The Ancients - The Amazons
Episode Date: June 15, 2025What makes the Amazons one of the most captivating myths in ancient Greek culture?Tristan Hughes is joined by Dr. David Braund, Emeritus Professor at the University of Exeter, to explore and celebrate... the legends of the Amazons in ancient Greek culture. From their portrayal through iconic myths involving Heracles, Achilles, and Theseus to modern misconceptions, Tristan and David reveal the Amazons' roles in epic tales like the Trojan War and their artistic representations on ancient Greek vases and temple reliefs.These formidable warrior women were not only central figures in mythology but also revered city founders, astronomers and festival creators, far more than their popular depiction as alluring and dangerous figures.MOREAchilleshttps://open.spotify.com/episode/6uNHjwkzMHT5Ql2NHixZvl?si=7098cc9c847141e4The Thracianshttps://open.spotify.com/episode/6uvIfj2fkYhoJZsn4y1SDX?si=1yLefV8PSSO2ZzZzY5T9yAAres: God of Warhttps://open.spotify.com/episode/6mER4RZ11k56eqV1uoVvNsPresented by Tristan Hughes. Audio editor is Aidan Lonergan, the producer is Joseph Knight. The senior producer is Anne-Marie Luff.All music courtesy of Epidemic SoundsThe Ancients is a History Hit podcast.Sign up to History Hit for hundreds of hours of original documentaries, with a new release every week and ad-free podcasts. Sign up at https://www.historyhit.com/subscribe. You can take part in our listener survey here: https://insights.historyhit.com/history-hit-podcast-always-on
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The Amazons
Their idea is one of the most romantic and resonant in all antiquity. A
mythological race of women that lived on the plain of Themyscira next to the Black Sea
and featured in several of the biggest episodes from Greek mythology. From Heracles' labours,
to Jason and the Argonauts, to the Iliad, where an Amazon queen battles the Greek hero Achilles. They were renowned warriors, who in Greek mythology lived in prehistoric times,
long before the age of Classical Athens or Alexander the Great.
Their stories endured and became popular across the Greek world.
But the Amazons also did much more than just fighting.
They were founders of cities, of festivals and peoples.
They were garfald superwomen that became closely entwined with wonders of the ancient world.
Today we're going to explore various myths and legends of the Amazons that have endured from
ancient Greece. We'll be delving into how the ancient Greeks perceived these alluring, clever
and dangerous warrior women. Our guest is Dr David Braund, Emeritus Professor at the University of Exeter. David, he has
just released a brand new book all about the Amazons and their presence throughout the
ancient Greek world. It was a pleasure to interview him and I hope you enjoy.
David, we are talking about the Amazons today, your brand new book. The Amazons, they seem
as popular as ever. But am I also right that modern perceptions of Amazons, they're very
different to what the ancient Greeks thought?
Yeah, very often they are. There's a lot going on, you know. And actually, before I say anything
else, I think I should just make one, I think, quite important sort of ethical point that my
book, my research is all about getting to grips with Greek thinking in the ancient world about
Amazons. And I'm aware that because that doesn't fit very well with a lot about Amazons that people
think they know, often things which they're very committed to.
That kind of awkwardness of fit
could actually be quite problematic for some people.
I'm aware that there are people who draw a great strength
from and support really, from their ideas about Amazons.
And I don't really wanna damage that.
I mean, to explain what I mean,
I happened across a Polish group for example of women who've had breast cancer and
surgery and that sort of stuff and they clearly find the whole Amazon myth as
they perceive it to be really helpful to them and I just I got a nervous at
producing a book which doesn't exactly threaten that, but kind of
risks it, shall we say. So I just want to make that point. That is not my goal. I'm all in
support of whatever anybody wants to do with Amazons, really. My purpose is, as it were,
the history of the myth. The myth in Greek reality is what I'm aiming at.
And I'm quite open for people now
to do whatever they want with Amazon.
That's the beauty of myth.
It's endlessly elastic.
And I guess the reason people are still very interested
in Amazons is precisely because it touches base
with all sorts of really big issues in modern society.
Everything surrounding gender for a start.
My women of Poland, for example, as well.
All kinds of things which actually at times
are a bit surprising to me, you know?
Not to mention all the TV stuff, all the films
and everything.
There's a lot of kind of noise around ancient Amazons.
My focus is very much to try and get beyond all that
and to look at what Greeks of antiquity
and to a small extent Romans too,
what they had to say about Amazons
and in particular to explain why they made so much of them,
why they put them on their great public buildings, why they have, you know,
three of the seven wonders of the world have Amazons quite prominently. And there's a lot
of texts about Amazons, myths about Amazons in plays which explore real human difficulties and
so forth. The ceramics of the ancient world,
which are really quite important for us
as an insight into the private life,
the lives of ancient Greeks,
quite often feature Amazons.
And Amazons really doing a lot of very interesting things.
And we even connect with some rather surprising myths.
You know, the Trojan War, for example, everybody likes the Trojan War.
Brad Pitt charging about and so forth.
No Amazons in that film as far as I remember.
But in the ancient myth of Troy, just as Homer's account finishes, the war goes on
and Hector has just been killed at the
end of the Homeric version of Troy and what happens? The Amazon Queen turns up
to fill his boots and she takes his place defending Troy and then immediately
generates a whole series of questions and it shows, for example, that the Amazons
aren't exclusive with regard to men. Very often we find them in alliance with men or
male-based communities shall we say, patriarchal Troy we might call it, with old Priam in charge
and various key heroic figures and And yet the Amazon queen and her
followers have no problem turning up and fighting for Troy and actually dying there. I think
there's special reasons for that. But as I say, the Amazon myth, it just touches a lot,
a lot in antiquity and really quite a lot today as I've tried to outline.
David, it is so interesting all of these different channels we can go down these avenues to explore
with understanding how the ancient Greeks perceived the Amazons. I also really liked your
mention of three wonders of the world, which we will get to as this chat goes on. But is it also
then important to highlight that actually, from what you were saying,
mythology, Greek mythology is not our only source for the Amazons. I mean, archaeology is also really
important too. Well, some people have claimed as much. Really, the answer to that is no, it isn't.
Now, unless by archaeology, you mean the material culture and for example, vases that have survived
and so forth with their images or buildings, what exactly do you mean there Tristan in
terms of archaeology is important too?
Are you talking about the material culture's survivals?
In regards to archaeology, I was thinking more about how they're depicted, as you mentioned, on temple reliefs or in pottery or in coinage, which may give us more of a sense of how the
Greeks viewed these mythological figures. That's certainly true. I thought you might
be alluding to something quite different it's worth addressing, perhaps. There has been a
sustained attempt over the last 10 years or so to claim that Amazons have been
found literally dug up through excavation and this really is an unhelpful confusion.
In English, English usage generally there are two ways of using the word
Amazons. This is where the confusion comes in. The general usage of Amazons is, as we all know,
are tough, resilient, resourceful women
who might pick up a weapon,
might even form an army or something.
That's the general image of Amazons, yep.
There's also the far more specific meaning of Amazons,
which is the Amazons of Greek thought, myth, belief
in ancient times. Now those two things need to be kept well apart. In terms of the ancient
Amazons we really have nothing in terms of excavations that have relevance. People claim we do and tend to say we have a lot,
but trust me, we do not. What we do find are women around the ancient world from time to time,
either individually or maybe in small clusters with or without men, we do find women who are buried with several
kinds of weapon. Very recently there's a bit of a fuss on the Silly Isles of all places,
quite a long way really from the Greek Main Street, where a woman seems to have been excavated
buried with a large spear. And of course, immediately people say,
Amazon, Amazon.
And you know, maybe so.
Maybe this was a woman who in life
went into battle with a large spear.
But archeologists, you know,
we spend an awful lot of time trying to work out
a methodology for getting into these grave goods as they're called
to try to understand actually why these are buried there.
The simple question is why was this spear put in this burial?
The short answer is we do not know.
One option is yes it was her favourite spear that she took into battle
but there are plenty of other options which which confuse the picture. Maybe it's put there as a
symbol of something important. Important to maybe the woman and maybe the people that buried her.
Maybe it's her husband's favourite spear that's
gone in there and one might even speculate about the phallic nature of the spear. We
know in other contexts that weapons are very often symbolic of the supernatural of gods
and so forth so that it might be the case that we have weapons put in there
as part of a broader sense of religion and ritual. We just don't know. Maybe the
Spears put there as a valuable thing in a context where maybe there were too
many valuable things available to be put in a burial burial in the city isle. Now you
know I focus on this one thing I've had no contact whatsoever with the people
who've excavated that and so forth but I did notice how immediately we go from
finding a weapon in a burial to Amazons. Now normally we don't find spears
actually with buried women we tend to find arrows most commonly.
We find them buried in all sorts of contexts,
in all sorts of places.
I was looking some buried in the middle of Athens
the other day.
So there are many, many ways of interpreting
these grave goods.
The mistake, as I would see it,
is to take the fact that from time to time,
female burials contained what we might think of as weapons
to move from that to say,
aha, we have found an Amazon.
And it's worth saying actually also,
especially with the older excavations,
when you look more carefully, and people on the whole don't I'm afraid but when you do look more
carefully you find that actually the sexing of the skeleton is pretty iffy
you find that there's a cluster of burials all together so we're not clear
whether any weapon there was to do with the female or to do with men who are also buried there and thereabouts.
Sometimes we're told triumphantly.
You'll get my sense that I'm rather short of patience with this because it's on the whole unhelpful.
We are sometimes told triumphantly, look, this woman was killed violently. Unfortunately,
a lot of people in the ancient world were killed violently, and that includes women. It doesn't
tell you that they went to war to get killed violently. They were on the wrong end of somebody's
spear or knife or whatever. If we go a bit more onto the myth surrounding
the Amazons by the ancient Greeks, first off, do we know why the ancient Greeks created
this story of the Amazons? Do we know much about the origins of the Amazon myth and the
mindset behind the Greeks who would have created it?
Angus Now that's a really interesting question,
Tristan. I think the first point that needs to be stressed is that Amazons are already baked into Greek culture when Greek culture first comes 700 BC. In other words, the beginning of Archaic Greece, as we tend to call it.
We look to the early texts and we look in particular to Homer. And although Amazons don't
appear at all in the Odyssey, which is quite interesting, they do appear in the Iliad not
once, not twice, but three times.
And indeed, an interesting Amazon burial just outside the city of Troy, which is used as
a sort of focus for Trojan military power and organization, actually.
So Amazons are already, as Greek culture starts to sort of raise its head, are already there. Now you're
asking whether, you know, where it may all come from and clearly this is always a problem because,
you know, you go in search of beginnings and you get into a sort of infinite regress. There's a
glimpse of that already with Amazons. Again, a lot of daft claims have been made
about Amazon myth origins, but on a positive note,
I think what's going on is that Amazons are in
the great swathe of myth that comes from
what we tend to call the Near East,
into Greek culture.
And this involves a whole mass of stuff,
Prometheus, for example, good one.
And much, much more besides.
And I suspect that Amazons are coming in there.
This is not a field I'm particularly expert in.
However, I've noticed that those who work on Hittite texts,
of which we have very few, unfortunately,
dating from what the early-ish second millennium BC.
So, you know, whereas Greek culture begins, say, 700 BC,
this is more 1700 BC, a thousand years before,
in these Hittite texts,
there's just hint of Amazons.
There's certainly female power
and queens and that sort of thing.
And those who specialize in this
are doing two rather interesting things.
One is they're suspecting Amazon myth at this early stage.
And secondly, they're also engaged
in this inevitable search for beginnings,
which is an infinite regress.
So just as I'm now saying, okay,
probably it comes from the Near East and the Hittites,
the Hittite specialists are saying,
well, it may come from further over
in the Near East maybe a thousand years before so you can go on and on you know
and you end up with sort of Amazons in caves as it were. It's important to
think about origins but don't expect much in the way of answers would be my
thought on the subject which is why by and large
I haven't gone down that road very much. I'm very much more interested in the myth as embedded
in Greek society in this very powerful way so that they, as you were saying, they get into temples,
the inevitable pottery and so forth, and also a whole series of key stories,
including Troy, they're in the Argonautic epic,
which is also very early, already there,
again in 700 BC referred to in Homer, et cetera.
So yeah, Amazons, I think, are there,
in some ways for the same reasons
that they have survived so much now.
They touch real society,
we can call it that, everyday society, in a whole series of ways.
And I think that's perhaps the way to go in trying to understand all of this and that's really what I've tried to do.
to do. David, is it also important to highlight, and I know you do so in your book, how the myths of the Amazons, they are created by men and they're written for men as well. Is
that also important to highlight? Because I know there's like the word fantasy surrounding
them as well.
Yeah, there is. I always sign up for that as a general view, created by men and for men. I mean, this is a society which right through antiquity
is dominated by men.
And these Amazons, they're not feminists
in the sense that they have an agenda
which is all that worrying to Greek men actually.
The idea of Amazons as alluring is actually quite new and it's something
which I've placed far more stress on than most researchers ever have. But one
really only has to look at the pictures and read the texts. The ancient Greeks
themselves were very unclear about their sense of whether Amazons had ever once walked the earth by
and large. It's a bit like people believing in the literal truth of religious texts now,
you know. They sort of believed in them and at the same time wouldn't really want to press
it. They are quite happy to believe in a general way, as now perhaps somebody might believe
in Jesus performing miracles without actually wanting
to go very far in thinking that, you know,
a few loaves and fish might feed a multitude.
The ancient world is very like that with Amazons.
They're perceived by and large as a set of a state indeed, an ethnos is the
word of people, of women who are all somehow in the prime of life. We hear very little
about Amazon children and we hear absolutely nothing about middle-aged or older Amazons. Amazons
are always somehow at around the age that a Greek woman in a normative sense would be
expecting to be married usually. That's where Amazons are located in Greek thought.
They in that sense are indeed alluring and some of the stories we have about
them they are identified specifically as of great breeding stock. You know they
they will produce really strong sons in particular. So that's something which we often find
as a wonderful story in Herodotus,
which is built all around that.
So we can talk about fantasy,
but we've also got to have some sense
that these women are dangerous, of course, they can fight.
So it's a kind of mixed fantasy.
It's a fantasy where these women warriors, we're going to
call them that, are a challenge to the Greek male and particularly perhaps the young Greek
male looking to be in inverted commas a hero, an Achilles, a Heracles even. And at the same
time these are potentially first class again. It's kind of difficult
to talk about this without being a bit sort of, I don't know, crude around the edges perhaps,
but they're very attractive women physically and part of the road to heroism in Greek male thought is not only being able to go out and
defeat these Amazon women and all kinds of other opponents, but also and in some ways
even more importantly to be able to resist their female charms. So when you go out as a young hero, Greek, out there
to do battle with an Amazon, you are taking on an opponent who is doubly dangerous. She
can fight you and kill you, but she can also see you off with her sheer attraction.
One particularly famous and I think really rather astonishing version of that is in the
so-called duel between an Amazon queen and the famous Achilles where actually nobody survives Achilles.
Achilles just kills anybody in front of him.
And so when the Amazon Queen comes across Achilles, I'm afraid we all know what's going
to happen and it happens very quickly.
We call it a duel.
It's no duel at all.
He simply kills her on the spot.
However, although he's done that part of the hero role, he's not really equipped to cope with the
other aspect of Amazon power. Because as she dies, he looks into her face, into her eyes and is totally, totally overwhelmed
by strange emotions or of passion. Love as it's often called, it's slightly odd in this
context but nevertheless. And he starts to think hang on, I am I've killed this woman who would have been a great
wife partner for me but I've just killed her and he's disturbed by that disturbed very
deeply so that when one of the others in the Greek army happens to be passing and says
something we don't quite know what he says but we know it's offensive to Achilles about this. Achilles turns on him and kills him on the spot. He's totally
distraught and this causes problems for Achilles. He's killed one of his own men for saying
the wrong thing. It's all getting a bit out of hand. And that's the power of the Amazon.
She's powerful as a warrior, but she's also powerful with all the
skills that the young Greek hero would tend to associate with the women around him. So that
the outlook of the young Greek hero, who I agree is totally central to all of this, the outlook
that he's got is that this is the ultimate challenge.
It's not question of going out and killing a monster. You're going out and
killing this beautiful creature but there's a danger in that beauty. A great
danger. And Amazon queens in particular, like the one killed by Achilles, are
particularly outstanding in that regard and are flagged as such in the ancient texts. And we've got some really very
nice pictures of them you know they look great and what can you do? There's a nice
vase in Manchester which shows the young Heracles going to see the Amazon
Queen on one of his missions. It's his ninth labour in fact. He's got to go and persuade her to give him
her belt, her battle belt, and they seem to go on quite well. But at Heracles we see him in the vase
looking at this queen who looks like a sort of ancient version, I always think, of Barbarella
in the famous Jane Fonda role covered in fur and all kinds of
boots and things. It's all very potentially, it depends on the viewer of course,
but potentially a kind of erotic scene and according to myth just as Heracles
and the Queen were going to have a sexual escapade. One of the goddesses,
Hera, who had a problem with all this, intervened, caused a riot among the
Amazons so that Heracles in fact just had to kill the Queen and all the other
Amazons that he could to get away with the belt that he'd come to get. So you
know this double mixture is really important,
I think, both the sex and the violence together.
That's what's going on with Amazons.
And I think that's why they're part of this complex fantasy.
And so powerful for Greek society,
because Greeks in general were facing the whole issue
of how to live their lives and Amazons were offering all kinds of suggestions for as it were ways to go or not go.
And that would apply in epic heroic contexts and it would apply also in the more everyday context within, for example, a city like Athens.
And that's quite aside from all the public images and so forth.
We're talking here about the area that we know the least about, which is
the private everyday world of the Greek, the Greek male and the Greek female.
Unfortunately, we just don't have that much from the Greek female. Unfortunately we just don't have that much from the Greek
females. It would be wonderful if we had a Greek female author telling us about
all this. But we don't. Occasionally we have a Greek male author suggesting
what female figures might have thought about Amazons. And when they do that, it's really not very different.
There's no sign of a kind of female take on Amazons
as distinct from the male take on Amazons.
So clearly in experiential ways,
there will be obvious differences.
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David, you've covered a lot of different points there, including some of the big myths
in which Amazons are associated. You mentioned there, of course, Achilles and Heracles and
the portrayal and sex and violence and so on. We'll come back to certain areas of that
and hopefully we'll get to Athens as well because they feel important in the story of the Amazons. But if we explore
the mythology a bit more, did the Greeks place the Amazons in a particular area of the world?
I mean, where did Greek myth locate the Amazon homelands? Is there a real geographic region
for that? And do we know much about the whole Amazon society? What do the Greeks tell about that?
Right, yeah. No, the Greek culture is pretty clear about this actually, though there are one or two
loose ends. In terms of their earliest origins and their ethnicity, for want of a better word,
Greeks regarded the Amazons as coming from Thrace. In other words, roughly the area between northern Greece,
Thessaloniki etc. up to more or less the Danube, Bulgaria, Romania, those areas. That's where
they thought they came from originally. That goes together with a set of myths which talk about in prehistoric times major movements
of peoples from that area, from Thrace, that sort of Danubian area, from Thrace, eastwards,
and the people's cities, etc. along what is now the south coast of the Black Sea and northern Turkey, they often have a story about
migration from Thrace as if in some sense Greeks thought that, and these people themselves
apparently thought, that Thracian influence had spread right across the southern in particular Black Sea as far as the Caucasus mountains in
what is now Georgia and beyond that actually and even into Azerbaijan and so forth and the shores
of the Caspian. So the Amazons are part of those stories of Thracians moving eastwards.
those stories of Thracians moving eastwards. Now the Amazons, however, stop at a particular fascinating location actually, one of the greenest and most fertile areas around the whole coast of
the Black Sea. And this is in what is now north east Turkey on the shores of the Black Sea immediately east of the modern
town of Samsun which is ancient Amisos and there you can actually go to a sort of Amazon
theme park if you like and the locals I'm reliably informed are very proud of their
Amazon past, their Amazon connection.
And I think that's borne out by the fact that in a small town there, which is taken to be
the epicentre of all of this, little place called Tereme, you find in the main square
a very large statue of a very lively Amazon.
To this day, it's a modern statue.
But what's interesting about it is that there's clearly a communal commitment to this day, it's a modern statue. But what's interesting about it is that there's clearly
a communal commitment to this Amazon past.
In a society, it's pretty patriarchal society really around those parts.
So again, there's a mirror image of what's going on with ancient Greece perhaps.
But that area is known in the ancient world
and in a way today too, as the Plane of Themiscyra.
So going back to the point, the Amazons have drifted
or marched or whatever they've done from Thrace,
which they've left completely behind them,
to this place on the eastern part of the Black Sea,
the southeastern part of the Black Sea, northern Turkey,
where they establish cities.
We call them cities, as usual in the ancient world.
What we tend to mean are small towns, villages even.
And there, at those three rather rustic villages villages they spent a lot of time with their
horses they're great horsewomen rather obsessed with horses actually they have their society there
now what happens is as I mentioned briefly Pericles rather reluctantly smashes the whole society, it never really recovers. But in terms of Amazon
society there, we have a consistent sense that it's a monarchy, a monarchy with a queen,
of course, and we have a whole mess of rather kind of silly, you might say, stories. You see, with myth, myth doesn't feel the need
to offer a kind of ethnography.
Myth gives us highlights and often things
which really don't fit together very well.
I mean, you might say, well, how can it be, for example,
that Amazons are always, you know, teenagers
and they're only 20 or something like that.
How can that be?
Makes no sense. But nevertheless, myth doesn't worry about that. But the people that do worry
about that are in a way people like you and me, people who, you know, want to have a fuller story.
And so as antiquity goes on, particularly with the later periods, the fourth, third century BC and onwards, we find various writers coming up with their own notions of what went on in the private lives of Amazons. Amazon's sex with either neighbors sometimes a lot of deliberately crippled males that they keep the sexual purposes.
This is all pretty solid torrid stuff which is not part of the mainline traditional myth the mainline traditional myth is much more interested in for example heracles smashing the Amazon culture that's there.
Because it's interesting, isn't it? You get that later idea, sometimes of the Amazons
being almost man haters, and you mentioned that kind of more infamous portrayal of the
Amazons that comes later. But is it very clear, like as well from the tales that you have,
that although that part of the myth isn't
fully fledged out, you know, it's a very capable society of independent women, but also heterosexual
women as well.
They're all, as far as we hear, actually rather keenly heterosexual, you might say. They certainly
do not hate men. What they want to do is to have their own independent state and
actually that's why they have to fight because if they weren't able to fight
then they wouldn't be able to have this independent state because they you know
the ancient world's a violent place and they would be subjugated one way or
another. They by no means hate men. They get on very well with men, but they do go to war with a whole
series of cities and peoples and so forth. They're kind of surprising in that way perhaps.
And this idea of hating men, you know, it's really hard to find anything like that in the
ancient texts. Almost nothing. After all, since this is this, as we called it, a fantasy of men
for men and maybe for women too, it would perhaps be a little bit surprising if they
were, as it were, men haters. They're really not.
Mason. We get our sense that the Amazons are pretty different to Greek women. But were
those differences, were differences sometimes bridged?
Was it sometimes not the case that some Greek women were very different to Amazon?
LR Yeah. This has been overplayed a lot, really.
One reason I got into writing this book is that I spent years teaching about Amazons
and I found it very hard to recommend anything to my students. I mean that's why I wrote the book really and we have a whole sort of set of slightly
daft ideas.
I mean yes Amazons are unlike if you like normative Greek women in certain regards.
They have their own political system, a system within which they are out and about
riding horses, indeed not side saddle, which is also quite important, and that
they're doing things that in general in Greek society women did not do,
particularly the more wealthy prominent women. Poor women on the whole did
whatever they had to do to get by, we tend to forget them.
So it's fair enough to talk about them being different
to Greek women say.
However, however, then by no means is different
as has been claimed over the years.
You know, quite apart from their obviously same biology, we find women in Greek culture, who are really good
warriors. We find, for example, particularly notable one called
Atalantae, a woman of Arcadia in the Peloponnese in southern
Greece, who's a match for any man. And indeed, there's a whole
myth around her, an early and important myth
the myth of the Caledonian boar she is the one the first one to damage this huge beast this great
big wild pig but a massive one when all the youths of Greece want to be the first one to draw blood from this creature
it's a woman who does it, Atalantae, who manages to hit it and the result of that is all sorts
of argument about well you know should women really be allowed to come and do this kind
of stuff?
There was a whole debate about whether Atalantae should join the Argonautic expedition to go
with Jason and the other heroes of his day to get the Golden Fleece.
In one or two versions of the story she's allowed to go but it's problematic.
In the best known version by a guy called Apollonius Rhodius, Jason says to her, look,
I'd love to take you. You you deserve to come but my god can
you imagine you'd be the only woman on the boat we're rowing all the way across the G and C and
black seam and going to face who knows what you're just going to cause mayhem and again
mayhem. And again, partly because women like this from a Greek male perspective are by and large very attractive. So poor Atalanta, despite the fact that she'd probably be the best warrior on
the ship, perhaps doesn't get to go at all. So there's stories about Greek women like this
There are stories about Greek women like this and the distinction, the contrast between Amazons and ordinary Greek women as it were is much weaker than has often been understood.
And I think that's underlined particularly where we have a transition where Amazons actually become normative Greek females.
The classic case of that is the Athenian hero, Aethesius,
whose story we can explore if you like.
But the general point is very clear.
Amazons and real Greek women actually are fundamentally very similar. So that stories about Amazons
are also stories about female potential. I think that's very important.
Will, you mentioned there the story of Theseus and Athens, and yes, I would like us to explore
that in a bit. But I feel we should talk a bit about Amazon warfare and how the myths portray the Amazons and how they fight.
Now, David, we get this idea today, quite a big idea, isn't it? With the bow and arrow and so on
and so forth. But do we know, what do the sources say? What do they reveal about how the Amazons
fought? Right. That comes in two slightly different packages. In the
straightforwardly grand epic contexts, like the duel with Achilles, the women fight as
Achilles fights, which is in the epic style. In other words, with large spears mostly used
for throwing. However, although you get the use of javelins more generally,
in most stories about Amazons,
outside that narrow kind of epic vision,
you have Amazons who are fighting with bows and arrows
in particular, and also axes.
The Greeks imagined axes very much as a domestic weapon and occasionally a woman chooses to
kill her husband or something with an axe because, you know, lying around the Greek
house, there were plenty of axes.
So that axes are regarded very often as a female accoutrement and indeed they're also
particularly connected with Thrace. So in Amazons we've got women
from Thrace, so doubly we should see them wielding axes which usually Greek warriors
don't tend to make much of. The archers very often have a small axe with them, so that
perhaps goes with the bow and arrow side of things. There's a whole kind of ethical vision of how one should go to war,
which Greeks often sort of hold forth on one way or another.
The bow and arrow is regarded as something which is perhaps not entirely heroic.
Heracles, for example, got a lot of stick for using a bow and arrow quite a lot of
the time. It's a little bit cowardly. You're a bit like say Paris in the Trojan story. You're not
really much of a warrior if you use a bow and arrow all the time. Heracles does it some of the time.
Paris does it all the time. It's a sort of cowardly weapon in the sense
that you're fighting at a distance.
So actually quite suitable in the sense of what women
might be able to do usefully on the battlefield.
The standard Greek battlefield, if we can call it that,
is all about a kind of rugby game in a way,
a rugby game with spears and shields
where each side forms a sort of thick phalanx
and charge into each other as if in a rugby scrum.
Now, okay, women can do that,
but they're automatically physically up against it given the in general
the larger weight and size of their male opponents.
So normally when Greeks imagine Amazon's fighting, they're doing this more distance stuff.
Now remarkably, Plato of all people, who is a bit of a dry stick,
he holds forth on the whole idea
of whether actually it might be a good idea
for Greek states to train their young women
in using bows and arrows.
Why not, he says?
They can fire an arrow just as well as
any man. And where's the problem? Let's train not only
the young men to be warriors, but train the young women to be
able to be warriors at a distance, the bow and arrow, or
maybe even throwing a javelin or something of that sort. And
indeed, given their love of horses, throwing a javelin or something of that sort. And indeed, given their love of horses,
throwing a javelin or firing an arrow or sometimes wielding a big axe on horseback,
there is a kind of internal logic to all of this from a Greek perspective.
Thracian warfare as well, where they have that, you know, the kind of the javelin and the mounted
warrior idea with the of the skirmisher
cavalry. Is there a sense that the Greeks might have modelled that idea of Amazon warfare
on the actual Thracians that they would have faced to the north of the Greek world in the
central Mediterranean?
Yeah, I think that's almost inescapable. It's kind of hard to know what comes first, but it's a kind of rational package,
isn't it? These are Thracian women. They fight like Thracians. Why wouldn't they?
Will Barron Well, let's explore something else now.
We'll move a bit away from the fighting because we can talk about fighting for so long. But with
the Amazons and how they are portrayed in the ancient Greek myths, it feels like there are almost secret, lesser
known parts of the Amazon story and what they were renowned for. And one of the things I
have in my notes is astronomy. So David, how big is astronomy to the Amazons?
Yeah, quite big actually. And as you rightly say, it's something which never, never gets a look in.
I mean, part of the problem with pretty much everything
that's been written about Amazons over the years
is that there's been this relentless obsession
with their fighting.
And yes, they fight and they fight very well,
but they do a lot else.
Amazons are incredibly creative, incredibly intelligent
and wise in all sorts of ways.
Let's not forget that there's an element of divinity
about them.
They're not immortal, they're not gods,
but they are in ways which myth never quite explains properly.
They are the daughters of the war god Ares, okay?
So that they have a lot in their genetics. Now we have quite a few
stories of Amazons planning and constructing major buildings. For example, a temple of
Ares up there in the southern Black Sea for their father. A whole temple planned,
conceived, orientated, created by Amazons, which is an extraordinary thing because in
the ancient world, I mean, we see all those temples as we go around, you know, you see
the path and all, and I've just come back from Sic, you go to Agrigento, full of temples.
But we need to be clear that these temples
are really hard to build.
They cost a bomb and you really got to know
what you're doing.
And we do know that it was not unusual
for there to be major problems in construction.
And yet these Amazons, they can do all that.
Now, one of the other things they can do
is they can look to the heavens.
And we actually have, bless him, in a play of Euripides,
a whole account of an Amazon vision of the stars, because Euripides tells of a tapestry,
which is in itself quite interesting.
Amazons can weave too.
They sometimes claim that they can't, but they can.
They do the female jobs weaving,
as usually understood by the Greeks, a female job,
but they also do the astronomy
because the tapestry in Euripides is a whole picture,
a magnificent, huge picture of the stars
seen in very much female terms.
So the figures who are featured are in one way or another
key to primary female concerns,
including for example, the hunter Orion.
Orion who's a male, but who is a very nasty male
from a female perspective.
He's a kind of determined rapist.
And we see him having a bad time up in the heavens
in this tapestry that Euripides offers us
in one of his less known plays called the Ion.
And the tapestry said to be kept in vaults in Delphi
in the temple of Apollo,
whether there ever was anything of that sort
in the temple of Apollo, there were tapestries for sure.
And a lot of other bric-a-brac you might say.
So the general idea is very appealing and sensible enough.
But what Euripides does is show us these Amazons
who study the stars.
They study the stars in a particularly female kind of way, which he doesn't develop a great
deal, but nevertheless it's there.
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American History Hit, a podcast from History Hit. Do we also get a sense in the surviving myths and even, you know, with playwrights and so
on and historians, I believe I've got my notes Herodotus here as well, that the Amazons also, one of their many traits and the legendary stories that
become associated with them, is that they become linked to the founding of cities and
the creation of new peoples and sanctuaries across the Greek world and indeed beyond the
borders of the Greek world and indeed beyond the borders of the Greek
world too.
Yes, absolutely right. And you're right to mention Herodotus in particular in Book
Four of his histories. I think it's about chapter 110 onwards, if anybody wants to look
it up. Herodotus himself shows no enthusiasm for Amazons actually. What he's trying to do is to explain the background
to a whole bunch of peoples who are there
in the broader Black Sea world
when the Persians turn up to try and take over.
And one of those peoples, the Saramatians, Sarumati, they have women who go out hunting
with their husbands who may even go to war with their husbands and Herodotus says that
there's a story that all of this goes back to Amazon genetics. In a nutshell, what has happened is
that Heracles has smashed up the Amazon state.
A small number of Amazons,
because Amazons go in all directions,
a small number are taken back towards Greece onboard ships.
But the Amazons being a tough lot, take over the ships.
Now, they don't quite know how to work ships but
nevertheless there they are on the ships and they get thrown up on land on the
northern coast of the Black Sea and there they do what Amazons do best. They
pinch some horses because they're in this new world. They're refugees but
they're very resilient and they seize horses, have punch ups etc.
with the locals, the so-called Scythians. And the Scythians soon discover that these
are women and they think, well this is interesting. Why don't we send our young boys out to breed basically with some of these strange powerful women who've
turned up and we'll have some really good grandchildren etc.
So the old Scythians send out the young ones who meet the Amazons and fairly quickly because these Amazons are clever, very quickly form erotic
relationships with the Amazons. The Amazons then start to say to the young
Scythians, look normally we'd go back with you to your families but we can't do
that because your families you know they just don't live like us the women of Scythia spend
all their time sat about in wagons we can't do that incidentally this is one text which
among many which torpedoes a popular idea that the Amazons are in some sense Scythians
they're not anyway so the young Scythian men very impressed with the Amazons, go home to their families, take what they can,
and together with the Amazons,
according to this origin myth,
strike eastwards, cross the Don
into what is now South Russia,
and establish a new people called the Saramations.
And so, says Herodotus, that's's the reason why because all of this is an explanatory
myth that's the reason why the women of the Saramations look a bit like Amazons because
way back when there were some Amazons cast ashore and the result of that genetic mix between
a few Amazons there and a few Scythians,
the genetic mix is the Saramation people. The whole business of the destruction of the
Amazon state is a large part of this larger tale of creativity and I really want to sort of
emphasise that. It seems to me a huge pity that through this obsession with
Amazon's fighting we lose so often their incredible creativity. As you said, creating peoples
in this case as Aramations, creating sanctuaries and so forth and creating whole cities and
much else besides. I happened to be talking to a lady in
Izmir not long ago who told me that the women of Izmir, which ancient Smyrna in
Western Turkey, I dare say well known enough, and the women there are very
proud that their city is named after an Amazon, an Amazon called Smyrni, and they
feel that they're descended somehow
from Amazons. And the women of Turkish Izmir take a particular pleasure in that, rather
as the women and others, I think, of northern Turkey around Samsun that I mentioned earlier.
Is that the kind of the ancient city of Sinop or Sinope or that kind of area as well, which
seems to, if it was around that Black
Sea area, is there a very strong link to Amazons that can endure even down to the present day?
Yes, it's well known, this story of this Amazon woman who turned up there and allegedly
drank too much. It's a common stereotype we have in the ancient world for women. Women
tend to get drunk a
lot according to ancient Greeks and particularly the peoples of the northern world get drunk
a lot as well. So a woman of the northern world is going to be a serious drinker. The
Thracian language has allegedly the word sanapē to mean a woman that drinks too much. And the name of sinope is sometimes derived
from that particular story.
There are a lot of myths surrounding sinop, sinope,
actually, but that's quite a significant one.
But it's all going on as well,
not only on the Northern Coast,
but also on the Western Coast of what's Turkey.
I mean, I mentioned, I think I mentioned Bodrum. I mentioned Izmir. Also a bit up the road at Ephesus. The situation there is quite
remarkable. The hugely important temple, sanctuary temple of Artemis at Ephesus, one of the wonders
of the world, was created with, and sometimes in some versions by,
the Amazons, Amazons who had taken refuge there, thrown out of their homeland by Heracles,
and incidentally also sometimes Dionysus. Now Dionysus in all of this has been outrageously
ignored, and I've tried to say a bit about that
and may well come back to it in the future in the book.
Dionysus also goes to war with the Amazons.
And we know we need to think about that too.
But the temple there, the sanctuary of Artemis at Ephesus
is all about Amazon and is about also the new life
that Amazons will have away from their homeland up there on the Black Sea, which no longer exists, thanks to Heracles. And
they are made, as it were, civilized in the sense that they no longer, or at least so
much, go out fighting or go out hunting,
they're turned into a more normative female
as priestesses and servants of the goddess.
The goddess, incidentally, who is also very important
in the land where they come from up there in the north.
One aspect of why these Amazons are so, what should we call them? I want to have a
better word civilized, I suppose, from a Greek perspective. Not monstrous. Is that they sign up
for these deities. Amazons are close, very close to Artemis and therefore inescapably also close, particularly to her twin brother Apollo, which
is one reason why we find them in Delphi.
These are Amazons who aren't in some sense separate from, certainly not hostile to the
deities of Greece.
They are closely aligned with several of them.
I've mentioned Aries already and
here we have Artemis, Apollo, you know it's a quite serious list. They don't get
on with all of them, they don't tend to get on with Athena for example, who's a
different kind of female, but again you know it shows you that fighting isn't
really as important as people want it to be.
Of all the female dead, the most full-blown military one is Athena, who tends to go around
dressed in her famous warrior's helmet and the kit of the traditional heavy infantry.
But she doesn't get on with Amazons very much. I think that's
helpful in trying to see that Amazons are much more than women who fight.
Mason I was very good of you there also, David,
to highlight something that I had questions for, but I didn't think we'd have time to cover,
which was that big presence of Amazons in art and in the stories at great sanctuaries like Delphi and Olympia and their their link to particular Greek festivals as well and that's another key aspect of their story.
So I'm really glad you mentioned that and also, of course, the links to wonders of the ancient world, like the Temple of Artemis at Ephesus.
I mentioned it earlier, so I feel I must ask this now before we wrap up.
We talked about
the Black Sea region and the Amazons there. I don't think we'll have time to cover the
importance of the Amazons for the Western Greeks and cities like what will become Marseille
in France and that extraordinary kind of great geographic length that the Amazons cover and
the Amazons remain important to Greeks in these various different cities across the Mediterranean. But I must ask about Athens, especially as you mentioned Athena
there. Why does classical Athens in particular, so like the 5th century,
why do the Athenians have such an obsession with the Amazons?
They do. Because it really was the Amazon invasion of Attica, Athens, that marked the
city coming to fruition. The earliest version we have of this really is probably that of
Aeschylus in his trilogy, the Orestia. That's what 458 BC first performed
and re-performed thereafter.
There, the Amazons come down to attack Athens,
partly at least, because they're jealous
of its fine buildings.
They don't like the idea that somebody else
has been out there creating a fine city,
which Theseus has done.
So they come down to have a go at Theseus.
Now, that's something which again tends
to be completely overlooked.
And it partly explains place names,
for example, near the Acropolis and so forth.
Now, the other aspect of it is that Theseus has
himself been up to the land of the Amazons in the southern Black Sea, various versions either on his
own or in partnership with others, in particular with Heracles sometimes, and as a result he's brought back with him a particular Amazon female. She's kind
of a queen and she goes under various names and Tiope is one of those. She's sometimes
called Hippolyte. There are plenty of Hippolytes in Amazon stories and she has other names too. Now, she goes back with Theseus
and the whole business is actually told differently so much.
There's a question mark as to whether she's actually
carried off as it were looted, grabbed, abducted
from her homeland and there's certainly a good deal of that or whether she
actually is entranced by Theseus and incidentally Theseus himself is the great lover of so much
of ancient Greek myth. So to be entranced for a woman to be entranced by a woman, to be entranced by Theseus is by no means unusual.
So she goes back to Athens and in Athens she becomes briefly Theseus' partner, Theseus' queen.
And she tries to play the part of an Athenian woman.
It's one of the transitions that we find where an Amazon can become a Greek woman,
as it were. And in that context, when the rest of the Amazons turn up to lay siege to
Athens, which they do quite successfully, although as always in the stories of Greeks
versus Amazons, the Amazons ultimately lose, but nevertheless do well. When these Amazons ultimately lose, but nevertheless do well.
When these Amazons turn up, the Antiochus,
shall we call her, Theseus' partner,
stands beside Theseus on his side, fighting for Athens,
and actually gets into a duel with the new Amazon queen,
who tends to be grotesquely ignored.
A woman called Malpadia.
In the end, both women die and both women are commemorated in the landscape
of Athens so that in the fourth century BC, you might say to somebody,
I'll see you near the Amazon, meaning Antiochus tomb.
So it's very much a picture of Amazons who are there,
as the city faces its first real challenge.
Not the only challenge,
there are also other challenges that come along
around the same time from people from the Peloponnese
in the south, people from the north,
but the defeat of the Amazons for Athenians was a very special moment, a defeat which actually
included having at least one Amazon fighting four Athenians. And is it a myth then that they later
try and substitute Amazons for Persians or the other way around. There always seems to be that link, isn't there,
between Amazons and Persians?
But the truth of that feels a bit more,
well, take it away.
Okay, well, the Amazons-Persians thing
is, I'm afraid, another red herring.
I should say that I don't set out
to sort of disrupt these connections.
It just doesn't work.
And others before me actually,
a minority of people have long since observed this.
It's true that the Amazon homeland
is just about in the Persian Empire,
but it's a very isolated distant corner
of the Persian Empire up there on the Black Sea.
It really is.
And there's very little to see about Amazons that has anything Persian in it as we've seen
over and over again.
Lothrations simply doesn't work.
It was suggested by the art historians actually.
There's nothing in any text, it was suggested
that maybe there's some sort of linkage because sometimes, not very often, Amazons and Persians
can look a bit the same in vase painting. That's why. Now the fact is that the representation of non-Greeks in vase painting is notoriously haphazard because
these guys, the painters themselves, they just produce something which looks sort of
foreignish. And it's true that with some of these images the Amazons can look like Persians,
but actually the truth is that that's very rare. And in the Persian Wars, for example,
there's really no sign of that.
And after the Persian Wars, when we hear about
how Aeschylus is played, the Persians,
there's no indication there that Amazons
are in any way relevant to the Persian Wars.
When Greek artists, Athenian artists
wanted to show Amazons in art. They showed Amazons.
They didn't need to show Persians
who are kind of like Amazons
or Amazons who are kind of like Persians.
They wanted to show Persians, they showed Persians.
They wanted to show Amazons, they showed Amazons.
On one building, the so-called painted Stoa,
the Stoa Poikile painted in the middle
of the fifth century BC.
We have one huge picture with Greeks fighting
Persians, Athenians fighting Persians, and another big picture with Athenians fighting Amazons.
No problem. So I'm afraid the whole Persians Amazons thing is an unhelpful bit of nonsense really.
Sorry about that. Well, David, this has been a wonderful chat. We covered so many different
themes and topics of the Amazons over this past hour also and there are still so many other things we could explore but alas.
We don't have time we didn't even cover Alexander the great and his sex marathon with wanna.
I later Amazon Queen which is fascinating isn't it but I'm guessing that as time goes on as the centuries go on.
Hellenistic period and then into Roman
times and then the rise of Christianity, that the Amazon story remains popular across the
Mediterranean. It's still there, but it evolves down into present day, where the name Amazons
remains as big as it ever has been.
Toby Levy Yeah, I think that's right. You do notice
with the advance of time from about AD 300
onwards, Amazons get rather nastier. They spend their time eating snakes and tortoises.
They train their horses to eat people. All kinds of crazy stuff. But we've moved well
away from the mainstream beliefs of the archaic and classical Greeks
that meant they wanted to put Amazons on their temples
and so forth.
And we're into a world where you can say
what the hell you like really.
Well, David, this has been fantastic.
Last but certainly not least, your new book,
which explores all the themes we've covered today
and so many more about the Amazons, it is called.
Amazons, the history behind the legend. What it means is how Amazons are important in Greek
society and why. We cover the whole military aspect, but I just want to get people thinking
about other things Amazons do. Their intelligence, their intelligence, their ability to create, you know,
they're a beauty, they're not monsters, unless you perhaps perceive beauty as somehow monstrous.
It's certainly dangerous, as is their warfare.
Well, David, it just goes to me to say thank you so much for taking the time
to come on the podcast today.
My pleasure, Tristan.
Well, there you go. There was Dr David Braun talking all things the Amazons in ancient Greece.
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