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Don't Fence Me in


Article # : 16513 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 11 / 1989  4,918 Words
Author : Peter B. Golden
Peter B. Golden is professor of history at Rutgers University. He is the author of Khazar Studies and numerous works on the history of the peoples of medieval Eurasia. He is currently completing An Introduction to the History of the Turkic Peoples.

       NOMADS OF EURASIA
       Vladimir N. Basilov, ed.
       Seattle: University of Washington Press: 1989
       208 pp., $39.95
       
        "When a Scythian kills his first man, he drinks his blood;
        of all those he kills in battle he carries the heads to the
        king. When he has brought in a head, he takes a share of
        whatever loot they have obtains, but without bringing a
        head he has none.
       
        --Herodotus (fifth century, B.C.)
       
        It is their [the Huns'] custom to herd their flocks in
        times of peace and make their living by hunting, but in
        periods of crisis they take up arms and go off on
        plundering and marauding expeditions. This seems to be
        their inborn nature… Their only concern is self-advantage,
        and they know nothing of propriety or righteousness.
       
        --Ssu-ma Ch'ien (mid-second to early first century B.C)
       
        The Huns "all have compact, strong limbs and thick necks
        and are so monstrously ugly and misshapen, that one might
        take them for two-legged beasts…But, although they have
        the form of men, however ugly, they are so hardy in their
        mode of life that they have no need of fire nor of savory
        food, but eat the roots of wild plants and the half-raw
        flesh of any kind of animal."
       
        Ammianus Marcellinus (fourth century A.D.)
       
        "The Ghuz have arrogant faces and are quarrelsome,
        malicious, and malevolent. Both in summer and winter they
       
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