The Sintians (‹See Tfd›Greek: Σίντιες) were a group of people who were known to the Greeks as pirates and raiders.[1][2] They are also referred to as a Thracian people[3][4] who once inhabited the area of Sintice[5] and the island of Lemnos which was also called in ancient times Sinteis.[6]

Approximate location of the Sinti

The Sintians worshipped Hephaestus. They are mentioned in Homer: in the Iliad[7] as the folk who had tended Hephaestus in Lemnos after the lame smith god was let fall to earth; the Sintians "of wild speech" (ἀγριόφωνοι agriophonoi) also appear in the Odyssey;[8] in the tradition reported by Homer it was understood by their incomprehensible speech that they were among the non-Hellenic peoples of the Aegean.[9] "Because the Sintians have no place in the immediate context (that is, they are not asking the god for anything), we may suspect that they were the ones who in some pre-Homeric myth rescued the god."[10] In 2002 the city of Heraclea Sintica was accidentally discovered at the foot of an extinct volcano on the land of Rupite, Bulgaria.[11]

References

edit
  1. ^ "Warlike" to Anacreon (fr. eleg. West 3), who had spent some time in Thrace, often referenced in his poetry (Onofrio Vox, "I Sinti in Anacreonte", Hermes 122.1 (1994:116–118).
  2. ^ Liddell, Henry G.; Scott, Robert (2015). Λεξικόν της Ελληνικής Γλώσσης (in Greek). Vol. 7 (3rd ed.). Pelekanos Books. pp. 175–176. ISBN 978-618-04-0030-4.
  3. ^ J. Wiesner, Die Thraker (Stuttgart, 1963:13ff).
  4. ^ Thucydides, History, II.101
  5. ^ D. C. Samsaris, Historical Geography of Eastern Macedonia during the Antiquity Archived 2017-04-24 at the Wayback Machine (in Greek), Thessaloniki 1976 (Society for Macedonian Studies), pp. 56–57. ISBN 960-7265-16-5.
  6. ^ Guy Hedreen, The Image of the Artist in Archaic and Classical Greece: Art, Poetry, and Subjectivity, Cambridge University Press, 2016, ISBN 1107118255, p. 137.
  7. ^ 1.863 and 18.394.
  8. ^ 8.294 Homer, Odyssey
  9. ^ "Hephaistos is most at home among the Sintians of Lemnos, who do not even speak Greek," observes Guy Hedreen, in "The Return of Hephaistos, Dionysiac Processional Ritual and the Creation of a Visual Narrative", The Journal of Hellenic Studies 124 (2004:38–64) p. 39.
  10. ^ Bruce Karl Braswell, "Mythological Innovation in the Iliad", The Classical Quarterly, New Series, 21.1 (May 1971:16–26) p. 20.
  11. ^ Heraclea Sintica: from Hellenistic Polis to Roman Civitas: (4th C. BC - 6th C. AD); Proceedings of a Conference at Petrich, Bulgaria, September 19–31, 2013, Volume 2 of Papers of the American Research Center in Sofia, Contributor Ljudmil Ferdinandov Vagalinski.