destitution of rain or snow which occurs not unfrequently
and lasts for a period of twenty-two months or longer—little
adapted for agriculture or for permanent settlement
at all; and they always were so, although two thousand
years ago the state of the climate was presumably
somewhat less unfavourable than it is at the present
day.(6) The various tribes, whose wandering impulse
led them into these regions, submitted to this ordinance
of nature and led (and still to some extent lead)
a wandering pastoral life with their herds of oxen
or still more frequently of horses, changing their
places of abode and pasture, and carrying their effects
along with them in waggon-houses. Their equipment
and style of fighting were consonant to this mode of
life; the inhabitants of these steppes fought in great
measure on horseback and always in loose array, equipped
with helmet and coat of mail of leather and leather-covered
shield, armed with sword, lance, and bow—the
ancestors of the modern Cossacks. The Scythians
originally settled there, who seem to have been of
Mongolian race and akin in their habits and physical
appearance to the present inhabitants of Siberia,
had been followed up by Sarmatian tribes advancing
from east to west,—Sauromatae, Roxolani,
Jazyges,—who are commonly reckoned of Slavonian
descent, although the proper names, which we are entitled
to ascribe to them, show more affinity with Median
and Persian names and those peoples perhaps belonged
rather to the great Zend stock. Thracian tribes
moved in the opposite direction, particularly the
Getae, who reached as far as the Dniester. Between
the two there intruded themselves—probably
as offsets of the great Germanic migration, the main
body of which seems not to have touched the Black
Sea—the Celts, as they were called, on the
Dnieper, the Bastarnae in the same quarter, and the
Peucini at the mouth of the Danube. A state,
in the proper sense, was nowhere formed; every tribe
lived by itself under its princes and elders.
Hellenism in That Quarter
In sharp contrast to all these barbarians stood the
Hellenic settlements, which at the time of the mighty
impetus given to Greek commerce had been founded chiefly
by the efforts of Miletus on these coasts, partly
as trading-marts, partly as stations for prosecuting
important fisheries and even for agriculture, for which,
as we have already said, the north-western shores
of the Black Sea presented in antiquity conditions
less unfavourable than at the present day. For
the use of the soil the Hellenes paid here, like the
Phoenicians in Libya, tax and ground-rent to the native
rulers. The most important of these settlements
were the free city of Chersonesus (not far from Sebastopol),
built on the territory of the Scythians in the Tauric
peninsula (Crimea), and maintaining itself in moderate
prosperity, under circumstances far from favourable,
by virtue of its good constitution and the public
spirit of its citizens; and Panticapaeum (Kertch)