Strabo, Geography (English) (XML Header) [genre: prose] [word count] [lemma count] [Str.].
Previous Page

Next Page

-- 197 --

Sabae, and Sabae note a considerable city; then he grove of Eumenes. note

Above is the city Darada, and a hunting-ground for elephants, called At the Well. The district is inhabited by the Elephantophagi (or Elephant-eaters), who are occupied in hunting them. When they descry from the trees a herd of elephants directing their course through the forest, they do not [then] attack, but they approach by stealth and hamstring the hindmost stragglers from the herd. Some kill them with bows and arrows, the latter being dipped in the gall of serpents. The shooting with the bow is performed by three men, two, advancing in front, hold the bow, and one draws the string. Others remark the trees against which the elephant is accustomed to rest, and, approaching on the opposite side, cut the trunk of the tree low down. When the animal comes and leans against it, the tree and the elephant fall down together. The elephant is unable to rise, because its legs are formed of one piece of bone which is inflexible; the hunters leap down from the trees, kill it, and cut it in pieces. The Nomades call the hunters Acatharti, or impure. 11

Above this nation is situated a small tribe the Struthophagi note (or Bird-eaters), in whose country are birds of the size of deer, which are unable to fly, but run with the swiftness of the ostrich. Some hunt them with bows and arrows, others covered with the skins of birds. They hide the right hand in the neck of the skin, and move it as the birds move their necks. With the left hand they scatter grain from a bag suspended to the side; they thus entice the birds, till they drive them into pits, where the hunters despatch them with cudgels. The skins are used both as clothes and as coverings for beds. The Ethiopians called Simi are at war with these people, and use as weapons the horns of antelopes. 12

Bordering on this people is a nation blacker in complexion than the others, note shorter in stature, and very short-lived. They rarely live beyond forty years; for the flesh

Previous Page

Next Page


Strabo, Geography (English) (XML Header) [genre: prose] [word count] [lemma count] [Str.].
Powered by PhiloLogic