The front cover of the issue of Fate Magazine (vol. 42, no. 9, issue #474, September 1989)
containing my original article on the possible reality behind the classic Greek
legend of Jason and the Golden Fleece (© Fate Magazine – reproduced here on a
strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational and review purposes
only)
One of my very first articles published by Fate Magazine concerned the exciting
possibility that the classic Greek legend of the hero Jason and his epic quest aboard
his ship the Argo for the magical Golden Fleece at Colchis may have been based
at least to a degree upon reality, especially with regard to the Fleece itself.
It appeared in the September 1989 issue of Fate,
whose front cover, depicting this famous story, opens the present ShukerNature
article. Eight years later, my article was republished in my compendium book From Flying Toads To Snakes With Wings
(1997), containing an extensive selection of my Fate articles. Now, 23 years on again, and this time expanded and
partly rewritten, my investigation of Jason and the Golden Fleece finally makes
its long-awaited debut on ShukerNature.
The grim shadow of a raised sword fell
across the pale, tensed body of Prince Phryxus as he lay upon the sacrificial
slab, awaiting certain death at the hand of his own father, King Athamas of
Orchomenus. This city in ancient Greece had once been rich and prosperous, but
that year its crop of corn had failed, and its people were starving. Due to a
false prophecy originating from Queen Ino, Phryxus's wicked stepmother who
hated him, Athamas mistakenly believed that his city's crop failure was a curse
inflicted by the gods and could only be lifted by the sacrifice to them of his
beloved son, Phryxus. Happily, however, Ino's evil plan was known to the gods,
who chose to thwart it in a most spectacular manner.
Phryxus striving to hold on to Helle as she falls from
Chrysomallus's back into the sea - depicted in an ancient Roman fresco, 45-79
AD, Pompeii (© Stefano Bolognini/Wikipedia, copyright-free for private or
commercial use when copyright owner is attributed)
Suddenly, as Athamas's sword was poised to
strike the fatal blow that would slay Phryxus, a golden stream of light poured
forth from the clouds directly overhead. The king and the gathered congregation
of spectators stared up in surprise, and as they did so the clouds parted and a
magnificent winged ram with a shimmering fleece of pure gold appeared. The ram
was Chrysomallus, sent by the messenger god Hermes to rescue the boy prince. As
soon as Chrysomallus alighted on the ground, Phryxus ran to him and sat astride
his broad woolly back. So too did Phryxus's young sister, Helle, whom Ino also
hated.
Moments later, like a brilliant golden
meteor, Chrysomallus was soaring speedily through the sky, journeying
eastwards. Just as they were flying over the narrow stretch of sea dividing
Europe and Asia, however, Helle looked down, and became so giddy that she fell
off Chrysomallus's back, plummeting into the waves where she drowned. From then
on, this sea was called the Hellespont. Chrysomallus, meanwhile, flew onwards
with Phryxus until they reached the land of Colchis, in what is today the
republic of Georgia. There, Phryxus was welcomed by Aeëtes, king of Colchis,
but Chrysomallus died, and his glorious golden fleece was hung in a sacred
grove, guarded by a dragon. Many years later, the fleece would be the focus of
an epic quest by a Greek prince called Jason and his bold crew, the Argonauts,
sailing from Iolcus to Colchis via the Black Sea aboard their famous ship the
Argo, and assisted by Aeëtes's own daughter Medea in their successful bid to
steal the fleece, sailing back to Iolcus with it afterwards.
Children's book illustration from 1902 or earlier, depicting
Phryxus and Helle, based upon the above-reproduced Pompeii fresco (public
domain)
Down through the ages, many ideas have been
aired with regard to the Golden Fleece not having been a literal, physical
sheep fleece of any kind, but rather a metaphor or a figurative description for
something else entirely. Suggestions have included such diverse options as
royal power, a book on alchemy, a technique of writing in gold on parchment,
the forgiveness of the Gods, a rain cloud, a land of golden corn, the
spring-hero, the sea reflecting the sun, the gilded prow of Phryxus's ship, the
riches imported from the East, the wealth of technology of Colchis (see later
here), a covering for a cult image of Zeus in the form of a ram, a fabric woven
from sea silk, and a symbol representing the trading of fleeces dyed with the
valuable, highly-prized pigment Tyrian purple (procured from the purple dye
murex Bolinus brandaris, and various
related species) for Georgian gold. Each of these, and more, has its own
supporters, but none has achieved a consensus of scholarly acceptance.
Moreover, most people assume that this
entire story is nothing more than a fanciful Greek myth anyway, dating back
3000 years but with no basis in fact. Quite apart from the ostensible fairytale
aspect of a golden-fleeced ram, there was no firm evidence to suggest that
Greek ships could even have reached the Black Sea prior to the 7th Century BC,
when they are known to have colonised this region. However, not everyone has
dismissed the legend quite so readily.
Purple dye murex Bolinus
brandaris (public domain)
In May 1984, a classics scholar called Tim
Severin and a team of modern-day Argonauts set out aboard their own Argo,
sailing from Volos (site of Iolcus) in Thessaly, Greece, to Vani (site of
Colchis) in western Georgia. Their goal was to recreate Jason's alleged voyage
- and thus prove that such a journey could truly have taken place in those
far-off days. In order to achieve as intimate a degree of verisimilitude as
possible, Severin's specially-designed Argo was patterned on ancient Aegean
vessels by naval architect Colin Mudie. It was then built by Greek shipwright
Vasilis Delimitros, who crafted it from the same Aleppo pine used by Bronze Age
Greek seafarers. When complete, it measured 54 ft in length.
Spanning 1500 nautical miles from the
Aegean Sea through the Dardanelles (Hellespont), the Sea of Marmara, the
Bosporus, and thence along the Black Sea's Turkish perimeter to his Georgian
destination at its eastern limit, Severin's voyage in this new Argo took three
months. It was often arduous, but it was also successful - thereby indicating
that Jason and the Argonauts' epic journey aboard the Argo was indeed possible
even back in those bygone times of ancient Greece. Moreover, as revealed in his
fascinating book The Jason Voyage (1986), Severin also learned some
interesting items of information relevant to the Golden Fleece.
Tim Severin (© Aaron D Linderman/Wikipedia - GNU Free Documentation Licence)
This legend is very popular in Georgia even
today - where it is taught in schools, and even commemorated in product names,
such as a 'Golden Fleece' brand of cigarettes. In addition, western Georgia once
harboured a thriving cult of ram worshippers that lasted from the middle Bronze
Age into the modern era - as confirmed by such archaeological finds as a bronze
ram's head totem dating from the 18th Century BC, and ram's head bracelets
moulded from gold that date from the 4th Century BC. There is even an old
Georgian folktale of a golden ram tethered by a golden chain in a mountain cave
filled with golden treasure.
Severin also learned that the traditional
method of prospecting for gold in Georgia, a method dating back countless
centuries, is to anchor in a gold-rich stream bed the fleece of a sheep -
because the fleece's wool is very effective at trapping particles of gold.
After it has been left in the stream for a time, the result will be a fleece impregnated
with gold - in other words, a golden fleece! True, it will hardly compare to
its magnificent legendary counterpart, but it may have been sufficient to
inspire such a legend long ago.
Two Georgian gold coins commemorating the Golden Fleece legend (public
domain)
The
possibility that this activity is the origin of the Golden Fleece account is
certainly intriguing, but it is not a recent revelation. As far back in time as
the 1st Century BC, the Greek geographer/historian Strabo had made the same suggestion.
He suggested that it may have been an ordinary fleece that had been used to
trap gold washed down the River Phasis. Particles of gold would have remained
ensnared among its fibres, resulting in a fleece that at least upon casual
observation might well have appeared to be composed of gold-bearing wool. Although
a most ingenious idea, it is surely unlikely that such a superficially
deceptive artefact could not only have retained its illusion intact during
inevitable closer examination but also have become sufficiently famous to
engender one of Greek mythology's most enduring legends.
Dr George Hartwig mentioned in The Subterranean World (1875) that modern-day gold prospectors
still use sheep fleeces for this purpose in several different gold-bearing
countries. However, he also noted that this was not taken by many authorities
as proof that the Golden Fleece was itself a fleece with gold-ensnared fibres.
On the contrary, many felt that the quest by Jason and his Argonauts to Colchis
was not for a Golden Fleece at all, but for this wealthy city's gold itself,
with the fleece being nothing more than a means of obtaining such gold and
having no significance of its own. In short, the Golden Fleece's present-day
prominence in mythology might be due to erroneous telling and retelling of the
ancient myths down through the ages, with the object of Jason's quest (the gold
of Colchis) becoming confused with the means of obtaining it (an ordinary sheep
fleece).
Strabo – 19th-Century
engraving (public domain)
Although
both of these theories are undoubtedly compelling in their simplicity, they are
not the only explanations on offer for the origin of the Golden Fleece legend.
Another solution, offered by several different researchers, is one that seeks
to explain the Golden Fleece in a very different manner - as a misinterpreted
and/or mythified reference to fine-wooled fleeces. There are three principal
classes of wool:
1)
Carpet wool (very coarse, and hair-like;
used for making carpets and rugs).
2)
Cross-bred wool (familiar, weaving-quality; produced by the majority of British
sheep breeds).
3)
Fine wool (valuable and lustrous, with exceedingly fine fibres lacking a central
medulla; generally obtained today from Merino sheep).
Vintage
illustration of a Merino ram (public domain)
In a paper published by the British
scientific journal Nature on 13 April 1973, Dr M.L. Ryder and Dr J.W.
Hedges from the ARC Animal Breeding Research Organisation at Edinburgh,
Scotland, noted that the legend of the Golden Fleece may actually refer to fine
wool. Moreover, in their paper they documented a sample of cloth composed of
fine wool that was obtained from a Scythian tomb in the Crimea, and which dated
back to the 5th Century BC. If their reconciliation of the Golden Fleece legend
with fine wool is correct, this Scythian sample is thus of particular significance.
Its age and Crimean locality collectively confirm that fine wool was indeed
associated with the Black Sea region, and at a time near that of the Golden
Fleece's appearance and Jason's quest for it.
Nevertheless, in 1932 a paper had already
appeared in the Proceedings of the Royal
Society (of London) that was destined during the 1980s to suggest a much
more literal solution to the Golden Fleece mystery than a gold-bearing
artefact, a substitute for gold itself, or a mythification of early fine-woolled
sheep.
Jason with the Golden Fleece, depicted upon a tin-glazed
earthenware plate created in c.1540 AD (public domain)
The paper in question was written by Drs
Claude Rimington and A.M. Stewart of the Wool Industries Research Association
of Leeds, in West Yorkshire, England, and concerned itself with a previously
uninvestigated pigment. Raw wool comprises the wool fibres and 'yolk'. This
latter component in turn consists of ether-soluble grease (secreted by the
sheep's sebaceous skin glands), and a water-soluble substance known as suint
(secreted by the sheep's sweat glands). In their paper, Rimington and Stewart
recorded that a golden-brown colouration existed in varying intensities within
the suint of certain sheep, its intensity of colour depending upon the animals'
diet and age, and also influenced by conditions stimulating sweat.
Following their analysis of the composition
and secretion of this mysterious pigment (which they termed lanaurin - meaning
'golden wool'), Rimington and Stewart concluded that it was a pyrrolic complex.
That is to say, a compound whose chemical structure is based upon a ring of
four carbon atoms and one nitrogen atom. Moreover, they believed it to be
related to the bile pigment bilirubin - a reddish substance originating via the
breakdown of the well-known respiratory pigment haemoglobin, and normally
secreted into the bile by the liver in many mammalian species.
Modern-day sculpture of the Golden Fleece hanging in its sacred
grove and protected by a dragon, on display at Sochi in Russia (public domain)
Rimington and Stewart suggested that the
appearance of lanaurin resulted from an enhanced destruction of haemoglobin
within the sheep so afflicted; they also confirmed that it was conveyed through
the skin of such sheep into their wool via the sweat glands. Furthermore, not
only did this compound occur within the wool
of golden-coloured sheep, it was also found within their urine, which in turn was excessively pigmented. Comparisons were
drawn between golden-woolled sheep and inherited acholuric jaundice in humans,
with the suggestion that as with this type of human jaundice, the golden-wool
condition in sheep may be genetically based.
Further researches into this intriguing
area of biochemistry took place in the years to come. Chemical analyses became
more precise, and chemical nomenclature diversified - substances inducing
jaundice becoming known as icterogenic agents. By the early 1960s, examples of
abnormal golden colouration had been reported and studied not only in sheep but
also in rabbits (see the series of papers by Rimington and colleagues published
during this period in the Royal Society's Proceedings),
and it emerged that a number of natural and synthetic icterogenic agents
belonged to a group of chemicals known as the pentacyclic triterpenoids. In
other words, they are organic compounds produced in animals and also plants by
combination into larger molecules of units each containing five carbon atoms
arranged in the characteristic pattern present in isoprene (a simple-structured
substance used in the manufacture of rubber).
'The Golden Fleece' by Herbert James Draper, 1904, oil on canvas
(public domain)
By 1963 and in partnership with J.M.M.
Brown and Barbara Sawyer, Rimington's continuing researches in this field had
uncovered some important new information. They revealed that the golden-wool
condition in sheep could also be induced by environmental means - namely, the
ingestion by sheep of leaves from certain plants (especially shrubs of the
genus Lantana). These plants
contained pentacyclic triterpenoids that poisoned the liver of such sheep, thus
preventing the normal excretion of bilirubin into the bile - resulting instead
in its passage (together with that of various related pigments) into the skin
and wool suint of those animals, thereby bestowing upon their wool the golden
appearance reported in Rimington's earlier studies.
So here we have an
environmentally-stimulated phenomenon that produces sheep (and rabbits!) with
golden-coloured wool. Not surprisingly, therefore, it was only a matter of time
before this circumstance was mooted as the solution to the fabled Golden Fleece
itself. And in a letter to Nature
published on 23 June 1987, this was indeed proposed in that context by Dr J.
Smith, a researcher in physical chemistry at Melbourne University, Australia.
Jason bringing Pelias the Golden Fleece and a winged victory
prepares to crown him with a wreath - Side A from an Apulian red-figure calyx
crater, in the Louvre, Paris (public domain)
In his letter, Dr Smith recalled an earlier
portion of the Golden Fleece legend. Namely, the section in which its ovine
bearer appeared during a period of severe famine in Greece, having been sent by
Hermes to rescue two children due to be sacrificed by their evil stepmother
Ino, in an attempt to appease the gods and thereby end the famine. Smith noted
that during modern-day periods of famine in New Zealand, sheep there were often
fed upon leaves from trees by their distraught farmer owners. He then
postulated that under similar conditions in Greece, farmers may well have fed their
sheep upon leaves from the extensively cultivated olive tree Olea europea. And it just so happens
that the olive tree's leaves contain great amounts of oleanolic acid, which is
the basic substance from which the known icterogenic pentacyclic triterpenoids
are derived.
Tests carried out with rabbits by Brown,
Rimington and Sawyer in the 1960s had readily revealed that small amounts of
oleanolic acid did not induce any icterogenic activity. Conversely, as argued
by Smith, when present in much greater concentrations - as in the leaves of the
olive tree (and particularly in those subjected to draught stress, as
experienced in famine conditions) - oleanolic acid could exert a deleterious
effect upon the liver of sheep, and in turn bring about abnormal golden discolouration
of wool. In short, the Golden Fleece legend may have been based upon sightings
of sheep that, during the famine periods experienced by Greece in earlier days,
had been fed upon olive tree leaves, whose high triterpenoid content had ultimately
caused their fleeces to be stained with golden bile pigments.
Although, as Smith himself admitted, this
is all speculative, there is no doubt that it offers an exceedingly beguiling
solution to the legend - and one, moreover, that actually corresponds very
closely not just with its principal but also with its more peripheral portions.
At the same time, however, some contrary
evidence also exists – which was brought to attention via a follow-up letter
published in Nature on 5 November
1987 and written by research chemists Drs Patrick Moyna and Horacio Heinzen
from the Faculty of Chemistry in Uruguay's Universidad de la Republica. They
reported that oleanolic acid is contained in even greater concentrations in
certain other plant sources - for example, it accounts for up to 50% of the
content of grapes' epicuticular wax. Yet this does not appear to have any toxic
effect upon humans consuming the grapes - in contrast to the outcome that one
would have predicted, judging from the arguments offered with sheep and olive
leaves. However, Moyna and Heinzen did not provide any references in relation
to sheep and grapes, and it is well
known that the gastrointestinal tract and its associated organs in humans
differ very considerably in morphology and physiology from those of sheep.
The concept of liver-damaged sheep with
discoloured yellowish wool stained by bile pigments certainly fails to conjure
forth the romantic image evoked by the stirring legend of the Golden Fleece.
However, the prosaic practicality of science is rarely able to match the
imaginative wonder of illusory fable and fairytale.
In March 1991, yet another theory was
highlighted, again by Dr ML. Ryder. In an Oxford
Journal of Archaeology paper, he discussed evidence not only for the two
afore-chronicled theories concerning fine wool and the using of fleeces to
collect gold from water, but also for the possibility that the legend stemmed
at least in part from fleeces sporting genetically-induced tan-coloured fibres rather
than white ones. Clearly, the allure and intrigue of the Golden Fleece is as
much alive in modern times as it was 3000 years ago in ancient times. Not bad
for a mere myth…?
The Colchis princess Medea, the Golden Fleece, and its dragon
guardian – plate from an old Russian children's book (public domain)
A final scientific curiosity linking sheep
and gold that is well worth mentioning here is the occurrence of reports from
many parts of the world down through the years concerning sheep that supposedly
possess teeth plated with gold! These still appear spasmodically in the media
even today, yet as far back as 25 August 1920 in a paper published by the Proceedings
of the Linnean Society of New South Wales, Thomas Steel revealed that the
golden colour was due merely to the reflection of light from the overlapping of
thin films of encrusting tartar, deposited on the teeth by the animals' own
saliva. As for the tartar - far from being gold, or even iron pyrites ('fool's
gold'), this had been conclusively shown to be nothing more exciting (or
valuable!) than impure calcium phosphate and organic matter. In Crete, it is
widely believed that sheep there sporting golden teeth have been eating the
herb nevrida Polygonum ideaum over a
lengthy period of time, as investigated in an online article here
that contains photographs of gold-stained sheep teeth.
It was Shakespeare who said: "All that
glisters is not gold", and judging from the subjects investigated in this
article, he certainly had a point!
That was an interesting read. I'm rather skeptical of most attempts to find literal truths behind myths, because they quickly get rather far-fetched, but those guesses at the origin of "the golden fleece" you describe do turn out some interesting information that I did not know nonetheless!
ReplyDelete"Crop of corn had failed". It could not have been corn since this is a new world vegetable.
ReplyDeleteThe term 'corn' when used in the Americas and Australasia is used specifically for maize, but elsewhere (e.g. Europe and the Middle East) it is used to denote any cereal crop, not just maize.
DeleteSeveral interesting possibilities! I once read another, suggesting the golden fleece was of a certain fowl which has a magnificent bright golden-coloured tail. I don't remember too much because it's been 25-30 years since I read it. I do remember the fowl was south-east Asian. For this fowl to make the Georgian connection, I suppose it would have had to have come by a route similar to the later Silk Road, but as far as I know, that route didn't open until Genghis Khan's conquests. Anyway, I prefer several of the possibilities presented in the article here.
ReplyDeleteI have no problem with trying to find truth in ancient legend; the remains of the city of Troy were found that way. Well, I do have one problem with it: ancient legend can contain some unpleasant things, such as the attitudes of certain Greek deities toward women.
Re. my earlier comment, the bird might have been Chrysolophus pictus, the golden pheasant, but I clearly remember an exceptionally large version of a rooster's arching tail, not like a pheasant's tail at all. I think the two species were depicted close together in the same book. I vaguely remember my 12-year-old self being surprised to find it applied to one bird and not the other, ;) perhaps because only the red form of the golden pheasant was depicted.
ReplyDeleteVery interesting, I wasn't previously aware of this suggestion. Might the bird have been a male argus pheasant, whose tail feathers do arch (although in this species it is the male's expanded wing plumes that are most conspicuous)?
Delete