- Blemmyes
The Blemmyes (
Latin "Blemmyae") are a race oflegendary creature s that were said to live inAfrica , inNubia ,Kush , orEthiopia , generally south ofEgypt . They were believed to be acephalous (headless)monster s who had eyes and mouths in their bellies.Pliny the Elder writes of them that "Blemmyes traduntur capita abesse, ore et oculis pectore adfixis" ("It is said that the Blemmyes have no heads, and that their mouth and eyes are put in their chests").The Blemmyes were, in fact, a nomadic
Nubia n tribe described in Roman histories of the later empire. From the late third century on, along with another tribe, the Nobadae, they repeatedly fought the Romans.Some authors derive the story of the Blemmyes from this, that their heads were hid between their shoulders, by hoisting those up to an extravagant height.
Samuel Bochart derives the word "Blemmyes" from two Hebrew terms, one a negation, the other meaning "brain", implying that the Blemmyes were people without brains.ref label|1728|3|^In Antiquity
The Greek geographer
Strabo describes the Blemmyes as a peaceful people living in the East Desert nearMeroe . Later, in the beginning of our Era,Pliny the Elder wrote that the Blemmeys were a people with no head, and with their mouth, eyes and nose on the chest.In fact, this people had Arabic origins and occupied the area near
Meroe toAswan by the I-II centuries AD.Their cultural and military power started to enlarge to such a level that in 197
Pescennius Niger asked a Blemmye king of Thebas to help him in the battle against theRoman Emperor Septimius Severus . In 250 theRoman Emperor Decius took a lot of effort to win over an invasion army of Blemmyes. A few years later, in 253, they attacked Lower Aegyptus (Thebais) again but were quickly defeated. In 265 they were defeated again by theRoman Prefect Firmus who later in 273 would rebel against the Empire and the Queen ofPalmyra Zenobia with the help of the Blemmyes themselves. The Roman generalProbus took sometime to defeat the usurper and his allies but couldn't prevent the occupation of Thebais by the Blemmyes. That meant another war and the almost entire destruction of the Blemmyes army.In the reign of
Diocletian the province of Lower Aegyptus (Thebais) was again occupied by the Blemmyes and after defeating them one more time, the Romans retreated to their borderPhilae .Culture
The Blemmyes occupied a considerable region in current day
Sudan . There were some important cities likeFaras ,Kalabsha ,Balana and Aniba, and they were all fortified with walls and towers of a mixture of Egyptian, Helenic, Roman and Nubic elements.Their culture had also the influence of the
Meroitic culture, and so, Blemmyes religion was centered in the temples ofKalabsha andPhilae . The former being a huge masterpiece ofNubian architecture, where a solar lion like divinity namedMandulis was worshiped.Philae was a place of mass pilgrimage with temples forIsis ,Mandulis andAnhur , and where theRoman Emperors Augustus andTrajan made many contributions with new temples, plazas and monumental works.In literature
Othello makes reference to them as "men whose heads | Do grow beneath their shoulders" [I.iii.143-144] .In
Umberto Eco 's "Baudolino ", the protagonist meets Blemmyes along withSciapod s and a number of monsters from the medievalbestiary in his quest to findPrester John .In his
2006 book "Tower",Valerio Massimo Manfredi features the Blemmyes as fierce, sand-dwelling creatures located in the southeasternSahara , and suggests that they are the manifestation of the evil face of mankind.Science fiction author
Bruce Sterling wrote a short story entitled "The Blemmye's Stratagem", included in his collection "Visionary in Residence". The story describes a Blemmye during theCrusades , who turns out to be anextraterrestrial .Blemmyes appeared in the 2000 novel The Amazing Voyage of Azzam by Kelly Godel as cannibalistic tribesmen who guard a lost treasure of King
Solomon . They use clubs, spears, and blow darts as weapons.ee also
*
Anthropophagi References
* [http://www.bartleby.com/81/2013.html "Blemmyes"] , in
Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase and Fable (1898 )
*Pliny the Elder, "Historia naturalis" V.8.46
*note label|1728|3|^1728 [http://digicoll.library.wisc.edu/cgi-bin/HistSciTech/HistSciTech-idx?type=turn&entity=HistSciTech000900240257&isize=L]
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