PART 2 – Ch.XIV.4

(KION OURANOU. The Sky Column on Atlas Mountain

in the country of the Hyperboreans)

 

PART 2

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XIV. 4. Prometheus chained on the rocks of Pharanx (Parang) mountain in Dacia.

 

According to Eschyl of Greece, born in the 6th century bc, Prometheus, the most powerful genius of the Pelasgian times, was chained in Scythia, in the country of the iron (Prometheus vinctus, v. 2), on the remote territory of the ancient world (Herodotus, lib. V. 9), in a wild mountainous region, on some rocky crags, which in his poem are called pharagga, pharaggos and pharaggi, various forms of the nominative pharagxi (Eschyl, Prometheus, v. 15. 142. 618. 1015), meaning mountain or rocky cliff with broken faces and deep ravines.

From the constant use which Eschyl makes in his tragedy of the term Pharang- in order to indicate the rocks and mountain on which Prometheus was crucified, results that we have in this case not a generic word, but a particular topical name.

Close to this mountain called Pharang-, on which according to Eschyl’s legend, had taken place Prometheus’ torture, flowed, according to the same author, the great and divine river of the ancient world called Oceanos potamos or the Istru of historical times (Ibid. v. 284-285).

And in regard to the particular geographical position of this Pharang-, the itinerary proposed by Prometheus to the nymph Io presents a special importance.

The young priestess Io, daughter of king Inachus of Argos, persecuted by Juno because she was loved by Jove, comes on Pharang- to the crucified Prometheus, who was also the first prophet of his times, to learn how much more she will have to suffer and wander because of the persecution of the powerful queen goddess.

Prometheus indicates to the girl the following itinerary:

“Firstly”, says he to Io, “taking the road from here towards east, you will cross untilled fields and will come to the shepherd Scythians (nomads), superb men, armed with far reaching arrows, who spend their lives in carts well fitted with iron, and well covered. But I counsel you not approach them, but instead to turn towards the rocks beaten by the waves of the sea, and to continue your way on dry land. On the left dwell the Chalybi, the ironsmiths, of whom you should beware, they are violent men and do not gladly receive strangers; from there you will reach the violent river called rightfully that, but don’t cross it, because it is dangerous, until you reach the Caucasus, the highest mountain, where the torrents gather, rushing from the tops of this mountain, from where then the river takes their violence downstream. From there then, passing over the peaks of the mountain which reaches to the stars, take the road southwards and you will arrive to the land of the many Amazons, who hate men…They will show you the way with goodwill, then you will come to the Cimmerian isthmus, near the narrow mouths of the Meotic lake. After you will leave this isthmus, gathering your courage, you will have to cross the mouths of the Meotic lake, and you will achieve an everlasting fame for this crossing. After this deed, the straits of the Meotic lake will be called Bospor, then, leaving behind the lands of Europe, you will cross into the continent of Asia” (Prometheus, v. 707 seqq).

It results from this new legend communicated by Eschyl that the rocky cliffs on which the great hero of the ante-Homeric civilization was put in irons, were on the western side of the Black Sea, on the territory of mountainous Scythia, near ancient Oceanos potamos. It also results from this legend that the tragic scene of Prometheus had taken place on the same mountain chain which is called by Hesiod Atlas, and by Apollodorus Caucasus.

The only difference is that the prehistoric Golgotha is presented by Eschyl as having been another group of mountains, Parang, the grandiose massif on the western side of the river Olt, famous for the wildness of its rocky cliffs and its solitary valleys.

 

In Eschyl’s legends the shepherd Scythians, superb men and well armed, are the famous Hyperborean shepherds, who had once trodden the whole known world, and who dominated the mountains and the untilled fields on the northern parts of Istru.

Close to Pharang- mountain were the renowned Chalybi (Ibid, v. 715), the ironsmiths of prehistoric times. By form and meaning, this word is of Pelasgian origin, synonymous with the German Huttenarbeiter, workers in metal factories. But the original meaning of the word Chalibes was undoubtedly the same as the Romanian Colibasi, dwellers in huts (TN– colibe)[1].

 

[1. Various villages on the territory of Romania, in the districts Mehedinti, Gorj, Muscel, Dambovita and Ramnicul-sarat, have the name of Colibasi.

Eschyl says in another tragedy of his (Septem adversus Thebas, v. 729) that the Chalybi were people who had migrated from Scythia to the southern lands].

 

A locality at the foot of Parang mountain is called even today Baia-de-fer (TN – Iron Mine), but we don’t know at what time the iron foundry had started there, flourished and ended.

All we know today are, according to our geographical descriptions, the almost vanished traces of an ancient factory (Marele Dict. Geogr. Rom., Baia de fer).

The mountains of Parang were once renowned for their wealth in metals.

The region of the Carpathian Mountains was in prehistoric times the classical country of mines, and it is a very remarkable fact from a historical point of view, that Eschyl (Prometheus v. 301-402) calls the western part of the Black Sea “Mama ferului” (TN – Mother of the iron).

Between the mountain Pharang- and the Black Sea, Eschyl also mentions a significant river which flows from the mountains, and famous for the violence of its course (Ibid, v. 717).

Of all the rivers of the Carpathians which flow into the Lower Danube, the most dangerous in Romanian traditions is the Olt. It is the “savage” river, the “accursed” river, with violent whirlpools. When it rains in the mountains, it comes swollen, muddy, angry and bloodied, it brings uprooted trees, bodies of outlaws and halters of dark bays (Alecsandri, Folk poetry, p.159 and Doinele, XLIX. LIV; Teodorescu, Folk poetry, p. 320, 323; Mandrescu, Literatura, p.119).

Each day, say folk legends, at least one man must drown in the Olt and, when a day goes without the river receiving its sacrifice, it starts howling and men should avoid entering it, because it asks for a man’s head (Sezatoarea, An. III. p.101).

Until the times of the reign of prince Bibescu, Margot writes (O viatorie, Buc, 1859, p.56), it was still believed that it was impossible to build a bridge over this river, even at Slatina.

 

In Eschyl’s geography the mountain called Caucasus appears also near this violent river (Prometheus, v. 719), but not the Asian Caucasus, but the Caucasus from the western side of the Black Sea. It is the same mountain about which also talks the Roman inscription from Brambach: Ad Alutum flumen secus montem Caucasi (see above).

After Caucasus, the most important point from the western side of the Black Sea was, in Eschyl’s geography, the mountain whose peaks reach to the stars (Ibid, 721). It is the ancient Atlas of the Hyperboreans, about which Virgil says that it bears on its shoulders the axis, especially made to support the flaming stars (Aen, IV. v. 4820.

“And after passing over the peaks of the mountain that reaches to the stars”, says Prometheus to the nymph Io, “…you will arrive to the land of the many Amazons”.

These Amazons belonged to the barbarian lands. Homer mentions them only as an ancient tradition. Their country of origin was Scythia, especially Scythia from near the Lower Danube.

According to the traditions collected by the Roman historian Trog Pompeius, the Amazons boasted that they were” the daughters of the god Mars” and that they “were from the nation of the Scythians” (Justinis, lib. II. c. 4). Virgil (Aen. XI. v. 659-660) gives the Amazons also the geographical epithet of Threiciae, and according to Hecateus (Fragm. 352) they spoke the Thracian language, meaning Getic (Valerius Flaccus, Argon. IV. 602).

Apart from Mars, the Geto -Thracian divinity, the Amazons especially worshipped the goddess Diana, whose principal residence according to Pindar (Olymp. III. v. 27), was in Istria, near the mouths of the Danube.

On old monuments of Greek art, bas-reliefs, statues and vase paintings, they are armed with shields, bows and the war hatchet. They wear a helmet on their head, or a Dacian type cap (Jahn, Berichte d. sachs. Gesellschaft d. Wissenschaften. Phil.-Hist. Cl. I. 1850).

Finally, their physiognomy presents a national Pelasgian character.

Prometheus’ Pharang- appears therefore as a mountain from the western parts of the river Olt. By name, position and description, it entirely corresponds to the mountain Parang of today [2].

 

[2. Parang mountain is especially characterized by vast precipices, collapsed cliffs and waves formed of gigantic boulders. Under the peak called Carja (2520m), two spikes rise from these ruins of rocks, like some inform columns, each ten 10m high.

Eschyl also mentions (v. 142) some craggy rocks, schopeloi, on Pharanx mountain].

 

 

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