Herodotus The earliest extant source that mentions Hyperborea in detail,
Herodotus'
Histories (Book IV, Chapters 32–36), dates from . Herodotus recorded three earlier sources that supposedly mentioned the Hyperboreans, including
Hesiod and
Homer, the latter purportedly having written of Hyperborea in his lost work
Epigoni. Herodotus voices doubts as to the attribution of the work to Homer. Herodotus wrote that the 7th-century BC poet
Aristeas wrote of the Hyperboreans in a poem (now lost) called
Arimaspea about a journey to the
Issedones, who are estimated to have lived in the
Kazakh Steppe. Beyond these lived the one-eyed
Arimaspians, further on the gold-guarding
griffins, and beyond these the Hyperboreans. Herodotus assumed that Hyperborea lay somewhere in
Northeast Asia.
Pindar, lyric poet from
Thebes and a contemporary of Herodotus in the tenth Pythian Ode described the Hyperboreans and tells of
Perseus's journey to them. Other 5th-century BC Greek authors, such as
Simonides of Ceos and
Hellanicus of Lesbos, described or referenced the Hyperboreans in their works.
Location The Hyperboreans were believed to live beyond the snowy
Riphean Mountains, with
Pausanias describing the location as "The land of the Hyperboreans, men living beyond the home of Boreas."
Homer placed
Boreas in
Thrace, and therefore Hyperborea was in his opinion north of Thrace, in
Dacia.
Sophocles (
Antigone, 980–987), Aeschylus (
Agamemnon, 193; 651),
Simonides of Ceos (Schol. on Apollonius Rhodius, 1. 121) and
Callimachus (
Delian, [IV] 65) also placed Boreas in
Thrace. Other ancient writers believed the home of Boreas or the Riphean Mountains were in a different location. For example,
Hecataeus of Miletus believed that the Riphean Mountains were adjacent to the Black Sea.
Hecataeus of Abdera and others believed Hyperborea was Britain. Later Roman and Greek sources continued to change the location of the Riphean mountains, the home of Boreas, as well as Hyperborea, supposedly located beyond them. However, all these sources agreed these were all in the far north of Greece or southern Europe. The ancient grammarian
Simmias of Rhodes in the 3rd century BC connected the Hyperboreans to the
Massagetae and Posidonius in the 1st century BC to the Western Celts, but
Pomponius Mela placed them even further north in the vicinity of the Arctic. In maps based on reference points and descriptions given by
Strabo, Hyperborea, shown variously as a
peninsula or island, is located beyond what is now France, and stretches further north–south than east–west. Other descriptions put it in the general area of the
Ural Mountains.
Later classical sources Plutarch, writing in the 1st century AD, mentions Heraclides of Ponticus, who connected the Hyperboreans with the
Gauls who had sacked Rome in the 4th century BC (see
Battle of the Allia).
Aelian,
Diodorus Siculus and
Stephen of Byzantium all recorded important ancient Greek sources on Hyperborea, but added no new descriptions. The 2nd-century AD Stoic philosopher
Hierocles equated the Hyperboreans with the Scythians, and the Riphean Mountains with the
Ural Mountains.
Clement of Alexandria and other early Christian writers also made this same Scythian equation.
Ancient identification with Britain Hyperborea was identified with Britain first by
Hecataeus of Abdera in the 4th century BC, as in a preserved fragment by
Diodorus Siculus: In the regions beyond the land of the Celts there lies in the ocean an island no smaller than
Sicily. This island, the account continues, is situated in the north and is inhabited by the Hyperboreans, who are called by that name because their home is beyond the point whence the north wind (Boreas) blows; and the island is both fertile and productive of every crop, and has an unusually temperate climate. Hecateaus of Abdera also wrote that the Hyperboreans had on their island "a magnificent sacred precinct of Apollo and a notable temple which is adorned with many votive offerings and is spherical in shape". Some scholars have identified this temple with
Stonehenge. Diodorus, however, does not identify Hyperborea with Britain, and his description of Britain (5.21–23) makes no mention of the Hyperboreans or their spherical temple.
Pseudo-Scymnus, around 90 BC, wrote that Boreas dwelled at the extremity of Gaulish territory, and that he had a pillar erected in his name on the edge of the sea (
Periegesis, 183). Some have claimed this is a geographical reference to northern France, and Hyperborea as the British Isles which lay just beyond the
English Channel.
Ptolemy (
Geographia, 2. 21) and
Marcian of Heraclea (
Periplus, 2. 42) both placed Hyperborea in the
North Sea which they called the "Hyperborean Ocean". In his 1726 work on the
druids,
John Toland specifically identified Diodorus' Hyperborea with the
Isle of Lewis, and the spherical temple with the
Callanish Stones. ==Legends==