Illustrations ix
Acknowledgments xiii
Prologue: Atalanta, the Greek Amazon 1
Part 1 Who Were the Amazons?
1 Ancient Puzzles and Modern Myths 17
2 Scythia, Amazon Homeland 34
3 Sarmatians, a Love Story 52
Part 2 Historical Women Warriors and Classical Traditions
4 Bones: Archaeology of Amazons 63
5 Breasts: One or Two? 84
6 Skin: Tattooed Amazons 95
7 Naked Amazons 117
8 Sex and Love 129
9 Drugs, Dance, and Music 142
10 The Amazon Way 155
11 Horses, Dogs, and Eagles 170
12 Who Invented Trousers? 191
13 Armed and Dangerous: Weapons and Warfare 209
14 Amazon Languages and Names 234
Part 3 Amazons in Greek and Roman Myth, Legend, and History
15 Hippolyte and Heracles 249
16 Antiope and Theseus 259
17 Battle for Athens 271
18 Penthesilea and Achilles at Troy 287
19 Amazons at Sea 305
20 Thalestris and Alexander the Great 319
21 Hypsicratea, King Mithradates, and Pompey's Amazons 339
Part 4 Beyond the Greek World
22 Caucasia, Crossroads of Eurasia 357
23 Persia, Egypt, North Africa, Arabia 377
24 Amazonistan: Central Asia 395
25 China 411
Appendix: Names of Amazons and Warrior Women in Ancient Literature and Art from the Mediterranean to China 431
Notes 439
Bibliography 485
Index 503
Adrienne Mayor is the author of The Poison King: The Life and Legend of Mithradates, Rome's Deadliest Enemy (Princeton), a finalist for the National Book Award and named one of the best books of 2009 by the Washington Post. Her other books include Greek Fire, Poison Arrows, and Scorpion Bombs: Biological and Chemical Warfare in the Ancient World (Overlook) and The First Fossil Hunters: Dinosaurs, Mammoths, and Myth in Greek and Roman Times (Princeton). She is a research scholar in classics and history of science at Stanford University.
"Winner of the 2016 Sarasvati Award for Best Nonfiction Book in Women and Mythology, Association for the Study of Women & Mythology 2015 Silver Medal Winner in the Independent Publisher Book Awards, World History category Selected for The New York Times Book Review's ""The Year in Reading"" 2016 Shortlisted for the 2014 London Hellenic Prize One of Foreign Affairs' Best Military, Scientific, and Technological Books of 2015 Selected for American Scientist's Science Book Gift Guide 2014 ""In her quest to separate reality from mythology, Mayor left few stones unturned, even examining the graves of women with war wounds and mummified tattoos. She skillfully presents her findings with wit and conviction in this superbly illustrated book""--Lawrence D. Freedman, Foreign Affiars ""Fluidly written and exhaustively researched, this fascinating book lit up my mind and my sense of humanity, not just with women in it, but under it, above it, flinging out constellations and atoms; carving out grand canyons hand-in-hand with men and beasts and glaciers, too.""--Neko Case, singer-songwriter, New York Times Book Review ""The Amazons is elegantly written, nicely illustrated and will no doubt excite a lot of attention.""--Simon Goldhill, Times Literary Supplement ""Mayor specializes in connecting artifacts--paintings, sculptures, coins, bones, weapons, clothing, fossils--with the more diffuse evidence found in literature, lore and legend ... in order to illuminate the lives of the ancient warrior women... Impressive investigative work ... fascinating.""--James Romm, London Review of Books ""[A] fascinatingly detailed account.""--Emily Wilson, Wall Street Journal ""Mayor (The Poison King) looks at ancient writings and archeological evidence to argue that yes, 'Amazons' were based on real nomadic women, though much different from the way ancient Greeks or contemporary audiences imagine them... Mayor speculates on the origin of such misconceptions in ancient writings and art, smartly suggesting that, though Amazons are usually depicted heroically in Greek art and mythology, the male-centric Greeks perhaps struggled to understand a society based on equality between the sexes... Her expertise shines throughout.""--Publishers Weekly ""An encyclopedic study of the barbarian warrior women of Western Asia, revealing how new archaeological discoveries uphold the long-held myths and legends. The famed female archers on horseback from the lands the ancient Greeks called Scythia appeared throughout Greek and Roman legend. Mayor tailors her scholarly work to lay readers, providing a fascinating exploration into the factual identity underpinning the fanciful legends surrounding these wondrous Amazons... Mayor clears away much of the man-hating myths around these redoubtable warriors. Thanks to Mayor's scholarship, these fearsome fighters are attaining their historical respectability.""--Kirkus Reviews ""A must-read for anyone interested in either Amazonian myth or history.""--Fred Poling, Library Journal ""No one before has ever marshalled the full sweep of evidence as Mayor does here... The result is a book as erudite as it riveting, one that is surely destined to serve as the definitive work on the subject.""--Tom Holland, Literary Review ""There are myriad myths surrounding the Amazons, but which are based on truth? ... This is the question which Adrienne Mayor seeks to answer in her hugely informative and entertaining Encyclopaedia Amazonica.""--Natalie Haynes, Independent ""[A] lively and engaging exploration ... vivid, compelling and detailed ... a rich compendium.""--Lloyd Llewellyn Jones, Times Higher Education ""A beautiful book... The Amazons by Adrienne Mayor is required reading.""--Anna Meldolesi, Corriere della Sera ""Driven by a detective's curiosity, Mayor unearths long-buried evidence and sifts fact from fiction to show how flesh-and-blood women of the Eurasian steppes were mythologized as Amazons, the equals of men. The result is likely to become a classic.""--Peter Konieczny, History of the Ancient World blog ""Mayor writes elegant, jargon free, frequently witty prose.""--Barry Baldwin, Fortean Times ""If Adrienne Mayor had merely applied her rigorous scholarship and poetic charm to documenting the shifting image of Amazons in classical, medieval and post-Renaissance European culture, she would have written an important contribution to ancient history. But she has achieved much more. By painstaking research ... she has broken down the often impenetrable walls dividing western cultural history from its eastern equivalents... Mayor opens up new horizons in world storytelling and feminist iconography... There may not be Amazon dolls in today's toyshops, but a good substitute would be to read this wonderful book with your children and show them its pictures.""--Edith Hall, New Statesman ""For anyone who thinks Amazons were as mythical as centaurs or sphinxes, this pleasurable book proves that misconception is wondrously wrong... Mayor's beautifully illustrated book, truly encyclopedic on all things Amazonian, reclaims the historic image of these dauntless figures in the heroic frame they deserve.""--Fran Willing, Bust.com ""Mayor's book is popular history at its best. Much of her archaeological evidence is new -- such as her descriptions of 'Scythian' female graves with horses and weapons. She chooses wonderful illustrations which makes the book enjoyable and easy to read.""--Zenobia blog ""Clearly, with this clever, systematic and engaging work by Mayor, Amazons got their classic book. And it is a riveting read, too.""--Ephraim Nissan, Fabula ""Mayor's fascinatingly readable book convincingly argues that many of their characteristics may have derived from real nomadic womenwarriors of antiquity... It represents a remarkable scholarly breakthrough: no one will ever be able to discuss the Amazon myths again without taking into account the historical evidence she provides.""--Tassos A. Kaplanis, Journal of Historical Geography ""Adrienne Mayor has written an ambitious 'Encyclopedia Amazonica' as she calls her book, a kind of compendium of information about the Amazons... Her charming and seamless style can certainly provoke a reader's interest in the still distant and unknown terra incognita of the Black Sea and Caucasus regions and their nomadic life.""--Eleni Boliaki, Bryn Mawr Classical Review ""I can't ... begin to say how great it is to have a book like this, because it's exactly the kind of book I like. Not one that just dismisses old stories as being too tall or made up, but really gives them the benefit of the doubt and tries to correlate and reconcile them with hard evidence. This is brilliantly achieved in Amazons... This in many ways is an exhaustive study, every facet that could be thought of has been included, and very little left out.""--Adventures in Historyland ""Mayor writes well, and not without dry humour, and although hardly given to the sensational, the sheer depth and breadth of her research and discoveries carry you along. You won't devour this in a sitting, just as you wouldn't eat a whole gooey gateau at once, but each slice of book is appetising enough to keep you coming back for more.""--Lynn Picknett, Magonia Review of Books"