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(по-англ. Scythians; ; от греческого skythai; условный синоним скифский), общее название различных древних племен, живших в Северном Причерноморье VII в. до РХ – III в. н.э. Геродот разделял их на царских скифов, кочевников, земледельцев, пахарей. Хозяйство: земледелие, скотоводство, обработка металлов, торговля с античными городами Северного Причерноморья. В IV в. до РХ создали Скифское государство. После его разгрома готами (2-я половина III в. н.э.) растворились среди других племен. От скифов остались многочисленные памятники (курганы, городища).
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(in Russian скифы), a nomadic people originally of Iranian stock who migrated from
Central Asia to southern Russia in the 8th and 7th centuries Bc . Centred on what is now the Crimea,
the Scythians founded a rich, powerful empire that survived for several centuries before succumbing to
the Sarmatians during the 4th century BC to the 2nd century AD.
Much of what is known of the history of the Scythians comes from the account of them by the ancient
Greek historian Herodotus, who visited their territory. In modern times this record has been expanded
chiefly by the work of Russian anthropologists.
The Scythians were feared and admired for their prowess in war and, in particular, for their
horsemanship. They were among the earliest people to master the art of riding, and their mobility
astonished their neighbours. The migration of the Scythians from Asia eventually brought them into
the territory of the Cimmerians, who had traditionally controlled the Caucasus and the plains north of
the Black Sea. In a war that lasted 30 years, the Scythians destroyed the Cimmerians and set themselves up
as rulers of an empire stretching from west Persia through Syria and Judaea to the borders of Egypt.
The Medes, who ruled Persia, attacked them and drove them out of Anatolia, leaving them finally in control
of lands which stretched from the Persian border north through the Kuban and into southern Russia.
The Scythians were remarkable not only for their fighting ability but also for the civilization
they produced. They developed a class of wealthy aristocrats who left elaborate graves filled with richly
worked articles of gold and other precious materials. This class of chieftains, the Royal Scyths, finally
established themselves as rulers of the southern Russian and Crimean territories. It is there that
the richest and most numerous relics of Scythian civilization have been found. Their power was sufficient
to repel an invasion by the Persian king Darius I in about 513 BC.
The Royal Scyths were headed by a sovereign whose authority was transmitted to his son. Eventually,
around the time of Herodotus, the royal family intermarried with Greeks. In 339 the ruler Ateas was killed
at the age of 90 while fighting Philip II of Macedonia. The community was eventually destroyed
in the 2nd century BC, Palakus being the last sovereign whose name is preserved in history.
The Scythian army was made up of freemen who received no wage other than food and clothing, but
who could share in booty on presentation of the head of a slain enemy. Many warriors wore Greek-style
bronze helmets and chain-mail jerkins. Their principal weapon was a double-curved bow and trefoil-shaped
arrows; their swords were of the Persian type. Every Scythian had at least one personal mount, but
the wealthy owned large herds of horses, chiefly Mongolian ponies. Burial customs were elaborate and called
for the sacrifice of members of the dead man's household, including wife, servants, and a number of
horses.
Scythian // Encyclopædia Britannica, 2010.
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