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On the Trail of the Women Warriors by Lyn Webster Wilde
On the Trail of the Women Warriors by Lyn Webster Wilde







On the Trail of the Women Warriors by Lyn Webster Wilde On the Trail of the Women Warriors by Lyn Webster Wilde

Unlike most scholars, she examined-firsthand-Amazon remains: she traveled to the Ukraine, Russia, and the shores of the Black Sea to investigate graves of Scythian women warriors and the lost city of Themiscyra. Webster Wilde concentrates her study on the Amazons of Greek mythology, and with clarity, wit, and detail, she examines various possibilities as to what the source of their images and myth may have been.

On the Trail of the Women Warriors by Lyn Webster Wilde

First mentioned by Homer, who considered them "women the equal of men," Amazon women fought bravely and ruthlessly in the Bronze and Iron Ages (2000 BC-300 BC), and sought out masculine society only once a year to conceive. In On the Trail of the Women Warriors, Lyn Webster Wilde investigates the original Amazons, independent women warriors who lived without men.

On the Trail of the Women Warriors by Lyn Webster Wilde

Readers who associate "Amazon" primarily with a South American River or an online retailer are in for a big surprise. In the hidden world of the Hittites, near the Amazons' ancient capital of Themiscyra in Anatolia, she unearthed traces of powerful priestesses, women-only religious cults and an armed bisexual goddess - all possible sources for the ferocious warrior women.Ĭombining scholarly penetration with a sense of adventure, Webster Wilde has explored a largely unknown field and produced a coherent and absorbing book, which challenges our preconceived notions of what men and women can do. North of the Black Sea she found archaeological excavations of graves of Iron Age women buried with arrows, swords, and armor. Did they really exist? Until recently scholars consigned them to the world of myth, but Lyn Webster Wilde journeyed into the homeland of the Amazons, and uncovered astonishing evidence of their historic reality. "Golden-shielded, silver-sworded, man-loving, male-child slaughtering Amazons." That is how the fifth century Greek historian Hellanicus described the Amazons, and they have fascinated society ever since.









On the Trail of the Women Warriors by Lyn Webster Wilde