PART
3 – Ch.XVI.3
(‘ERAKLEOS STELAI - The
Columns of Hercules)
In pre-historical antiquity, the Columns of Hercules had been
a geographical reality. This was the general opinion of the ancient geographers
and historians.
The positive fact that results from all these traditions is
that the so-called Columns of Hercules were neither near the Iberian Ocean,
which, until the 7th century bc had been unknown to the Phoenicians
and Greeks, nor near the Northern Sea or Baltic, which became known to the
ancient world only since Cesar’s times.
They were near the archaic Ocean at the north of Thrace, the
big river of the theogony, the place where take place the most remarkable deeds
of the Pelasgian hero Hercules, in the blessed country of the Hyperboreans,
rich in gold, rich in flocks, in miraculous herds and fabulous harvests,
country towards which was directed the commercial navigation of the southern
Pelasgians, Egyptians, Phoenicians and Greeks, since the most ancient times.
We will summarize here the main geographical sources
regarding the Columns of Hercules, near Oceanos
potamos or Istru.
According to Pindar,
one of the most illustrious poets of
In one of his most beautiful odes, Pindar tells us about
Hercules’ trip to the sources (or
the cataracts) of Istru, in the country of the Hyperboreans, from whom he had requested an
oleander (wild olive tree), to plant it near Jove’s temple at
In the same ode, Pindar
also mentions Hercules’ travel to the Istrian
country, to Diana, the wonderful rider, and the Columns of Hercules, as an extreme limit for brave deeds (Olymp.
III. V. 26, 45; Isthm. III. 30). Finally, Pindar tells us in other odes of his,
that Hercules had erected these columns as famous markers for the extreme
limits of navigation; and that the last reaches of travel on water and land
were in the region of the Hyperboreans (Nem. III. V. 19-25; Pyth.
X. v. 29-30).
So, according to the geographical notions expressed by
Pindar, the Columns of Hercules, these extreme limits of navigation and heroic
actions, were on Hyperborean territory (Cf.
Boeckhius, Pindari Opera, II. 2.
140), the territory of the just, holy (Pindar,
Pyth. X. v. 42), wise (Origenes, c.
Cels. I. 16) and long lived people of
the Istru, or the lower
We also find two important indications about the
geographical situation of the Columns of
Hercules with Herodotus. As this
author tells us, the Greeks near the Euxine Pontos had positive information
about the Columns of Hercules, which they said were outside the Euxine Pontos, near the big river named Oceanos (lib. IV. 8). And in another
place Herodotus tells us about the Columns of Hercules as being located in the
geographical region of the Istru.
“The Istru”, writes he, “begins its course in the lands of
the Celts and flows through the middle of
If the Columns of Hercules had been therefore situated on the
southern parts of Iberia, between Africa and Europe, then neither the Greeks
near the Euxine Pontos could have had in those times authentic knowledge about
them, nor Herodotus could have written that the Celts lived beyond the Columns
of Hercules, and finally, that beyond the Celts lived the Cynesii, the most
extreme people in the western parts of Europe.
So, according with the geographical sources of Herodotus,
the Columns of Hercules were not near the Iberian Sea, but in a continental
region of Europe, near the Istru, on the eastern side of the Celts, or between
the Celts and the Scythians, because, as Diodorus
Siculus writes, the Celts were spread in more or less considerable large
groups as far as Scythia (lib. III. 32. 1).
Another remarkable author from the 4th century
a.d., the Roman poet Avienus, born
at Volsinium in Etruria, ex proconsul of Africa and Achaia, summarizes this way
the geographical and astronomical ideas of the ancients regarding the Columns
of Hercules:
“In the extreme parts of the (known) earth rise up to the
sky the Columns of Hercules, of a
longish shape. Here is the place called Gadir,
here the superb craggy Atlas rises, here the sky turns around a strong axle,
here the hub of the earth and the universe is surrounded by clouds”
(Descriptio orbis terrae, v. 98-104).
Cardines Mundi on the Atlas mountain, called also axis boreus, axis hyperboreus, polus Geticus, were, as we saw in the previous chapter, in the western
parts of the Black Sea, on the territory of Roman Dacia. The Columns of
Hercules belonged therefore, according to the ancient astronomical and
geographical theories, to the boreal
region.
This was also the tradition of the Romans, but a tradition
difficult to understand in the times of Drus
Germanicus. He had tried to find the Columns of Hercules near the
Finally, the Pelasgian tribes of
So we have a positive fact, confirmed by legends, traditions
and geographical descriptions, that the famous Columns of Hercules were
situated north of