- Oestriminis
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In Latin poetry Oestreminis ("Extreme West") was a name given to the territory of what is today modern Portugal, comparable to Finis terrae, the "end of the earth" from a Mediterranean perspective. Its inhabitants were named Oestrimni from their location.
The fourth century CE Roman poet on geographical subjects, Rufus Avienus Festus, in Ora Maritima ("Seacoasts"), a poem inspired by a much earlier Greek mariners' periplus, records that Oestriminis was peopled by the Oestrimni, a people that had lived there for a long time, who had to run away from their native lands after an invasion of serpents. His fanciful account has no archeological or historical application, but the poetical name has sometimes been ambitiously applied to popularized accounts of the Paleolithic inhabitants of Atlantic Iberia.
The expulsion of the Oestrimni, from Ora Maritima:
- Post illa rursum quae supra fati sumus,
- magnus patescit aequoris fusi sinus
- Ophiussam ad usque. rursum ab huius litore
- internum ad aequor, qua mare insinuare se
- dixi ante terris, quodque Sardum nuncupant,
- septem dierum tenditur pediti via.
- Ophiussa porro tanta panditur latus
- quantam iacere Pelopis audis insulam
- Graiorum in agro. haec dicta primo Oestrymnis est
- locos et arva Oestrymnicis habitantibus,
- post multa serpens effugavit incolas
- vacuamque glaebam nominis fecit sui.
- Back after the places we spoke of above,
- there opens a great bay filled with water,
- all the way to Ophiussa. Back from the shore of this place,
- to the inland water, through which I said before that the sea insinuates itself
- through the land, and which they call Sardum,
- the journey extends for seven days on foot.
- Ophiusa extends its side, being as large
- as you hear the Island of Pelops
- lying in the territory of the Greeks is. This land was originally called Oestrymnis
- by those who inhabited the Oestrymnian countryside and region,
- much later the serpent chased away the inhabitants
- and gave the now empty land its name.[1]
The "serpent people" of the semi-mythical Ophiussa in the far west are noted in ancient Greek sources.
Notes
- ^ The point being that ὄφις (ophis) means "snake" in Greek.
See also
- Lusitania
- Lusitanian mythology
- History of Portugal
- Timeline of Iberian prehistory
- Timeline of pre-Roman Iberian history
External links
- Ora Maritima (in Latin)
- Culto a la serpiente en el mundo Antiguo Serpent cult in the Ancient Word (in Spanish)
- Detailed map of the Pre-Roman Peoples of Iberia (around 200 BC)
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