth, in his palace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such, in outline, was the story of Ctesias. If we except the extent of the
+ breach which the river is declared to have made, it contains no glaring
+ improbabilities. On the contrary, it is a narrative that hangs well
+ together, and that suits both the relations of the parties and the
+ localities. Moreover, it is confirmed in one or two points by authorities
+ of the highest order. Still, as Ctesias is a writer who delights in
+ fiction, and as it seems very unlikely that he would find a detailed
+ account of the siege, such as he has given us, in the Persian archives,
+ from whence he professed to derive his history, no confidence can be
+ placed in those points of his narrative which have not any further
+ sanction. All that we know on the subject of the last siege of Nineveh is
+ that it was conducted by a combined army of Medes and Babylonians, the
+ former commanded by Cyaxares, the latter by Nabopolassar or
+ Nebuchadnezzar, and that it was terminated, when all hope was lost, by the
+ suicide of the Assyrian monarch. The self-immolation of Saracus is related
+ by Abydenus, who almost certainly follows Berosus in this part of his
+ history. We may therefore accept it as a fact about which there ought to
+ be no question. Actuated by a feeling which has more than once caused a
+ vanquished monarch to die rather than fall into the power of his enemies,
+ Saracus made a funeral pyre of his ancestral palace, and lighted it with
+ his own hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One further point in the narrative of Ctesias we may suspect to contain a
+ true representation. Ctesias declared the cause of the capture to have
+ been the destruction of the city wall by an unexpected rise of the river.
+ Now, the prophet Nahum, in his announcement of the fate coming on Nineveh,
+ has a very remarkable expression, which seems most naturally to point to
+ some destruction of a portion of the fortifications by means of water.
+ After relating the steps that would be taken for the defence of the place,
+ he turns to remark on their fruitlessness, and says: &ldquo;The gates of the
+ rivers are opened, and the palace is dissolved; and Huzzab is led away
+ captive; she is led up, with her maidens, sighing as with the voice of
+ doves, smiting upon their breasts.&rdquo; Now, we have already seen that at the
+ northwest angle of Nineveh there was a sluice or floodgate, intended
+ mainly to keep the water of the Khosrsu, which ordinarily filled the city
+ moat, from flowing off too rapidly into the Tigris, but probably intended
+ also to keep back the water of the Tigris, when that stream rose above its
+ common level. A sudden and great rise of the Tigris would necessarily
+ endanger this gate, and if it gave way beneath the pressure, a vast
+ torrent of water would rush up the moat along and against the northern
+ wall, which may have been undermined by its force, and have fallen in. The
+ stream would then pour into the city; and it may perhaps have reached the
+ palace platform, which being made of sun-dried bricks, and probably not
+ cased with stone inside the city, would begin to be &ldquo;dissolved.&rdquo; Such
+ seems the simplest and best interpretation of this passage, which, though
+ it is not historical, but only prophetical, must be regarded as giving an
+ importance that it would not otherwise have possessed to the statement of
+ Ctesias with regard to the part played by the Tigris in the destruction of
+ Nineveh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fall of the city was followed by a division of the spoil between the
+ two principal conquerors. While Cyaxares took to his own share the land of
+ the conquered people, Assyria Proper, and the countries dependent on
+ Assyria towards the north and north-west, Nabopolassar was allowed, not
+ merely Babylonia, Chaldaea, and Susiana, but the valley of the Euphrates
+ and the countries to which that valley conducted. Thus two considerable
+ empires arose at the same time cut of the ashes of Assyria&mdash;the
+ Babylonian towards the south and the south-west, stretching from Luristan
+ to the borders of Egypt, the Median towards the north, reaching from the
+ salt desert of Iran to Amanus and the Upper Euphrates. These empires were
+ established by mutual consent; they were connected together, not merely by
+ treaties, but by the ties of affinity which united their rulers; and,
+ instead of cherishing, as might have been expected, a mutual suspicion and
+ distrust, they seem to have really entertained the most friendly feelings
+ towards one another, and to have been ready on all emergencies to lend
+ each other important assistance. For once in the history of the world two
+ powerful monarchies were seen to stand side by side, not only without
+ collision, but without jealousy or rancor. Babylonia and Media were
+ content to share between them the empire of Western Asia: the world was,
+ they thought, wide enough for both; and so, though they could not but have
+ had in some respects conflicting interests, they remained close friends
+ and allies for more than half a century.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the Median monarch the conquest of Assyria did not bring a time of
+ repose. Wandering bands of Scythians were still, it is probable,
+ committing ravages in many parts of Western Asia. The subjects of Assyria,
+ set free by her downfall, were likely to use the occasion for the
+ assertion of their independence, if they were not immediately shown that a
+ power of at least equal strength had taken her place, and was prepared to
+ claim her inheritance. War begets war; and the successes of Cyaxares up to
+ the present point in his career did but whet his appetite for power, and
+ stimulate him to attempt further conquests. In brief but pregnant words
+ Herodotus informs us that Cyaxares &ldquo;subdued to himself all Asia above the
+ Halys.&rdquo; How much he may include in this expression, it is impossible to
+ determine; but, <i>prime facie</i>, it would seem at least to imply that
+ he engaged in a series of wars with the various tribes and nations which
+ intervened between Media and Assyria on the one side and the river Halys
+ on the other, and that he succeeded in bringing them under his dominion.
+ The most important countries in this direction were Armenia and
+ Cappadocia. Armenia, strong in its lofty mountains, its deep gorges, and
+ its numerous rapid rivers&mdash;the head-streams of the Tigris, Euphrates,
+ Kur, and Aras&mdash;had for centuries resisted with unconquered spirit the
+ perpetual efforts of the Assyrian kings to bring it under their yoke, and
+ had only at last consented under the latest king but one to a mere nominal
+ allegiance. Cappadocia had not even been brought to this degree of
+ dependence. It had lain beyond the furthest limit whereto the Assyrian
+ arms had ever reached, and had not as yet come into collision with any of
+ the great powers of Asia. Other minor tribes in this region, neighbors of
+ the Armenians and Cappadocians, but more remote from Media, were the
+ Ibenans, the Colchians, the Moschi, the Tibareni, the Mares the Macrones,
+ and the Mosynoeci. Herodotus appears to have been of opinion that all
+ these tribes, or at any rate all but the Colchians, were at this time
+ brought under by Cyaxares who thus extended his dominions to the Caucasus
+ and the Black Sea upon the north, and upon the east to the Kizil Irmak or
+ Halys.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is possible that the reduction of these countries under the Median yoke
+ was not so much a conquest as a voluntary submission of the inhabitants to
+ the power which alone seemed strong enough to save them from the hated
+ domination of the Scyths. According to Strabo, Armenia and Cappadocia were
+ the regions where the Scythic ravages had been most severely felt.
+ Cappadocia had been devastated from the mountains down to the coast; and
+ in Armenia the most fertile portion of the whole territory had been seized
+ and occupied by the invaders, from whom it thenceforth took the name of
+ Sacassene, the Armenians and Cappadocians may have found the yoke of the
+ Scyths so intolerable as to have gladly exchanged it for dependence on a
+ comparatively civilized people. In the neighboring territory of Asia Minor
+ a similar cause had recently exercised a unifying influence, the necessity
+ of combining to resist Cimmerian immigrants having tended to establish a
+ hegemony of Lydia over the various tribes which divided among them the
+ tract west of the Halys. It is evidently not improbable that the
+ sufferings endured at the hands of the Scyths may have disposed the
+ nations east of the river to adopt the same remedy and that, so soon as
+ Media had proved her strength, first by shaking herself free of the
+ Scythic invaders and then conquering Assyria. the tribes of these parts
+ accepted her as at once their mistress and their deliverer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another quite distinct cause may also have helped to bring about the
+ result above indicated. Parallel with the great Median migration from the
+ East under Cyaxares, or Phraortes (?), his father, an Arian influx had
+ taken place into the countries between the Caspian and the Halys. In
+ Armenia and Cappadocia during the flourishing period of Assyria, Turanian
+ tribes had been predominant. Between the middle and the end of the seventh
+ century these tribes appear to have yielded the supremacy to Arians. In
+ Armenia, the present language which is predominantly Arian, ousted the
+ former Turaman tongue which appears in the cuneiform inscriptions of Van
+ and the adjacent regions. In Cappadocia, the Moschi and Tibareni had to
+ yield their seats to a new race&mdash;the Katapatuka, who were not only
+ Arian but distinctly Medo-Persic, as is plain from their proper names, and
+ from the close connection of their royal house with that of the kings of
+ Persia. This spread of the Arians into the countries lying between the
+ Caspian and the Halys must have done much to pave the way for Median
+ supremacy over those regions. The weaker Arian tribes of the north would
+ have been proud of their southern brethren, to whose arms the queen of
+ Western Asia had been forced to yield, and would have felt comparatively
+ little repugnance in surrendering their independence into the hands of a
+ friendly and kindred people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus Cyaxares, in his triumphant progress to the north and the north-west,
+ made war, it is probable, chiefly upon the Scyths, or upon them and the
+ old Turanian inhabitants of the countries, while by the Arians he was
+ welcomed as a champion come to deliver them from a grievous oppression.
+ Ranging themselves under his standard, they probably helped him to expel
+ from Asia the barbarian hordes which had now for many years tyrannized
+ over them; and when the expulsion was completed, gratitude or habit made
+ them willing to continue in the subject position which they had assumed in
+ order to effect it. Cyaxares within less than ten years from his capture
+ of Nineveh had added to his empire the fertile and valuable tracts of
+ Armenia and Cappadocia&mdash;never really subject to Assyria&mdash;and may
+ perhaps have further mastered the entire region between Armenia and the
+ Caucasus and Euxine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The advance of their western frontier to the river Halys, which was
+ involved in the absorption of Cappadocia into the Empire, brought the
+ Medes into contact with a new power&mdash;a power which, like Media, had
+ been recently increasing in greatness, and which was not likely to submit
+ to a foreign yoke without a struggle. The Lydian kingdom was one of great
+ antiquity in this part of Asia. According to traditions current among its
+ people, it had been established more than seven hundred years at the time
+ when Cyaxares pushed his conquests to its borders. Three dynasties of
+ native kings&mdash;Atyadse, Heraclidse, and Mermnadae&mdash;had
+ successively held the throne during that period. The Lydians could repeat
+ the names of at least thirty monarchs who had borne sway in Sardis, their
+ capital city, since its foundation. They had never been conquered. In the
+ old times, indeed, Lydus, the son of Atys, had changed the name of the
+ people inhabiting the country from Maeonians to Lydians&mdash;a change
+ which to the keen sense of an historical critic implies a conquest of one
+ race by another. But to the people themselves this tradition conveyed no
+ such meaning; or, if it did to any, their self-complacency was not
+ disturbed thereby, since they would hug the notion that they belonged not
+ to the conquered race but to the conquerors. If a Ramcsos or a Sesostris
+ had ever penetrated to their country, he had met with a brave resistance,
+ and had left monuments indicating his respect for their courage. Neither
+ Babylon nor Assyria had ever given a king to the Lydians&mdash;on the
+ contrary, the Lydian tradition was, that they had themselves sent forth
+ Belus and Ninus from their own country to found dynasties and cities in
+ Mesopotamia. In a still more remote age they had seen their colonists
+ embark upon the western waters, and start for the distant Hesperia, where
+ they had arrived in safety, and had founded the great Etruscan nation. On
+ another occasion they had carried their arms beyond the limits of Asia
+ Minor, and had marched southward to the very extremity of: Syria, where
+ their general, Ascalus, had founded a great city and called it after his
+ name.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such were the Lydian traditions with respect to the more remote times. Of
+ their real history they seem to have known but little, and that little did
+ not extend further back than about two hundred years before Cyaxares.
+ Within this space it was certain that they had had a change of dynasty, a
+ change preceded by a long feud between their two greatest houses, which
+ were perhaps really two branches of the royal family. The Heraclidae had
+ grown jealous of the Mermnadae, and had treated them with injustice; the
+ Mormnadae had at first sought their safety in flight, and afterwards, when
+ they felt themselves strong enough, had returned, murdered the Heraclide
+ monarch, and placed their chief, Gyges, upon the throne. With Gyges, who
+ had commenced his reign about B.C. 700, the prosperity of the Lydians had
+ greatly increased, and they had begun to assume an aggressive attitude
+ towards their neighbors. Gyges&rsquo; revenue was so great that his wealth
+ became proverbial, and he could afford to spread his fame by sending from
+ his superfluity to the distant temple of Delphi presents of such
+ magnificence that they were the admiration of later ages. The relations of
+ his predecessors with the Greeks of the Asiatic coast had been friendly,
+ Gyges changed this policy, and, desirous of enlarging his seaboard, made
+ war upon the Greek maritime towns, attacking Miletus and Smyrna without
+ result, but succeeding in capturing the Ionic city of Colophon. He also
+ picked a quarrel with the inland town of Magnesia, and after many
+ invasions of its territory compelled it to submission. According to some,
+ he made himself master of the whole territory of the Troad, and the
+ Milesians had to obtain his permission before they could establish their
+ colony of Abydos upon the Hellespont. At any rate he was a rich and
+ puissant monarch in the eyes of the Greeks of Asia and the islands, who
+ were never tired of celebrating his wealth, his wars, and his romantic
+ history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The shadow of calamity had, however, fallen upon Lydia towards the close
+ of Gyges&rsquo; long reign. About thirty years before the Scythians from the
+ Steppe country crossed the Caucasus and fell upon Media, the same barrier
+ was passed by another groat horde of nomads. The Cimmerians, probably a
+ Celtic people, who had dwelt hitherto in the Tauric Chersonese and the
+ country adjoining upon it, pressed on by Scythic invaders from the East,
+ had sought a vent in this direction. Passing the great mountain barrier
+ either by the route of Mozdok&mdash;the Pylas Caucasiae&mdash;or by some
+ still more difficult track towards the Euxine, they had entered Asia Minor
+ by way of Cappadocia and had spread terror and devastation in every
+ direction. Gyges, alarmed at their advance, had placed himself under the
+ protection of Assyria, and had then confidently given them battle,
+ defeated them, and captured several of their chiefs. It is uncertain
+ whether the Assyrians gave him any material aid, but evident that he
+ ascribed his success to his alliance with them. In his gratitude he sent
+ an embassy to Asshur-bani-pal, king of Assyria, and courted his favor by
+ presents and by sending him his Cimmerian captives. Later in his reign,
+ however, he changed his policy, and, breaking with Assyria, gave aid to
+ the Egyptian rebel, Psammetichus, and helped him to establish his
+ independence. The result followed which was to be expected. Assyria
+ withdrew her protection; and Lydia was left to fight her own battles when
+ the great crisis came. Carrying all before them, the fierce hordes swarmed
+ in full force into the more western districts of Asia Minor; Paphlagonia,
+ Phrygia, Bithynia, Lydia, and Ionia were overrun; Gyges, venturing on an
+ engagement, perished; the frightened inhabitants generally shut themselves
+ up in their walled towns, and hoped that the tide of invasion might sweep
+ by them quickly and roll elsewhere; but the Cimmerians, impatient and
+ undisciplined as they might be, could sometimes bring themselves to endure
+ the weary work of a siege, and they saw in the Lydian capital a prize well
+ worth an effort. The hordes besieged Sardis, and took it, except the
+ citadel, which was commandingly placed and defied all their attempts. A
+ terrible scene of carnage must have followed. How Lydia withstood the
+ blow, and rapidly recovered from it, is hard to understand; but it seems
+ certain that within a generation she was so far restored to vigor as to
+ venture on resuming her attacks upon the Greeks of the coast, which had
+ been suspended during her period of prostration. Sadyattes, the son of
+ Ardys, and grandson of Gyges, following the example of his father and
+ grandfather, made war upon Miletus; and Alyattes, his son and successor,
+ pursued the same policy of aggression. Besides pressing Miletus, he
+ besieged and took Smyrna, and ravaged the territory of Clazomenae.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the great work of Alyattes&rsquo; reign, and the one which seems to have had
+ the most important consequences for Lydia, was the war which he undertook
+ for the purpose of expelling the Cimmerians from Asia Minor. The hordes
+ had been greatly weakened by time, by their losses in war, and, probably
+ by their excesses; they had long ceased to be formidable; but they were
+ still strong enough to be an annoyance. Alyattes is said to have &ldquo;driven
+ them out of Asia,&rdquo; by which we can scarcely understand less than that he
+ expelled them from his own dominions and those of his neighbors&mdash;or,
+ in other words, from the countries which had been the scenes of their
+ chief ravages&mdash;Paphlagonia, Bithynia, Lydia, Phrygia, and Cilicia.
+ But, to do this, he must have entered into a league with his neighbors,
+ who must have consented to act under him for the purposes of war, if they
+ did not even admit the permanent hegemony of his country. Alyattes&rsquo;
+ success appears to have been complete, or nearly so; he cleared Asia Minor
+ of the Cimmerians; and having thus conferred a benefit on all the nations
+ of the region and exhibited before their eyes his great military capacity,
+ if he had not actually constructed an empire, he had at any rate done much
+ to pave the way for one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was the political position in the regions west and south of the
+ Halys, when Cyaxares completed his absorption of Cappadocia, and looking
+ across the river that divided the Cappadocians from the Phrygians, saw
+ stretched before him a region of great fertile plains, which seemed to
+ invite an invader. A pretext for an attack was all that he wanted, and
+ this was soon forthcoming. A body of the nomad Scyths&mdash;probably
+ belonging to the great invasion, though Herodotus thought otherwise&mdash;had
+ taken service under Cyaxares, and for some time served him faithfully,
+ being employed chiefly as hunters. A cause of quarrel, however, arose
+ after a while; and the Scyths, disliking their position or distrusting the
+ intentions of their lords towards them, quitted the Median territory, and,
+ marching through a great part of Asia Minor, sought and found a refuge
+ with Alyattes, the Lydian king. Cyaxares, upon learning their flight, sent
+ an embassy to the court of Sardis to demand the surrender of the
+ fugitives; but the Lydian monarch met the demand with a refusal, and,
+ fully understanding the probable consequences, immediately prepared for
+ war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though Lydia, compared to Media, was but a small state, yet her resources
+ were by no means inconsiderable. In fertility she surpassed almost every
+ other country of Asia Minor, which is altogether one of the richest
+ regions in the world. At this time she was producing large quantities of
+ gold, which was found in great abundance in the Pactolus, and probably in
+ the other small streams that flowed down on all sides from the Tmolus
+ mountain-chain. Her people were at once warlike and ingenious. They had
+ invented the art of coining money, and showed considerable taste in their
+ devices. <a href="#linkimage-0008">[PLATE VII., Fig. 1]</a>, They claimed
+ also to have been the inventors of a number of games, which were common to
+ them with the Greeks. According to Herodotus, they were the first who made
+ a livelihood by shop-keeping. They were skilful in the use of musical
+ instruments, and had their own peculiar musical mode or style, which was
+ in much favor among the Greeks, though condemned as effeminate by some of
+ the philosophers. At the same time the Lydians were not wanting in courage
+ or manliness. They fought chiefly on horseback, and were excellent riders,
+ carrying long spears, which they managed with great skill. Nicolas of
+ Damascus tells us that even under the Heraclido kings, they could muster
+ for service cavalry to the number of 30,000. In peace they pursued with
+ ardor the sports of the field, and found in the chase of the wild boar a
+ pastime which called forth and exercised every manly quality. Thus Lydia,
+ even by herself, was no contemptible enemy; though it can hardly be
+ supposed that, without help from others, she would have proved a match for
+ the Great Median Empire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0008" id="linkimage-0008">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/plate007.jpg" width="100%" alt="Plate VII. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ But such help as she needed was not wanting to her. The rapid strides with
+ which Media had advanced towards the west had no doubt alarmed the
+ numerous princes of Asia Minor, who must have felt that they had a power
+ to deal with as full of schemes of conquest as Assyria, and more capable
+ of carrying her designs into execution. It has been already observed that
+ the long course of Assyrian aggressions developed gradually among the
+ Asiatic tribes a tendency to unite in leagues for purposes of resistance.
+ The circumstances of the time called now imperatively for such a league to
+ be formed, unless the princes of Asia Minor were content to have their
+ several territories absorbed one after another into the growing Median
+ Empire. These princes appear to have seen their danger. Cyaxares may
+ perhaps have, declared war specially against the Lydians, and have crossed
+ the Halys professedly in order to chastise them; but he could only reach
+ Lydia through the territories of other nations, which he was evidently
+ intending to conquer on his way; and it was thus apparent that he was
+ activated, not by anger against a particular power, but by a general
+ design of extending his dominions in this direction. A league seems
+ therefore to have been determined on. We have not indeed any positive
+ evidence of its existence till the close of the war; but the probabilities
+ are wholly in favor of its having taken effect from the first. Prudence
+ would have dictated such a course; and it seems almost implied in the fact
+ that a successful resistance was made to the Median attack from the very
+ commencement. We may conclude therefore that the princes of Asia Minor,
+ having either met in conclave or communicated by embassies, resolved to
+ make common cause, if the Medes crossed the Halys; and that, having
+ already acted under Lydia in the expulsion of the Cimmerians from their
+ territories, they naturally placed her at their head when they coalesced
+ for the second time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyaxares on his part, was not content to bring against the confederates
+ merely the power of Media. He requested and obtained a contingent from the
+ Babylonian monarch, Nabopolassar, and may not improbably have had the
+ assistance of other allies also. With a vast army drawn from various parts
+ of inner Asia, he invaded the territory of the Western Powers, and began
+ his attempt at subjugation. We have no detailed account of the war; but we
+ learn from the general expressions of Herodotus that the Median monarch
+ met with a most stubborn resistance; numerous engagements were fought with
+ varied results; sometimes the Medes succeeded in defeating their
+ adversaries in pitched battles; but sometimes, and apparently as often,
+ the Lydians and their allies gained decided victories over the Medes. It
+ is noted that one of the engagements took place by night, a rare
+ occurrence in ancient (as in modern) times. The war had continued six
+ years, and the Medes had evidently made no serious impression, when a
+ remarkable circumstance brought it suddenly to a termination. The two
+ armies had once more met and were engaged in conflict, when, in the midst
+ of the struggle, an ominous darkness fell upon the combatants and filled
+ them with superstitious awe. The sun was eclipsed, either totally or at
+ any rate considerably, so that the attention of the two armies was
+ attracted to it; and, discontinuing the fight, they stood to gaze at the
+ phenomenon. In most parts of the East such an occurrence is even now seen
+ with dread&mdash;the ignorant mass believe that the orb of day is actually
+ being devoured or destroyed, and that the end of all things is at hand&mdash;even
+ the chiefs, who may have some notion that the phenomenon is a recurrent
+ one, do not understand its cause, and participate in the alarm of their
+ followers. On the present occasion it is said that, amid the general fear,
+ a desire for reconciliation seized both armies. Of this spontaneous
+ movement two chiefs, the foremost of the allies on either side, took
+ advantage. Syennesis, king of Cilicia, the first known monarch of his
+ name, on the part of Lydia, and a prince whom Herodotus calls &ldquo;Labynetus
+ of Babylon&rdquo;&mdash;probably either Nabopolassar or Nebuchadnezzar&mdash;on
+ the part of Media, came forward to propose an immediate armistice; and,
+ when the proposal was accepted on either side, proceeded to the more
+ difficult task of arranging terms of peace between the contending parties.
+ Since nothing is said of the Scythians, who had been put forward as the
+ ostensible grounds of quarrel, we may presume that Alyattes retained them.
+ It is further clear that both he and his allies preserved undiminished
+ both their territories and their independence. The territorial basis of
+ the treaty was thus what in modern diplomatic language is called the
+ status quo; matters, in other words, returned to the position in which
+ they had stood before the war broke out. The only difference was that
+ Cyaxares gained a friend and an ally where he had previously had a jealous
+ enemy; since it was agreed that the two kings of Media and Lydia should
+ swear a friendship, and that, to cement the alliance, Alyattes should give
+ his daughter Aryenis in marriage to Astyages, the son of Cyaxares. The
+ marriage thus arranged took place soon afterwards, while the oath of
+ friendship was sworn at once. According to the barbarous usages of the
+ time and place, the two monarchs, having met and repeated the words of the
+ formula, punctured their own arms, and then sealed their contract by each
+ sucking from the wound a portion of the other&rsquo;s blood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this peace the three great monarchies of the time&mdash;the Median, the
+ Lydian, and the Babylonian&mdash;were placed on terms, not only of amity,
+ but of intimacy and (if the word may be used) of blood relationship. The
+ Crown Princes of the three kingdoms had become brothers. From the shores
+ of the Aegean to those of the Persian Gulf, Western Asia was now ruled by
+ interconnected dynasties, bound by treaties to respect each other&rsquo;s
+ rights, and perhaps to lend each other aid in important conjunctures, and
+ animated, it would seem, by a real spirit of mutual friendliness and
+ attachment. After more than five centuries of almost constant war and
+ ravage, after fifty years of fearful strife and convulsion, during which
+ the old monarchy of Assyria had gone down and a new Empire&mdash;the
+ Median&mdash;had risen up in its place, this part of Asia entered upon a
+ period of repose which stands out in strong contrast with the long term of
+ struggle. From the date of the peace between Alyattes and Cyaxares
+ (probably B.C. 610), for nearly half a century, the three kingdoms of
+ Media, Lydia, and Babylonia remained fast friends, pursuing their separate
+ courses without quarrel or collision, and thus giving to the nations
+ within their borders a rest and a refreshment which they must have greatly
+ needed and desired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In one quarter only was this rest for a short time disturbed. During the
+ troublous period the neighboring country of Egypt, which had recovered its
+ freedom, and witnessed a revival of its ancient prosperity, under the
+ Psamatik family, began once more to aspire to the possession of those
+ provinces which, being divided off from the rest of the Asiatic continent
+ by the impassable Syrian desert, seems politically to belong to Africa
+ almost more than to Asia. Psamatik I., the Psammetichus of Herodotus, had
+ commenced an aggressive war in this quarter, probably about the time that
+ Assyria was suffering from the Median and then from the Scythian inroads.
+ He had besieged for several years the strong Philistine town of Ashdod,
+ which commands the coast-route from Egypt to Palestine, and was at this
+ time a most important city. Despite a resistance which would have wearied
+ out any less pertinacious assailant, he had persevered in his attempt, and
+ had finally succeeded in taking the place. He had thus obtained a firm
+ footing in Syria; and his successor was, able, starting from this
+ vantage-ground, to overrun and conquer the whole territory. About the year
+ B.C. 608, Neco, son of Psamatik I., having recently ascended the throne,
+ invaded Palestine with a large army, met and defeated Josiah, king of
+ Judah, near Megiddo in the great plain of Esdraelon, and, pressing forward
+ through Syria to the Euphrates, attacked and took Carchemish, the strong
+ city which guarded the ordinary passage of the river. Idumea, Palestine,
+ Phoenicia, and Syria submitted to him, and for three years he remained in
+ undisturbed possession of his conquest. Then, however, the Babylonians,
+ who had received these provinces at the division of the Assyrian Empire,
+ began to bestir themselves. Nebuchadnezzar marched to Carchemish, defeated
+ the army of Neco, recovered all the territory to the border of Egypt, and
+ even ravaged a portion of that country. It is probable that in this
+ expedition he was assisted by the Medes. At any rate, seven or eight years
+ afterwards, when the intrigues of Egypt had again created disturbances in
+ this quarter, and Jehoiakim, the Jewish king, broke into open
+ insurrection, the Median monarch sent a contingent, which accompanied
+ Nebuchadnezzar into Judaea, and assisted him to establish his power firmly
+ in South-Western Asia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is the last act that we can ascribe to the great Median king. He can
+ scarcely have been much less than seventy years old at this time; and his
+ life was prolonged at the utmost three years longer. According to
+ Herodotus, he died B.C. 593, after a reign of exactly forty years, leaving
+ his crown to his son Astyages, whose marriage with a Lydian princess was
+ above related.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have no sufficient materials from which to draw out a complete
+ character of Cyaxares. He appears to have possessed great ambition,
+ considerable military ability, and a rare tenacity of purpose, which
+ gained him his chief successes. At the same time he was not wanting in
+ good sense, and could bring himself to withdraw from an enterprise, when
+ he had misjudged the fitting time for it, or greatly miscalculated its
+ difficulties. He was faithful to his friends, but thought treachery
+ allowable towards his enemies. He knew how to conquer, but not how to
+ organize, an empire; and, if we except his establishment of Magism, as the
+ religion of the state, we may say that he did nothing to give permanency
+ to the monarchy which he founded. He was a conqueror altogether after the
+ Asiatic model, able to wield the sword, but not to guide the pen, to
+ subdue his contemporaries to his will by his personal ascendency over
+ them, but not to influence posterity by the establishment of a kingdom, or
+ of institutions, on deep and stable foundations. The Empire, which owed to
+ him its foundation, was the most shortlived of all the great Oriental
+ monarchies, having begun and ended within the narrow space of three score
+ and ten years&mdash;the natural lifetime of an individual.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Astyages, who succeeded to the Median throne about B.C. 593, had neither
+ his father&rsquo;s enterprise nor his ability. Born to an empire, and bred up in
+ all the luxury of an Oriental Court, he seems to have been quite content
+ with the lot which fortune appeared to have assigned him, and to have
+ coveted no grander position. Tradition says that he was remarkably
+ handsome, cautious, and of an easy and generous temper. Although the
+ anecdotes related of his mode of life at Ecbatana by Herodotus, Xenophon,
+ and Nicolas of Damascus, seem to be for the most part apocryphal, and at
+ any rate come to us upon authority too weak to entitle them to a place in
+ history, we may perhaps gather from the concurrent, descriptions of these
+ three writers something of the general character of the Court over which
+ he presided. Its leading features do not seem to have differed greatly
+ from those of the Court of Assyria. The monarch lived secluded, and could
+ only be seen by those who asked and obtained an audience. He was
+ surrounded by guards and eunuchs, the latter of whom held most of the
+ offices near the royal person. The Court was magnificent in its apparel,
+ in its banquets, and in the number and organization of its attendants. The
+ courtiers wore long flowing robes of many different colors, amongst which
+ red and purple predominated, and adorned their necks with chains or
+ collars of gold, and their wrists with bracelets of the same precious
+ metal. Even the horses on which they rode had sometimes golden bits to
+ their bridles. One officer of the Court was especially called &ldquo;the King&rsquo;s
+ Eye;&rdquo; another had the privilege of introducing strangers to him; a third
+ was his cupbearer; a fourth his messenger. Guards torch-bearers,
+ serving-men, ushers, and sweepers, were among the orders into which the
+ lower sort of attendants were divided; while among the courtiers of the
+ highest rank was a privileged class known as &ldquo;the King&rsquo;s
+ table-companions&rdquo;. The chief pastime in which the Court indulged was
+ hunting. Generally this took place in a park or &ldquo;paradise&rdquo; near the
+ capital; but sometimes the King and Court went out on a grand hunt into
+ the open country, where lions, leopards, bears, wild boars, wild asses,
+ antelopes, stags, and wild sheep abounded, and, when the beasts had been
+ driven by beaters into a confined space, despatched them with arrows and
+ javelins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Prominent at the Court, according to Herodotus, was the priestly caste of
+ the Magi. Held in the highest honor by both King and people, they were in
+ constant attendance, ready to expound omens or dreams, and to give their
+ advice on all matters of state policy. The religious ceremonial was, as a
+ matter of course, under their charge; and it is probable that high state
+ offices were often conferred upon them. Of all classes of the people they
+ were the only one that could feel they had a real influence over the
+ monarch, and might claim to share in his sovereignty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The long reign of Astyages seems to have been almost undisturbed, until
+ just before its close, by wars or rebellions. Eusebius indeed relates that
+ he, and not Cyaxares, carried on the great Lydian contest; and Moses of
+ Chorene declares that he was engaged in a long struggle with Tigranes, an
+ Armenian king. But little credit can be attached to these statements, the
+ former of which contradicts Herodotus, while the latter is wholly
+ unsupported by any other writer. The character which Cyaxares bore among
+ the Greeks was evidently that of an unwarlike king. If he had really
+ carried his arms into the heart of Asia Minor, and threatened the whole of
+ that extensive region with subjugation, we can scarcely suppose that he
+ would have been considered so peaceful a ruler. Neither is it easy to
+ imagine that in that case no classical writer&mdash;not even Ctesias&mdash;would
+ have taxed Herodotus with an error that must have been so flagrant. With
+ respect to the war with Tigranes, it is just possible that it may have a
+ basis of truth; there may have been a revolt of Armenia from Astyages
+ under a certain Tigranes, followed by an attempt at subjugation. But the
+ slender authority of Moses is insufficient to establish the truth of his
+ story, which is internally improbable and quite incompatible with the
+ narrative of Herodotus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are some grounds for believing that in one direction Astyages
+ succeeded in slightly extending the limits of his empire. But he owed his
+ success to prudent management, and not to courage or military skill. On
+ the north-eastern frontier, occupying the low country now known as Talish
+ and Ghilan, was a powerful tribe called Cadusians, probably of Arian
+ origin, which had hitherto maintained its independence. This would not be
+ surprising, if we could accept the statement of Diodorus that they were
+ able to bring into the field 200,000 men. But this account, which probably
+ came from Ctesias, and is wholly without corroboration from other writers,
+ has the air of a gross exaggeration; and we may conclude from the general
+ tenor of ancient history that the Cadusians were more indebted to the
+ strength of their country, than to either their numbers or their prowess,
+ for the freedom and independence which they were still enjoying. It seems
+ that they were at this time under the government of a certain king, or
+ chief, named Aphernes, or Onaphernes. This ruler was, it appears, doubtful
+ of his position, and, thinking it could not be long maintained, made
+ overtures of surrender to Astyages, which were gladly entertained by that
+ monarch. A secret treaty was concluded to the satisfaction of both
+ parties; and the Cadusians, it would seem, passed under the Medes by this
+ arrangement, without any hostile struggle, though armed resistance on the
+ part of the people, who were ignorant of the intentions of their
+ chieftain, was for some time apprehended.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The domestic relations of Astyages seem to have been unhappy. His
+ &ldquo;marriage de convenance&rdquo; with the Lydian princess Aryenis, if not wholly
+ unfruitful, at any rate brought him no son; and, as he grew to old age,
+ the absence of such support to the throne must have been felt very
+ sensibly, and have caused great uneasiness. The want of an heir perhaps
+ led him to contract those other marriages of which we hear in the Armenian
+ History of Moses&mdash;one with a certain Anusia, of whom nothing more is
+ known; and another with an Armenian princess, the loveliest of her sex,
+ Tigrania, sister of the Armenian king, Tigranes. The blessing of male
+ offspring was still, however, denied him; and it is even doubtful whether
+ he was really the father of any daughter or daughters. Herodotus, and
+ Xenophon, indeed give him a daughter Mandane, whom they make the mother of
+ Cyrus; and Ctesias, who denied in the most positive terms the truth of
+ this statement, gave him a daughter, Amytis, whom he made the wife, first
+ of Spitaces the Mede, and afterwards of Cyrus the Persian. But these
+ stories, which seem intended to gratify the vanity of the Persians by
+ tracing the descent of their kings to the great Median conqueror, while at
+ the same time they flattered the Medes by showing them that the issue of
+ their old monarchs was still seated on the Arian throne, are entitled to
+ little more credit than the narrative of the Shahnameh, which declares
+ that Iskander (Alexander) was the son of Darab (Darius) and of a daughter
+ of Failakus (Philip of Macedon). When an oriental crown passes from one
+ dynasty to another, however foreign and unconnected, the natives are wont
+ to invent a relationship between the two houses, which both parties are
+ commonly quite ready to accept; as it suits the rising house to be
+ provided with a royal ancestry, and it pleases the fallen one and its
+ partisans to see in the occupants of the throne a branch of the ancient
+ stock&mdash;a continuation of the legitimate family. Tales therefore of
+ the above-mentioned kind are, historically speaking, valueless; and it
+ must remain uncertain whether the second Median monarch had any child at
+ all, either male or female.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Old age was now creeping upon the sonless king. If he was sixteen or
+ seventeen years old at the time of his contract of marriage with Aryenis,
+ he must have been nearly seventy in B.C. 558, when the revolt occurred
+ which terminated both his reign and his kingdom. It appears that the
+ Persian branch of the Arian race, which had made itself a home in the
+ country lying south and south-east of Media, between the 32nd parallel and
+ the Persian gulf, had acknowledged some subjection to the Median kings
+ during the time of their greatness. Dwelling in their rugged mountains and
+ high upland plains, they had however maintained the simplicity of their
+ primitive manners, and had mixed but little with the Medes, being governed
+ by their own native princes of the Achasmenian house, the descendants,
+ real or supposed, of a certain Achajmenes. These princes were connected by
+ marriage with the Cappadocian kings; and their house was regarded as one
+ of the noblest in Western Asia. What the exact terms were upon which they
+ stood with the Median monarch is uncertain. Herodotus regards Persia as
+ absorbed into Media at this time, and the Achsemenidse as merely a good
+ Persian family. Nicolas of Damascus makes Persia a Median satrapy, of
+ which Atradates, the father of Cyrus, is satrap, Xenophon, on the
+ contrary, not only gives the Achajmenidae their royal rank, but seems to
+ consider Persia as completely independent of Media; Moses of Chorene takes
+ the same view, regarding Cyrus as a great and powerful sovereign during
+ the reign of Astyages. The native records lean towards the view of
+ Xenophon and Moses. Darius declares that eight of his race had been kings
+ before himself, and makes no difference between his own royalty and
+ theirs. Cyrus calls himself in one inscription &ldquo;the son of Cambyses, the
+ powerful king.&rdquo; It is certain therefore that Persia continued to be ruled
+ by her own native monarchs during the whole of the Median period, and that
+ Cyrus led the attack upon Astyages as hereditary Persian king. The Persian
+ records seem rather to imply actual independence of Media; but as national
+ vanity would prompt to dissimulation in such a case, we may perhaps accord
+ so much weight to the statement of Herodotus, and to the general tradition
+ on the subject, as to believe that there was some kind of acknowledgment
+ of Median supremacy on the part of the Persian kings anterior to Cyrus,
+ though the acknowledgment may have been not much more than a formality and
+ have imposed no onerous obligations. The residence of Cyrus at the Median
+ Court, which is asserted in almost every narrative of his life before he
+ became king, inexplicable if Persia was independent, becomes thoroughly
+ intelligible on the supposition that she was a great Median feudatory. In
+ such cases the residence of the Crown Prince at the capital of the
+ suzerain is constantly desired, or even required by the superior Power,
+ which sees in the presence of the son and heir the best security against
+ disaffection or rebellion on the part of the father.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It appears that Cyrus, while at the Median Court, observing the unwarlike
+ temper of the existing generation of the Medes, who had not seen any
+ actual service, and despising the personal character of the monarch, who
+ led a luxurious life, chiefly at Ecbatana, amid eunuchs, concubines, and
+ dancing-girls, resolved on raising the standard of rebellion, and seeking
+ at any rate to free his own country. It may be suspected that the Persian
+ prince was not actuated solely by political motives. To earnest
+ Zoroastrians, such as the Achgemenians are shown to have been by their
+ inscriptions, the yoke of a Power which had so greatly corrupted, if it
+ had not wholly laid aside, the worship of Ormazd, must have been extremely
+ distasteful; and Cyrus may have wished by his rebellion as much to
+ vindicate the honor of his religion&mdash;as to obtain a loftier position
+ for his nation. If the Magi occupied really the position at the Median
+ Court which Herodotus assigns to them&mdash;if they &ldquo;were held in high
+ honor by the king, and shared in his sovereignty&rdquo;&mdash;if the
+ priest-ridden monarch was perpetually dreaming and perpetually referring
+ his dreams to the Magian seers for exposition, and then guiding his
+ actions by the advice they tendered him, the religious zeal of the young
+ Zoroastrian may very naturally have been aroused, and the contest into
+ which he plunged may have been, in his eyes, not so much a national
+ struggle as a crusade against the infidels. It will be found hereafter
+ that religious fervor animated the Persians in most of those wars by which
+ they spread their dominion. We may suspect, therefore, though it must be
+ admitted we cannot prove, that a religious motive was among those which
+ led them to make their first efforts after independence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to the account of the struggle which is most circumstantial, and
+ on the whole most probable, the first difficulty which the would-be rebel
+ had to meet and vanquish was that of quitting the Court. Alleging that his
+ father was in weak health, and required his care, he requested leave of
+ absence for a short time; but his petition was refused on the flattering
+ ground that the Great King was too much attached to him to lose sight of
+ him even for a day. A second application, however, made through a favorite
+ eunuch after a certain interval of time, was more successful; Cyrus
+ received permission to absent himself from Court for the next five months;
+ whereupon, with a few attendants, he left Ecbatana by night, and took the
+ road leading to his native country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next evening Astyages, enjoying himself as usual over his wine,
+ surrounded by a crowd of his concubines, singing-girls, and dancing-girls,
+ called on one of them for a song. The girl took her lyre and sang as
+ follows: &ldquo;The lion had the wild boar in his power, but let him depart to
+ his own lair; in his lair he will wax in strength, and will cause the lion
+ a world of toil; till at length, although the weaker, he will overcome the
+ stronger.&rdquo; The words of the song greatly disquieted the king, who had been
+ already made aware that a Chaldaean prophecy designated Cyrus as future
+ king of the Persians. Repenting of the indulgence which he had granted
+ him, Astyages forthwith summoned an officer into his presence, and ordered
+ him to take a body of horsemen, pursue the Persian prince, and bring him
+ back, either alive or dead. The officer obeyed, overtook Cyrus, and
+ announced his errand; upon which Cyrus expressed his perfect willingness
+ to return, but proposed, that, as it was late, they should defer their
+ start till the next day. The Medes consenting, Cyrus feasted them, and
+ succeeded in making them all drunk; then mounting his horse, he rode off
+ at full speed with his attendants, and reached a Persian outpost, where he
+ had arranged with his father that he should find a body of Persian troops.
+ When the Medes had slept off their drunkenness, and found their prisoner
+ gone, they pursued, and again overtaking Cyrus, who was now at the head of
+ an armed force, engaged him. They were, however, defeated with great loss,
+ and forced to retreat, while Cyrus, having beaten them off, made good his
+ escape into Persia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Astyages heard what had happened, he was greatly vexed; and, smiting
+ his thigh, he exclaimed, &ldquo;Ah! fool, thou knewest well that it boots not to
+ heap favors on the vile; yet didst thou suffer thyself to be gulled by
+ smooth words; and so thou hast brought upon thyself this mischief. But
+ even now he shall not get off scot-free.&rdquo; And instantly he sent for his
+ generals, and commanded them to collect his host, and proceed to reduce
+ Persia to obedience. Three thousand chariots, two hundred thousand horse,
+ and a million footmen (!) were soon brought together; and with these
+ Astyages in person invaded the revolted province, and engaged the army
+ which Cyrus and his father Cambyses had collected for defence. This
+ consisted of a hundred chariots, fifty thousand horsemen, and three
+ hundred thousand light-armed foot, who were drawn up in in front of a
+ fortified town near the frontier. The first day&rsquo;s battle was long and
+ bloody, terminating without any decisive advantage to either side; but on
+ the second day Astyages, making skilful use of his superior numbers,
+ gained a great victory. Having detached one hundred thousand men with
+ orders to make a circuit and get into the rear of the town, he renewed the
+ attack; and when the Persians were all intent on the battle in their
+ front, the troops detached fell on the city and took it, almost before its
+ defenders were aware. Cambyses, who commanded in the town, was mortally
+ wounded and fell into the enemy&rsquo;s hands. The army in the field, finding
+ itself between two fires, broke and fled towards the interior, bent on
+ defending Pasargadse, the capital. Meanwhile Astyages, having given
+ Cambyses honorable burial, pressed on in pursuit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The country had now become rugged and difficult. Between Pasargadse and
+ the place where the two days&rsquo; battle was fought lay a barrier of lofty
+ hills, only penetrated by a single narrow pass. On either side were two
+ smooth surfaces of rock, while the mountain towered above, lofty and
+ precipitous. The pass was guarded by ten thousand Persians. Recognizing
+ the impossibility of forcing it, Astyages again detached a body of troops,
+ who marched along the foot of the range till they found a place where it
+ could be ascended, when they climbed it and seized the heights directly
+ over the defile. The Persians upon this had to evacuate their strong
+ position, and to retire to a lower range of hills very near to Pasargadge.
+ Here again there was a two days&rsquo; fight. On the first day all the efforts
+ of the Medes to ascend the range (which, though low, was steep, and
+ covered with thickets of wild olive) were fruitless. Their enemy met them,
+ not merely with the ordinary weapons, but with great masses of stone,
+ which they hurled down with crushing force upon their ascending columns.
+ On the second day, however, the resistance was weaker or less effective
+ Astyages had placed at the foot of the range, below his attacking columns,
+ a body of troops with orders to kill all who refused to ascend, or who,
+ having ascended, attempted to quit the heights and return to the valley.
+ Thus compelled to advance, his men fought with desperation, and drove the
+ Persians before them up the slopes of the hill to its very summit, where
+ the women and children had been placed for the sake of security. There,
+ however, the tide of success turned. The taunts and upbraidings of their
+ mothers and wives restored the courage of the Persians; and, turning upon
+ their foe, they made a sudden furious charge. The Medes, astonished and
+ overborne, were driven headlong down the hill, and fell into such
+ confusion that the Persians slew sixty thousand of them. Still Astyages
+ did not desist from his attack. The authority whom we have been following
+ here to a great extent fails us, and we have only a few scattered notices
+ from which to reconstruct the closing scenes of the war. It would seem
+ from these that Astyages still maintained the offensive, and that there
+ was a fifth battle in the immediate neighborhood of Pasargadse, wherein he
+ was completely defeated by Cyrus, who routed the Median army, and pressing
+ upon them in their flight, took their camp. All the insignia of Median
+ royalty fell into his hands; and, amid the acclamations of his army, he
+ assumed them, and was saluted by his soldiers &ldquo;King of Media and Persia.&rdquo;
+ Meanwhile Astyages had sought for safety in flight; the greater part of
+ his army had dispersed, and he was left with only a few friends, who still
+ adhered to his fortunes. Could he have reached Ecbatana, he might have
+ greatly prolonged the struggle; but his enemy pressed him close; and,
+ being compelled to an engagement, he not only suffered a complete defeat,
+ but was made prisoner by his fortunate adversary. By this capture the
+ Median monarchy was brought abruptly to an end. Astyages had no son to
+ take his place and continue the struggle. Even had it been otherwise, the
+ capture of the monarch would probably have involved his people&rsquo;s
+ submission. In the East the king is so identified with his kingdom that
+ the possession of the royal person is regarded as conveying to the
+ possessor all regal rights. Cyrus, apparently, had no need even to besiege
+ Ecbatana; the whole Median state, together with its dependencies, at once
+ submitted to him, on learning what had happened. This ready submission was
+ no doubt partly owing to the general recognition of a close connection
+ between Media and Persia, which made the transfer of empire from the one
+ to the other but slightly galling to the subjected power, and a matter of
+ complete indifference to the dependent countries. Except in so far as
+ religion was concerned, the change from one Iranic race to the other would
+ make scarcely a perceptible difference to the subjects of either kingdom.
+ The law of the state would still be &ldquo;the law of the Medes and Persians.&rdquo;
+ Official employments would be open to the people of both countries. Even
+ the fame and glory of empire would attain, in the minds of men, almost as
+ much to the one nation as the other. If Media descended from her
+ preeminent rank, it was to occupy a station only a little below the
+ highest, and one which left her a very distinct superiority over all the
+ subject races.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If it be asked how Media, in her hour of peril, came to receive no
+ assistance from the great Powers with which she had made such close
+ alliances&mdash;Babylonia and Lydia&mdash;the answer would seem to be that
+ Lydia was too remote from the scene of strife to lend her effective aid,
+ while circumstances had occurred in Babylonia to detach that state from
+ her and render it unfriendly. The great king, Nebuchadnezzar, had he been
+ on the throne, would undoubtedly have come to the assistance of his
+ brother-in-law, when the fortune of war changed, and it became evident
+ that his crown was in danger. But Nebuchadnezzar had died in B.V. 561,
+ three years before the Persian revolt broke out. His son, Evil-Merodach,
+ who would probably have maintained his father&rsquo;s alliances, had survived
+ him but two years: he had been murdered in B.C. 559 by a brother-in-law,
+ Nergalsharezer or Neriglissar, who ascended the throne in that year and
+ reigned till B.C. 555. This prince was consequently on the throne at the
+ time of Astyages&rsquo; need. As he had supplanted the house of Nebuchadnezzar,
+ he would naturally be on bad terms with that monarch&rsquo;s Median connections;
+ and we may suppose that he saw with pleasure the fall of a power to which
+ pretenders from the Nebuchadnezzar family would have looked for support
+ and countenance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In conclusion, a few words may be said on the general character of the
+ Median Empire, and the causes of its early extinction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Median Empire was in extent and fertility of territory-equal if not
+ superior to the Assyrian. It stretched from Rhages and the Carmanian
+ desert on the east to the river Halys upon the west, a distance of above
+ twenty degrees, or about 1,300 miles. From north to south it was
+ comparatively narrow, being confined between the Black Sea, the Caucasus,
+ and the Caspian, on the one side, and the Euphrates and Persian Gulf on
+ the other. Its greatest width, which was towards the east, was about nine,
+ and its least, which was towards the west, was about four degrees. Its
+ area was probably not much short of 500,000 square miles. Thus it was as
+ large as Great Britain, France, Spain, and Portugal put together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In fertility its various parts were very unequal. Portions of both Medias,
+ of Persia, of Armenia, Iberia, and Cappadocia, were rich and productive;
+ but in all these countries there was a large quantity of barren mountain,
+ and in Media Magna and Persia there were tracts of desert. If we estimate
+ the resources of Media from the data furnished by Herodotus in his account
+ of the Persian revenue, and compare them with those of the Assyrian
+ Empire, as indicated by the same document, we shall find reason to
+ conclude, that except during the few years when Egypt was a province of
+ Assyria, the resources of the Third exceeded those of the Second Monarchy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The weakness of the Empire arose chiefly from its want of organization.
+ Nicolas of Damascus, indeed, in the long passage from which our account of
+ the struggle between Cyrus and Astyages has been taken, represents the
+ Median Empire as divided, like the Persian, into a number of satrapies but
+ there is no real ground for believing that any such organization was
+ practised in Median times, or to doubt that Darius Hystaspis was the
+ originator of the satrapial system. The Median Empire, like the Assyrian,
+ was a congeries of kingdoms, each ruled by its own native prince, as is
+ evident from the case of Persia, where Cambyses was not satrap, but
+ monarch. Such organization as was attempted appears to have been clumsy in
+ the extreme. The Medes (we are told) only claimed direct suzerainty over
+ the nations immediately upon their borders; remoter tribes they placed
+ under these, and looked to them to collect and remit the tribute of the
+ outlying countries. It is doubtful if they called on the subject nations
+ for any contingents of troops. We never hear of their doing so. Probably,
+ like the Assyrians, they made their conquests with armies composed
+ entirely of native soldiers, or of those combined with such forces as were
+ sent to their aid by princes in alliance with them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The weakness arising from this lack of organization was increased by a
+ corruption of manners, which caused the Medes speedily to decline in
+ energy and warlike spirit. The conquest of a great and luxurious empire by
+ a hardy and simple race is followed, almost of necessity, by a
+ deterioration in the character of the conquerors, who lose the warlike
+ virtues, and too often do not replace them by the less splendid virtues of
+ peace. This tendency, which is fixed in the nature of things, admits of
+ being checked for a while, or rapidly developed, according to the policy
+ and character of the monarchs who happen to occupy the throne. If the
+ original conqueror is succeeded, by two or three ambitious and energetic
+ princes, who engage in important wars and labor to extend their dominions
+ at the expense of their neighbors, it will be some time before the
+ degeneracy becomes marked. If, on the other hand, a prince of a quiet
+ temper, self-indulgent, and studious of ease, come to the throne within a
+ short time of the original conquests, the deterioration will be very
+ rapid. In the present instance it happened that the immediate successor of
+ the first conqueror was of a peaceful disposition, unambitious, and
+ luxurious in his habits. During a reign which lasted at least thirty-five
+ years he abstained almost wholly from military enterprises; and thus an
+ entire generation of Medes grew up without seeing actual service, which
+ alone makes the soldier. At the same time there was a general softening of
+ manners. The luxury of the Court corrupted the nobles, who from hardy
+ mountain chieftains, simple if not even savage in their dress and mode of
+ life, became polite courtiers, magnificent in their apparel, choice in
+ their diet, and averse to all unnecessary exertion. The example of the
+ upper classes would tell on the lower, though not perhaps to any very
+ large extent. The ordinary Mede, no doubt, lost something of his old
+ daring and savagery; from disuse he became inexpert in the management of
+ arms; and he was thus no longer greatly to be dreaded as a soldier. But he
+ was really not very much less brave, nor less capable of bearing
+ hardships, than before; and it only required a few years of training to
+ enable him to recover himself and to be once more as good a soldier as any
+ in Asia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But in the affairs of nations, as in those of men, negligence often proves
+ fatal before it can be repaired. Cyrus saw his opportunity, pressed his
+ advantage, and established the supremacy of his nation, before the unhappy
+ effects of Astyages&rsquo; peace policy could be removed. He knew that his own
+ Persians possessed the military spirit in its fullest vigor; he felt that
+ he himself had all the qualities of a successful loader; he may have had
+ faith in his cause, which, he would view as the cause of Ormazd against
+ Ahriman, of pure Religion against a corrupt and debasing nature-worship.
+ His revolt was sudden, unexpected, and well-timed. He waited till Astyages
+ was advanced in years, and so disqualified for command; till the veterans
+ of Cyaxares were almost all in their graves; and till the Babylonian
+ throne was occupied by a king who was not likely to afford Astyages any
+ aid. Ho may not at first have aspired to do more than establish the
+ independence of his own country. But when the opportunity of effecting a
+ transfer of empire offered itself, he seized it promptly; rapidly
+ repeating his blows, and allowing his enemy no time to recover and renew
+ the struggle. The substitution of Persia for Media as the ruling power in
+ Western Asia was due less to general causes than to the personal character
+ of two men. Had Astyages been a prince of ordinary vigor, the military
+ training of the Medes would have been kept up; and in that case they might
+ easily have hold their own against all comers. Had their training been
+ kept up, or had Cyrus possessed no more than ordinary ambition and
+ ability, either he would not have thought of revolting, or he would have
+ revolted unsuccessfully. The fall of the Median Empire was due immediately
+ to the genius of the Persian Prince; but its ruin was prepared, and its
+ destruction was really caused, by the shortsightedness of the Median
+ monarch.
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 6em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
+
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+</pre>
+ </body>
+</html>
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