PART
2 – Ch.XIV.15
(KION OURANOU. The Sky Column on
in
the country of the Hyperboreans)
XIV.
15. The titan Atlas in Romanian heroic songs.
In ante-Homeric
antiquity existed a heroic legend in which the titan Atlas, this grandson of Oceanos potamos (Istru) and king in the
country of the Hyperboreans (Hesiod
says in Theog. v. 507 that Clymena,
the daughter of Oceanos was the mother of Atlas
and Prometheus), was presented
as a giant of the waters and
particularly of the seas.
From this Pelasgian
legend Homer has preserved only a
small fragment in which is told that the titan Atlas knew all the depths of the
seas (Odyss.
Luckily for the
study of ante-Homeric traditions, a big number of heroic songs have been
preserved to this day with the Romanian people, the essence of which harks back
to a very remote antiquity.
A part of these
traditional Romanian songs present in several versions the Homeric legend about
Atlas, as giant of the
In this cycle of
ancestral songs the famous titan Atlas has the name of Tanislav or Stanislav.
The hero is
originally from the parts of
The Turks from
Darstor,
She washes the
weapons and clothes of Tanislav of Turkish blood. These Turks then, going
downstream on the
But when they see
Tanislav’s hair fluttering in the wind, dread and cold shivers run through
them. They do not dare to get near Tanislav, but run away and crawl as frogs
through the orchards. Then before the Turks appears Tanislav’s servant, a son
of an immigrant Greek, who offers to sell them Tanislav tied up. Paid by the
Turks, he ties Tanislav, still sleeping, with 12 silk thick ropes. And after
Tanislav is bound, a smaller Turk, blind in one eye and lame of one leg,
advises his mates to tie on the neck of Tanislav the millstone from the country
of Moldova and then to throw him in the Danube, because “the Danube reared him
and wide in shoulders made him, the Danube should finish him and his life to
end”. The Turks bring the millstone from the country of
Tanislav still
sleeps when he reaches the bottom of the
But look, it
happens that “a ruddy maiden, with a yellowish bucket”, arriving with the
buckets at the
Then this good
hearted old man, taking in his hand the silver oar, runs to the Danube, chooses
a copper kayak and seeing Tanislav straining himself and lifting the stone
above him, goes to his aid straightaway, cuts the ropes, the stone sinks, the
water splits in two, the waves rise and for three hours bubble. Now Tanislav,
freed from the load, grabs the oar of the kayak, and when it dips it in the
waves of the
According to
another version, when Tanislav wakes up at the bottom of the water, feeling
that he is tied up, chained and with the stone around the head, he strains, at
the surface he emerges, bravely swims and on the bank emerges, still with the
stone around his head.
These are the main
parts of the Romanian legend about Tanislav the brave, the son of Matusa, the
most titanic figure presented by the Romanian heroic songs, the giant who
sleeps for three days at the bottom of the
This is an
exceptional rhapsody, superior in eloquence and images to any other epic
episode from Homer.
As we see, the
personality of the Romanian hero Tanislav or Stanislav is identical with the figure
of the titan Atlas, who, according to the Odyssey, knows all the depths of the
seas.
A very
characteristic image presented by the Romanian legend is when it tells us that
the Turks had tied around his head a millstone and that he had emerged on dry land
still with it around his head. We have here an important ante-historical
reminiscence about the simulacra of the titan Atlas, figured with a stone
globe, or the sphere of the universe behind his head.
The name Tanislav or Stanislav under which the famous titan Atlas appears in Romanian
epic songs belongs also to the ante-Homeric times. One of the Dardanian heroes
who fight at
In the historical
traditions of the Romans the hero Tanislav was known under the name of Tanus and it was said about him that he
had been a king of the Scythians from near the
[1. Isidorus Hispal., Originum lib. XIII. 20. 24. In this particular
passage of Isidorus there is a simple confusion between the ancient name of the
According to Eschyl (Frag. 73), Istru
is the river which flows from the lands of the Hyperboreans and from the Rhipaei mountains. Finally we note here
that the
The name of Tanais has been applied to Istru
even in the legend of the Argonauts.
As the scholiast of Apollonius Rhodius
tells us (IV. 282), the Argonauts had entered from the Euxine Pontus into the
river Tanais, and after transporting the ship on dry land they reached the
great sea].