PART
3 – Ch.XVI.4
(‘ERAKLEOS STELAI - The
Columns of Hercules)
XVI. 4. Erythia, or Rusava island, near the
Columns of Hercules.
Close
to the Columns of Hercules was situated, as the ancient geographers tell, the island,
which the Greeks named Erythia (Rosia, Rusava - TN: the Red, Ruddy), in which the giant king,
called in Greek legends Geryon, kept
at pasture his magnificent cattle herds, cows and oxen with wide foreheads and
flexible legs (Livy, lib.
Among
the twelve labours which the king Eurystheus of Mycenae had imposed on
Hercules, the tenth was to bring him the famous herds of Geryon from the Erythia island.
Hercules, Apollodorus tells us (Bibl. Lib. II. 5. 10), after arriving near Oceanos, where Erythia island was, erects in the mountains two columns, one facing
the other, as monumental markers of his travel, then kills the herdsman Eurythion and his dog called Orthros, takes Geryon’s herds and departs. Geryon though, hearing of this theft,
runs after Hercules and catches up with him at the river called Anthemunta. The fight starts. Hercules
shoots Geryon down with an arrow, takes the herds into Abderia and from here into the land of the Lygiens. Here he is confronted by the heroes Alebion and Dercunos
(Dercynos), who want to take his herds. But Hercules kills them also, and
continues on his way across Tyrrhenia.
This
island called Erythia, in which king Geryon kept his magnificent herds, was not
in the External Ocean, as Greek geographers of later times of antiquity
erroneously assumed, but was situated close to the Euxine Pontos, in the western parts of the river called Oceanos potamos or Istru. “The Greeks who dwell near the Euxine Pontos” writes Herodotus “tell that Hercules, driving
the cattle herds which he had taken from Geryon, came to this country, which at
that time was deserted, but now is owned by the Scythians. And they tell that Geryon dwelt outside of the Euxine Pontos,
in the island which the Greeks call Erythia (Rosia, Rusava), situated near Gadira (Gedeira), outside of the Columns of Hercules, in the Ocean” (lib. IV. C. 8).
As
results from this tale, the Greeks from near the Black Sea had some historical
traditions about the theft of Geryon’s herds, they had positive geographical
knowledge about the place where the Columns of Hercules were situated, and
about the island named Erythia, located outside of the Euxine Pontos, near the
same Columns.
The
name “Erythia” under which Geryon’s
island appears in the ancient geographical literature, presents only a simple
Greek translation of an indigenous name. This statement is made by Herodotus himself in the words “the
Greeks call it Erythia”.
Another
author of antiquity, the famous Hecateus
of Miletus, who had lived during the times of Darius Hystaspes and had
navigated along the shores of Spain and Italy, declares also, based on his
information, that the island called Erythia was not to be found at the Iberian
straits.
“That
Geryon”, writes he, “against whom king Eurystheus had sent Hercules to take his
herds and bring them to Mycenae, has nothing to do with the Iberian region, nor
was Hercules sent to some island Erythia, out into the big sea (Mediterranean),
but to Geryon on the continent, who was king over the region beside Ambracia
and Amphiloch” (Fragm. 349 in Fragm. Hist. grace. Ed. Didot,
Finally,
the Orphic poem about the Argonauts tells us that the island Erythia was at the straits of the
So,
Erythia island, which was only a
simple geographical fiction at the western straits of the Mediterranean, but
about which the Greek merchants settled near the Euxine Pontos had positive
information, and which was situated at the straits of the Caucasus mountains,
in the big river from north of Thrace (Oceanos potamos), could be no other than
the island located upstream of the cataracts of Istru, near the city called in
folk Romanian language Rusava, and
officially Orsova.
In
Geryon’s genealogy we find a very precious indication about the name under
which Erythia island was known by the indigenes living by the Istru,
In
Greek legends Geryon’s father is named Chrysaor, the one with the gold
sword (Hesiod, Theog. V. 281-283).
Leaving out the sharp aspiration Ch, this word appears as Rusaor. So, we have here a topographical surname taken from the
town called even today Rusava.
Even
from the most remote times of Pelasgian history, the lower parts of the Istru
were renowned for the extremely beautiful flocks, herds and horses belonging to
its inhabitants. Thousands of flocks thousands of herds, the old legends told,
were wandering through the extensive pastures belonging to the titan Atlas,
king in the country of the Hyperboreans (Ovid,
Metam. Lib. IV. v. 633-634).
Theopompus also writes that in the
region of the Peoni, an extensive population spread through
Finally,
the Dacians who lived on the banks of the
In
the old times (or the Pelasgian epoch), writes Pausanias, the main ambition of the people, regarding wealth, was
to have magnificent herds of cattle and horses, and the fame of Geryon’s noble
race of oxen had spread far and wide (lib. IV. 36. 3).
The
legend about Hercule’s expedition against Geryon had a historical foundation.
In
heroic Romanian songs echoes even today the recollection about the Greeks who
had crossed to the northern bank of the

The straits of the
With the islands Rusava (Erythia) and Ogradena (Gadeira). Scale 1:
200 000.
In
Greco-Roman antiquity Geryon’s legend had a much wider scope than it is
presented in the episode of Hercules’ labour.
Geryon
is one of the big heroes of the Pelasgian epic from the
He
appears in Romanian epic songs under the names Gruia, Gruian and Iorguta
(Teodorescu, Poezii pop. 615) and Geryones
with Apollodorus (II. 5. 10. 1), Geryoneus
with Hesiod (Theog. V. 287, 982), Geryon, Geryoneus, Geryones with
Varro (L. L. IX. 90). He is also
called Pana Rusiana, Roman Grue
Grozovanul (Alecsandri, Poezii
pop. p.77), and Roscovan (Sezatoarea,
Falticeni, An. II. p.34), topographical epithets after the name of the island
and the town Rusava.
Gruia
is “son of a Domn”, a gallant (Francu,
Romanii din Muntii apuseni, p.207) from Ardel (TN -
He
comes to the
The
Greek authors have exaggerated though in a fantastic way his physical qualities
and have presented him as a monster, with three heads (Hesiod, Theog. v. 287), three chests (Lucretius, R. N. V. v. 28), or three bodies (Apollodorus, Bibl. II. 5. 10. 1; Pausanias, lib. V. 19. 1). Regarding the fable about the three
bodied Geryon, Trog Pompeius writes
(Justini lib. XLIV. 4) that they were three brothers, and the Romanian
tradition also tells us that Gruia had two other brothers (Negoescu, Balade, p. 208).
This
is how, from a beautiful heroic poem of the Pelasgian times, they have created
a confusion of the most bizarre fantasies, as they had also presented, in the
same unnatural way, the Giants, the Cyclops, the Centimanes, Typhon and other
northern heroes.
According
to Romanian traditions the hero Gruia had also a sister, with the name of Rusanda (Bibicescu, Poezii pop. din Transilvania, p.290. 310; Marinescu, Balade, I. p. 208). The
origin of this name is incontestably the island Erythia or Rusava.
Rusanda
herself is an old epic character. She was known to the Greek legends under the
correspondent name of Erythia (Pausanias, lib. X. 17. 5; Stephanos Byzantinus, see ‘Erytheia).
The only difference is that in Greek traditions Erythia (or Rusanda) was the
daughter, not the sister of Geryon. (From the Erythia / Rusava island derives
too the name of Eurythion. In an
altered form appears also the name of the dog Orthros, which guarded the herds of Geryon, having received a Greek
meaning, orthros, the dawn).
The
Greek legends about Hercule’s fight with Geryon also mentioned two
distinguished heroes of the antiquity, one called Alebion and the other Dercunos,
both from the Lygiens’ lands [1],
both the sons of
[1. The Ligyens
(Ligyes)
from Geryon’s legend should not be mistaken for the Ligurians, also named by Greek authors Ligyes, whom we find
settled later on the southern shore of Gaul and in the neighbouring lands of
Italy. From an ethnographical point of view, these groups formed without doubt
one and the same people. Aristotle
spoke in one of his works about the Ligyrei
from
According to traditions held by the Greeks from the
Euxine Pontos (Herodotus, IV. 8),
Hercules, returning to
Some
reminiscences about the hero Dercunos have been preserved to this day in
Romanian traditions. In the old folk songs he appears under the name of Dragan, or Dragan from Baragan, the nephew or grandson (TN - nepot) of old (TN - mos) Stan [2].
[2. This “mos Stan” is
one of the oldest heroes of Romanian folk songs. He appears identical with Stanislav, the one “big in stature and
terrible in countenance, whom the
The epic type of “mos Stan”
presents in everything the special characteristics of Poseidon (
In the Romanian folk reminiscences he is just a simple “old-man hero”, a personality with a purely historic character, while in the legends of Hellada he is a mythological figure (borrowed therefore from other more remote lands), a divinity who dominates the Pontos (Pontomedon) and the great commercial waterways, which explains the respect and honours which he enjoyed in Greek lands.
In Italy Poseidon was honoured under the name of Neptunus. The Roman authors can’t tell us though, which was the origin of this name, although its form is old Latin.
Varro (L. L. V. 72) tries to derive this name from nuptus (wrapping), since nuptiae
(wedding), a wrong etymology, because the Roman literati had generally
neglected to study the folkloric traditions. But regarding the origin of the
name Neptunus, and the old history
of this divinity of the waters, so much worshipped in
And
we even have a song fragment in which Iorgovan
(Hercules), Dragan (Dercunos) and Iorguta Roscovan (Geryon), these
illustrious representatives of the old wars, whose names had once echoed far
and wide in the Pelasgian world, are mentioned all together.
Historic
traditions about Dercunos or Dragan existed also with the Pelasgians from the
western parts of
With
Virgil, Dercennus is one of the old kings of
The
Greek authors had altered though the name of the hero Dragan (Dercunos). But we
find a more correct form with the poet Avienus
(Ora maritma, v. 196-198). He mentions the Ligiens and the descendants of the Dragani (Draganes pl.),
whose dwellings were in the region abundant in snow, or the lands of

The island Rusava (old Erythia), in the bed of the
(Urechia, Ist. Rom. Tom. III - from an 18th century engraving).
We’ve
presented here the legends and geographical traditions of the ancients,
regarding the island Erythia, from near the Columns of Hercules.
And
we have yet another precious archaeological document about the identity of this
island, Erythia, identical with the island Rusava from the straits of the
On
a bas-relief discovered in
This
monument presents an exceptional importance for the identification of Erythia
island with the island called today Rusava.


Actual view of Rusava island, ancient Erythia.
In the background is the same group of mountains represented on the
bas-relief from
(TN – The island called Rusava, or Ada-Kaleh, after it was
settled by Turks, has disappeared under the Danube’s waters in 1972, as a
result of the building of the great Iron Gates hydroelectric dam).
The
artist of Cyprus shows in this sculpture not only the longish shape of the
island, as described by the ancients (Pliny,
H. N. IV. s. 35), but he depicts at the same time the terrain on the opposite
side of the island, across the water.
In
the background is represented with contours the whole group of mountains which
complete the natural aspect of the island Erythia. There is an astonishing
similarity with the real perspective presented even today by the hills and
mountains in the vicinity of this island.
So,
the geographical problem of the famous Erythia island, a problem so difficult
for the ancients, is today completely elucidated.
The
island Erythia, situated in the old Oceanos potamos from the north of Thrace,
appears, from traditions, from the most believable geographical descriptions,
as well as from the chorographic image presented by the bas-relief from Cypros,
as being one and the same with the island Rusava inside the famous straits of the Danube,
upstream from the Iron Gates.