PREHISTORIC DACIA

PART 3  –  Ch.XVIII

The obelisk of Polovragi

 

PART 3

PREVIOUS

 

Between Jiu and Olt, on the north-western part of Romania, at the foot of the Carpathians, stretches the fine plain of the villages Polovragi and Baia – de – fer (TN – the Iron Mine).

It is a region which in remote times had a particular history; a region where we find today numerous traces of a prehistoric civilization, beginning with the first endeavors of man to come out of a barbaric existence, from the archaic, manufactured pottery, to the fine instruments of polished stone, and finally to the extraction of iron from the earth and its processing.

 

But the hillock on the left bank of the river Oltet, which dominates the monastery and the village Polovragi, presents a particular archaeological importance.

On the eastern side of this hillock, on a meadow leveled by the hand of man, there is an extensive prehistoric necropolis, from where we gathered numerous fragments of Neolithic pottery, brought to the surface by treasure seekers, together with various remains of human bones.

On the western side of this ancient necropolis rises the apex of the hillock, a position fortified in part by nature, with steep rocky walls, and encircled by the hand of man with ancient earth walls on the other part.

On top of this high peak, from which a magnificent perspective opens over the plain of Polovragi, can still be seen, even today, the fragment of an archaic monument, unique in its type among the prehistoric monuments of Europe known to us so far.

It is a monolith column of granite, cut with four faces and ending at the top with a small pyramid; an obelisk in a shape somewhat phallic, which had been stuck in a base made of cut slabs, buried into the ground. All the faces of this important monument are beautifully polished, but there is no inscription [1].

 

[1. According to Pliny (lib. XXXVI. 14. 1) the Egyptian obelisks were consecrated to the Sun (Solis numini sacratos); they were an image of the rays of the sun and their name in ancient Egyptian language had the same meaning].

 

From the quality of the stone of which it is cut, from the art with which it is fashioned and from its majestic position on which it had been positioned, this obelisk appears to have been erected on the tumulus of an ancient and wealthy ruler of this region, or to have been destined to preserve the memory of a significant event.

Today this obelisk is broken and removed from its base by the treasure seekers.

The height of the upper part which we reproduce here is 1.09m, the lower width of the main faces is 0.45m, while the second fragment, or the lower part of this monolith has been lost.

The age of this monument, which forms a unique specimen among the monuments of cut and polished stone of Europe, harks back to very remote times.

Although the granite from which this obelisk is cut presents a great hardness, its edges are in some places worn out, eroded by rains and ice.

 

The oldest obelisks found in Egypt, positioned near the funeral chambers of the kings, had a height between 1 and 4 metres.

But the obelisk of Polovragi belongs anyway to the prehistoric epoch of the metals.

Close to this important prehistoric station of Polovragi is the village called Baia-de-fer, a locality which, as seen from its name, once had had a significant metallurgical industry.

We do not find in the history of the Romanian countries, beginning from the 13th century onwards, any mention about the fabrication of iron and steel in these parts. Even the traditions have been lost, while traces of the ancient works can barely be distinguished in some places (Vasiliu-Nasturel, Dictionarul geogr. Gorj. P. 28).

 

But when did the so-called Iron Age begin in the countries near the Carpathians?

In Egypt this metal appears known even in the times of the 5th and 6th dynasties, or 4200-4650bc. But on the plains of the Nile the iron was imported. As we know, the most ancient population of Egypt was composed of pastoral and agricultural tribes which had once migrated from the Carpathians towards the southern lands.

On the other hand, according to the ancient Greek traditions, the first iron workers appear in the western parts of Scythia, or in other words in the parts of today Romania and Transylvania.

Homer mentions the so-called Iron Gates, sidereiei pylai (Iliad, VIII. v. 15), near Oceanos potamos or Istru, as an ancient and famous monument of the ante-Hellenic world.

And Eschyl in his dramatic poem about the chaining of Prometheus (Prom. vinct. v. 714-715), tells us that between the mountain so-called Pharanx (Parang) and the “Furious river” (Olt), dwelt “Chalybii, the iron workers”, the most remarkable metallurgists of the ancient world.

(The scholiast of Apollonius Rhodius – Arg. II. 375 – tells us that Chalybii claimed their origin from Mars, the national god of the Getae).

In this same poem Eschyl repeats the ancient Greek tradition according to which the mountainous region of western Scythia, where Prometheus had been chained, was called the “country mother of iron”, sideromator aia (Prom. vinct. v. 301). So we see that the ancient writers from the lands near the Aegean Sea and the Mediterranean Sea had placed the origin of the iron industry in the mountainous region of western Scythia, in the Romanian country and Transylvania of today.

 

Therefore, the age of the obelisk presented above goes back to the epoch of the renowned Chalybi, or the workers of iron and copper from western Scythia [2].

 

[2. The Carpathians of Dacia form an archaeological region of extreme importance for the ante-historical times. Apart from the simulacra and primitive altars of divinities, cut in live rock and apart from the votive and commemorative columns from the tops of peaks, still exists in the Carpathians an infinite number of megalithic sculptures, some representing the “Chairs” of the divinities, others the traces left by some heroes or giants, or figures and footprints of animals (especially the figure of the “White horse”, consecrated to the Sun), all remains of the Uranian-Saturnian religion. Also, the region of the Carpathians is characterized by an extraordinary number of caves and caverns, which present on the outside wonderful circular portals worked by the hand of man, remains of an epoch when these caves served as chapels for the ceremonies of the cult, or as residences of the oracles].

 

 

NEXT