Thracian horseman

"Thracian horseman" votive tablet with the standard iconographic elements: the rider is holding a lance in his right hand aiming at a boar attacked by a hunting dog.
Fragment from a Thracian horseman marble relief: the hunting dog attacking the boar

The Thracian Horseman (also "Thracian Rider" or "Thracian Heros") is the name given to a recurring motif of a horseman depicted in reliefs of the Hellenistic and Roman periods in the Balkans (Thrace, Macedonia, Moesia, roughly from the 3rd century BC to the 3rd century AD).

Its depiction is in the tradition of the funerary steles of Roman cavalrymen, with the addition of syncretistic elements from Hellenistic and Paleo-Balkanic religious or mythological tradition. The Thracian horseman is depicted as a hunter on horseback, riding from left to right. Between the horse's hooves is depicted either a hunting dog or a boar. In some instances, the dog is replaced by a lion.

Inscriptions found in Romania identify the horseman as Heros (also Eros, Eron, Herros, Herron), apparently the word heros used as a proper name.[1] The Cult of the Thracian horseman was especially important in Philippi, where the Heros had the epithets of soter (saviour) and epekoos "answerer of prayers". Funerary stelae depicting the horseman belong to the middle or lower classes (while the upper classes preferred the depiction of banquet scenes).[2] The motif most likely represents a composite figure, a Thracian heros possibly based on Rhesus, the Thracian king mentioned in the Iliad,[3] to which Scythian, Hellenistic and possibly other elements had been added.[4]

In the Roman era, the "Thracian horseman" iconography is further syncretised. The rider is now someties shown as approaching a tree entwined by a serpent, or as approaching a goddess. These motifs are partly of Greco-Roman and partly of possible Scythian origin. The motif of a horseman with his right arm raised advancing towards a seated female figure is related to Scythian iconographic tradition. It is frequently found in Bulgaria, associated with Asclepius and Hygeia.[5] The motif of a standing goddess flanked by two horsemen, identified as Artemis flanked by the Dioscuri, and a tree entwined by a serpent flanked by the Dioscuri on horseback is transformed into a motif of a single horseman approaching the goddess or the tree. [6] Related to the Dioscuri motif is the so-called "Danubian Horsemen" motif of two horsemen flanking standing goddess.[7]

The motif of the Thracian horseman is not to be confused with the depiction of a rider slaying a barbarian enemy on funerary stelae, as on the stele of Dexileos, interpreted as depictions of a heroic episode from the life of the deceased.[8]

Under the Roman Emperor Gordian III the god on horseback appears on coins minted at Tlos, in neighboring Lycia, and at Istrus, in the province of Lower Moesia, between Thrace and the Danube.[9]

The motif of the Thracian horseman was continued in Christianised form in the equestrian iconography of both Saint George and Saint Demetrius.[10]

Hunter motif
Serpent-and-tree
Rider and goddess
Greco-Roman comparanda
Medieval comparanda

References

  1. Nubar Hampartumian, Moesia Inferior (Romanian Section) and Dacia, Volume 74, Part 4 (1979),
  2. Richard S. Ascough, Paul's Macedonian Associations: The Social Context of Philippians and 1 Thessalonians (2003), p. 159.
  3. Rebecca West (21 December 2010). Black Lamb and Grey Falcon: A Journey Through Yugoslavia. Open Road Media. p. 455. ISBN 978-1-4532-0746-8.
  4. R. F. Hoddinott, Early Byzantine Churches in Macedonia & Southern Serbia, 1963, 5862
  5. Hoddinott (1963:58)
  6. Hoddinott (1963:59)
  7. Hoddinott (1963:59)
  8. Hoddinott (1963:60)
  9. Sabazios on coins, illustrated in the M. Halkam collection.
  10. Hoddinott (1963:61). Sigfried J. de Laet (1994). History of Humanity: From the seventh to the sixteenth century. Routledge. pp. 233–. ISBN 978-92-3-102813-7. Christopher Walter (2003). The Warrior Saints in Byzantine Art and Tradition. Ashgate. pp. 88–. ISBN 978-1-84014-694-3. c.f. the badly damaged wall painting of St George in the ruins of Đurđevi stupovi, Serbia (c. 1168), see Hoddinott (1963:61).

See also

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