WEBVTT 00:00:07.779 --> 00:00:09.628 Since the time of Homer, 00:00:09.628 --> 00:00:14.578 ancient stories told of fierce warriors dwelling beyond the Mediterranean world, 00:00:14.578 --> 00:00:18.669 striking fear into the mightiest empires of antiquity. 00:00:18.669 --> 00:00:22.380 Their exploits were recounted by many epic poets. 00:00:22.380 --> 00:00:27.729 They fought in the legendary Trojan War and their grand army invaded Athens. 00:00:27.729 --> 00:00:30.300 Jason and the Argonauts passed by their shores, 00:00:30.300 --> 00:00:32.998 barely avoiding their deadly arrows. 00:00:32.998 --> 00:00:37.280 These formidable fighters faced off against the greatest champions of myth: 00:00:37.280 --> 00:00:38.311 Heracles, 00:00:38.311 --> 00:00:39.291 Theseus, 00:00:39.291 --> 00:00:41.321 and Achilles. NOTE Paragraph 00:00:41.321 --> 00:00:45.841 And every single one of these warriors was a woman. NOTE Paragraph 00:00:45.841 --> 00:00:51.019 The war-loving Amazons, "the equals of men" in courage and skill, 00:00:51.019 --> 00:00:54.111 were familiar to everyone in ancient Greece. 00:00:54.111 --> 00:00:58.101 Amazon battle scenes decorated the Parthenon on the Athenian Acropolis; 00:00:58.101 --> 00:01:03.362 paintings and statues of Amazons adorned temples and public spaces. 00:01:03.362 --> 00:01:05.671 Little girls played with Amazon dolls, 00:01:05.671 --> 00:01:10.402 and Amazons were a favorite subject on Greek vase paintings. 00:01:10.402 --> 00:01:12.141 In Greek art and literature, 00:01:12.141 --> 00:01:15.131 they were depicted as daring and desirable, 00:01:15.131 --> 00:01:16.915 but also terrifying and deadly, 00:01:16.915 --> 00:01:21.082 and doomed to die at the hands of Greek heroes. NOTE Paragraph 00:01:21.082 --> 00:01:24.981 Were Amazons merely figures of myth, or something more? NOTE Paragraph 00:01:24.981 --> 00:01:27.517 It was long assumed that they were imaginary, 00:01:27.517 --> 00:01:29.602 like the cyclops and centaurs. 00:01:29.602 --> 00:01:33.113 But curiously enough, stories from ancient Egypt, 00:01:33.113 --> 00:01:34.324 Persia, 00:01:34.324 --> 00:01:35.397 the Middle East, 00:01:35.397 --> 00:01:36.463 Central Asia, 00:01:36.463 --> 00:01:37.422 India, 00:01:37.422 --> 00:01:38.242 and China 00:01:38.242 --> 00:01:41.403 also featured Amazon-like warrior women. 00:01:41.403 --> 00:01:46.883 And Amazons were described in ancient historical accounts, not just myths. 00:01:46.883 --> 00:01:52.024 Writers like Herodotus, Plato, and Strabo never doubted their existence. NOTE Paragraph 00:01:52.024 --> 00:01:56.379 So who were the real women warriors known as Amazons? NOTE Paragraph 00:01:56.379 --> 00:02:00.507 Ancient historians located the Amazon homeland in Scythia, 00:02:00.507 --> 00:02:02.398 the vast territory stretching from 00:02:02.398 --> 00:02:05.901 the Black Sea across the steppes of Central Asia. 00:02:05.901 --> 00:02:08.695 This immense region was populated by nomadic tribes 00:02:08.695 --> 00:02:10.919 whose lives centered on horses, 00:02:10.919 --> 00:02:11.928 archery, 00:02:11.928 --> 00:02:13.120 and warfare. 00:02:13.120 --> 00:02:18.535 Their culture flourished for about 1,000 years beginning around 800 BC. 00:02:18.535 --> 00:02:22.916 Feared by Greeks, Persians, and the Chinese, the Scythians left 00:02:22.916 --> 00:02:26.636 no written records. But we can find clues in how 00:02:26.636 --> 00:02:30.486 their neighbors described them, as well as in archaeology. 00:02:30.486 --> 00:02:33.356 Scythians' ancestors were the first to ride horses 00:02:33.356 --> 00:02:36.030 and they invented the recurve bow. 00:02:36.030 --> 00:02:41.647 And, because a female mounted archer could be as fast and as deadly as a male, 00:02:41.647 --> 00:02:44.695 all children were trained to ride and shoot. 00:02:44.695 --> 00:02:49.208 Women hunted and fought alongside men, using the same weapons. 00:02:49.208 --> 00:02:52.227 The harsh landscape and their nomadic lifestyle 00:02:52.227 --> 00:02:55.007 created its own form of equality. 00:02:55.007 --> 00:03:00.797 This amazed the ancient Greeks, whose women led restricted indoor lives. NOTE Paragraph 00:03:00.797 --> 00:03:03.888 The earliest stories of the Scythians, and Amazons, 00:03:03.888 --> 00:03:06.619 may have been exaggerated rumors. 00:03:06.619 --> 00:03:10.739 But as the Greeks began to trade around the Black Sea and further east, 00:03:10.739 --> 00:03:13.646 their portrayals became more realistic. 00:03:13.646 --> 00:03:17.539 Early depictions of Amazons showed them with Greek weapons and armor. 00:03:17.539 --> 00:03:19.758 But in later representations, 00:03:19.758 --> 00:03:22.220 they wielded bows and battle-axes, 00:03:22.220 --> 00:03:23.347 rode horses, 00:03:23.347 --> 00:03:26.101 and wore pointed caps and patterned trousers 00:03:26.101 --> 00:03:29.238 characteristic of steppe nomads. NOTE Paragraph 00:03:29.238 --> 00:03:32.862 Until recently, no one was sure how strong the links were 00:03:32.862 --> 00:03:36.170 between Scythians and the Amazons of Greek myth. 00:03:36.170 --> 00:03:40.851 But recent archaeological discoveries have provided ample evidence. 00:03:40.851 --> 00:03:46.234 More than 1,000 ancient Scythian kurgans, or burial mounds, have been excavated, 00:03:46.234 --> 00:03:48.817 containing skeletons and weapons. 00:03:48.817 --> 00:03:51.065 Archaeologists had previously assumed 00:03:51.065 --> 00:03:54.164 that weapons could only belong to male warriors. 00:03:54.164 --> 00:03:56.781 But modern DNA analysis so far 00:03:56.781 --> 00:03:59.825 has revealed that about 300 skeletons buried with weapons 00:03:59.825 --> 00:04:04.092 belong to females ranging in age from 10 to 45, 00:04:04.092 --> 00:04:07.166 and more are being found every year. 00:04:07.166 --> 00:04:09.543 The women's skeletons show battle injuries: 00:04:09.543 --> 00:04:11.762 ribs slashed by swords, 00:04:11.762 --> 00:04:14.211 skulls bashed by battle-axes, 00:04:14.211 --> 00:04:17.473 and arrows embedded in bones. NOTE Paragraph 00:04:17.473 --> 00:04:19.744 In classical art and writings, 00:04:19.744 --> 00:04:24.654 the fearsome Amazons were always portrayed as brave and heroic. 00:04:24.654 --> 00:04:27.295 In male-dominated classical Greece, however, 00:04:27.295 --> 00:04:34.162 the very idea of strong women who gloried in freedom and war aroused mixed feelings. 00:04:34.162 --> 00:04:38.044 And yet, the Greeks were also drawn to egalitarian ideals. 00:04:38.044 --> 00:04:42.167 Is it possible that the mythic realm of thrilling Amazon tales 00:04:42.167 --> 00:04:46.194 was a way to imagine women and men as equal companions?