Gorytos

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Scythian golden gorytos, Melitopol kurgan, 340-320 BCE
Gorytos from tomb of Philip II of Macedon, Vergina, Greece.

A gorytos (

Latin: gorytus) is a type of leather bow-case for a short composite bow used by the Scythians in classical antiquity.[1] They are a combination of bow case and quiver in one, and are worn on the archer's left hip with the opening tilted rearward. Many gorytoi were highly decorated, and at least one surviving specimen was determined via SEM examination to be made of human skin.[1]

Some have been found in Macedonian tombs, such as the so-called "Tomb of Philip" in

Indo-Greeks adopted the composite bow and the gorytos as part of their mounted archery
equipment from around 100 BCE, as can be seen on their coins.

External links

References

  1. ^ .
  2. ^ "'Gorytos' from the Tomb of Philip". Macedonian Heritage. Retrieved 2019-08-15.