PART 1 - Ch.V.5
(The temple of the Hyperboreans in Leuce
island)
V. 5.
The Celts near the island of the Hyperboreans.
In the Apollinic genesis we are
faced with two more important questions of the prehistoric geography.
The blessed
According to all the historical and
geographical data, the Celts had immigrated to
Diverse historical and geographical
sources of antiquity mention those Celts from near the
The Agathyrses, renowned for their gold riches – a Tursene (Pelasgian) people – who in Herodotus’ times dwelt in today
Transylvania – are considered by some Greek authors as Celts (Stephanos Byzanthinos,
cf. Tacitus, Germania c. XXVIII.
XLIII; Diefenbach, Origines
Europaeae, p.139 seqq.).
Finally, the renowned grammarian and
poet Lycophron from Eubea, who lived
in the 3rd century bc, tells us that Leuce island is situated in
front of the mouths of the river named Keltos
(Cassandr. V. 189 / Kohler,
Memoire, p.544, 730), and under this name he understands the Istru, which came
from the lands of the Celts, as Herodotus also writes.
Diodorus Siculus also mentions the Celts, as living close to the Black Sea. He says “the
Celts who dwell in the northern region, and in the lands near the Ocean and the
Hercinic mountains, as well as all those who are scattered as far as Scythia,
are called Galls. And of these, the ones who dwell under the Northern Pole and
those neighboring the Scythians are the wildest... their power and savagery had
become so renowned in the world, that it is told that in ancient times they had
wandered across, and had laid waste the whole of Asia, under the then name of Cimerians (lib. V.c.32). Strabo (XI.7.2) writes also: The old
Greek authors called Scythians and Celtoscythians
all the northern populations (Cf. Ibid. VII. 1.1).
When Hecateus tells us therefore,
that the holly island of Apollo is in the northern region (or at north of the
Greek zone) and faces the lands of the Celts, he considers the same historical
sources as Asclepiades, who maintained that Boreas from the Rhipaei mountains
was a king of the Celts; as Diodorus Siculus, who presents the Cimmerians from
near the shores of the Nipru (TN – Dneper) river as Celts; and finally as
Stephanos Byzanthinos, who considers the Agathyrsos, or the Pelasgian Tursens
from near the river Mures, as Celts.
We will examine now the last
geographical matter from the Apollinic legends. Geography is one of the principal
lights of history.
From the blessed island of Apollo,
writes Hecateus Abderitas, were seen some heights from Selina, which was not too distant. This Selina, near the island of
Apollo, has complicated even more the geographical question of the location of
the pious and virtuous Hyperboreans, about whom Hecateus speaks. Namely, the
commentators of the fragments of Hecateus Abderitas, some for lack of precise
geographical knowledge, others seduced by the text somewhat altered, as
transmitted by Diodorus Siculus, believed that by this enigmatic Selene,
from near the island of Apollo the Hyperborean, must be understood the moon (TN – luna) in the sky,
interpreting therefore this passage not in the pure geographical spirit of the
author, but giving it a totally fabulous meaning.
But Selina from the land of the
Hyperboreans was a geographical reality. Leuce Island or Alba, which, after the
Trojan war was consecrated to Achilles’ tomb, is situated, as we know, facing
the two upper mouths of the Danube, one Chilia
and the other Sulina. This latter
arm of the Danube, which in the 10th century ad appears to have been
the most navigable, is called Selina
by Constantinos Porfynogenitos (De
admin. Imp. C.9), and under the same name of Selina it also appears in the “Catalan
periple” of 1375 (Notices et Extraits
de manuscrits de la Bibliotheque du roi et autres bibliotheques publies par
l’Institut royal de France, T.XIV. 2-me partie, Paris, 1843). Finally, under
the name of Selina, this part of the Danube Delta appears in all our heroic
songs (Teodorescu, Folk poetry,
p.562).
When Hecateus Abderitas writes then,
that from the blessed island of Apollo were seen some terrestrial heights from Selina, he did not consider the aspect of
the sky, or the distance, shorter or longer, of the moon to this corner of the
earth, but he considered exclusively only that continental part of the Danube
Delta, which, even in the Middle Ages was known to the Black Sea navigators
under the name of Selina [1].
[1. An analogous geographical situation about Selina presents itself in
We have
examined here the main parts of the positive geography found in the fragments
left from Hecateus Abderitas. This information will permit us to fix with
complete certainty the geographical position of the island, where the memorable
temple of Apollo the Hyperborean is to be found.