CHAP. 27.—THE ISLANDS OF THE EUXINE. THE ISLANDS OF THE NORTHERN
OCEAN.
But now, in conformity with the plan which I originally
proposed, the remaining portions of this gulf must be described. As
for its seas, we have already made mention of them.
(13.) The Hellespont has no islands belonging to Europe
that are worthy of mention. In the Euxine there are, at a
distance of a mile and a half from the European shore, and
of fourteen from the mouth of the Strait, the two Cyanæan[1]
islands, by some called the Symplegades[2], and stated in
fabulous story to have run the one against the other; the reason
being the circumstance that they are separated by so short
an interval, that while to those who enter the Euxine opposite
to them they appear to be two distinct islands, but if viewed
in a somewhat oblique direction they have the appearance of
becoming gradually united into one. On this side of the
Ister there is the single island[3] of the Apolloniates, eighty
miles from the Thracian Bosporus; it was from this place
that M. Lucullus brought the Capitoline[4] Apollo. Those
islands which are to be found between the mouths of the
Ister we have already mentioned[5]. Before the Borysthenes
is Achillea[6] previously referred to, known also by the names
of Leuce and Macaron[7]. Researches which have been made
at the present day place this island at a distance of 140 miles
from the Borysthenes, of 120 from Tyra, and of fifty from
the island of Peuce. It is about ten miles in circumference.
The remaining islands in the Gulf of Carcinites are Cephalonnesos, Rhosphodusa, and Macra. Before we leave the
Euxine, we must not omit to notice the opinion expressed
by many writers that all the interior[8] seas take their rise in
this one as the principal source, and not at the Straits of
Gades. The reason they give for this supposition is not an
improbable one—the fact that the tide is always running
out of the Euxine and that there is never any ebb.
We must now leave the Euxine to describe the outer
portions[9] of Europe. After passing the Riphæan mountains we
have now to follow the shores of the Northern Ocean on the
left, until we arrive at Gades. In this direction a great
number of islands[10] are said to exist that have no name; among
which there is one which lies opposite to Scythia, mentioned
under the name of Raunonia[11], and said to be at a distance
of the day's sail from the mainland; and upon which, according to
Timæus, amber is thrown up by the waves in the spring
season. As to the remaining parts of these shores, they are
only known from reports of doubtful authority. With reference to the
Septentrional[12] or Northern Ocean; Hecatæus
calls it, after we have passed the mouth of the river Parapanisus,
where it washes the Scythian shores, the Amalchian
sea, the word 'Amalchian' signifying in the language of these
races, frozen. Philemon again says that it is called Morimarusa or
the "Dead Sea" by the Cimbri, as far as the Promontory of Rubeas,
beyond which it has the name of the Cronian[13]
Sea. Xenophon of Lampsacus tells us that at a distance
of three days' sail from the shores of Scythia, there is an
island of immense size called Baltia[14], which by Pytheas is
called Basilia[15]. Some islands[16] called Oönæ are said to be
here, the inhabitants of which live on the eggs of birds
and oats; and others again upon which human beings
are produced with the feet of horses, thence called Hippopodes. Some
other islands are also mentioned as those of
the Panotii, the people of which have ears of such extraordinary size
as to cover the rest of the body, which is
otherwise left naked.
Leaving these however, we come to the nation of the
Ingævones[17], the first in Germany; at which we begin to have
some information upon which more implicit reliance can be
placed. In their country is an immense mountain called
Sevo[18], not less than those of the Riphæan range, and which
forms an immense gulf along the shore as far as the Promontory of the Cimbri. This gulf, which has the name of the
'Codanian,' is filled with islands; the most famous among
which is Scandinavia[19], of a magnitude as yet unascertained:
the only portion of it at all known is inhabited by the nation
of the Hilleviones, who dwell in 500 villages, and call it a
second world: it is generally supposed that the island of
Eningia[20] is of not less magnitude. Some writers state that
these regions, as far as the river Vistula, are inhabited by the
Sarmati, the Venedi[21], the Sciri, and the Hirri[22], and that there
is a gulf there known by the name of Cylipenus[23], at the mouth
of which is the island of Latris, after which comes another
gulf, that of Lagnus, which borders on the Cimbri. The
Cimbrian Promontory, running out into the sea for a great
distance, forms a peninsula which bears the name of Cartris[24].
Passing this coast, there are three and twenty islands which
have been made known by the Roman arms[25]: the most
famous of which is Burcana[26], called by our people Fabaria,
from the resemblance borne[27] by a fruit which grows there
spontaneously. There are those also called Glæsaria[28] by our
soldiers, from their amber; but by the barbarians they are
known as Austeravia and Actania.
1. These islands, or rather rocks, are now known as Fanari, and lie at
the entrance of the Straits of Constantinople.
2. From su\n and plhgh\, "a striking together." Tournefort has explained the ancient story of these islands running together, by remarking
that each of them consists of one craggy island, but that when the sea is
disturbed the water covers the lower parts, so as to make the different
points of each resemble isolated rocks. They are united to the mainland
by a kind of isthmus, and appear as islands only when it is inundated in
stormy weather.
3. Upon which the city of Apollonia (now Sizeboli), mentioned in
C. 18 of the present Book, was situate.
4. So called because it was dedicated by Lucullus in the Capitol. It
was thirty cubits in height.
5. In C. 24 of the present Book.
6. Mentioned in the last Chapter as the "Island of Achilles."
7. From the Greek makarw=n," (The island) of the Blest." It was also
called the "Island of the Heroes."
8. Meaning all the inland or Mediterranean seas.
9. As the whole of Pliny's description of the northern shores of Europe
is replete with difficulties and obscurities, we cannot do better than transcribe the learned remarks of M. Parisot, the Geographical Editor of Ajasson's Edition, in reference to this subject. He says, "Before entering on
the discussion of this portion of Pliny's geography, let us here observe, once
for all, that we shall not remark as worthy of our notice all those ridiculous
hypotheses which could only take their rise in ignorance, precipitation, or
a love of the marvellous. We shall decline then to recognize the Doffrefelds in the mountains of Sevo, the North Cape in the Promontory of
Rubeas, and the Sea of Greenland in the Cronian Sea. The absurdity
of these suppositions is proved by—I. The impossibility of the ancients
ever making their way to these distant coasts without the aid of large
vessels, the compass, and others of those appliances, aided by which European skill finds the greatest difficulty in navigating those distant seas.
II. The immense lacune which would be found to exist in the
descriptions of these distant seas and shores: for not a word do we
find about
those numerous archipelagos which are found scattered throughout the
North Sea, not a word about Iceland, nor about the numberless seas and
fiords on the coast of Norway. III. The absence of all remarks upon
the local phænomena of these spots. The North Cape belongs to the
second polar climate, the longest day there being two months and a half.
Is it likely that navigators would have omitted to mention this remarkable
phænomenon, well known to the Romans by virtue of their astronomical
theories, but one with which practically they had never made themselves
acquainted?—The only geographers who here merit our notice are those
who are of opinion that in some of the coasts or islands here mentioned
Pliny describes the Scandinavian Peninsula, and in others the Coast of
Finland. The first question then is, to what point Pliny first carries us?
It is evident that from the Black Sea he transports himself on a
sudden to the shores of the Baltic, thus passing over at a single
leap a considerable space filled with nations and unknown deserts.
The question
then is, what line has he followed? Supposing our author had had before
his eyes a modern map, the imaginary line which he would have drawn
in making this transition would have been from Odessa to the Kurisch-
Haff. In this direction the breadth across Europe is contracted to a
space, between the two seas, not more than 268 leagues in length. A
very simple mode of reasoning will conclusively prove that Pliny has
deviated little if anything from this route. If he fails to state in precise
terms upon what point of the shores of the Baltic he alights after leaving
the Riphæan mountains, his enumeration of the rivers which discharge
themselves into that sea, and with which he concludes his account of
Germany, will supply us with the requisite information, at all events in
great part. In following his description of the coast, we find mention
made of the following rivers, the Guttalus, the Vistula, the Elbe, the Weser,
the Ems, the Rhine, and the Meuse. The five last mentioned follow in
their natural order, from east to west, as was to be expected in a description starting from the east of Europe for its western extremity and the
shores of Cadiz. We have a right to conclude then that the Guttalus
was to the east of the Vistula. As we shall now endeavour to show,
this river was no other than the Alle, a tributary of the Pregel, which
the Romans probably, in advancing from west to east, considered as the
principal stream, from the circumstance that they met with it, before
coming to the larger river. The Pregel after being increased by the waters
of the Alle or Guttalus falls into the Frisch-Haff, about one degree
further west than the Kurisch-Haff. It may however be here remarked,
Why not find a river more to the east, the Niemen, for instance, or the
Duna, to be represented by the Guttalus? The Niemen in especial would
suit in every respect equally well, because it discharges itself into the
Kurisch-Haff. This conjecture however is incapable of support, when
we reflect that the ancients were undoubtedly acquainted with some
points of the coast to the east of the mouth of the Guttalus, but which,
according to the system followed by our author, would form part of the
Continent of Asia. These points are, 1st. The Cape Lytarinis
(mentioned by Pliny, B. vi. c. 4). 2ndly. The mouth of the river
Carambucis
(similarly mentioned by him), and 3rdly, a little to the east of Cape
Lytarmis, the mouth of the Tanais. The name of Cape Lytarmis suggests
to us Lithuania, and probably represents Domess-Ness in Courland; the
Carambucis can be no other than the Niemen; while the Tanais, upon
which so many authors, ancient and modern, have exhausted their
conjectures, from confounding it with the Southern Tanais which falls
into
the Sea of Azof, is evidently the same as the Dwina or Western Duna.
This is established incontrovertibly both by its geographical position (the
mouth of the Dwina being only fifty leagues to the east of Domess-Ness)
and the identity evidently of the names Dwina and Tanais. Long since,
Leibnitz was the first to remark the presence of the radical
T. n, or D. n,
either with or without a vowel, in the names of the great rivers of Eastern
Europe; Danapris or Dnieper, Danaster or Dniester, Danube (in German Donau, in Hungarian Duna), Tanais or Don, for example; all
which rivers however discharge themselves into the Black Sea. There
can be little doubt then of the identity of the Duna with the Tanais, it
being the only body of water in these vast countries which bears a name
resembling the initial Tan, or Tn, and at the same time
belongs to the
basin of the Baltic. We are aware, it is true, that the White Sea
receives a river Dwina, which is commonly called the Northern Dwina,
but there can be no real necessity to be at the trouble of combating the
opinion that this river is identical with the Northern Tanais. As the
result then of our investigations, it is at the eastern extremity of the
Frisch-Haff and near the mouth of the Pregel, that we would place the
point at which Pliny sets out. As for the Riphæan mountains, they have
never existed anywhere but in the head of the geographers from whom
our author drew his materials. From the mountains of Ural and Poias,
which Pliny could not possibly have in view, seeing that they lie in a
meridian as eastern as the Caspian Sea, the traveller has to proceed 600
leagues to the south-west without meeting with any chains of mountains
or indeed considerable elevations."
10. It is pretty clear that he refers to the numerous islands scattered over
the face of the Baltic Sea, such as Dago, Oesel, Gothland, and Aland.
11. The old reading here was Bannomanna, which Dupinet would
translate by the modern Bornholm. Parisot considers that the modern
Runa,
a calcareous rock covered with vegetable earth, in the vicinity of Domess-
Ness, is the place indicated.
12. It has been suggested by Brotier that Pliny here refers to the Icy
Sea, but it is more probable that he refers to the north-eastern part of
the Baltic, which was looked upon by the ancients as forming part of
the open sea.
13. With reference to these divisions of land and sea, a subject which is
involved in the greatest obscurity, Parisot states it as his opinion that
the Amalchian or Icy Sea is that portion of the Baltic which extends
from Cape Rutt to Cape Grinea, while on the other hand the Cronian
Sea comprehends all the gulfs which lie to the east of Cape Rutt, such
as the Haff, the gulfs of Stettin and Danzic, the Frisch-Haff, and the Kurisch-Haff. He also thinks that the name of 'Cronian' originally belonged
only to that portion of the Baltic which washes the coast of Courland,
but that travellers gradually applied the term to the whole of the sea.
He is also of opinion that the word "Cronium" owes its origin to the
Teutonic and Danish adjective groen or "green." The extreme verdure
which characterizes the islands of the Danish archipelago has given to
the piece of water which separates the islands of Falster and Moen the
name of Groensund, and it is far from improbable that the same epithet
was given to the Pomeranian and Prussian Seas, which the Romans would
be not unlikely to call 'Gronium' or 'Cronium fretum,' or 'Cronium
mare.' In the name 'Parapanisus' he also discovers a resemblance to that
of modern Pomerania.
14. Upon this Parisot remarks that on leaving Cape Rutt, at a distance
of about twenty-five leagues in a straight line, we come to the island of
Funen or Fyen, commonly called Fionia, the most considerable of the
Danish archipelago next to Zealand, and which lying between the two
Belts, the Greater and the Smaller, may very probably from that circumstance have obtained the name of Baltia. Brotier takes Baltia to
be no other than Nova Zembla—so conflicting are the opinions of
commentators!
15. Parisot suggests that under this name may possibly lie concealed
that of the modern island of Zealand or Seeland, and that it may have
borne on the side of it next to the Belt the name of Baltseeland, easily
corrupted by the Greeks into Basilia.
16. Brotier takes these to be the islands of Aloo, and Bieloi or Ostrow,
at the mouth of the river Paropanisus, which he considers to be the same
as the Obi. Parisot on the other hand is of opinion that islands of the
Baltic are here referred to; that from the resemblance of the name Oönæ
to the Greek w)o\n, "an egg," the story that the natives
subsisted on the
eggs of birds was formed; that not improbably the group of the Hippopodes resembled the shape of a horse-shoe, from which the story men-
tioned by Pliny took its rise; and that the Fanesii (or, as the reading here
has it, the Panotii, "all-ears") wore their hair very short, from which
circumstance their ears appeared to be of a larger size than usual.
17. Tacitus speaks of three great groups of the German tribes, the Ingævones forming the first thereof, and consisting of those which dwelt on
the margin of the ocean, the Hermiones in the interior, and the Istævones
in the east and south of Germany. We shall presently find that Pliny
adds two groups, the Vandili as the fourth, and the Peucini and Basternæ
as the fifth. This classification however is thought to originate in a mistake, for Zeuss has satisfactorily shown that the Vandili belonged to the
Hermiones, and that Peucini and Basternæ are only names of individual
tribes and not of groups of tribes.
18. Brotier and other geographers are of opinion that by this name the
chain of the Doffrefeld mountains is meant; but this cannot be the case
if we suppose with Parisot that Pliny here returns south from the
Scandinavian islands and takes his departure from Cape Rutt in the
territory
of the Ingævones. Still, it is quite impossible to say what mountains he
would designate under the name of Sevo. Parisot suggests that it is a form
of the compound word "seevohner," "inhabitants of the sea," and that it
is a general name for the elevated lands along the margin of the
sea-shore.
19. Parisot supposes that under this name the isle of Funen is meant,
but it is more generally thought that Norway and Sweden are thus designated, as that peninsula was generally looked upon as an island by the
ancients. The Codanian Gulf was the sea to the east of the Cimbrian
Chersonesus or Jutland, filled with the islands which belong to the modern
kingdom of Denmark. It was therefore the southern part of the Baltic.
20. By Eningia Hardouin thinks that the country of modern Finland is
meant. Poinsinet thinks that under the name are included Ingria,
Livonia, and Courland; while Parisot seems inclined to be of opinion
that
under this name the island of Zealand is meant, a village of which, about
three-fourths of a league from the western coast, according to him, still
bears the name of Heinïnge.
21. Parisot is of opinion that the Venedi, also called Vinidæ and
Vindili, were of Sclavish origin, and situate on the shores of the
Baltic. He
remarks that this people, in the fifth century, founded in Pomerania, when
quitted by the Goths, a kingdom, the chiefs of which styled themselves
the Konjucs of Vinland. Their name is also to be found in Venden, a
Russian town in the government of Riga, in Windenburg in Courland, and
in Wenden in the circle of the Grand Duchy of Mecklenburg Schwerin.
22. Parisot remarks that these two peoples were probably only tribes
of the Venedi.
23. Parisot feels convinced that Pliny is speaking here of the Gulf of
Travemunde, the island of Femeren, and then of the gulf which extends
from that island to Kiel, where the Eider separates Holstein from
Jutland. On the other hand, Hardouin thinks that by the Gulf of
Cylipenus the Gulf of Riga is meant, and that Latris is the modern
island of
Oësel. But, as Parisot justly remarks, to put this construction on
Pliny's
language is to invert the order in which he has hitherto proceeded,
evidently from east to west.
24. The modern Cape of Skagen on the north of Jutland.
25. When Drusus held the command in Germany, as we learn from
Strabo, B. vii.
26. It is generally agreed that this is the modern island of Borkhum, at
the mouth of the river Amaiius or Ems.
27. To a bean, from which (faba) the island had its name of Fabaria.
In confirmation of this Hardouin states, that in his time there was a
tower still standing there which was called by the natives Het
boon huys, "the bean house."
28. From the word gles or glas, which primarily means
'glass,' and then
figuratively "amber." Probably Œland and Gothland. They will be
found again mentioned in the Thirtieth Chapter of the present Book.
See p. 351.