PART 5    Ch.XXXIII.18

The Pelasgians or proto – Latins (Arimii)

(The Pelasgians from the northern parts of the Danube and the Black Sea)

 

PART 5

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XXXIII. 18. Latinii. Ancient genealogy of the Latin tribes.

 

The Latin tribes of Italy constituted in the beginning only a small branch of the large family of the Latin nation, scattered in prehistoric times through various regions of Asia and Europe.

According to the most ancient traditions, which we find with the Greek and Latin authors, the geographical origin of the Latinii in Italy was reduced to the eastern parts of Europe.

One of these traditions, which in fact appears to be the oldest, is transmitted by Dionysius of Halikarnassus (lib. I. 43). Following his expedition against Geryon, Hercules crossed into Italy, and had there a son called Latinus, born by a Hyperborean maiden, whom he had taken hostage from her parents.

In this ethnographic tradition, Latinus figures as the eponymous patriarch of the Latin people.

His genealogy is the genealogy of the Latin people in ante-Roman times. Hercules, as we know, is the great national hero of the Pelasgians from the lower Danube. There were also the dwellings of the legendary Hyperboreans, who had played such a significant role in the cult of Apollo (the sun). From there, from the lower Danube, had taken Hercules therefore the Hyperborean maiden, with whom he had crossed into Italy.

Another tradition presents Latinus as a son of Hercules, but born by the wife (Dio Cassius, lib. I -XXXVI, fr. 8), or the daughter (Justin. XLIII. 1), of king Faunus. This legend is in fact only a simple version of the first. The wife of Faunus, who had given birth to Latinus, had been, according to Dionysius of Halikarnassus, the same as the Hyperborean “maiden” (chore), about whom we spoke above.

We find the third tradition about the origin of the Latinii with Suidas, and it is as follows: Hercules had a son called Telephus, but also called Latinus, who had reigned over the Cetii (Ketioi), and during his reign the Cetii had started to be called Latini (Suidas, see Latinoi).

In examining this latter tradition, the first question is: who had been Telephus-Latinus in prehistoric times, and which were the lands over which he had reigned?

In the ancient poems and epic legends, Telephus appears as a king of Mysia. Telephus and his son had taken active part in the Trojan war, as allies of Priam. Some of the ancient authors believed that to have been the region of Mysia from Asia Minor, but Dios Chrysostomus from Bithynia, who, in the times of Domitianus had retreated to the Getae from the lower Danube and had written a history of the Dacii called Geticha, tells us that this Telephus had been a king of the Getae; that his kingdom had stretched very far; that he had reigned over the entire territory called Mesia, which bordered at east with the mouths of the Danube, at west with Istria, at south with Macedonia and at north with the Danube (Jornandis, De Get. orig. II. c. 9).

In other words, Telephus-Latinus of the Trojan times had reigned over Mesia, Illyria, Dalmatia, Pannonia and Noric.

 

All of these ancient traditions, which show us Hercules as the first ancestor of the Latinii, are in reality only a simple fragment from a genealogical table of a larger group of peoples, in which Hercules, the national hero of the Pelasgians from the north of Hellada, figures at the same time as parent of the Agathyrsii, Gelonii and Scythii.

We find this part of the historical tradition studied here, with Herodotus (IV. 9-10).

The Greeks from the Black Sea, he says, tell the following about the origin of the Scytii: Hercules, after taking the cattle herds of Geryon, had come to Scythia, where, losing his horses, had found them finally, after much and prolonged searching, with the virgin Echidna, who ruled over that country. Hercules had spent some time with Echidna, and had had with her three sons, Agathyrsus, Gelonus and Scythes, and to them, according to the ancient traditions, drew their origin the dynasties of the Agathirsii, Gelonii and Scythii.

The country of Echidna, as Hesiodus tells us, had been the country of the Arimii (Theog. v. 304). But according to Herodotus, Echidna was from a region of Scythia called Hylea (Silvosa), a translated geographical term which, as results from the meaning of the name, seems to indicate one of the mountainous regions of ancient Dacia: Transilvania (Hung. Erdely, meaning the Woodland), or the Romanian Country (Muntenia, Transalpina, Hung. Havasalfold).

According to all these ethnographic traditions, two Italic and two Pontic, the genealogy of the four ancient peoples about which we speak here appears as follows:

 

If we examined now closer this versions – which all are part of the same epic cycle of Hercules – Geryon, the genealogical legend of the Latinii becomes more clear, and the correlation among the various versions is easily made: the Hyperborean virgin is the same as Echidna from the country of the Arimii, and therefore the ancient form of this ethnographic table was the following:

 

According to these genealogic traditions, the Agathyrsii of Transilvania, the Scythii from near the Black Sea, the Gelonii, who dwelt beyond the Borysthenes river as far as the Urals, and finally, the Latinii from the Italic peninsula, had constituted in prehistoric times four branches of the same Pelasgian Arimic family [1].

 

[1. Horatio mentions in one of his odes (II. 20) as peoples of Latin language, the inhabitants from the Bosphorus, the Getulii from Africa, the Hyperboreii, the Colchii, Dacii, Gelonii, Iberii, Volcii and Ligurii from the Rhodan].

 

We arrive now at the Christian legend about the origin of the so-called Latin populations.

According to Ch.X of Genesis, from Iavan, the son of Iaphet, son of Noah, were born Elisa, Tharsis and Dodanim.

The Mosaic tradition though, had in its view, as we know, only the populations from the eastern basin of the Mediterranean and from around the Black Sea. Moses’ knowledge of geography was quite limited. After a long series of centuries though, when Christianity, with its Hebraic doctrines and traditions, had spread over the entire Greco-Roman world, the Biblical genealogy about the origin of peoples did not correspond any more to ethnographic reality. Because of this, the chroniclers of the Middle Ages were compelled to complete the Biblical tradition, about the ancestry and kinship of the populations, with new data, offered by the ancient traditions on the one hand, and their historical knowledge on the other.

 

In this way, the Biblical tradition about the peoples whose proto-parent had been Iuvan (or Hercules of the Pelasgians), has received in the Middle Ages (Riese, Geogr. Lat. min. p. 161. 168) the following form:

 

[2. Under the name Elisa, from the ethnographic table of Moses, were understood in the first times of Christianity, the original inhabitants of Hellada (the Pelasgians) and the Pelasgian tribes emigrated from those parts to Italy and Sicily (Isidorus, Orig. lib. IX. 2. 34; Dlugossi, Hist. Polon. I, 1871, p. 4).

 

The Christian traditions present therefore Iuvan (or Hercules of the heroic times, Romanian Iovan), as the proto-parent of the entire southern Latin nation: of the Siculii, Iberii, Tursenii, Romanii, Latinii and Trojanii.

According to this ethnographic table, the Romans and the Latinii are only the descendants of an older people, which had in Hebrew traditions the name of Cythii (Cuthii).

But the tradition transmitted by Suidas says the same: that the Cetii had started to be called Latini only since the times of king Telephus-Latinus.

 

We ask though, in which part of the ancient world were the dwellings of the Cetii, who, as it seems, must have been a famous people in ante-Mosaic times.

In the Argonautic traditions, under the name Cytaei figure the inhabitants of the vast kingdom of Aietes, who had reigned over the Colchii and over a large part of Scythia, near the Black Sea.

The region of Scythia over which reigned Aietes is also called Kutais gaia, Cytaea terra by Apollonius Rhodius (IV, 511), king Aietes himself has the epithets Kutaieus and Kutaios (II. 403, 1094; III. 228), and his capital was, as we know, near the lower Danube (see Ch.XXVI. 3).

In Homer’s Odyssey (XI.v. 521), the inhabitants of Mesia, over which reigned Telephus, are also called Cetei (Kateioi), and according to Dios Chrysostomos, Telephus had been the king of the Getae, and his empire stretched over the entire region from the mouths of the Danube to Istria in the west.

The ancient Latins were therefore, according to Christian traditions, a people of the great kingdom from the lower Danube, over which Aietes had reigned in the times of the Argonauts, and in Trojan times, Telephus.

 

We find another version of the Christian tradition about the origin of the Latin people with the Polish historian Dlugos (+ 1480ad). This version, the basis of which is formed by the Biblical genealogy, appears under the following form:

 

 

According to this table, communicated by Dlugos, the origin of the Latin tribes of Italy, of the Calabrii (Enotrii), Siculii (Sicanii), Apulii and Latinii of Latium, was reduced to the Scythii or Sarmatii of Europe, and namely to that part of the Scythians whom the Greeks called Regini.

(TN – the Royal Scythians)

 

We ask though, who were the Sarmatii whom the Greeks called Regini?

An important mention about this mysterious people is found in the historical notes relating to the life of St. Demetrios, which have been discovered at the Castamonitos Monastery.

The respective passage in these manuscripts is the following: “in the days of the iconoclastic emperors (726-780ad), the peoples who dwelt in the regions near the Danube, the so-called Rechinii or better said Blacho – Rechinii and the Sagudatii, taking advantage of the anarchy which had followed the war of the un-pious emperors of the Romans against the holly icons, after subjecting Bulgaria, spread little by little to various other lands, over Macedonia, and finally arrived at Mount Athos” (Uspenski, Ist. Athona, III. 311).

So the Blacho – Rechinii, from the historical notes of the Castamonitos Monastery, were a people who dwelt near the lower Danube. By their name, dwellings and traditions, they are identical with the Sarmatii Regini, about whom Dlugos speaks [3].

 

[3. Under the name Sagudatei figure here the inhabitants of the southern parts of Transilvania, where exists even today the Romanian village Sacadate, near the Olt.

The more correct form of the name Rechini and Regini seems to have been in any case Remini or Remni (cf. Homer who says Rigmon instead of Rimon)].

 

From all these traditions results therefore that the Latinii of Italy were only a branch of the Pelasgian people from the eastern parts of Europe, of the Hyperboreans from the lower Danube; that they formed the same ethnic family with the Agathyrsii from Transilvania, with the ancient Scythii from the Black Sea, and with the Gelonii, who dwelt beyond the river Borysthenes, and even beyond the river Tanais.

 

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