Listed 12 sub titles with search on: Information about the place for wider area of: "THRAKI Ancient country BALKANS" .
MISSIA (Ancient country) THRAKI
A Roman province in Europe, was bounded on the S. by M. Haemus, which
separated it from Thrace, and by M. Orbelus and Scordus, which separated it from
Macedonia, on the W. by M. Scordus and the rivers Drinus and Savus, which separated
it from Illyricum and Pannonia, on the N. by the Danube, which separated it from
Dacia, and on the E. by the Pontus Euxinus, thus corresponding to the present
Servia and Bulgaria. The Greeks called it Mysia (Musia), and the inhabitants Mysians
(Musoi), and sometimes European Mysia (Musia he en Europei, Dion Cass. xlix. 36;
Appian, Ill. 6), to distinguish it from Mysia in Asia.
The original inhabitants of Moesia were, according to Strabo, a tribe
of Thracians, and were the ancestors of the Mysians of Asia (vii. p. 295). Of
the early history of the country, little or nothing is known. In B.C. 277, a large
body of Gaulish invaders entered Moesia, after the defeat and death of their leader
Brennus, and settled there under the name of the Scordisci. The Romans first entered
Moesia in B.C. 75, when C. Scribonius Curio, proconsul of Macedonia, penetrated
as far as the Danube, and gained a victory over the Moesians. (S. Ruf. Brev. 7;
Jornand. de Regn. Succ. 50; Eutrop. vi. 2.) But the permanent subjugation of Moesia
was probably effected by M.Licinius Crassus, the grandson of the triumvir, who
was proconsul of Macedonia in B.C. 29. (Liv. Ep. 134, 135; Dion Cass. li. 25-27;
Flor. iv. 12, 15.) This may be inferred from the statement of Dion Cassius (liii.
7), who represents Augustus two years afterwards (B.C. 27) speaking of the subjugation
of Gallia, Mysia, and Aegypt. Further, in A.D. 6, Dion Cassius mentions the governor
of Mysia (lv. 29), and in A.D. 14 Tacitus speaks of the legatus Moesiae (Ann.
i. 79); so that there can be no doubt that it was reduced into the form of a province
in the reign of Augustus, and that the statement of Appian is incorrect, that
it did not become a Roman province till the reign of Tiberius. (Ill. 30.) In the
reign of Tiberius, Moesia was laid waste by the Dacians and Sarmatians, being
then without a garrison, contrary to the usual Roman practice, for a legion was
generally stationed there. (Suet. Tib. 41, Vesp. 6; Tacit. Ann. xvi. 6.) As a
frontier province of the empire. it was strengthened by a line of stations and
fortresses along the south bank of the Danube. A Roman wall was built from Axiopolis
to Tomi, as a defence against the Sarmatians and Scythians, who inhabited the
delta of the Danube. Moesia was originally only one province, but was divided
into two provinces, called Moesia Superior and Inferior, probably at the commencement
of Trajan's reign. (Marquardt, in Becker's Romisch. Alterth. vol. iii. pt. i.
p. 106.) Each province was governed by a consular legatus, and was divided into
smaller districts (regiones et vici). Moesia Superior was the western, and Moesia
Inferior the eastern half of the country; they were separated from each other
by the river Cebrus or Ciabrus, a tributary of the Danube. (Ptol. iii. 9, 10.)
They contained several Roman colonies, of which two, Ratiaria and Oescus, were
made colonies by Trajan, and Viminacium by Gordian III. (Marquardt, l. c.) The
conquest of Dacia, by Trajan, removed the frontiers of the empire farther north,
beyond the Danube. The emperor Hadrian visited Moesia, as we are informed by his
medals, in his general progress through the empire, and games in his honour were
celebrated at Pincum. In A.D. 250 the Goths invaded Moesia. Decius, who was then
emperor, marched against them, but was defeated and killed in a battle with them
in 251. What the valour of Decius could not effect, his successor, Trebonianus
Gallus, obtained by bribery; and the Goths withdrew to the Dniester. When Aurelian
gave up Dacia to the Goths, and withdrew his troops and part of the inhabitants
to the south side of the river, he formed a settlement in the heart of Moesia,
which was named from him Dacia Aureliani. In 395 the Ostrogoths, being hard pressed
by the Huns, requested permission of the Romans to pass the Danube, and settle
in Moesia. The request was acceded to by Valens, who was then emperor, and a large
number took advantage of the privilege. They soon, however, quarrelled with the
Roman authorities, and killed Valens, who marched to oppose them. The Goths, who
settled in Moesia, are sometimes called Moeso-Goths, and it was for their use
that Ulphilas translated the Scriptures into Gothic about the middle of the fourth
century. In the seventh century the Sclavonians entered Moesia, and the Bulgarians
about the same time, and founded the kingdoms of Bulgaria and Servia.
Moesia was occupied by various populations; the following are enumerated
by Ptolemy and Pliny (Ptol. iii. 9; Plin. iii. 26): the Dardani, Celegeri, Triballi,
Timachi, Moesi, Thraces, Scythae, Tricornesii, Pincensii, Troglodytes, and Peucini,
to which may be added the Scordisci. (Liv. xl. 57.) The relative situations of
these people were somewhat as follows: the Dardani, said to be a colony from Dardania
in Asia, dwelt on the borders of Macedonia. The Triballi dwelt near the river
Ciabrus; the Timachi by the river Timachus. The Triconesii, who derived their
name from Tricornum, were on the confines of Dalmatia. The Peucini inhabited the
island of Pence, at the mouth of the Danube. The Thraces were near their own country;
the Scordisci, between the Dardani and Dalmatia. The Moesi, or Mysi, proper, inhabited
the heart of the country to which they gave their name, on the banks of the river
Ciabrus.
This text is from: Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854) (ed. William Smith, LLD). Cited August 2004 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks
ODRYSAE (Ancient country) BALKANS
Odrysae (Odrusai), a people seated on both banks of the Artiscus, a river of Thrace,
which discharges itself into the Hebrus (Herod. iv. 92). Their territory, however,
must undoubtedly have extended considerably to the W. of the Artiscus; since Pliny
(iv. 18) informs us that the Hebrus had its source in their country ; a fact that
is corroborated by Ammianus Marcellinus (xxvii. 4, 10). They appear to have belonged
to that northern swarm of barbarians which invaded Thrace after the Trojan War
; and their names are often found interwoven in the ancient myths. Thus the Thracian
singer Thamyris is said to have been an Odrysian (Paus. iv. 33.4); and Orpheus
is represented as their king (Conon, ap. Phot.).
A rude and barbarous people like the Odrysians cannot be expected
to have had many towns; and in fact we find none mentioned either by Thucydides
or Xenophon. The first of their towns recorded is Philippopolis, founded by Philip
II. of Macedonia, as there will be occasion to relate in the sequel; and it may
be presumed that all their towns of any importance were built after they had lost
their independence.
The name of the Odrysae first occurs in history in connection with
the expedition of Dareius Hystaspis against the Scythians (Herod.). Whilst the
Persians oppressed the southern parts of Thrace, the Odrysians, protected by their
mountains, retained their independence; and the strength which they thus acquired
enabled Teres to incorporate many Thracian tribes with his subjects. He extended
his kingdom to the Euxine in spite of a signal defeat which he sustained in that
quarter from the Thyni (Xen. Anab. vii. 2. 22); and the dominion of his son Sitalces
embraced the greater part of Thrace; having been bounded on the N. by the Danube,
and extending from Abdera on the W. to the Euxine on the E. (Thucyd. ii. 96-98).
Indeed, so powerful was this monarch that his alliance was eagerly courted both
by the Athenians and Lacedaemonians at the breaking out of the Peloponnesian War
(Thucyd. ii. 29; Herod. vii. 137 ; Aristoph. Acharn. 136-150). The expedition
which he undertook in B.C. 429, at the instance of the Athenians, and of Amyntas;
pretender to the throne of Macedonia, against Perdiccas II., the reigning sovereign
of that country, is also a striking proof of the power of the Odrysians at that
period; as the army which Sitalces assembled on that occasion amounted, on the
lowest estimate, to 150,000 men, of which one-third were cavalry (Thuc. ii. 98;
Diod. xii. 50). For the latter force, indeed, the Odrysians were renowned, and
the extensive plains of the Hebrus afforded pasture for an excellent breed of
horses (Thuc. l. c.; Polyb. xxiv. 6; Liv. xliv. 42). With this army Sitalces overran
Chalcidice, Anthemus, Crestonia, and Mygdonia; but the non-appearance of the Athenian
contingent, coupled with the approach of winter, obliged him hastily to retire
after a month's campaign. In B.C. 424 Sitalces fell in an engagement with the
Triballi, and was succeeded by his nephew Seuthes I. Under his reign the Odrysians
attained the highest pitch of their power and prosperity. Their yearly revenue
amounted to 400 talents, besides an equal sum in the shape of presents and contributions
(Thuc: ii. 97, iv. 101). But from this period the power of the Odrysians began
sensibly to wane. After the death of Seuthes we find his dominions divided among
three sovereigns. Medocus, or Amadocus, who was most probably his son, ruled the
ancient seat of the monarchy; Maesades, brother of Medocus, reigned over the Thyni,
Melanditae, and Tranipsae; whilst the region above Byzantium called the Delta
was governed by Teres (Xen. Anab. vii. 2. 32, vii. 5.1). It was in the reign of
Medocus that Xenophon and the Ten Thousand passed through Thrace on their return
from the Persian expedition, and helped to restore Seuthes, son of the exiled
Maesades, to his dominions. We gather from this writer that Seuthes exercised
only a subordinate power under Medocus, with the title of Archon, or governor,
of the Coast (vii. 3.16). Subsequently, however, he appears to have asserted his
claim to an independent sovereignty, and to have waged open war with Medocus;
till they were reconciled and gained over to the Athenian alliance by Thrasybulus
(Xen. Hell. iv. 8. 25; Diod. xiv. 94). When we next hear of the Odrysians, we
find them engaged in hostilities with the Athenians respecting the Thracian Chersonese.
This was under their king Cotys I., who reigned from B.C. 382 to 353. It was in
the reign of the same monarch (B.C. 376) that the Triballi invaded their territories,
and penetrated as far as Abdera (Diod. xv. 36). When Cersobleptes, the son and
successor of Cotys, ascended the throne, the Odrysians appear to have still retained
possession of the country as far as the coast of the Euxine. But a civil war soon
broke out between that monarch and Berisades and Amadocus, who were probably his
brothers, and to whom Cotys had left some portions of his kingdom. The Athenians
availed themselves of these dissensions to gain possession of the Chersonese,
which appears to have been finally ceded to them in B.C. 357 (Diod. xvi. 34).
But a much more fatal blow to the power of the Odrysians was struck by Philip
II. of Macedon. After nine or ten years of warfare, Philip at last succeeded (B.C.
343) in conquering them, and reducing them to the condition of tributaries (Diod.
xvi. 71; Dem. de Chers.). The exact nature of their relations with Philip cannot
be ascertained; but that their subjugation must have been complete appears from
the fact of his having founded colonies in their territory, especially Philippopolis,
on the right bank of the Hebrus, and in the very heart of their ancient seat.
Their subjection is further shown by the circumstance of their cavalry being mentioned
as serving in the army of Alexander under Agathon, son of Tyrimmas (Arrian, iii.
12.4). But a still more decisive proof is, that after Alexander's lieutenant Zophyrio
had been defeated by the Getae, the Odrysians were incited by their king, Seuthes
III., to rebel against the Macedonians (Curt. x. 1. § 45; Justin, xii. l.). After
the death of Alexander, Seuthes took the field against Lysimachus, to whom Thrace
had devolved, with an army of 20,000 foot and 8000 horse, -a sad falling off from
the forces formerly arrayed by Sitalces (Diod. xviii. 14; Paus. i. 9.6). The struggle
with Lysimachus was carried on with varied success. Under Philip V. of Macedon,
the Odrysians were still in a state of revolt. In B.C. 211 that monarch assembled
an army with the ostensible design of marching to the relief of Byzantium, but
in reality to overawe the malcontent chieftains of Thrace (Liv. xxxix. 35). In
183 we find Philip undertaking an expedition against the Odrysians, Dentheletae,
and Bessi. He succeeded in taking Philippopolis, which the inhabitants deserted
at his approach, and where he established a garrison, which was expelled shortly
after his departure (Liv. xxxix. 53; Polyb. Ex. Leg. xlviii.). It may be assumed
from Livy that on this occasion the Odrysians were supported in their revolt by
the Romans (xlii. 19, xlv. 42). After the fall of the Macedonian kingdom, the
Odrysians appear to have been treated with consideration by the Romans, who employed
them as useful allies against the newly-conquered districts, as well as against
the other Thracian tribes; amongst whom the Bessi had now raised themselves to
some importance. After this period the history of the Odrysians is for some time
involved in obscurity, though they were doubtless gradually falling more and more
under the Roman dominion. In the year B.C. 42 their king Sadales, who had no children,
bequeathed his kingdom to the Romans, and possession was taken of it by Brutus
(Caes. B.C. iii. 4; Dion Cass. xlvii. 25; Lucan v.54).
Augustus seems to have left the Odrysians the appearance of independence,
In the year B.C. 29, in return for the friendly disposition which they had shown
towards the Romans, they were presented by M. Crassus with a territory hallowed
by the worship of Bacchus, which he had conquered from the Bessi (Dion Cass. li.
25). In the year B.C. 20, Rhoematalces, who was administering the kingdom as guardian
of the three infant sons of the deceased monarch Cotys IV., succeeded, with the
assistance of the Romans under M. Lollius, in reducing the Bessi (Id. liv. 20).
A few years afterwards, the Bessi again rose under their leader Vologaeses, a
priest of Bacchus, and drove Rhoematalces into the Chersonese; they were, however,
soon reduced to submission by Lucius Piso; Rhoematalces was restored; and it would
appear, from Tacitus, that under his reign the Odrysians acquired the dominion
of all Thrace (Dion Cass. liv. 34; Tac. Ann. ii. 64). This apparent prosperity
was, however, entirely dependent on the Romans, by whose influence they were governed.
Thus, after the death of Rhoematalces, we find Augustus dividing his kingdom between
his son Cotys and his brother Rhascuporis (Tac. l. c.; Vell. Pat. ii. 98). Again,
after the murder of Cotys by Rhascuporis, Tiberius partitioned the kingdom between
the children of Cotys and Rhoematalces, son of Rhascuporis, at the same time appointing
a Roman, Trebellienus Rufus, as guardian of the former, who were not of age (Tac.
Ann. ii. 67, iii. 38). But, in spite of their subjection, the spirit of the Odrysians
was not subdued. Two years after the event just recorded, they rose, in conjunction
with the Coeletae, against the Romans, as well as against their own king Rhoematalces,
whom they besieged in Philippopolis. This rebellion, which was undertaken by leaders
of little distinction, and conducted without concert, was soon quelled by P. Velleius
(Tac. Ann. iii. 39). A more formidable one took place A.D. 26, which Tacitus ascribes
to the unwillingness of the Thracian tribes to supply the Roman army with recruits,
as well as to the native ferocity of the people. It occasioned the Romans some
trouble, and Poppaeus Sabinus was rewarded with the triumphal insignia for his
services in suppressing it (lb. iv. 46-51). At length, under the reign of Vespasian,
the Odrysians were finally deprived of their independence, and incorporated with
the other provinces of the Roman empire (Suet. Vesp. 8; Eutrop. vii. 19).
In the preceding sketch those circumstances only have been selected
which illustrate the history of the Odrysians as a people, without entering into
the personal history of their monarchs. The following is a list of the dynasty;
an account of the different kings who compose it will be found in the Dict. of
Biogr. and Mythol. under the respective heads. 1. Teres. 2. Sitalces. 3. Seuthes
I. 4. Medocus (or Amadocus) with Maesades. 5. Seuthes II. 6. Cotys I. 7. Cersobleptes,
with Amadocus and Berisades. 8. Seuthes III. 9. Cotys Il. 10. Cotys III. 11. Sadales.
12. Cotys IV. 13. Rhoematalces I. 14. Cotys V. and Rhascuporis. 15. Rhoematalces
II. 16. Cotys VI.
The manners of the Odrysians partook of that wildness and ferocity
which was common to all the Thracian tribes, and which made their name a byword
among the Greeks and Romans; but the horrible picture drawn of them by Ammianus
Marcellinus (xxvii. 4.9) is probably overcharged. Like most other barbarous nations
of the north, they were addicted to intoxication, and their long drinking bouts
were enlivened by warlike dances performed to a wild and barbarous music. (Xen.
Anab. vii. 3. 32) Hence it is characteristic that it was considered a mark of
the highest distinction to be a table companion of the king's; but whoever enjoyed
this honour was expected not only to drink to the king, but also to make him a
present (lb. 16, seq.) Among such a people,we are not surprised to find that Dionysus
seems to have been the deity most worshipped. They had a custom of buying their
wives from their parents, which Herodotus (v. 6) represents as prevailing among
all the Thracian tribes. (Odrusai), a people seated on both banks of the Artiscus, a river of Thrace,
which discharges itself into the Hebrus (Herod. iv. 92). Their territory, however,
must undoubtedly have extended considerably to the W. of the Artiscus; since Pliny
(iv. 18) informs us that the Hebrus had its source in their country ; a fact that
is corroborated by Ammianus Marcellinus (xxvii. 4, 10). They appear to have belonged
to that northern swarm of barbarians which invaded Thrace after the Trojan War
; and their names are often found interwoven in the ancient myths. Thus the Thracian
singer Thamyris is said to have been an Odrysian (Paus. iv. 33.4); and Orpheus
is represented as their king (Conon, ap. Phot.).
A rude and barbarous people like the Odrysians cannot be expected
to have had many towns; and in fact we find none mentioned either by Thucydides
or Xenophon. The first of their towns recorded is Philippopolis, founded by Philip
II. of Macedonia, as there will be occasion to relate in the sequel; and it may
be presumed that all their towns of any importance were built after they had lost
their independence.
The name of the Odrysae first occurs in history in connection with
the expedition of Dareius Hystaspis against the Scythians (Herod.). Whilst the
Persians oppressed the southern parts of Thrace, the Odrysians, protected by their
mountains, retained their independence; and the strength which they thus acquired
enabled Teres to incorporate many Thracian tribes with his subjects. He extended
his kingdom to the Euxine in spite of a signal defeat which he sustained in that
quarter from the Thyni (Xen. Anab. vii. 2. 22); and the dominion of his son Sitalces
embraced the greater part of Thrace; having been bounded on the N. by the Danube,
and extending from Abdera on the W. to the Euxine on the E. (Thucyd. ii. 96-98).
Indeed, so powerful was this monarch that his alliance was eagerly courted both
by the Athenians and Lacedaemonians at the breaking out of the Peloponnesian War
(Thucyd. ii. 29; Herod. vii. 137 ; Aristoph. Acharn. 136-150). The expedition
which he undertook in B.C. 429, at the instance of the Athenians, and of Amyntas;
pretender to the throne of Macedonia, against Perdiccas II., the reigning sovereign
of that country, is also a striking proof of the power of the Odrysians at that
period; as the army which Sitalces assembled on that occasion amounted, on the
lowest estimate, to 150,000 men, of which one-third were cavalry (Thuc. ii. 98;
Diod. xii. 50). For the latter force, indeed, the Odrysians were renowned, and
the extensive plains of the Hebrus afforded pasture for an excellent breed of
horses (Thuc. l. c.; Polyb. xxiv. 6; Liv. xliv. 42). With this army Sitalces overran
Chalcidice, Anthemus, Crestonia, and Mygdonia; but the non-appearance of the Athenian
contingent, coupled with the approach of winter, obliged him hastily to retire
after a month's campaign. In B.C. 424 Sitalces fell in an engagement with the
Triballi, and was succeeded by his nephew Seuthes I. Under his reign the Odrysians
attained the highest pitch of their power and prosperity. Their yearly revenue
amounted to 400 talents, besides an equal sum in the shape of presents and contributions
(Thuc: ii. 97, iv. 101). But from this period the power of the Odrysians began
sensibly to wane. After the death of Seuthes we find his dominions divided among
three sovereigns. Medocus, or Amadocus, who was most probably his son, ruled the
ancient seat of the monarchy; Maesades, brother of Medocus, reigned over the Thyni,
Melanditae, and Tranipsae; whilst the region above Byzantium called the Delta
was governed by Teres (Xen. Anab. vii. 2. 32, vii. 5.1). It was in the reign of
Medocus that Xenophon and the Ten Thousand passed through Thrace on their return
from the Persian expedition, and helped to restore Seuthes, son of the exiled
Maesades, to his dominions. We gather from this writer that Seuthes exercised
only a subordinate power under Medocus, with the title of Archon, or governor,
of the Coast (vii. 3.16). Subsequently, however, he appears to have asserted his
claim to an independent sovereignty, and to have waged open war with Medocus;
till they were reconciled and gained over to the Athenian alliance by Thrasybulus
(Xen. Hell. iv. 8. 25; Diod. xiv. 94). When we next hear of the Odrysians, we
find them engaged in hostilities with the Athenians respecting the Thracian Chersonese.
This was under their king Cotys I., who reigned from B.C. 382 to 353. It was in
the reign of the same monarch (B.C. 376) that the Triballi invaded their territories,
and penetrated as far as Abdera (Diod. xv. 36). When Cersobleptes, the son and
successor of Cotys, ascended the throne, the Odrysians appear to have still retained
possession of the country as far as the coast of the Euxine. But a civil war soon
broke out between that monarch and Berisades and Amadocus, who were probably his
brothers, and to whom Cotys had left some portions of his kingdom. The Athenians
availed themselves of these dissensions to gain possession of the Chersonese,
which appears to have been finally ceded to them in B.C. 357 (Diod. xvi. 34).
But a much more fatal blow to the power of the Odrysians was struck by Philip
II. of Macedon. After nine or ten years of warfare, Philip at last succeeded (B.C.
343) in conquering them, and reducing them to the condition of tributaries (Diod.
xvi. 71; Dem. de Chers.). The exact nature of their relations with Philip cannot
be ascertained; but that their subjugation must have been complete appears from
the fact of his having founded colonies in their territory, especially Philippopolis,
on the right bank of the Hebrus, and in the very heart of their ancient seat.
Their subjection is further shown by the circumstance of their cavalry being mentioned
as serving in the army of Alexander under Agathon, son of Tyrimmas (Arrian, iii.
12.4). But a still more decisive proof is, that after Alexander's lieutenant Zophyrio
had been defeated by the Getae, the Odrysians were incited by their king, Seuthes
III., to rebel against the Macedonians (Curt. x. 1. § 45; Justin, xii. l.). After
the death of Alexander, Seuthes took the field against Lysimachus, to whom Thrace
had devolved, with an army of 20,000 foot and 8000 horse, -a sad falling off from
the forces formerly arrayed by Sitalces (Diod. xviii. 14; Paus. i. 9.6). The struggle
with Lysimachus was carried on with varied success. Under Philip V. of Macedon,
the Odrysians were still in a state of revolt. In B.C. 211 that monarch assembled
an army with the ostensible design of marching to the relief of Byzantium, but
in reality to overawe the malcontent chieftains of Thrace (Liv. xxxix. 35). In
183 we find Philip undertaking an expedition against the Odrysians, Dentheletae,
and Bessi. He succeeded in taking Philippopolis, which the inhabitants deserted
at his approach, and where he established a garrison, which was expelled shortly
after his departure (Liv. xxxix. 53; Polyb. Ex. Leg. xlviii.). It may be assumed
from Livy that on this occasion the Odrysians were supported in their revolt by
the Romans (xlii. 19, xlv. 42). After the fall of the Macedonian kingdom, the
Odrysians appear to have been treated with consideration by the Romans, who employed
them as useful allies against the newly-conquered districts, as well as against
the other Thracian tribes; amongst whom the Bessi had now raised themselves to
some importance. After this period the history of the Odrysians is for some time
involved in obscurity, though they were doubtless gradually falling more and more
under the Roman dominion. In the year B.C. 42 their king Sadales, who had no children,
bequeathed his kingdom to the Romans, and possession was taken of it by Brutus
(Caes. B.C. iii. 4; Dion Cass. xlvii. 25; Lucan v.54).
Augustus seems to have left the Odrysians the appearance of independence,
In the year B.C. 29, in return for the friendly disposition which they had shown
towards the Romans, they were presented by M. Crassus with a territory hallowed
by the worship of Bacchus, which he had conquered from the Bessi (Dion Cass. li.
25). In the year B.C. 20, Rhoematalces, who was administering the kingdom as guardian
of the three infant sons of the deceased monarch Cotys IV., succeeded, with the
assistance of the Romans under M. Lollius, in reducing the Bessi (Id. liv. 20).
A few years afterwards, the Bessi again rose under their leader Vologaeses, a
priest of Bacchus, and drove Rhoematalces into the Chersonese; they were, however,
soon reduced to submission by Lucius Piso; Rhoematalces was restored; and it would
appear, from Tacitus, that under his reign the Odrysians acquired the dominion
of all Thrace (Dion Cass. liv. 34; Tac. Ann. ii. 64). This apparent prosperity
was, however, entirely dependent on the Romans, by whose influence they were governed.
Thus, after the death of Rhoematalces, we find Augustus dividing his kingdom between
his son Cotys and his brother Rhascuporis (Tac. l. c.; Vell. Pat. ii. 98). Again,
after the murder of Cotys by Rhascuporis, Tiberius partitioned the kingdom between
the children of Cotys and Rhoematalces, son of Rhascuporis, at the same time appointing
a Roman, Trebellienus Rufus, as guardian of the former, who were not of age (Tac.
Ann. ii. 67, iii. 38). But, in spite of their subjection, the spirit of the Odrysians
was not subdued. Two years after the event just recorded, they rose, in conjunction
with the Coeletae, against the Romans, as well as against their own king Rhoematalces,
whom they besieged in Philippopolis. This rebellion, which was undertaken by leaders
of little distinction, and conducted without concert, was soon quelled by P. Velleius
(Tac. Ann. iii. 39). A more formidable one took place A.D. 26, which Tacitus ascribes
to the unwillingness of the Thracian tribes to supply the Roman army with recruits,
as well as to the native ferocity of the people. It occasioned the Romans some
trouble, and Poppaeus Sabinus was rewarded with the triumphal insignia for his
services in suppressing it (lb. iv. 46-51). At length, under the reign of Vespasian,
the Odrysians were finally deprived of their independence, and incorporated with
the other provinces of the Roman empire (Suet. Vesp. 8; Eutrop. vii. 19).
In the preceding sketch those circumstances only have been selected
which illustrate the history of the Odrysians as a people, without entering into
the personal history of their monarchs. The following is a list of the dynasty;
an account of the different kings who compose it will be found in the Dict. of
Biogr. and Mythol. under the respective heads. 1. Teres. 2. Sitalces. 3. Seuthes
I. 4. Medocus (or Amadocus) with Maesades. 5. Seuthes II. 6. Cotys I. 7. Cersobleptes,
with Amadocus and Berisades. 8. Seuthes III. 9. Cotys Il. 10. Cotys III. 11. Sadales.
12. Cotys IV. 13. Rhoematalces I. 14. Cotys V. and Rhascuporis. 15. Rhoematalces
II. 16. Cotys VI.
The manners of the Odrysians partook of that wildness and ferocity
which was common to all the Thracian tribes, and which made their name a byword
among the Greeks and Romans; but the horrible picture drawn of them by Ammianus
Marcellinus (xxvii. 4.9) is probably overcharged. Like most other barbarous nations
of the north, they were addicted to intoxication, and their long drinking bouts
were enlivened by warlike dances performed to a wild and barbarous music. (Xen.
Anab. vii. 3. 32) Hence it is characteristic that it was considered a mark of
the highest distinction to be a table companion of the king's; but whoever enjoyed
this honour was expected not only to drink to the king, but also to make him a
present (lb. 16, seq.) Among such a people,we are not surprised to find that Dionysus
seems to have been the deity most worshipped. They had a custom of buying their
wives from their parents, which Herodotus (v. 6) represents as prevailing among
all the Thracian tribes.
This text is from: Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854) (ed. William Smith, LLD). Cited Nov 2005 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks
THRAKI (Ancient country) BALKANS
Thracia (Threike, Hom.; Threikie, Herod. i. 168, or Threike, iv. 99; Attic, Thraike:
Eth. Threix, Hom.; Threix, Herod. viii. 116; Attic, Thraix; Trag. Threix: Thrax,
Threx), the latter form being chiefly, if not exclusively, employed of gladiators),
a country at the south-eastern extremity of Europe, and separated from Asia only
by the Propontis and its two narrow channels, the Bosporus and the Hellespont.
I. Name. Besides its ordinary name, the country had, according to Steph.
B., two older appellations, Perke and Aria; and Gellius (xiv. 6) mentions Sithon
as another. Respecting the origin of these names, various conjectures have been
made both in ancient and in modern times; but as none of them, with the exception
to be presently mentioned, are of much value, it is not worth while to devote
any space to their consideration. The exception alluded to is the etymology adopted
by Col. Mure (Hist. of Lang. and Lit. of Anc. Greece), which is far more probable
and satisfactory than any other that the present writer has seen, and which derives
the name Thrace from the adjective tracheia, rugged, by the common transfer of
the aspirate. Thus the name would indicate the geographical character of the various
districts to which it is given; for, as we shall see, it was by no means confined
to the country which is the special subject of the present notice.
II. Extent. In the earliest times, the region called Thrace had no definite
boundaries, but was often regarded as comprising all that part of Europe which
lies to the north of Greece. Macedonia, in the south, is spoken of by Hecataeus
as belonging to it (cf. Mel. ii. 2, sub fin., where the Chalcidic peninsula is
described under the title of Thrace); and Scythia, in the north, is included in
it by Steph. B. (Skuthai: cf. Amm. xxvii. 4.3). This explains the fable reported
by Andron (Tzetz. ad Lycophr. 894), to the effect that Oceanus had four daughters,
Asia, Libya, Europa, and Thracia; thus elevating the last-named country to the
rank of one of the four quarters of the known--or rather unknown--world. But as
the Greeks extended their geographical knowledge, the designation Thrace became
more restricted in its application, and at length was generally given to that
part of Europe which is included within the following boundaries: the Ister on
the N. (Strab. ii.; Plin. iv. 18; Mel. ii. 2); the Euxine and the Bosporus on
the E.; the Propontis, the Hellespont, the Aegean, and the northern part of Macedonia,
on the S.; the Strymon, or subsequently, i. e. in the time of Philip II. and his
son Alexander the Great, the Nestus (Strab. vii.; Ptol. iii. 11), and the countries
occupied by the Illyrians, on the W., where, however, the boundary was never very
settled or accurately known. These were the limits of Thrace until the Romans
subdued the country, when, in the reign of Augustus, it was divided into two parts,
separated by the Haemus; the portion to the south of that mountain chain retaining
the name of Thrace, while the part between the Ister and the Haemus received the
appellation of Moesia, and was constituted a Roman province. But even after this
period both countries were sometimes included under the old name, which the Latin
poets frequently used in its earliest and widest extent of meaning. As the little
that is known about Moesia is stated in a separate article, the present will,
as far as possible, be confined to Thrace proper, or south of the Haemus, corresponding
pretty nearly to the modern Roumelia, which, however, extends somewhat more to
the west than ancient Thrace.
III. Physical Geography, Climate, Productions, &c. Many circumstances might
have led us to expect that the ancients would have transmitted to us full information
respecting Thrace: its proximity to Greece; the numerous Greek colonies established
in it; the fact that it was traversed by the highroad between Europe and Asia;
and that the capital of the Eastern Empire was situated in it, -all these things
seem calculated to attract attention to the country in an unusual degree, and
to induce authors of various kinds to employ their pens in recording its natural
and political history. Yet the latest and most profound historian of Greece is
compelled to admit that, apart from two main roads, scarcely anything whatever
is known of [the interior of] the country. (Grote, vol. xii. p. 34, note) For
this various reasons may be assigned; but the principal one is the barbarous character,
in all ages, of the occupants of the land, which has, at least until very recently,
precluded the possibility of its exploration by peaceful travellers. Those who
have traversed it have been almost invariably engaged in military enterprises,
and too much occupied with their immediate objects to have either opportunity
or inclination, even had they possessed the necessary qualifications, to observe
and describe the natural features of the country. What adds to the difficulty
of the writer on the classical geography of Thrace is the unfortunate loss of
the whole of that portion of the seventh book of Strabo which was devoted to the
subject. Strabo, in several parts of his work, treats incidentally of Thrace:
but this is a poor substitute for the more systematic account of it which has
perished, and of which little more than a table of contents has been preserved
in the meagre epitome which alone remains of it.
In modern times, several travellers have endeavoured, with various
degrees of success, to explore the country; and some of them have published the
results of their investigations; but it is evident from their very frequent disagreement
as to the sites of the places which they attempt to identify with those mentioned
in ancient writers, that as yet the necessary data have not been obtained; and
the Itineraries, instead of assisting, not seldom add to the difficulty of the
task, and render its accomplishment almost hopeless. Moreover, the extent of country
examined by these travellers was very limited. The mountainous region of Rhodope,
bounded on the west by the Strymon, on the north and east by the Hebrus, and on
the south by the Aegean, is a terra incognita, except the few Grecian colonies
on the coast. Very few travellers have passed along or described the southern
or king's road; while the region in the interior, apart from the highroad, was
absolutely unexplored until the visit of M. Viquesnel in 1847. (Grote)
The results of this traveller's researches have not yet, we believe,
appeared in a complete and connected form. His reports to the French minister
by whom he was commissioned are published in the work already referred to; but
most of them are mere outlines, written on the spot from brief notes. They contain
much that is valuable and interesting; but no one except their author could make
full use of them; and it is to be hoped that he may be able to employ the materials
so ably collected in the composition of a work that would dispel much of the obscurity
that at present rests upon the country. M. Viquesnel was engaged little more than
a year in Thrace, a period evidently insufficient for its complete exploration;
accordingly he seems to have devoted his principal attention to its geology, especially
of the the mountain systems, above all in the district of Rhodope.
According to Ami Boue‘s chart of the geological structure of the globe,
copied in Johnston's Physical Atlas, the three principal geological formations
in Thrace are: (1) the crystalline schistous, comprehending all the granitoid
rocks; this occupies the W. portion of the country, and a small district on the
Euxine, immediately S. of the Haemus: (2) the tertiary, extending over the basin
of the Hebrus: (3) the primary stratifications, or the transition series, including
the carboniferous formations; this occupies the SE. part of the country, and a
region S. of the Haemus, and W. of the tertiary formation above mentioned. Near
the sources of the Bourghaz, Viquesnel found volcanic rocks.
The surface of Thrace is, on the whole, decidedly mountainous, the
vast plains spoken of by Virgil (Aen. iii. 13) belonging to Moesia. From the great
range of Haemus, three chains of mountains branch off towards the SE., and with
their various ramifications occupy nearly the entire country. The most westerly
of these begins at the NW. extremity of the boundary line, and soon separates
into two almost parallel ranges, the Pangaeus and Rhodope, which are separated
from each other by the river Nestus; the former filling up the whole space between
that river and the Strymon, the latter the district E. of the Nestus and SW. of
the Hebrus. Both Pangaeus and Rhodope extend down to the coast of the Aegean,
and the latter is continued parallel to it as far E. as the Hebrus. The central
offshoot of the Haemus branches off between the sources of the Hebrus and the
Tonzus, and extends to their junction near Hadrianopolis. The most easterly chain
diverges from the Haemus about 100 miles W. of the Euxine, to the W. shore of
which it is nearly parallel, though it gradually approaches nearer to it from
N. to S.: it extends as far as the Bosporus, and with its lateral offshoots occupies
nearly the whole country between the E. tributaries of the Hebrus and the Euxine.
The central and E. ranges appear to have had no general distinctive names; at
least we are not aware that any occur in ancient writers: the modern name of the
most easterly is the Strandja-Dagh. A continuation of this range extends along
the shore of the Propontis, and is now called the Tekir-Dagh.
The loftiest peaks, among these mountains, belong to Rhodope, and attain an elevation
of about 8500 feet; the summits of the Strandja-Dagh, are 2600 feet high; those
of the Tekir-Dagh, 2300; the other mountains are from 2000 to 600 feet in height.
The Haemus is not more than 4000 feet high, in that portion of it which belongs
to Thrace. It is obvious from these measurements that the statements of some of
the ancients that the summits of the Thracian mountains were covered with eternal
snow (Threikon orea niphoenta, Hom. Il. xiv. 227), and that from the highest peak
of the Haemus the Adriatic and the Euxine could be seen, are mere fancies. Strabo
(vii.) points out the inaccuracy of this notion. An interesting account is given
by Livy (xl. 21, 22) of the ascent of Haemus by Philip V., who shared in the popular
belief in question. Livy states plainly enough his conviction that Philip's labour,
which was far from slight, was thrown away; but he and his attendants were prudently
silent upon the subject, not wishing, says Livy, to be laughed at for their pains.
Yet Florus, who alludes to the same circumstance (ii. 12), but makes Perseus the
mountainclimber, assumes that the king's object was accomplished, and that the
bird's-eye view of his dominions, obtained from the mountain top, assisted him
in forming a plan for the defence of his kingdom, with reference to his meditated
war with Rome. Mela too repeats the erroneous statement (ii. 2).
The main direction of the rivers of Thrace is from N. to S., as might
be inferred from the foregoing description of its mountain system. The Strymon
forms its W. boundary. In the lower part of its course, it expands to a considerable
width, and was called Lake Cercinitis, into which flowed a smaller river, the
Angites (Herod. vii. 113); next, towards the E., comes the Nestus; then, in succession,
the Travus, which falls into Lake Bistonis, the Schoenus, the Hebrus, the principal
river of Thrace, and lastly the Melas. All these rivers fall into the Aegean.
Several small streams flow into the Hellespont and the Propoutis, of which we
may mention Aegospotami, renowned, notwithstanding its insignificant size, the
Arzus, and the Erginus. The rivers which fall into the Euxine are all small, and
few of them are distinguished by name in the geographers, though doubtless not
so unhonoured by the dwellers upon their banks: among them Pliny (iv. 18) mentions
the Pira and the Orosines. The Hebrus drains at least one-half, probably nearer
two-thirds, of the entire surface of Thrace; and on its banks, or on those of
its tributaries, most of the level portions of the country are situated, as well
as nearly all the inland towns. Its principal affluents are the Arda (in some
maps called the Harpessus), and the Suemus on the W., the Tonzus, Artiscus, and
Agrianes on the E.
The Thracian coast of the Aegean is extremely irregular in its outline,
being broken up by bays which enter far into the land, yet appear to be of comparatively
little depth. Most of them, indeed, are at the mouths of rivers, and have probably
been filled up by alluvial deposits. It was perhaps for this reason that several
of them were called lakes, as if they had been regarded as belonging to the land
rather than to the sea; e. g. Lake Cercinitis, already mentioned, which seems,
indeed, to have been little more than a marsh, and in Kiepert's map its site is
so represented; Lake Bistonis, east of Abdera; and Stentoris Lacus, at the mouth
of the Hebrus. The gulf of Melas, formed by the northern shore, of the Chersonesus
and the opposite coast of what may he called the mainland, is an exception to
this description of the Thracian bays. The coasts on the Propontis and the Euxine
are comparatively unbroken, the only gulf of any extent being Portus Hellodos,
near Anchialus, which is known in modern times, by the name of the bay of Bonrghaz,
as one of the best harbours in the Euxine, the Thracian shore of which was regarded
by the ancients as extremely dangerous.
The principal promontories were, Ismarum, Serrheum, Sarpedonium, and
Mastusium, on the southern coast; Thynias and Haemi Extrema, on the eastern.
Off the southern coast are situated the islands of Thasos, Samothrace,
and Imbros; the first is separated from the mainland by a channel about 5 miles
wide; the other two are considerably more distant from the shore.
The climate of Thrace is always spoken of by the ancients as being extremely cold
and rigorous: thus Athenaeus (viii.) describes the year at Aenus as consisting
of eight months of cold and four months of winter; but such statements are not
to be taken literally, since many of them are mere poetical exaggerations, and
are applied to Thrace as the representative of the north in general. The Haemus
was regarded as the abode of the north wind, and the countries beyond it were
believed to enjoy a beautifully mild climate. Even after making full allowance
for the undoubted effect of vast forests, undrained marshes, and very partial
cultivation, in lowering the average temperature of a country, it is difficult
to believe that a land, the northern boundary of which (i. e. of Thrace Proper)
is in the same parallel of latitude as Tuscany and the Pyrenees, and the highest
mountains of which are less than 9000 feet above the level of the sea, can have
had a very severe climate. That the winter was often extremely cold, there can
be no doubt. The Hebrus was sometimes frozen over: not to dwell upon the Hebrus
nivali compede vinctus of Horace (Ep. i. 3. 3; cf. Virg. Aen. xii. 331, and the
epigram, attributed by some to Caesar, beginning, Thrax puer adstricto glacie
dum ludit in Hebro ), Florus (iii. 4) relates that, in the campaign of Minucius
in southern Thrace, a number of horsemen in his army were drowned while trying
to cross that river on the ice. Xenophon states that the winter which he passed
in Thrace, in the mountainous district of the Thyni, was so cold that even wine
was frozen in the vessels, and that many Greek soldiers had their noses and ears
frostbitten; the snow also lay deep upon the ground. And that this was not an
exceptional season may be inferred from Xenophon's remarks on the dress of the
Thracians, which seemed to him to have been devised with special reference to
the climate, and to prevent such mishaps as those which befel the Greeks (Anab.
vii. 4.3, 4). Tacitus (Ann. iv. 51) assigns the early and severe winter of Mount
Haemus among the causes which prevented Poppaeus Sabinus (A.D. 26) from following
up his first success over the rebellious Thracians. Pliny (xvii. 3) says that
the vines about Aenus were often injured by frosts, after the Hebrus was brought
nearer to that city; the allusion probably being to the formation of the western
mouth of the river, nearly opposite to Aenus, the floating ice and the cold water
brought down by which would have some effect in lowering the temperature of the
neighbourhood. Mela (ii. 2, init.) describes Thrace generally as agreeable neither
in climate nor in soil, being, except in the parts near the sea, barren, cold,
and very ill adapted for agriculture and fruit-trees of all kinds, except the
vine, while the fruit even of that required to be protected from the cold by a
covering of the leaves, in order to ripen. This last remark throws some doubt
upon the accuracy of the writer; for the shading of the grapes from the direct
rays of the sun is obviously more likely to prevent than to promote their arrival
at maturity; and hence, as is well known, it is the practice in many parts of
Europe to remove the leaves with a view to this object.
However this may be, it is certain that Thrace did produce wine, some
kinds of which were famous from very early times. Homer, who bestows upon Thrace
the epithet eribolax (Il. xx. 485), represents Nestor reminding Agamemnon that
the Grecian ships bring to him cargoes of wine from that country every day (Ib.
ix. 76); and the poet celebrates the excellence of the produce of the Maroneian
vineyards (Od. ix. 197, seq.). Pliny (xiv. 6) states that this wine still maintained
its reputation, and describes it as black, perfumed, and growing rich with age;
a description which agrees with Homer's (l. c.). Paul Lucas says that he found
the Thracian wine excellent. Thrace was fertile in corn (Plin. xvii. 3), and its
wheat is placed by Pliny high in the scale of excellence as estimated by weight.
It has, he says (xviii. 12), a stalk consisting of several coats (tunticae), to
protect it, as he supposes, from the severity of the climate; by which also he
accounts for the cultivation, in some parts of the country, of the triticum trimestre
and bimestre, so called because those varieties were reaped in the third and second
month respectively after they were sown. Corn was exported from Thrace, and especially
from the Chersonesus to Athens (Theoph. de Plantis, viii. 4; Lys. in Diogit.),
and to Rome (Plin.). Millet was cultivated in some parts of Thrace; for Xenophon
(Anab. vii. 5.12) states that on the march to Salmydessus, Seuthes and his allies
traversed the country of the millet-eating Thracians (cf. Strab. vii.). The less
important vegetable productions of Thrace may be briefly mentioned: a species
of water-chestnut (tribulus) grew in the Strymon, the leaves of which were used
by the people who lived on its banks to fatten their horses, while of its nuts
they made a very sweet kind of bread (Plin. xxi. 58, xxii. 12). Roses (Rosa centifolia)
grew wild on the Pangaeus, and were successfully transplanted by the natives (Id.
xxi. 10). The mountains, in general, abounded in wild-thyme and a species of mint
(Id. xix. 55). A sort of morel or truffle (iton) was found in Thrace (Id. xix.
12; Athen. ii.), and a styptic plant (ischaemon), which was said to stop bleeding
from even divided blood-vessels (Theoph. de Plant. ix. 15; Plin. xxv. 45). Several
varieties of ivy grew in the country, and were sacred to Dionysus (Theoph. de
Plant. iii. 16; Plin. xvi. 62). Herodotus (iv. 74) states that the Scythians had
hemp both wild and cultivated; and as he proceeds to say that the Thracians made
clothing of it, we may fairly infer that it grew in Thrace also. The Athenians
imported their timber chiefly from the country about the Strymon, for the Thracian
hills abounded in oak and fir-trees. M. Viquesnel states that the Strandjadagh
is covered with forests of oak, and that in some parts of the district of Rhodope
tobacco is now cultivated.
Among the animals of Thrace, white horses are repeatedly mentioned.
The famous steeds of Rhesus were whiter than snow (Hom. Il. x. 437; Eurip. Rhes.
304). When Xerxes reached the banks of the Strymon in his onward march, the magi
sacrificed white horses (Herod. vii. 113), which were probably Thracian, for the
same reason, whatever that was, that the human victims spoken of in the next chapter
were the children of natives. Xenophon states that, during a banquet given by
Seuthes, a Thracian entered, leading a white horse, which he presented to his
prince, with an encomium on its fleetness (Anab. vii. 3.26). Virgil speaks of
Thracian horses with white spots (Aen v. 565, ix. 49). Horses were no doubt plentiful
in Thrace: Homer (Il. xiv. 227) calls the Thracians hippopoloi; and cavalry always
formed a large part of their armies. Thus Thucydides (ii. 98) estimates the number
of horsemen in the army with which Sitalces invaded Macedonia at about 50,000.
One of the twelve labours of Hercules was to bring to Mycenae the savage mares
of Diomedes, king of the Bistones in Thrace, who fed them with human flesh (Ov.
Met. ix. 194). Herodotus (vii. 126) states that lions were found throughout the
country bounded on the W. by the Achelous and on the E. by the Nestus; a statement
which is repeated by Aristotle (H. A. vi. 31, viii. 28); so that the part of Thrace
between the Strymon and the Nestus must have been infested, at least in early
times, by those formidable animals. Herodotus says that they attacked the baggage-camels
of Xerxes during the march of his army from Acanthus to Therme (vii. 125). Cattle,
both great and small, were abundant, and seem to have constituted the chief wealth
of a people who, like most barbarians, considered agriculture a base occupation
(Herod. v. 6). The fertile valleys were well adapted for oxen, and the thyme-covered
hills for sheep; and it is clear, from several passages in Xenophon, that even
the wildest Thracian tribes were rich in this kind of wealth (Anab. vii. 3.48,
7.53). Aristotle informs us that the Thracians had a peculiar method of fattening
swine (H. A. viii. 6). He attributes the smallness of their asses to the coldness
of the climate (lb. 28). Cranes are often mentioned as belonging to Thrace (Virg.
Georg. i. 120; Ov. A. A. iii. 182; Juv. xiii. 167). Aristotle says that an aquatic
bird of the pelican kind (pelekanes) migrates from the Strymon to the Ister (H.
A. viii. 11); and that the people in some marshy districts of Thrace were assisted
in catching water-fowl by hawks; which do not seem to have been trained for the
purpose, but, though wild, to have been induced by a share of the game, to second
the proceedings of their human associates (lb. ix. 36). Eels were caught at certain
seasons in the Strymon (Ib. viii. 2, ad fin.). The tunny fishery was a source
of great wealth to Byzantium (Strab. vii.).
Tile principal mineral productions of Thrace were, gold and silver,
most of which came from the mountainous district between the Strymon and the Nestus.
There, at the southern extremity of the Pangaeus, was situated Crenides, founded
by the Thasians, and afterwards called Philippi, in a hill near which, named the
hill of Dionysus (Appian, B.C. iv. 106), were the most productive gold mines of
Thrace, to get possession of which was Philip's principal object in annexing the
district in question to his dominions. He is said to have derived from the mines
an annual income of 1000 talents (Diod. xvi. 8; cf. Strab. vii.). Strabo (xiv.
p. 680) says that the wealth of Cadmus came from the mines of the Pangaeus; and
Pliny refers to the same tradition when he states (vii. 57) that according to
some authorities, the Pangaeus was the place where Cadmus first discovered gold-mines,
and the art of melting their produce (conflatura). Herodotus (vii. 112) mentions
silver, as well as gold, mines in the Pangaeus, which in his time were in the
possession of the native tribes called Pieres, Odomanti, and Satrae. He states
also (vi. 46) that the Thasians had gold mines at Scapte Hyle, near Abdera, from
which they derived an (annual) revenue of about 80 talents; and that a part of
the revenues of Peisistratus came from the Strymon, by which the mines on its
banks are probably meant (i. 64). According to Pliny (xxxiii. 21) gold was found
in the sands of the Hebrus; and this is confirmed by Paul Lucas, and by Viquesnel,
who states that in rainy years the affluents of that river are frequented by gold-finders,
who wash the sands which contain gold in grains (en paillettes). Thucydides was
interested in gold mines and works near Amphipolis, as he himself informs us (iv.
105). Of the other minerals of Thrace we may mention the opal (paederos, Plin.
xxxvii. 46); the Thaecia gemma, one variety of which seems to resemble the bloodstone
(ib. 68); a stone which burnt in water (Id. xxxiii. 30); and nitre, which was
found near Philippi (Id. xxxi. 46). In addition to these, M. Viquesnel mentions
fine marble, which is quarried from the mountains of Lidja; excellent iron, manufactured
at Samakor; alum, produced at Chaphane; and potter's clay, in the district of
Rhodope, used by the Turks in the fabrication of earthenware. He states also that
Rhodope abounds in mineral waters (ib.), and that there are warm springs at Lidja.
A few miscellaneous notes will conclude this part of our subject.
The narrow portion of Thrace between the Euxine, Bosporus and Propontis,
is sometimes called the Delta (to Delta, Xen. Anab. vii. 1. 33, 5.1).
Reference is several times made to violent natural convulsions, which
destroyed various Thracian cities. Thus Strabo (i. 59) says that it appeared that
some cities were swallowed up by a flood in Lake Bistonis; and he (vii. p. 319),
Pliny (iv. 18), and Mela (ii. 2) speak of the destruction of Bizone, on the Euxine,
by earthquakes.
Livy (xl. 22) describes the region between Maedica and the Haemus
as without inhabitants (solitudines).
Herodotus (vii. 109) speaks of a lake near Pistyrus (on the coast
N. of Abdera), about 30 stadia in circumference, abounding in fish, and extremely
salt.
Thrace possessed two highroads, both starting from Byzantium; the
one (called the King's road, from having been in part the march of Xerxes in his
invasion of Greece, Liv. xxxix. 27; Herod. vii. 115), crossing the Hebrus and
the Nestus, touching the northern coast of the Aegean sea at Neapolis, a little
south of Philippi, then crossing the Strymon at Amphipolis, and stretching through
Pella across Inner Macedonia and Illyria to Dyrrhachium. The other road took a
more northerly course, passing along the upper valley of the Hebrus from Adrianople
to Philippopolis, then through Sardica (Sophia) and Naissus (Nisch), to the Danube
near Belgrade, being the highroad now followed from Constantinople to Belgrade.
Herodotus remarks, with evident surprise, that the King's road had not, up to
his time, been destroyed by the Thracians, a circumstance which he seems to attribute
to the almost religious respect with which they regarded the great king. It may
be safely inferred that people who were considered to have done something wonderful
in abstaining from breaking up a road, were not great makers or maintainers of
highways; and it is clear from Livy's account of the march of Manlius (xxxviii.
40, 41) along this very road (afterwards called by the Romans, Via Egnatia), that,
although it was the principal line of communication between Europe and Asia, it
was at that time (B.C. 188) in a very bad condition. From this some conception
may be formed of the deplorable state in which the roads of the interior and mountainous
districts must have been, and in which, indeed, they still remain. The Thracians
no doubt were well aware that their independence would soon be lost, if there
were an easy access for disciplined armies to every part of their country. Such
paths as they possessed were sufficient for their own purposes of depredation,
of ambush, and, when overpowered, of flight.
IV. Ethnology, Manners, Religion, etc. The first point to be determined
here is, whether the Thracians mentioned in the ancient writers as extending over
many parts of Greece, as far south as Attica, were ethnologically identical with
those who in historical times occupied the country which is the subject of the
present article. And before discussing the topic, it will be convenient to lay
before the reader some of the principal passages in the classics which bear upon
it.
It is Strabo who makes the most distinct statements on the point.
He says (vii.), Hecataeus the Milesian states that, before the Hellenes, barbarians
inhabited Peloponnesus. But in fact nearly all Greece was originally the abode
of barbarians, as may be inferred from the traditions. Pelops brought a people
with him into the country, to which he gave his name, and Danaus came to the same
region with followers from Egypt, at a time when the Dryopes, Caucones, Pelasgi,
Leleges, and other similar races had settlements within the Isthmus; and indeed
without it too, for the Thracians who accompanied Eumolpus had Attica and Tereus
possessed Daulis in Phocis; the Phoenician companions of Cadmus occupied Cadmeia,
the Aones, Temmices, and Hyantes Boeotia. Strabo subsequently (ix.) repeats this
statement respecting Boeotia, and adds that the descendants of Cadmus and his
followers, being driven out of Thebes by the Thracians and Pelasgians, retired
into Thessaly. They afterwards returned, and, having joined the Minyans of Orchomenos,
expelled in their turn the Pelasgians and Thracians. The former went to Athens,
where they settled at the foot of Hymettus, and gave the name of Pelasgicum to
a part of the city (cf. Herod. vi. 137): the Thracians, on the other hand, were
driven to Parnassus. Again (ix.) he says, speaking of Helicon: The temple of the
Muses, and Hippocrene, and the cave of the Leibethridan nymphs are there; from
which one would conjecture that those who consecrated Helicon to the Muses were
Thracians; for they dedicated Pieris, and Leibethrum, and Pimpleia to the same
goddesses. These Thracians were called Pierians (Pieres); but their power having
declined, the Macedonians now occupy these (last named) places. This account is
afterwards (x.) repeated, with the addition that the cultivators of ancient music,
Orpheus, Musaeus, Thamyris, and Eumolpus, were Thracians.
The difficulty that presents itself in these passages -and they are
in general agreement with the whole body of Greek literature- arising from the
confounding under a common name of the precursors of Grecian poetry and art with
a race of men designated as barbarous, is well stated by K. O. Muller: It is utterly
inconceivable that, in the later historic times, when the Thracians were contemned
as a barbarian race, a notion should have sprung up that the first civilisation
of Greece was due to them; consequently we cannot doubt that this was a tradition
handed down from a very early period. Now, if we are to understand it to mean
that Eumolpus, Orpheus, Musaeus, and Thamyris were the fellow-countrymen of those
Edonians, Odrysians, and Odomantians, who in the historical age occupied the Thracian
territory, and who spoke a barbarian language, that is, one unintelligible to
the Greeks, we must despair of being able to comprehend these accounts of the
ancient Thracian minstrels, and of assigning them a place in the history of Grecian
civilisation; since it is manifest that at this early period, when there was scarcely
any intercourse between different nations, or knowledge of foreign tongues, poets
who sang in an unintelligible language could not have had more influence on the
mental development of the people than the twittering of birds.
Muller therefore concludes that the Thracians of the ante-historical
era, and those of subsequent times, belonged to distinct races. When we come to
trace more precisely the country of these Thracian bards, we find that the traditions
refer to Pieria, the district to the east of the Olympus range, to the north of
Thessaly, and the south of Emathia or Macedonia: in Pieria likewise was Leibethra,
where the Muses are said to have sung the lament over the tomb of Orpheus: the
ancient poets, moreover, always make Pieria, not Thrace, the native place of the
Muses, which last Homer clearly distinguishes from Pieria (Il. xiv. 226). It was
not until the Pierians were pressed in their own territory by the early Macedonian
princes that some of them crossed the Strymon into Thrace Proper, where Herodotus
(vii. 112) mentions the castles of the Pierians at the time of the expedition
of Xerxes. It is, however, quite conceivable that in early times, either on account
of their close vicinity, or because all the north was comprehended under one name,
the Pierians might, in Southern Greece, have been called Thracians. These Pierians,
from the intellectual relations which they maintained with the Greeks, appear
to be a Grecian race; which supposition is also confirmed by the Greek names of
their places, rivers, fountains, &c., although it is probable that, situated on
the limits of the Greek nation, they may have borrowed largely from neighbouring
tribes. After referring to the accounts of the Thracians in Southern Greece, Muller
adds: From what has been said, it appears sufficiently clear that these Pierians
or Thracians, dwelling about Helicon and Parnassus in the vicinity of Attica,
are chiefly signified when a Thracian origin is ascribed to the mythical bards
of Attica.
Colonel Mure, after referring to the foregoing view, which he designates
as plausible, goes on as follows: But the case admits of another, and perhaps
more satisfactory explanation. It is certain that, in the mythical geography,
a tract of country on the frontiers of Boeotia and Phocis, comprehending Mount
Parnassus and Helicon, bore the name of Thrace. In this region the popular mythology
also lays the scene of several of the most celebrated adventures, the heroes of
which are called Thracians. The author then applies this explanation to the stories
of Tereus and Procne, and of Lycurgus, king of Thrace; and proceeds thus: Pausanias
makes the `Thracian' bard Thamyris virtually a Phocian. He assigns him for mother
a nymph of Parnassus called Argiope. His father, Philammon, is described as a
native of the same region, son of Apollo, by the nymph Chione, and brother of
Autolycus, its celebrated robber chieftain. The divine grandsire is obviously
here but a figure of his own sacred region; the grandmother Chione, as her name
bears, of its snow. Others call the latter heroine Leuconoe The names of these
heroines are all so many varied modes of typifying the same 'snow-white' Parnassus.
This view of the 'Thracian' character of these sages becomes the more plausible,
if it be remembered that the region of Central Greece, in which the Hellenic Thrace
was situated, is that from which first or chiefly, the seeds of elementary culture
were propagated throughout the nation. Here tradition places the first introduction
of the alphabet. Here were also the principal seats of Apollo and the Muses. In
the heart of the same region was situated the Minyean Orchomenos, the temple of
the Graces, rivalling Thebes herself in the splendour of her princes and zeal
for the promotion of art. Among the early masters of poetry or music, not vulgarly
styled Thracians, the most illustrious, Amphion and Linus, are Boeotians. Nor
was this region of Central Greece less favoured in respect of its religious institutions.
It was not only the favourite seat of Apollo, the Muses, and the Graces, but the
native country of the Dionysiac rites, zeal for the propagation of which is a
characteristic of the Thracian sages.
In thus entirely disconnecting these early Thracians, from those of
later times, we have the authority of Thucydides (ii. 29), who, in speaking of
Teres, the father of Sitalces, remarks: This Teres had no connection whatever
with Tereus, who married Procne, daughter of Pandion of Athens; they did not even
belong to the same Thrace. Tereus dwelt at Daulia, a city of the country now called
Phocis, and which was then occupied by the Thracians. And he proceeds to show
that it was not likely that Pandion would form an alliance with any one who lived
so far from Athens as the country of the Odrysae.
The consideration of the ethnological relations of the early Thracians
hardly falls within the scope of this article; but since identity of name has
often caused them to be confounded with the historical inhabitants of Thrace,
it may be desirable briefly to discuss the subject in this place. The view which
seems to the present writer to be best supported by the evidence, and to explain
most satisfactorily the ancient authors, is that which regards the mythical Thracians
as members of the widely extended race to which the name of Pelasgians is usually
given. It is clear from Homer that a close connection existed between the people
of Southern Thrace and the Trojans, who were probably Pelasgians, and who are
at the same time represented by him as agreeing, in language, religion, and other
important respects, with the Greeks. Again, Homer mentions among the auxiliaries
of Priam, the Caucones, who are named along with the Pelasgians (Il. x. 429),
and the Cicones (Il. ii. 846). These two names bear so close a resemblance to
each other as to suggest the probability of the cognate origin of the tribes so
designated. Now the Cicones were undoubtedly Thracians (Odys. ix. 39, seqq.);
while as to the Caucones, Strabo (xii.) informs us that they occupied part of
the coast of Bithynia, and were regarded by some as Scythians, by others as Macedonians,
by others again as Pelasgians. It will be remembered that Caucones are mentioned
by him (vii.) among the earliest inhabitants of Peloponnesus. Another noticeable
fact is, that in the passage of Strabo already quoted (ix.), he represents the
Thracians and Pelasgians as acting in concert. The same author (xiii.) points
out the similarity of many Thracian names of places to those existing in the Trojan
territory. Finally, the names of the places mentioned by Strabo (vii.) as common
to Pieria and the southern Thracians, are evidently Greek; and, as we have seen,
the name Thrace itself is in all probability a significant Greek word.
These considerations appear to us to lead to the conclusion already
stated, namely, that the mythical Thracians, as well as those spoken of by Homer,
were Pelasgians; and hence that that race once occupied the northern as well as
the other shores of the Aegean, until, at a comparatively late period, its continuity
was broken by the irruption of the historical Thracians from the north into the
country between the Strymon and the Euxine. The circumstance that the Greeks designated
these barbarians by the name which had been borne by those whom they supplanted,
admits of easy explanation, and history abounds in instances of a similar kind.
But it may be doubted whether the Thracians had any general designation in their
own language: they probably called themselves Edones, Denseletae, Thyni, Satrae,
and so on; but we have no evidence that they really were all branches of a common
stock. Under these circumstances, it was inevitable that the Greeks should bestow
upon them the name of the earlier possessors of the country; and those Thracians
who were brought in contact with the more civilised race would probably adopt
it.
Respecting the historical Thracians we have tolerably full information,
but not of that kind which will enable us to arrive at any very definite conclusions
as to their ethnological relations. That they belonged to an extensively diffused
race, whose early abodes were in the far northern regions, may be regarded as
sufficiently proved by the concurrent testimony of the ancient writers. Herodotus,
in a well-known passage (v. 3), says that the Thracian nation is the greatest
in the world, after the Indians, and that its subdivisions, of which the Getae
are one, have many names, according to the countries which they severally occupy.
Strabo too (vii.) states that the Getae and the Mysi were Thracians, who extended
north of the Danube (vii.). In confirmation of his assertion that the Getae were
ethnologically akin to the Thracians, he adduces the identity of their language.
He adds that the Daci also spoke this language. From his remark about the Iapodes,
it would seem that he regarded the Illyrians also as nearly allied to, if not
actually a branch of, the Thracians. In another passage (x.) he says that the
Phrygians were colonists of the Thracians; to which race also the Saraparae, a
nation still farther towards the east, north of Armenia, were reported to belong
(xi.). The Bithyni, previously called Mysi, were so named, as is admitted by most
authorities, from the Thracian Bithyni and Thyni, who emigrated to that country
(i. e. Asia Minor; cf. Herod. vii. 75). And I conjecture that the Bebryces, who
settled in Mysia before the Bithyni and Mysi, were also Thracians. The Mysians
themselves are said to be colonists of those Thracians who are now called Mysi.
As the Mariandyni are in all respects like the Bithyni, they too are probably
Thracians (Strab. xii.). Justin couples the Thracians with the Illyrians and Dardani
(xi.). In the west and south-west it is impossible to define the Thracian boundary:
we have seen that Mela describes the whole of the Chalcidic peninsula as part
of Thrace (cf. Thucyd. ii. 79); and there is no doubt that they extended as far
south as Olympus, though mixed up with Macedonians, who were the preponderating
race in that quarter. In later times the intrusive and undoubtedly distinct races
which were mingled with the Thracians near the Danube, were sometimes confounded
with them. Thus Floras (iii. 4) calls the Scordisci the most savage of all the
Thracians.
Of the language of the Thracians scarcely a trace exists. They were
too barbarous to have any literary or artistic memorials, so that the principal
guides of the ethnologist are wanting. Strabo (vii.) states that bria, which occurs
as the termination of several names of Thracian towns, signified city or town.
This and a few proper names constitute all that remains of their language.
The following is the account which Herodotus gives of the customs
of the Thracians. They sell their children into foreign slavery. The women while
unmarried enjoy perfect freedom in their intercourse with men; but after marriage
they are strictly guarded. The men pay large sums of money for their wives to
the parents of the latter. To be tattooed is considered an indispensable mark
of noble birth.Idleness is most honourable; the cultivator of the soil is regarded
as the meanest of men; to live by war and plundering is most noble. The only gods
they worship are Ares, Dionysus, and Artemis. But their kings differ in this respect
from their subjects; for they worship Hermes especially, and swear by him alone,
from whom they say that they are descended. When a wealthy man dies, his corpse
lies in state for three days: his friends then make a great feast, at which, after
bewailing the departed, they slaughter victims of every kind: the body is then
buried, having sometimes been previously burnt. A mound is raised above the grave,
upon which athletic games are celebrated (v. 6--8; cf. Xen. Hell. iii. 2. 5).
Besides these customs, which were common to all the Thracians, Herodotus mentions
some which were peculiar to certain tribes; as, for instance, that which prevailed
among the people to the north of the Crestonians. Among them, each man has many
wives. When any man dies, a great contest arises among his widows on the question
as to which of them was most beloved by their husband; and in this their relations
take a very active part. She in whose favour the point is decided, receives the
congratulations of both men and women, and is then slain upon her husband's grave
by her nearest male relation. The other widows regard themselves as extremely
unfortunate, for they are considered to be disgraced. (lb. 5.) Herodotus here
seems to speak of polygamy as confined to a certain tribe of Thracians; but Strabo
(vii.) represents this custom as general among them. In a note upon this passage,
Casaubon quotes from Heracleides Ponticus to the effect that Thracians often had
as many as thirty wives, whom they employed as servants, a practice still common
in many eastern countries. Xenophon furnishes us with an illustration of the Thracian
custom of purchasing wives. He states that at his first interview with Seuthes,
the Thracian prince proposed to give his daughter in marriage to Xenophon; and
if the Greek himself had a daughter, offered to buy her as a wife (Anab. vii.
2. § 38; cf. Mela, ii. 2).
The want of union among the Thracians is mentioned by Herodotus (v.
3) as the only cause of their weakness. Their tribes, like the Highland clans,
seem to have been constantly engaged in petty Warfare with one another, and to
have been incapable of co-operating even against foreign foes, except for very
brief periods, and rarely with any higher object than plunder. Until a late period
(Flor. iv. 12.17) they appear to have been destitute of discipline, and this,
of course, rendered their bravery of comparatively little avail. Thus we learn
from Thucydides (ii. 96, 98) that, although Sitalces was the most powerful Thracian
king that had ever reigned --(he seems indeed to have been subsequently regarded
as a kind of national hero; Xen. Anab. vi. 1. 6)-- yet a large part of the army
with which he invaded Macedonia consisted of mere volunteers, formidable chiefly
for their numbers, and attracted to his standard by his offers of pay, or by their
hope of plunder. Any one, in fact, who held out these inducements, could easily
raise an army in Thrace. Thus Clearchus no sooner received supplies of money from
Cyrus the Younger, than he collected a force in the Chersonesus, which, although
in great part undoubtedly Thracian, was employed by him in making war upon other
Thracians, until he was required to join Cyrus in Asia Minor (Ib. i. 1.9, 2.9,
&c.). So when Seuthes undertook the expedition against his so-called revolted
subjects, his army was soon tripled by volunteers, who hastened from other parts
of Thrace to serve him, as soon as they heard of his enterprise (lb. vii. 4.21).
Such soldiers could not, of course, be depended upon for one moment after a reverse.
A considerable number of Thracian mercenaries in the army of Cyrus took the earliest
opportunity to desert to Artaxerxes after the battle of Cunaxa (lb. ii. 2.7).
Tacitus (Ann. iv. 46) informs us that the principal cause of the insurrection
(A.D. 26) of the Thracians who dwelt in the elevated mountain districts (probably
of Rhodope), was their dislike of the conscription, which, it would appear, the
Romans had introduced into Thrace. This was a yoke to which they could not submit;
they were not accustomed to obey even their own rulers, except when it pleased
them; and when they sent troops to the assistance of their princes, they used
to appoint their own commanders, and to war against the neighbouring tribes only
(Cf. Liv. xlii. 51; Xen. Anab. vii. 4. 24, 7.29, seq.).
Thracian troops were chiefly light-armed infantry and irregular horse
(Xen. Anab. i. 2. 9, vii. 6.27, Memor. iii. 9.2; Curt. iii. 9). The bravest of
the foot-soldiers in the army of Sitalces were the free mountaineers of Rhodope,
who were armed with short swords (machairophoroi; Thucyd. ii. 98). The equipment
of the Asiatic Thracians is described by Herodotus (vii. 75), and as this description
agrees with what Xenophon states respecting Seuthes' forces (Anab. vii. 4.4),
it is no doubt substantially true of the Thracians generally. They wore caps covering
their ears, made of fox-skins, cloaks, and party-coloured mantles (zeirai,? =plaids);
their boots, which came high up the leg, were made of deer-skin; their arms were
shields, javelins, and daggers (cf. Thucyd. vii. 27). The Thracians in the army
of Philip V. were armed with very long rhomphaeae, a word which some translate
javelins, others swords (Liv. xxxi. 39; Plut. Paul. Aemil. 17). Thracian soldiers
fought with impetuosity and with no lack of bravery; but they, like all barbarian
and undisciplined troops were incapable of sustained efforts. Livy (xlii. 59)
describes them as rushing to the attack like wild beasts long confined in cages:
they hamstrung the horses of their adversaries, or stabbed them in the belly.
When the victory was gained on this occasion (the first encounter in the war between
the Romans and Perseus), they returned to their camp, singing loud songs of triumph,
and carrying the heads of the slain on the tops of their weapons (lb. 60). When
defeated, they fled with rapidity, throwing their shields upon their backs, to
protect them from the missiles of the pursuers (Xen. Anab. vii. 4. 17).
About the time of the Peloponnesian War, Thrace began to be to the
countries around the Aegean what Switzerland has long, to its disgrace, been to
the despotic powers of modern Europe, a land where men might be procured to fight
for any one who could hold out sufficient inducements in the shape of pay or plunder
(Thucyd. vii. 27, et alibi; Xen. Anab. i. pass.; Just. xi. 1 & 9). The chief causes
of this, apart from the character of its people, appear to have been the want
of any central government, and the difficult nature of the country, which rendered
its savage independence tolerably secure; so that there was nothing to restrain
those who might wish to seek their fortune in foreign warfare. Daring the period
of Macedonian supremacy, and after its close, under the Roman power, Thracians
are often mentioned as auxiliaries in Macedonian and Roman armies; but few of
these, it is probable, were volunteers (Liv. xxxi. 39, xlii. 29, 51, et al.; Caes.
B.C. iii. 4; Veil. Pat. ii. 112; Tac. Hist. i. 68, &c.). Cicero (de Prov. Cons.
4) seems to imply that Thracians were sometimes hired to assassinate like the
modern Italian bravos; these were perhaps gladiators, of whom great numbers were
Thracians. Caligula gave the command of his German bodyguard to Thracians (Suet.
Calig. 55).
Another point in which the Thracians remind us of the natives of India, is mentioned
by Thucydides (ii. 97) in these words: The tribute of the barbarians and of the
Greek cities received by Seuthes, the successor of Sitalces, might be reckoned
at 400 talents of silver, reckoning gold and silver together. The presents in
gold and silver amounted to as much more. And these presents were made not only
to the king, but also to the most influential and distinguished of the Odrysae.
For these people, like those of Thrace generally, differ in this respect from
the Persians, that they would rather receive than give; and among them it is more
shameful not to give when you are asked, than to be refused when you ask. It is
true that abuses arise from this custom; for nothing can be done without presents
(Cf. Liv. xlii. 19, xlv. 42; Tac. Germ. 15). Xenophon (Anab. vii. 3) gives some
amusing illustrations of this practice among the Thracians.
Mention is often made of the singing and dancing of the Thracians,
especially of a martial kind. Xenophon (Anab. vi. 1.5, seq.) gives an account
of a dance and combat performed by some Thracians, to celebrate the conclusion
of a peace between the remnant of the 10,000 Greeks and the Paphlagonians: they
danced fully armed to the music of the flute, jumping up nimbly to a considerable
height, and fencing with their swords: at last, one man struck another, to all
appearance mortally and he fell as if dead, though in reality not in the least
injured. His antagonist then stripped off his armour, and went out singing the
praises of Sitalces, while the other man was carried out like a corpse by his
comrades (cf. Ib. vii. 3.32, seq.; Tac. Ann. iv. 47).
Their music was rude and noisy. Strabo (x.) compares it to that of
the Phrygians, whom, indeed, he regards as descended from the Thracians. Xenophon,
in the passage last referred to, says that they played on horns and on trumpets
made of raw ox-hide. Their worship of Dionysus and Cotytto was celebrated on mountain
tops with loud instruments of music, shouting, and noises like the bellowing of
cattle (Strab. x.).
Their barbarity and ferocity became proverbial. Herodotus (viii. 116)
tells a story of a king of the Bisaltae, who punished his six sons for disobeying
him by putting out their eyes. Seuthes, with his own hand, transfixed some of
the Thyni who had been taken prisoners (Xen. Anab. vii. 4. 6). Rhascuporis invited
his nephew to a banquet, plied him with wine, then loaded him with fetters, and
afterwards put him to death (Tac. Ann. ii. 64, seqq.). Thucydides (vii. 27, seq.)
gives an instance of the ferocity of the Thracians in their massacre of the inhabitants
of Mycalessus.
A truly barbarian trait in the character of the Thracians was their
faithlessness, even to one another. This is especially shown in their disregard
of their obligations towards the hostages whom they gave as securities for their
observance of their engagements with others. Seuthes had received from the Thyni
a number of old men as hostages; yet the Thyni, seeing a favourable opportunity,
as they supposed, for renewing hostilities, at once seized it, apparently without
a thought of the but too probable consequences of such conduct to their helpless
countrymen (Xen. Anab. vii. 4. 21; cf. Liv. xl. 22). Some of the tribes inhabiting
the Thracian coast of the Euxine were systematic wreckers. Robbery, as we have
seen, was considered honourable by them; and plunder was their chief inducement
to engage in war (Strab. vii. p. 318; Cic. Pis. 34; Liv. xxvi. 25, xxxviii. 40,
seq.). Strabo (iii. pp. 164, 165), Mela (ii. 2), and Tacitus (Ann. iv. 51) bear
witness to the bravery of the Thracian women.
The deity most worshipped by the Thracians was Dionysus, whom they,
as well as the Phrygians, called Sabazius. The mythical stories respecting Orpheus
and Lycurgus are closely connected with the worship of this god, who had an oracle
on Rhodope, in the country of the Satrae, but under the direction of the Bessi.
Herodotus (vii. 111) states that the mode of delivering the answers of this oracle
resembled that which prevailed at Delphi. He compares also the worship of Artemis
(whose Thracian name was Bendis or Cotytto), as he had seen it celebrated by Thracian
and Paeonian women, with some of the ceremonies at Delos (iv. 33). These resemblances
may be accounted for on the supposition that the Thracian rites were derived from
the original Pelasgian population, remnants of which may have maintained themselves
amid the mountain fastnesses; as Niebuhr holds was the case with the Paeonians,
who are mentioned by Herodotus in the passage last referred to. (On the Thracian
divinities, see Strabo, x.; Soph. Antig. 955, seq.; Plin. xvi. 62; and the articles
Bendis, Cotys, and Rhea, in the Dict. Biog. and Myth.)
It has sometimes been asserted that the Thracians were accustomed
to sacrifice human victims to their divinities; but this appears to be either
an incorrect generalisation, or a confounding of them with other races; for we
find no reference to such a custom in any of the ancient accounts of their manners.
Herodotus, it is true, states (ix. 119) that when the Persian Oeobazus fell into
the hands of the Apsinthii, after the taking of Sestus by the Athenians, they
sacrificed him to their local god, Pleistorus; but from the next words (tropoi
toi spheteroi) it is clear that he regarded the practice as characteristic of
the Apsinthii, and not as one common to all Thracians: nor is it conceivable that
he would have omitted to mention so striking a circumstance, in his general description
of Thracian manners, which has been already quoted (v. 3, seqq); for tile practice
of slaying the favourite wife on the tomb of her deceased husband cannot with
any propriety be called a sacrifice.
Whether indulgence in wine was regarded as a part of the homage due
to Dionysus, or simply as a means of sensual gratification, certain it is that
it was prevalent in Thrace, and frequently attended with violent and sanguinary
quarrels: Natis in usum laetitiae scyphis pugnare Thracum est, says Horace, and
evidence is not wanting in support of the accusation. Ammianus (xxvii. 4. § 9)
describes the Odrysae as so fond of bloodshed that in their banquets, after eating
and drinking to satiety, they used to fall to blows with one another. Tacitus
(Ann. iv. 48) relates that the Thracians serving with Poppaeus Sabinus against
their fellow-countrymen, indulged to such a degree in feasting and drinking that
they kept no guard at night, so that their camp was stormed by their exasperated
brethren, who slew great numbers of them. Xenophon tells us that at his first
interview with Seuthes, they drank horns of wine to each other's health, according
to the Thracian custom (Anab. vii. 2.23). At the banquet which Seuthes afterwards
gave to Xenophon and some other important persons the drinking seems to have been
deep. Xenophon admits that he had indulged freely; and he was evidently astonished
that when Seuthes rose from the table, he manifested no signs of intoxication.
(Ib. 3.26, seqq.) The Thracians are said to have had a custom, which prevailed
in England as late as the last century, of compelling all the guests to drink
the same quantity (Callim. ap. Athen. x.). The Odrysian auxiliaries of Dercyllidas
poured great quantities of wine upon the graves of their slain comrades (Xen.
Hell. iii. 2. 5). It would appear from Mela (ii. 2), that some of the Thracians
were unacquainted with wine, but practised another mode of producing intoxication:
while feasting, they threw into the fires around which they were seated certain
seeds, the fumes of which caused a cheerful kind of drunkenness. It is possible
that these may have been the seeds of hemp, which, as we have seen, probably grew
in Thrace, and contains, as is well known, a narcotic principle.
The Thracians against whom Seuthes led his forces lived in villages
(lb.43), the houses being fenced round with large stakes, within the inclosure
formed by which their sheep were secured (lb. 4.14; cf. Tac. Ann. iv. 49).
Pliny (vii. 41) states that the Thracians had a custom of marking
their happy or unhappy days, by placing a white or a black stone in a vessel at
the close of each day. On any one's death, the vessel belonging to him was emptied,
the stones were separately counted, and his life pronounced to have been happy
or the reverse, as the white or the black were more numerous.
V. History. Thrace is one of those countries whose people, not being sufficiently
civilised to establish a national government or to possess a national literature,
cannot have histories of their own. We become acquainted with the Thracians at
second hand, as it were, through the narrations of foreigners, who necessarily
make them subordinate to their own countrymen; and therefore it is only in connection
with foreign states that their history has been recorded. Hence it is fragmentary,
and, consequently, often obscure; nor would its importance, indeed, repay the
labour that might be employed in elucidating it, even if we possessed the requisite
materials. Destitute of union, the Thracians, notwithstanding their numbers, their
wide diffusion, their powers of endurance, and their contempt of death, exerted
no perceptible influence upon the general course of history; but were reduced,
in spite of their wild love of independence, to assist, as humble allies or subjects,
in the aggrandisement of the more civilised or politic races with which they came
in contact. These were the Greeks, the Persians, the Macedonians, and the Romans,
with the successors of the last in the Eastern Empire. We shall now briefly state
the leading points of their history, as connected with that of the nations just
mentioned; referring the reader for details, especially as to the little that
known of their purely internal affairs, to the articles in this work which relate
to the Bessi, Odrysae, and other prominent Thracian tribes.
We pass over the alleged conquest of Thrace by Sesostris (Herod, ii.
103; Diod. i, 53), and that said to have been effected by the Teucri and Mysi
before the Trojan War (Herod. vii. 20; cf. Eurip. Rhes. 406, seq.), and come at
once to the strictly historical periods.
The first connection of the Greeks with Thrace was through colonies
planted upon its various coasts, the original object of which seems generally
to have been of a commercial kind. Only an approximation to the date of most of
these can be made, since the majority were established long before the commencement
of authentic history. Byzantium and Selymbria, colonies of Megara, belong to the
seventh century B.C., the year 675 B.C. being assigned for the foundation of the
former. In 651 B.C. an unsuccessful attempt is said to have been made by settlers
from Clazomenae to establish themselves at Abdera (Solin. x. 10); but that city
was not actually founded till 560 B.C., and then by emigrants from Teos (Herod.
i. 168). Mesembria, on the Euxine, was a colony of the Byzantians and Chalcedonians,
who abandoned their cities on the approach of the Phoenician fleet, B.C. 493.
(Id. vi. 33). When Dicaea, Maronea, and Aenus, all on the south coast, were established,
is not known; which is the case also with Cardia and Sestus in the Chersonesus.
That these settlements were generally exposed to the hostility of their Thracian
neighbours, there can be no doubt, though corded as in the instance of Amphipolis.
The Athenians sent no less than 10,000 men (B.C. 465) to found a colony there;
and they succeeded in driving off the Edonians who occupied the country; but having
advanced into the interior, they were defeated at Drabescus by the natives, and
compelled to abandon the country. About thirty years afterwards, however, the
Athenians returned, and this time overcame all resistance. Sometimes the relation
between the Greeks and the Thracians was of a more friendly description. Thus,
in the time of Peisistratus, the Dolonci, who dwelt in the Chersonesus, invited
Miltiades (the elder) to rule over them, as they were unable to cope with their
neighbours the Apsinthii; and this led to the Athenians obtaining a firm footing
in that most important and valuable district (Herod. vi. 34, seq.). By these various
means, the Greeks had obtained possession of nearly the whole coast of Thrace,
a considerable period before the commencement of the great contest between themselves
and the Persian empire. Of the interior they appear to have known scarcely anything
whatever; and although in some cases the surrounding barbarians may have been
brought into subjection (Byzantium is said to have reduced the Bithynian Thracians
to the condition of tributary perioeci), yet this was rarely the case. On the
contrary, it is clear from Thucydides (ii. 97), that the Greeks sometimes paid
tribute to the native kings. The Greeks, even when dwelling among hostile strangers,
showed their tendency to separation rather than to union; and hence their settlements
on the Thracian coast never gained the strength which union would have conferred
upon them. Each city had a government, and to a great extent a history of its
own; and we must therefore refer the reader is for information respecting those
states to the separate articles in this work devoted to them.
The first Persian expedition to Thrace was that of Darius, who crossed
the Bosporus with his army about B.C. 513 (or 508, as some authorities hold).
As the principal object of Darius was to chastise the Scythians for their invasion
of Asia in the reign of Cyaxares, he took the shortest route through Thrace; where
he met with no opposition. The Greeks whom he found there were required to follow
in his train to the Danube: among them was the younger Miltiades, the destined
hero of Marathon, who then ruled over the Chersonesus, as his uncle had formerly
done, and who had married the daughter of a Thracian king (Herod. vi. 39). On
returning from the north, Darius directed his march to the Hellespont, and before
crossing from Sestus into Asia, erected a fort at Doriscus, near the mouth of
the Hebrus (Herod. iv. 89-93, 143, 144, vii. 59). Megabazus was left with 80,000
men to subdue the whole of Thrace, a task which he began by besieging Perinthus,
which, though previously weakened by the attacks of the Paeonians, made a brave
but fruitless resistance. After this, Megabazus reduced the country into subjection,
though perhaps only the districts near the sea (Herod. v. 1, 2, 10). That his
conquests extended as far as the Strymon appears from Darius's grant of a district
upon that river to Histiaeus, who founded there the town of Mvrcinus (Herod. v.
11). Megabazus soon returned to Asia; and it seems probable that he took with
him the greater part of his army; for if the Persians had maintained a powerful
force in Thrace, the Paeonians could hardly have succeeded in making their escape
from Phrygia back to the Strymon (Id. v. 98), nor could the revolted Ionians (B.C.
498) have taken Byzantium and all the other cities in that countr. (Id. v. 103).
It is to this period that we must refer the invasion of the Scythians, who are
said to have advanced as far as the Chersonesus, thus occasioning the temporary
flight of Miltiades, who, they were aware, had assisted Darius in his attack upon
their country (Id. vi. 40).
After the suppression of the Ionian revolt (B.C. 493), the Phoenician
fleet sailed to the Hellespont, and again brought the country under the Persian
dominion, Cardia being the only city which they were unable to take (Id. vi. 33).
Miltiades made his escape from the Chersonesus to Athens, on hearing of the approach
of the hostile fleet (Ib. 41).
Next year Mardonius led an army across the Hellespont, and advanced
as far as Macedonia; but his fleet having been wrecked off Mount Athos, and his
land forces having suffered considerably in a war with the Thracians, who then
occupied the country W. of the Strymon, he retraced his steps, and transported
his shattered army into Asia (Id. vi. 43, seqq.).
It was not till B.C. 480 that the vast army under the command of Xerxes
crossed the Hellespont by the famous bridges which spanned the strait from Abydos
to Sestus. Of his march through Thrace, Herodotus gives an interesting account
(vii. 108-115); but, as he met with no opposition, we need not dwell upon these
circumstances.
After the disastrous battle of Salamis, Xerxes, with an escort of
60,000 men, hastened back by the same road which he had so recently trod in all
the overweening confidence of despotic power: in Thrace, his miserable troops,
suffered greatly from hunger and consequent disease, but do not appear to have
been openly attacked (Herod. viii. 115, seqq.).
Next year (B.C. 479) was fought the battle of Plataeae in which Thracians
formed part of the motley host arrayed against Greek freedom (Id. ix. 32). Artabazus
led the 40,000 men, who alone remained of the Persian army, by forced marches
through Thessaly, Macedonia, and Thrace. He struck through the interior of the
latter country, probably for fear of the Greek cities on the coast; but he encountered
enemies as much to be dreaded, and lost a great part of his army by hunger, fatigue,
and the attacks of the Thracians, before he reached Byzantium.
It was now the turn of the victorious Greeks to assail their foes
in their own territories. Thrace, with the exception of Doriscus, was soon cleared
of the Persians. After the battle of Mycale, their fleet sailed to the Hellespont,
where the Athenians laid siege to Sestus, which was taken early in the following
year (B.C. 478). Eion, at the mouth of the Strymon, made a desperate resistance;
but at length (B.C. 476) fell into the hands of Cimon and the Athenians, after
its Persian governor had put to death all his family, and finally himself (Herod.
vii. 107; cf. Thucyd. i. 98). Byzantium had been taken by Pausanias the year before.
Thus the Persians were driven out of Europe, and the Greek settlements in Thrace
resumed their internal freedom of action, though most of them, it is probable,
were under the supremacy of Athens, as the chosen head of the great Greek confederacy.
During the administration of Pericles, 1000 Athenian citizens were
settled in the Thracian Chersonesus, which was always the chief stronghold of
Athens in that quarter. Under the auspices of the same statesman, in B.C. 437,
the Athenians succeeded in founding Amphipolis, the contests for the possession
of which occupy a very prominent place in the subsequent history of Greece.
About this time flourished the most powerful Thracian kingdom that
ever existed, that of the Odrysae, for the history of which see Odrysae. At the
commencement of the Peloponnesian War (B.C. 431), the Athenians entered into an
alliance with Sitalces, the king of the Odrysae (Thucyd. ii. 29), who, they hoped,
would enable them to subdue all opposition to their supremacy in the Chalcidic
peninsula. In consequence of this alliance, Sitalces led (B.C. 429) a vast host
into Macedonia, the ruler of which supported the enemies of Athens: he encountered
no opposition, yet was compelled by want of supplies to return to Thrace, about
a month after he had left it (Ib. 95-101). But although Sitalces was an ally of
Athens, this did not prevent Brasidas from having great numbers of light-armed
Thracians in his armies, while commanding the Spartan forces in the neighbourhood
of Amphipolis (B.C. 422).
It would occupy too much space to relate minutely the various turns
of fortune which occurred in Thrace during the Peloponnesian War. The principal
struggle in this quarter was for the command of the Bosporus and Hellespont, so
important, especially to the Athenians, on account of the corn trade with the
Euxine, from which Athens drew a large part of her supplies. Hence many of the
most important naval battles were fought in the Hellespont; and the possession
of Byzantium and Sestus was the prize of many a victory. The battle of Aegospotami,
which terminated the long contest for supremacy, took place to the S. of Sestus,
B.C. 405. By the peace concluded next year, Athens gave up all her foreign possessions;
and those in the east of Thrace fell into the hands of the Spartans and Persians.
When the remnant of the 10,000 Greeks returned (B.C. 400) to Europe,
they were engaged by Seuthes, an Odrysian prince, to assist him in recovering
the dominions which had belonged to his father, in the south eastern part of Thrace
(Xen. Anab. vii. pass.). Having thus been reinstated in his principality, he showed
his gratitude to the Greeks, by sending auxiliaries to Dercyllidas, who commanded
the Spartan forces against the Persians, with whom they were now (B.C. 399) at
war (Xen. Hell. iii. 2). Next year Dercyllidas crossed over into the Chersonesus,
and erected a wall across its northern extremity, as a protection to the Greek
inhabitants, who were exposed to constant attacks from their barbarous neighbours
(Ib. 2.8-10). The same general successfully defended Sestus from the combined
forces of Conon and Pharnabazus (B.C. 394: Ib. iv. 8.5, seqq.). But in B.C. 390
Thrasybulus restored Athenian influence in Thrace, by forming an alliance with
two native princes, and by establishing democracy at Byzantium (Ib.25, seqq.);
and his success was confirmed by the victory of Iphicrates over Anaxibius the
next year (ib.34). The peace of Antalcidas, however, released all the Greek states
from their connection with Athens, and virtually gave the supremacy to Sparta
(B.C. 387).
Nothing of any importance happened in Thrace after this event till
the accession of Philip II. to the throne of Macedonia (B.C. 359). This able but
unscrupulous scrupulous monarch at once began his career of aggrandisement towards
the east. He contrived to get possession of Amphipolis (B.C. 358), and thus obtained
a secure footing from which he might extend his dominions in Thrace as opportunity
offered. At this time there were three native Thracian princes, probably brothers,
who seem to have ruled over most of the country. According to Justin (viii. 3),
Berisades and Amadocus, two of them, chose Philip as judge of their disputes;
of which position he treacherously availed himself to seize upon their dominions.
Though this statement is not supported, we believe, by any other ancient author,
yet it is probably true; for such conduct is highly characteristic of the Macedonian
monarch; and the almost entire disappearance from history of these Thracian princes
soon after Philip's accession, would thus be accounted for. Cersobleptes, the
third brother, who seems to have had the E. portion of Thrace, maintained a long
struggle against his ambitious neighbour. In B.C. 357 he ceded the Chersonesus
to the Athenians, who sent a colony to occupy it four years afterwards. Philip
at various times marched into Thrace, and repeatedly defeated Cersobleptes, whom
he at length (B.C. 343) completely subdued and rendered tributary. Next year he
established colonies in the eastern part of Thrace, and acts of hostility occurred
between him and Diopeithes, the Athenian commander in that quarter. Philip was
occupied the next three years in Thrace, and laid siege to Perinthus and Byzantium,
which were in alliance with Athens, whose forces, commanded by Phocion, compelled
Philip to abandon the sieges; and he soon afterwards left Thrace, to advance towards
the south against the confederate Greeks. On his departure Phocion recovered several
of the cities in which Macedonian garrisons had been placed.
Notwithstanding these checks, Philip had brought under his command a great part of Thrace, especially on the south coast: he had, above all, completely incorporated with his kingdom the district between the Strymon and the Nestus, and from the mines of the Pangaeus, which he seized in B.C. 356, he obtained abundant supplies of the precious metals.
Philip was assassinated B.C. 336: next year his successor, Alexander
the Great, marched across the Haemus to attack the Triballi; but his chief attention
was bestowed upon the preparations for the Asiatic expedition, which he entered
upon next year, crossing the Hellespont from Sestus.
On the death of Alexander (B.C. 323), Thrace was allotted to Lysimachus, who was
soon involved in hostilities with Seuthes, a king of the Odrysae. The reader is
referred to the account of Lysimachus for details respecting his government of
Thrace: the result of his various wars was that his sway was firmly established
over all the countries south of the Danube, as far as the confines of Macedonia;
the Greek cities on the Euxine were garrisoned by his troops; and though many
of the native tribes, in the more inaccessible districts, no doubt retained their
freedom, yet he had completely defeated all their attacks upon his power. In B.C.
309 he founded Lysimachia, near the northern extremity of the Chersonesus and
made it his capital. Having engaged in a war with Seleucus, the ruler of Syria,
he advanced to meet his antagonist in Asia, and was defeated and slain at Corupedion
(B.C. 281), upon which Seleucus passed over into Europe and took possession of
Thrace. Next year, however, he was assassinated by Ptolemy Ceraunus, who was thereupon
acknowledged king; but shortly: afterwards a vast horde of Celts invaded the country,
and Ptolemy was slain in a battle with them. Anarchy now prevailed for some years
in the country: the Celts again advanced to the south in B.C. 279, and under Brennus
penetrated as far as Delphi, on their repulse from which they retreated northwards,
and some of them settled on the coast of Thrace.
For nearly fifty years after this time little mention is made of Thrace
in history; it appears to have been annexed to Macedonia; but the rulers of that
kingdom were too insecure, even in their central dominions, to be able to exercise
much control over such a country as Thrace, inhabited now by races differing so
widely as the Thracians, the Greeks, and the Celts, and offering so many temptations
to the assertion of independence.
About B.C. 247, the fleet of Ptolemy Euergetes captured Lysimachia
and other important cities on the coast; and they remained for nearly half a century
under the kings of Egypt (Polyb. v. 34, 58).
In B.C. 220, Philip V. ascended the throne of Macedonia. Under him
the Macedonian power regained something of its old prestige; and had it not been
brought in collision with Rome, it might have become as extensive as in former
times. But Philip unfortunately directed his ambitious views in the first instance
towards the West, and thus soon encountered the jealous Republic. It was not till
B.C. 211 that Philip commenced his enterprises against Thrace: he then led an
army into the country of the Maedi, who were in the habit of making incursions
into Macedonia. Their lands were laid waste, and their capital, Iamphorina, compelled
to surrender. Having made peace with the Romans (B.C. 205), he invaded Thrace,
and took Lysimachia. In B.C. 200, he again attacked that country, both by sea
and land; and it is evident that he did not anticipate much resistance, since
he took with him only 2000 infantry and 200 cavalry. Yet with this insignificant
force, aided by the fleet, he made himself master of the whole of the south coast,
and of the Chersonesus. He then laid siege to Abydos, and after a desperate resistance
took it (Liv. xxxi. 16). This seems to have hastened the declaration of war on
the part of the Romans; a war which lasted till B.C. 196, when Philip was reduced
to procure peace by surrendering all his conquests, and withdrawing his garrisons
from the Greek cities (Liv. xxxiii. 30), L. Stertinius was sent to see that these
terms were complied with (ib. 35). But scarcely had the cities been evacuated
by the Macedonian garrisons, when Antiochus the Great crossed the Hellespont,
and took possession of the Chersonesus, which he claimed as a conquest of Seleucus
(ib. 38). He refused to comply with the demand of the Romans, that he should withdraw
his army from Europe; but left his son Seleucus to complete the restoration of
Lysimachia, and to extend his influence, which seems to have been done by placing
garrisons in Maroneia and Aenus.
In the war which ensued between the Romans and Antiochus (B.C. 190),
Philip rendered the former good service, by providing everything necessary for
their march through Thrace, and securing them from molestation by the native tribes
(Liv. xxxvii. 7). Antiochus was defeated by Scipio at Magnesia, and sued for peace,
which was at length granted to him (B.C. 188) on condition of his abandoning all
his dominions west of the Taurus (Liv. xxxviii. 38). The Romans gave the Chersonesus
and its dependencies to their ally Eumenes (ib. 39). As indicative of the internal
condition of Thrace, even along the great southern road, the account which Livy
(ib. 40, seq.) gives of the march of the consul Manlius' army through the country
on its return from Asia Minor, is highly interesting. The army was loaded with
booty, conveyed in a long train of baggagewaggons, which presented an irresistible
temptation to the predatory tribes through whose territories its route lay. They
accordingly attacked the army in a defile, and were not beaten off until they
had succeeded in their object of sharing in the plunder of Asia.
The possession of the Chersonesus by Eumenes soon led to disagreements
with Philip, who was charged by Eumenes (B.C. 185) with having seized upon Maroneia
and Aenus, places which he coveted for himself. (Liv. xxxix. 24, 27). The Romans
insisted upon the withdrawal of the Macedonian garrisons (B.C. 184), and Philip,
sorely against his will, was obliged to obey. He wreaked his anger upon the defenceless
citizens of Maroneia, by conniving at, if not actually commanding, the massacre
of a great number of them (ib. 33, 34). In the course of the disputes about these
cities, it was stated that at the end of the war with Philip, the Roman commissioner,
Q. Fabius Labeo, had fixed upon the king's road, which is described as nowhere
approaching the sea, as the S. boundary of Philip's possessions in Thrace; but
that Philip had afterwards formed a new road, considerably to the S., and had
thus included the cities and lands of the Maronitae in his territories (ib. 27).
In the same year, Philip undertook an expedition into the interior
of Thrace, where he was fettered by no engagements with the Romans. He defeated
the Thracians in a battle, and took their leader Amadocus prisoner. Before returning
to Macedonia he sent envoys to the barbarians on the Danube to invite them to
make an incursion into Italy (ib. 35). Again in B.C. 183, Philip marched against
the Odrysae, Dentheletae and Bessi, took Philippopolis, which its inhabitants
had abandoned at his approach, and placed a garrison in it, which the Odrysae,
however, soon afterwards drove out (ib. 53). In B.C. 182, Philip removed nearly
all the inhabitants of the coast of Macedonia into the interior, and supplied
their places by Thracians and other barbarians, on whom he thought he could more
safely depend in the war with the Romans, which he now saw was inevitable (Liv.
xl. 3). He had done something of the same kind a few years before (Id. xxxix.
24).
Philip's ascent of the Haemus, already referred to, took place in
B.C. 181: on the summit he erected altars to Jupiter and the Sun. On his way back
his army plundered the Dentheletae; and in Maedica he took a town called Petra.
(Liv. xl. 21, seq.)
Philip died in B.C. 179, and his successor Perseus continued the preparations
which his father had made for renewing the war with Rome, which did not begin,
however, till B.C. 171. The Romans had formed an alliance the year before with
a number of independent Thracian tribes, who had sent ambassadors to Rome for
the purpose, and who were likely to be formidable foes to Perseus. The Romans
took care to send valuable presents to the principal Thracians, their ambassadors
having no doubt impressed upon the senate the necessity for compliance with this
national custom. (Liv. xlii. 19.)
The advantage of this alliance was soon seen. Cotys, king of the Odrysae,
was an ally of Perseus, and marched with him to meet the Romans in Thessaly, but
with only 1000 horse and 1000 foot, a force which shows how greatly the power
of the Odrysian monarchy had declined since the reign of Sitalces (ib. 51). Cotys
commanded all the Thracians in Perseus's army in the first engagement with the
Roman cavalry, which was defeated (ib. 57, seq.). When Perseus retreated into
Macedonia a report was brought that the Thracian allies of Rome had invaded the
dominions of Cotys, whom Perseus was therefore obliged to dismiss for their protection
(ib. 67), and he does not seem to have personally taken any further part in the
war, though he probably sent part of his forces to assist Perseus (xliv. 42).
His son Bitis fell into the hands of the Romans, after the battle of Pydna (B.C.
168), which put an end to the Macedonian kingdom. Cotys sent ambassadors to Rome
to endeavour to ransom his son, and to excuse himself for having sided with Perseus.
The senate rejected his offers of money, but liberated his son, and gave a considerable
sum to each of the Thracian ambassadors. The reason it assigned for this generosity
was the old friendship which had existed between Rome and Cotys and his ancestors.
The Romans were evidently unwilling to engage in a war with the Thracian people
at this time; and were anxious to secure friends among them for the sake of the
peace of Macedonia, which, though not yet nominally made a province, was completely
in their power. They sent (B.C. 167) three commissioners to conduct Bitis and
the other Thracians home; and at the same time, no doubt, to make observations
on the state of that country (Liv. xlv. 42).
After the fall of Perseus, the senate divided his dominion's into
four districts (regiones), the first of which included the territory between the
Strymon and the Nestus, and all the Macedonian possessions east of the latter,
except Aenus, Maroneia, and Abdera: Bisaltica and Sintice, west of the Strymon,
also belonged to this district, the capital of which was Amphipolis. (Ib. 29.)
It is important to recollect that the Thrace spoken of by the Latin historians
subsequently to this time does not include the territories here specified, which
thenceforth constituted an integral part of Macedonia.
From the year B.C. 148, when the Romans undertook the direct government
of that country, they were brought into contact with the various barbarous nations
on its frontiers, and were continually at war with one or another of them. For
some years, however, their chief occupation was with the Scordisci, a people of
Celtic origin which had settled south of the Danube, and often made devastating
incursions into the more civilised regions of the south. They are sometimes called
Thracians (e. g. by Florus, iii. 4; cf. Amm. xxvii. 4.4), which is the less surprising
when we remember that great numbers of Celts had settled in Southern Thrace, and
would soon be confounded under a common name with the other occupants of the country.
The history of all this period, up to the time of Augustus, is very obscure, owing
to the loss of so great a part of Livy's work; enough, however, appears in other
writers to show that Thrace was left almost entirely to its native rulers, the
Romans rarely interfering with it except when provoked by the predatory incursions
of its people into Macedonia: they then sometimes made retaliatory expeditions
into Thrace; but seem generally to have made their way back as soon as the immediate
object was accomplished. The relation existing between the Romans and the Thracians,
for more than a century after the conquest of Macedonia, thus bears a close resemblance
to that which has long existed between our own countrymen and the Caffres.
During the years B.C. 110, 109, the Consul M. Minucius Rufus was engaged
in hostilities with the Scordisci and Triballi; and, according to Florus (l. c.),
laid waste the whole valley of the Hebrus (cf. Eutr. iv. 27). In B.C. 104, Calpurnius
Piso penetrated into the district of Rhodope (Flor. l. c.). In B.C. 92, the Maedi
defeated the praetor, C. Sentius, and then ravaged Macedonia (Cic. Pis. 34; Liv.
Epit. 70). After the breaking out of the Mithridatic War (B.C. 88), mention is
made in several successive years of the incursions of the Thracians into the Roman
provinces, and it is probable that they were acting in concert with Mithridates,
whose general Taxiles, in B.C. 86, led a vast army through Thrace, and Macedonia
to the assistance of Archelaus. (Liv. Epit. 74, 76, 81, 82). On the final defeat
of Archelaus, Sulla directed his march towards Asia through, Thrace B.C. 84, and,
either to punish the people for their connection with Mithridates, or because
they opposed his passage, made war upon them with complete success (Id. 83). C.
Scribonius Curio defeated the Dardani, and penetrated to the Danube, being the
first Roman who had ventured into that part of Europe (B.C. 75; Liv. Epit. 92;
Eutr. vi. 2). Curio was succeeded as governor of Macedonia by M. Lucullus (B.C.
73), who defeated the Bessi in a pitched battle on Mount Haemus, took their capital,
and ravaged the whole country between the Haemus and the Danube (Liv. Epit. 97;
Eutr. vi. 10). The Bessi were again conquered in B.C. 60 by Octavius, the father
of Augustus (Suet. Aug. 3; cf. lb. 94; Freinsh. Suppl. cxxxv. 2). In the years
B.C. 58, 57, Piso, so well known. to us from Cicero's celebrated speech against
him, was governor of Macedonia; and, if we may believe Cicero, acted in the most
cruel and faithless manner towards the Bessi and other peaceable Thracian tribes.
(Pis. 34, de Prov. Cons. 2, seq.). From the latter passage it appears that although
Thrace was not under the government of Rome, yet the Romans claimed the right
of way through it to the Hellespont; for Cicero calls the Egnatian Way via illa
nostra militaris.
In the civil war between Caesar and Pompey, several Thracian princes
furnished the latter with auxiliary forces. Why they interfered in the contest,
and why they preferred Pompey to Caesar, are matters of conjecture only. Pompey
had been chiefly engaged all his life in the East, Caesar in the West; and that
is probably sufficient to account for the greater influence of Pompey in Thrace.
(Caes. B.C. iii. 4; Flor. iv. 2; Dion Cass. xli. 51, 63, xlvii. 25).
At the time of Caesar's death two brothers, Rhascuporis and Rascus
ruled over the greater part of Thrace; and when the war broke out between the
triumvirs and the republican party, Rhascuporis sided with the latter, while Rascus
aided the former. By this plan they hoped to be safe, whichever party might be
victorious; and it is said that their expectations were realised. When the power
of Rome was at length wielded by Augustus. without a rival, the relation of Thrace
to the Roman state seems to have become in many respects like that which the native
princes of India long bore to the British. The Thracian kings were generally allowed
to exercise, without restraint, their authority over their own subjects, and when
needful it was supported by the arms of Rome. But all disputes among the native
rulers were referred to the decision of the emperors, who disposed of the country
as its acknowledged lords. These subject princes were expected to defend Thrace
from external and internal foes; to assist the Romans in the field; to allow them
to enlist troops, and in other ways to exercise the rights of sovereignty. For
illustrations of these statements we must refer the reader to Tacitus, especially
to the following passages: Ann. ii. 64-67, iii. 38, 39, iv. 5, 46--51. The few
Thracian coins which are extant afford a proof of the dependent character of the
Thracian kings; they bear on the obverse the effigy of the reigning emperor, on
the reverse that of the native prince.
The interference of the Romans in the government of Thrace was not
submitted to by the nation at large without several severe struggles. The most
formidable of these occurred about B.C. 14, the fullest account of which is given
by Dion Cassius (lib. liv.). The leader in this insurrection was Vologaesus, a
Bessian priest of Bacchus, who availed himself of his sacerdotal character to
inflame the religious feelings of his countrymen. Having thus assembled a large
army, he attacked, defeated, and slew Rhascuporis, a king under Roman protection;
his uncle, Rhoemetalces, was next assailed and compelled to flee: the insurgents
pursued him as far as the Chersonesus, where they devastated the country and captured
the fortified places. On receiving information of these proceedings, Augustus
ordered L. Piso, the governor of Pamphylia, to transport his army into Thrace,
where, after a three years' war and several reverses, he at length succeeded in
subduing the Bessi, who had adopted Roman arms. and discipline. They soon afterwards
made a second attempt to regain their independence; but were now easily crushed.
(Vell. Pat. ii. 98; Tac. Ann. vi. 10; Sen. Ep. 83; Flor. iv. 12; Liv. Epit. 137.)
After this war, the Romans gradually absorbed all the powers of government
in the country. Germanicus visited it in A.D. 18, and introduced reforms in its
administration (Tac. Ann. ii. 54). A system of conscription seems to have been
imposed upon the Thracians about A.D. 26 (Ib. iv. 46). The last native prince
of whom we find any mention is Rhoemetalces II., who, in A.D. 38, was made by
Caligula ruler over the whole country; and at length, in the reign of Vespasian
(A.D. 69-79), Thrace was reduced into the form of a province (Suet. Vesp. 8; Eutr.
vii. 19; cf. Tac. Hist. i. 11). The date of this event has been disputed on the
authority of the Eusebian Chronicle, which states that it took place in A.D. 47,
in the reign of Claudius; but the statement of Suetonius is express on the point.
It is possible that Rhoemetalces II. may have died about the year last mentioned;
and if Claudius refused to appoint a successor to him, this would be regarded
as equivalent to incorporating the country in the Roman empire, although its formal
constitution as a, province was delayed; as we know was commonly the case. It
is remarkable that Moesia was made a province upwards of 50 years before Thrace
Proper, its first propraetor being mentioned in A.D. 15. (Tac. Ann. i. 79; cf.
Ib. ii. 66; Plin. iii. 26. s. 29).
Thrace now shared in the general fortunes of the Roman world, on the
division of which into the Eastern and Western Empires, it was attached to the
former, being governed by the Vicarius Thraciarum, who was subordinate to the
Praefectus Praetorio Orientis. Its situation rendered it extremely liable to the
inroads of barbarians, and its history, so far as it is known, is little else
than a record of war and devastation. The Goths made their first appearance there
in A.D. 255; the emperor Probus, about A.D. 280, established in it 100,000 Bastarnae.
In A.D. 314, and again in 323, the emperor Licinius was defeated at Hadrianople
by Constantine, who, in A.D. 334, settled a multitude of Sarmatians in Thrace,
which, in 376, received another accession to its heterogeneous population, Valens
having given permission to the Goths to reside in it. This gave rise to innumerable
wars, the details of which are recorded by Ammianus (lib. xxxi.). In 395 the devoted
country was overrun by Alaric, and in 447 by the more dreadful Attila. Through
all these misfortunes, however, Thrace remained in connection with the Eastern
Empire, the capital of which was within its boundaries, until the year 1353, when
the Turks, who had crossed over into Europe in 1341, obtained possession of the
Thracian fortresses. Their leader Amurath conquered the whole country, except
Constantinople, and made Hadrianople his capital. At length, in 1453, Constantinople
itself was taken, and the Turks have ever since been the undisputed lords of Thrace.
VI. Topography. Under this head we shall merely collect such names as will
serve to direct the reader to articles in this work, where fuller information
is given:
Pliny (iv. 18; cf. Mela, ii. 2; Amm. xxvii. 4) enumerates the following as the
principal Thracian tribes: Denseletae, Maedi, Bisaltae, Digeri, Bessi, Elethi,
Diobessi, Carbilesi, Brysae, Sapaei, Odomanti, Odrysae, Cabyleti, Pyrogeri, Drugeri,
Caenici, Hypsalti, Beni, Corpilli, Bottiaei, Edoni, Selletae, Priantae, Dolonci,
Thyni, Coeletae. To these we may add, the Apsinthii, Bistones, Cicones, Satrae,
Dii, and Trausi.
Of the towns mentioned by Pliny (l. c.), these belonged to Thrace
Proper: 1. On the coast (i.) of the Aegean: Oesyma, Neapolis, Datum, Abdera, Tirida,
Dicaea, Maronea, Zone, and Aenus; to these must be added Amphipolis, Pistyrus,
Cosinthus, and Mesembria; (ii.) of the Chersonesus: Cardia, Lysimachia, Pachyta,
Callipolis, Sestus, Elaeus, Coelos, Tiristasis, and Panormus; besides these there
were Alopeconnesus and Agora; (iii.) of the Propontis: Bisanthe, Perinthus, and
Selymbria; (iv.) of the Bosporus: Byzantium; (v.) of the Euxine: Mesembria, Anchialus,
Apollonia, Thynias, Salmydessus, and Phinopolis. 2. In the interior: Philippopolis,
Philippi, Scotusa, Topiris, Doriscus, Cypsela, Apros, and Develton. This is a
very scanty list; but many of the principal inland towns were founded after Pliny's
time: their names also were often changed. The following are some of the chief
towns in the interior: Hadrianopolis, Plotinopolis, Trajanopolis, Tempyra, Nicopolis,
Beroea, Iamporina, and Petra.
Besides the rivers mentioned in the course of this article, the following
occur: the Bathynias, Pydaras or Atyras, Bargus, Cossinites, Compsatus, and Xerogypsus.
As to the political divisions of Thrace, Pliny states that it was
divided into fifty strategiae; but he describes Moesia as part of Thrace. According
to Ptolemy (iii. 11.8, seq.), its districts were Maedica, Dentheletica, Sardica,
Bessica, Drosica, Bennica, Usdicesica, Selletica, Samaica, Coeletica, Sapaica,
Corpiliaca, Caenica, and Astica.
Ammianus states that in the 4th century Thrace was divided into six
provinces, but of these only four belonged to Thrace south of the Haemus: (i.)
Thrace Proper (speciali nomine), including the W. part of the country; principal
cities, Philippopolis and Beroea: (ii.) Haemimontus, i. e. the NE. district; chief
towns, Hadrianopolis and Anchialus: (iii.) Europa, comprehending the SE. district;
cities, Apri and Perinthus (Constantinople, being the capital of the whole Eastern
Empire, was not regarded as belonging to any province): (iv.) Rhodopa, comprising
the SW. region; principal cities, Maximianopolis, Maroneia, and Aenus.
The principal modern writers in whose works information will be found
respecting Thrace, have been mentioned in the course of this article. Among the
other authors whom the reader may consult, we may name the following: Dapper,
Beschryving der Eilanden in de Archipel, Amst. 1688, of which Latin and French
translations were published at Amsterdam in 1703. Paul Lucas, Voyage dans la Turquie,
l'Asie, &c. 2 vols. Amst. 1720. Choiseul, Voyage Pittoresque dans l'Empire Ottoman:
of this work the first volume was published at Paris in 1782, the first part of
the second not till 1809; the author died in 1817. A new edition, with. many corrections
and additions, was published in 4 vols. 8vo. at Paris in 1842. This work is devoted
chiefly to the antiquities of the country; of which the plates contained in the
illustrative Atlas which accompanies the book give many representations. Ami Boue‘s,
La Turquie d'Europe, 4 vols. 8vo. Paris, 1840, is the most complete work yet written
on the subject; its author, a man of great scientific acquirements, made two journeys
in Turkey, in 1836, when he was accompanied by M. Viquesnel, and in 1838. The
first volume contains an elaborate account of the physical geography, geology,
vegetation, fauna, and meteorology of the country; but takes little or no notice
of its classical geography. A map is prefixed to it, which was a vast improvement
on all that had preceded it; but it is now in its turn superseded by that of Kiepert,
who has employed in its construction the materials afforded by M. Viquesnel's
reports already referred to.
This text is from: A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities (1890) (eds. William Smith, LLD, William Wayte, G. E. Marindin). Cited Nov 2005 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks
THYNI (Ancient tribe) THRAKI
Thyni (Plin, iv. 11. s. 18, v. 32. s. 43; Thunoi, Herod. i. 28), a people in the
SE. part of Thrace, between the Agrianes and the mountains which separate its
head-waters from the Euxine. At a very early period, a portion of the tribe, along
with the related race of the Bithyni, emigrated to Asia Minor, where they occupied
the district afterwards called Bithynia; but part of which seems originally to
have been named more directly from the Thyni, since we find the names Thuniake
Thraike (Memnon. c. 18), Thunias (Scymn. 727, and 236), Thunia (Steph. B.), and
Thynia (Amm. xxii. 8.14).
Of the Thyni who remained in Europe scarcely any notice is taken by
the ancient historians. When Xenophon and the remnant of the 10,000 Greeks entered
the service of Seuthes, one expedition in which they were employed had for its
object the subjugation of the Thyni, who were said to have defeated Teres, an
ancestor of Seuthes (Anab. vii. 2.22). Xenophon gives them the somewhat equivocal
character of being the most warlike of all people, especially by night: and he
had personal experience of their fondness for nocturnal fighting; for, having
encamped in their villages at the foot of the mountains, to which the Thyni had
retired on the approach of Seuthes and his forces, he was attacked by them on
the next night, and narrowly escaped being burnt to death in the house in which
he had taken up his quarters (Ib. 4.14, seq.). But this attack having failed,
the Thyni again fled to the mountains, and soon afterwards submitted to Seuthes.
Xenophon visited the country of the Thyni in the winter (Ib. 6.31), which he describes
as being extremely severe, there being deep snow on the ground, and so low a temperature,
that not only water, but even wine in the vessels was frozen; and many of the
Greeks lost noses and ears through frostbite. (Ib. 4.3)
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VISSI (Ancient tribe) BALKANS
Bessi (Bessoi), a Thracian tribe occupying the country about the rivers Axius,
Strymon, and Nestus. They appear to have been a very numerous people, and at different
times to have occupied a more or less extensive country. According to Herodotus
(vii. 111), they belonged to the Satrae, a free Thracian people, and had the management
of an oracle of Dionysus situated in the highest part of the mountains. In the
time of Strabo (vii. p. 318) the Bessi dwelt all along the southern slope of Mount
Haemus, from the Euxine to the frontiers of the Dardanians in the west. In the
second century of our era their territory might seem to have been greatly reduced,
as Ptolemy (iii. 11.9) mentions the Bessike among the smaller strateniai of Thrace;
but his statement evidently refers only to the western portion of the Bessi, occupying
the country between the Axius and Strymon, and Pliny (iv. 11. 18) speaks of Bessi
living about the Nestus and Mount Rhodope. Looking at the country they occupied,
and the character given them by Herodotus, there can be no doubt that they were
the chief people of Thrace; they were warlike and independent, and were probably
never subdued by the Macedonians; the Romans succeeded in conquering them only
in their repeated wars against the Thracians. It would seem that the whole nation
of the Bessi was divided into four cantons (Steph. Byz. s. v. Tetrachopitai),
of which the Diobessi mentioned by Pliny may have been one. In the time of Strabo
the Bessi are said to have been the greatest robbers among the Thracians, who
were themselves notorious as lestai. That they were not, however, wholly uncivilised,
is clear from the fact that they inhabited towns, the chief of which was called
Uscudama (Entrop. vi. 10). Another town, Bessapara, is mentioned by Procopius
and others.
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MISSIA (Ancient country) THRAKI
A country of Europe, called by the Greeks Mysia. It was bounded
on the south by Thrace and Macedonia, on the west by Illyricum and Pannonia, on
the north by the Danube, and on the east by the Pontus Euxinus, thus corresponding
roughly to the present Servia and Bulgaria. This country was subdued in the reign
of Augustus (B.C. 29), and was made a Roman province at the commencement of the
reign of Tiberius. It was afterwards formed into two provinces, called Moesia
Superior and Moesia Inferior, the former being the western and the latter the
eastern half of the country. When Aurelian surrendered Dacia to the barbarians
and removed the inhabitants of that province to the south of the Danube, the middle
part of Moesia was called Dacia Aureliani.
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THRAKI (Ancient country) BALKANS
Thracia (Thraike, Ion. Threike). In earlier times the name of the vast
space of country bounded on the north by the Danube, on the south by the Propontis
and the Aegaean, on the east by the Pontus Euxinus, and on the west by the river
Strymon and the easternmost of the Illyrian tribes. It was divided into two parts
by Mount Haemus (the Balkan), running from west to east, and separating the plain
of the lower Danube from the rivers which fall into the Aegaean. Its plains are
drained by the Hebrus, the largest river in Thrace. At a later time the name Thrace
was applied to a more limited extent of country. The district between the Strymon
and the Nestus was added to Macedonia by Philip, and was usually called Macedonia
Adiecta. Under Augustus the part of the country north of the Haemus was made a
separate Roman province under the name of Moesia; but the district between the
Strymon and the Nestus had been previously restored to Thrace by the Romans. The
Roman province of Thrace was accordingly bounded on the west by the river Nestus;
on the north by Mount Haemus, which divided it from Moesia; on the east by the
Euxine, and on the south by the Propontis and Aegean.
Thrace, in its widest extent, was peopled in the times of Herodotus
and Thucydides by a vast number of different tribes; but their customs and characters
were marked by great uniformity. Herodotus says that, next to the Indians, the
Thracians were the most numerous of all races, and if united under one head would
have been irresistible. He describes them as a savage, cruel, and rapacious people,
delighting in blood, but brave and warlike. According to his account, which is
confirmed by other writers, the Thracian chiefs sold their children for exportation
to the foreign merchant; they purchased their wives from their parents; they punctured
or tattooed their bodies and those of the women belonging to them, as a sign of
noble birth; they despised agriculture, and considered it most honourable to live
by war and robbery. Deep drinking prevailed among them extensively. They worshipped
deities whom the Greeks assimilated to Ares, Dionysus, and Artemis: the great
sanctuary and oracle of their god Dionysus was in one of the loftiest summits
of Mount Rhodope. The tribes on the southern coast attained to some degree of
civilization, owing to the numerous Greek colonies which were founded in their
vicinity; but the tribes in the interior seem to have retained their savage habits,
with little mitigation, down to the time of the Roman Empire. In earlier times,
however, some of the Thracian tribes must have been distinguished by a higher
degree of civilization than prevailed among them at a later period. The earliest
Greek poets, Orpheus, Linus, Musaeus, and others, are all represented as coming
from Thrace. Eumolpus, likewise, who founded the Eleusinian Mysteries at Attica,
is said to have been a Thracian, and to have fought against Erectheus, king of
Athens. We also find mention of the Thracians in other parts of southern Greece:
thus they are said to have once dwelt both in Phocis and Boeotia. They were also
spread over a part of Asia: the Thynians and Bithynians, and perhaps also the
Mysians, were members of the great Thracian race. Even Xenophon speaks of Thrace
in Asia, which extended along the Asiatic side of the Bosporus, as far as Heraclea.
The principal Greek colonies along the coast, beginning at
the Strymon and going eastwards, were Amphipolis, at the mouth of the Strymon;
Abdera, a little to the west of the Nestus; Dicaea or Dicaepolis, a settlement
of Maronea; Maronea itself, colonized by the Chians; Stryme, a colony of the Thasians;
Mesembria, founded by the Samothracians; and Aenos, a Lesbian colony at the mouth
of the Hebrus. The Thracian Chersonesus was probably colonized by the Greeks at
an early period, but it did not contain any important Greek settlement till the
migration of the first Miltiades to the country, during the reign of Pisistratus
at Athens. On the Propontis the two chief Greek settlements were those of Perinthus
and Selymbria; and on the Thracian Bosporus was the important town of Byzantium.
There were only a few Greek settlements on the southwestern coast of the Euxine;
the most important were those of Apollonia, Odessus, Callatis, Tomi, renowned
as the place of Ovid's banishment, and Istria, near the southern mouth of the
Danube.
The Thracians are said to have been conquered by Sesostris,
king of Egypt, and subsequently to have been subdued by the Teucrians and Mysians;
but the first really historical fact respecting them is their subjugation by Megabazus,
the general of Darius. After the Persians had been driven out of Europe by the
Greeks, the Thracians recovered their independence; and at the beginning of the
Peloponnesian War, almost all the Thracian tribes were united under the dominion
of Sitalces, king of the Odrysae, whose kingdom extended from Abdera to the Euxine
and the mouth of the Danube. In the third year of the Peloponnesian War (B.C.
429), Sitalces, who had entered into an alliance with the Athenians, invaded Macedonia
with a vast army of 150,000 men, but was compelled by the failure of provisions
to return home, after remaining in Macedonia thirty days. Sitalces fell in battle
against the Triballi in 424, and was succeeded by his nephew Seuthes, who during
a long reign raised his kingdom to a height of power and prosperity which it had
never previously attained, so that his regular revenues amounted to the annual
sum of 400 talents, in addition to contributions of gold and silver in the form
of presents, to a nearly equal amount. After the death of Seuthes, which appears
to have happened a little before the close of the Peloponnesian War, we find his
powerful kingdom split up into different parts; and when Xenophon, with the remains
of the 10,000 Greeks, arrived on the opposite coast of Asia, another Senthes applied
to him for assistance to reinstate him in his dominions. Philip, the father of
Alexander the Great, reduced the greater part of Thrace; and after the death of
Alexander the country fell to the share of Lysimachus. It subsequently formed
a part of the Macedonian dominions, but it continued to be governed by its native
princes, and was only nominally subject to the Macedonian monarchs. Even under
the Romans Thrace was for a long time governed by its own chiefs; and we do not
know at what period it was made into a Roman province.
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Region spanning from the coast of the Aegean
Sea south to the Istrus (today's Danube) north, and from Macedon
west to the coast of the Euxine
Pontus (today's Black Sea) east.
Only the coastal areas of Thracia had been settled by Greeks, leaving
the rest of the country to non Greek speaking indigenous populations.
Bernard Suzanne (page last updated 1998), ed.
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