Gargareans

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Gargareans (Gargari) in the North Caucasus on a fragment of Henry Teesdale's map of the Ancient Roman Empire.

In Greek mythology, the Gargareans, or Gargarenses, (Greek: Γαργαρείς Gargareis) were an all-male tribe. They copulated with the Amazons annually in order to keep both tribes reproductive. The Amazons kept the female children, raising them as warriors, and gave the males to the Gargareans.[1]

The ancient Greek geographer

Galgaï.[2][3][4] According to professor E. Krupnov, the accuracy of the localization of Strabo's Gargareans in "Galga-chuv" (Ingushetia) is confirmed by archaeological, anthropological and ethnographic data.[5] Gaius Plinius Secundus likewise localizes the Gargareans north of the Caucasus Mountains, but calls them Gegar.[6]

References

  1. ^ Strabo, Geography, Bk. 11, Ch. 5, Sec. 1
  2. (in German). Halle und Berlin. pp. 650–651.
  3. ^ А.И. Робакидзе (1968). Кавказский этнографический сборник. Очерки этнографии Горной Ингушетии (in Russian). Тбилиси: Мецниереба. pp. 15, 27, 204.
  4. .
  5. ^ Е.И. Крупнов (1971). Средневековая Ингушетия [Medieval Ingushetia] (in Russian). Москва: Наука. p. 26.
  6. ^ Латышев В.В. Известия древних писателей греческих и латинских о Скифии и Кавказе, т. 1, Греческие писатели, СПб, 1890; т.2, Латинские писатели, вып.1, СПб, 1904, вып.2, СПб, 1906; Крупнов Е. И. Ук.соч., page.25.