Online Encyclopedia

TAURI

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V26, Page 455 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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TAURI  , the earliest known inhabitants of the mountainous

south coast of the Crimea (Herodotus iv . 103) . Nothing is certain as to their
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affinities . They probably represent an old population perhaps connected with some
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Caucasus stock; in spite of the resemblance of the name Taurisci they are not likely to be Celts . They were famous in the ancient
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world for their maiden goddess, identified by the Greeks with
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Artemis Tauropolos or Iphigeneia, whom the goddess was said to have brought to her shrine at the moment when she was to have been sacrificed at
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Aulis .
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Orestes sought his
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sister, and almost fell a victim to the Tauric custom of sacrificing to the maiden shipwrecked strangers, a real custom which was the ground of the whole myth . His adventures were the subject of plays by Euripides and Goethe . Towards the end of the 2nd century s.e. we find the Tauri dependent allies of the Scythian king Scilurus, who from their harbour of Symbolon
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Portus or Palacium (Balaclava) harassed Chersonese (q.v.) . Their later
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history is unknown . (E . H .

End of Article: TAURI
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