The Neuri were independent of the Scythians. The Neuri are first mentioned in Book 4 of Herodotus's "Histories" as a people living "above the Scythians":
Migration because of snakes The earliest events in the history of the Neuri as described by Herodotus date back to a time several decades before the Scythian campaign of Darius I (513 BC). Describing the area inhabited by the Neuri in the upper reaches of the Hypanis, Herodotus makes a digression and points out the migration of the Neuri to the Budini because of snakes:…One generation before Darius’s campaign they abandoned their country entirely because of the snakes. The fact is that many snakes appeared in their country, and others more numerous rushed down to them from above from the deserts, until finally the Neuri, pressed by them, settled together with the Budinians, leaving their landThis fragment has repeatedly attracted the attention of researchers, who have hypothesized that it does not refer to real snakes, but to mythical enemies, perhaps to a people with a snake totem who attacked the Neuri and forced them to leave their lands. There are different opinions about which ethnic group of Eastern Europe could have served as the historical basis for this story. Thus, B. A. Rybakov interpreted the "snakes" as the Balts, known for their ancient snake cult. Based on an analysis of the areas of Baltic and Slavic hydronymy, he assumed that the mention of the invasion of "snakes" from the "desert in the interior of the country" reflects the migration of the Balts from the northern shore of the marshy floodplain of the Pripyat River to the southern shore, occupied by the Neuri. As an archaeological confirmation of this migration, Rybakov considered the Volyn group of monuments of the Scythian period, located in the Sluch River basin, where it alternates with settlements of the Milograd culture, which he associated with the Neuri. A version of the Thracian origin of the plot about snakes was also proposed, since snakes played a significant role in the religious beliefs of the Thracians, being a symbol of the most important Thraco-Phrygian deity Sabazius. Archaeological data interpreted by B. N. Grakov seem to confirm the migration of the Neuri to the lands of the Budins: a number of monuments on the Vorskla are related to the synchronous Chernoles culture of the right bank of the Dnieper, which he identified with the Neuri. However, the story about the "snakes" contradicts the chronology set out by Herodotus: although the migration of the Neuri is mentioned as preceding the campaign of Darius, in the description of the campaign itself they and their territory are still in the same place - between the lands of the Agathyrsi and Androphagi. According to B.D. Grakov, either Herodotus' informants transferred a more ancient event closer to their time, or the described migration, which ended up in the second chapter of the fourth book, was the last episode in a series of similar migrations.
Participation in the Scythian-Persian War When the
Persian Achaemenid king
Darius I attacked the Scythians in 513 BC, the Scythian king
Idanthyrsus summoned the kings of the peoples surrounding his kingdom to a meeting to decide how to deal with the Persian invasion. The kings of the
Budini,
Gelonians and
Sarmatians accepted to help the Scythians against the Persian attack, while the kings of the
Agathyrsi,
Androphagi,
Melanchlaeni, Neuri, and
Tauri refused to support the Scythians. During the campaign, the Scythians and the Persian army pursuing them passed through the territories of the Melanchlaeni, Androphagi, and Neuri, before they reached the borders of the Agathyrsi, who refused to let the Scythian divisions to pass into their territories and find refuge there, thus forcing the Scythians to return to
Scythia with the Persians pursuing them.
Hunnic invasion The historian
Philostorgius, in his Ecclesiastical History, written between 425 and 433, identified the brutal Huns with the Scythian werewolves, the Neuri. The most probable explanation of this belief is the location of the Neuri. They were the northernmost people, the Huns came from the far north, therefore the Huns are Neuri.
The Scythians who lived beyond the Ister were driven from their native lands by the Huns who attacked them and, having shown friendly intentions, came under the rule of the Romans. These Huns are obviously the same ones whom the ancients called Neuri, who lived at the foot of the Riphean Mountains, from where the Tanais originates, pouring its waters into the Maeotian swamp.Thanks to Philostorgius, we can see how the literary legend was finally formed. The Neuri turned into the Huns, Borysthenes into Tanais. Too great a distance separates this legend from Herodotus's "History" - one of the main sources of information about the Neuri, Borysthenes and Tanais. The Neuri, Geloni, Hypemolges and other characters of such legends could not have been real contemporaries of the Romans Marcian of Heraclea Pontica (Southern Black Sea region) around 400 AD wrote:Along the river Khesin live the Agathyrsi, the people of European Sarmatia. The rivers Khesin and Turunt flow (from the mountains of Rip, which) lie inside the continent between the Meotian (Azov) lake and the Sarmatian ocean (Baltic). The river Rudon flows from the Alan mountain (the southern district of the Valdai hills); near this mountain and in general in this region live in a wide space the people of the Alans-Sarmatians (proto-Slavs and neighbors), in whose land are the sources of the river Borysthenes (Dnieper), flowing into the Pontus. The land beyond the Borysthenes, beyond the Alans, is inhabited by the so-called
European Huns (Huns, who were then considered close to the Neuri)"
Legacy Starting with K. Shirren (1852), scholars have proposed an etymological connection between Herodotus’s Neuri and the ethnonym
neroma, known from
Old Rus' chronicles. The term first appears in
Nestor’s “
Tale of Bygone Years” (in the form
norova); it is also mentioned in the
Pereyaslav-Suzdal Chronicle (as
neroma) and in the
Hypatian Chronicle (as “noroma” ==Society==