Wheeler, 'Georgia in Antiquity: A History of Colchis and Transcaucasian Iberia 550 BC-AD 562', Bryn Mawr Classical Review 9504
URL = http://hegel.lib.ncsu.edu/stacks/serials/bmcr/bmcr-9504-wheeler-georgia
@@@@95.4.5, Braund, Georgia in Antiquity
David Braund, Georgia in Antiquity: A History of Colchis and
Transcaucasian Iberia 550 BC-AD 562. Oxford: Clarendon Press,
1994. Pp. 359. $49.95. ISBN 0-19-814473-3.
Reviewed by Everett L. Wheeler -- Duke University
Authors can often be prophets--even unwittingly. In a recent
review the author of this work concludes: "However, this is not
a book for the uninformed or the unwary, since too much of its
details and its general thinking requires substantial revision"
(International History Review 16 [1994] 778). This
sentiment could be applied to his own book. Braund (hereafter
"B.") procedes from the erroneous assumption that scholars west
of the Crimea are totally ignorant of ancient Georgia. Hence B.'s
epiphany as an illuminator. His introduction, which can scarcely
be called modest (esp. p.1), boasts of this book as a "new
beginning," through which ancient Georgia can be understood for
the first time and the study of Georgia integrated into general
ancient history--a discipline that B. feels is still dominated by
the political history of Athens and Rome. With a few exceptions,
B. overlooks Western scholarship in Caucasiology, the
availability of Soviet and even Georgian scholarly publications
in the West (many with generous summaries in Western languages),
the life-long labors of Otar Lordkipanidze in familiarizing
Western scholars with Georgian archaeology, and not least the
long tradition of debates among Western ancient historians,
particularly on problems of Roman and Byzantine involvement with
the Caucasian peoples. In brief, B. misrepresents the state of
scholarship.
The absence of even a single reference to articles in
RE epitomizes B.'s scholarly method, which gravitates
between two poles--Georgian archaeology and British (chiefly
Cambridge) socio-economic historiography. Thus readers should be
prepared for "models," "elites," "center vs periphery," the now
hackneyed peoples-of-the-hills vs peoples-of-the-plains scenario,
and that Liebling transhumance.
This book is not a comprehensive treatment of
Transcaucasia: Albania (Azerbaijan), Armenia, and tribes north of
the Caucasus are omitted. Nor do we receive any hint about the
scholarly tradition of ethnological studies of the multi-ethnic
and polyglot Caucasian peoples, whom for B. are indigenous except
for some interaction with peoples from the north--a topic not
cogently pursued. B. focuses primarily on Colchis (western
Georgia); Iberia (eastern Georgia) is slighted. Similarly, as a
work of archaeology the book is curious: Stone-Age and Bronze-Age
Colchis are treated perfunctorily and Iberia before the third
century B.C. is by-passed. Technical terms like "Colchian-Koban
culture" (pp.106-108) are not defined, nor is Georgian
archaeology contextualized by detailed comparison with material
culture in Anatolia, the northern Near East, and the steppe north
of the Caucasus. Rather, B. surveys Greek and Roman involvement
in Georgia from the dawn of Greek colonization to the
Byzantine-Persian treaty of 562 without a unifying thesis, the
comprehensive coverage promised (p.vii), and a proper conclusion
to 314 pages of text.
The work is divided into nine chapters, which combine
updates on Georgian archaeology with various hypotheses. Ch. 1 on
myth is ahistorical. B. assembles RE-style catalogues of
references (e.g. Colchis, Argonauts, Medea) to prove
extensive connections between Colchis and the Graeco-Roman world,
but B. fails to distinguish fascination with the Argonaut saga
from contacts with the real Colchis, and only later (p.74) does
he realize that many of these "connections" were local
inventions. Ch. 2 ("Geography and Economy") offers a good
introduction for beginners in Caucasian studies. Advanced
students will find the economic theses less satisfying. An
emphasis on the Colchian slave trade is predictable, given B.'s
Cambridge training, and B. essentially follows W. W. Tarn in
denying Indian trade through Transcaucasia. A geographical thesis
seeks to overthrow the idea of the Caucasus as a barrier against
northern invaders--a view stressed in the sources. For B. the
Caucasus is permeable, but his case is weak and a full refutation
must be pursued elsewhere.
B.'s treatment of Greek colonization marches in step with
the current revisionist party line (aimed at the works of A.J.
Graham and what the ancient sources say): colonization as
"process" rather than "events"; dispatch of an oikist becomes a
late rather than a first step. Likewise, B. follows a current
trend in emphasizing cooperation rather than conflict with the
natives--a trend also now prominent in Roman frontier studies. In
these issues, as with the problem of a native Colchian kingdom,
B. marshals the evidence to support his hypotheses. Definitive
answers still lie far in the future.
From at least the fifth century B.C. on, Georgia was in
contact with various empires. B. adds little of historical
importance on Achaemenid Persia and Colchis, although his
conjecture that Colchis belonged to the Athenian Empire is
adventurous and his stance on Seleucid control of Colchis and
Iberia dubious. The rich sites of Vani and the more recently
excavated and less well-known Sairkhe, both prominent since at
least the sixth century B.C., highlight the Hellenistic period in
Colchis. B.'s extensive criticisms of Lordkipanidze's
interpretations of Vani, however, range from captious to
legitimate. The rise of an Iberian kingdom, which deserved more
attention, receives little.
Discussion of Roman involvement in Georgia, beginning with
the Third Mithridatic War, remains consistent with B.'s neglect
of Western scholarship. In fact, B.'s account lacks originality.
Pompey's Caucasian campaigns, for example, are seen as
adventurism. The view dates at least to 1949 (Matthias Gelzer's
Pompeius), but Gelzer is not cited. Iberia has yielded
numerous Greek and Aramaic inscriptions, on which B. refers only
to Georgian scholarship, apparently unaware of Western
discussions of the Greek inscriptions and many of the Aramaic.
Pertinent references to standard epigraphical corpora are not
given (e.g. pp.213-15; cf. SEG XVI 781-83, XX 113)
and SEG XV 838 is not mentioned. For the ties between
Iberia and Iranians north of the Caucasus, the supposed confusion
of the Caspian and Caucasian Gates in the sources, the
significance of Iberia in Roman policy towards Armenia and
Parthia, Arrian's governorship--indeed the whole history of Roman
relations with Georgia between the Third Mithridatic War and the
mid-second century--B. chooses to ignore a 1977 Duke University
dissertation, known to him since 1989 (E.L. Wheeler, Flavius
Arrianus: A Political and Military Biography, pp.54-283). B.
agrees with many of this author's views (e.g. pp.196-97,
210-12, 216, 218, 234) and even defends Wheeler's stance on
Nero's Caucasian campaign against Benjamin Isaac (p.226 n.121),
who (unlike B.) cited this work and named its author. B.'s
differences with this author must be discussed elsewhere.
For the third and fourth centuries B.'s survey becomes
spotty, superficial, and often unconvincing (e.g. pp.241-
42 on Machelonia in the Res Gestae of Sapor I). Substance
returns with the final chapter on the Byzantine-Sassanid struggle
for Lazica (Colchis) in the fifth and sixth centuries. B.
rehearses and expands an earlier article on Procopius' alleged
misconceptions, although B.'s polemic resorts to a fallacious
historical determinism--only what did happen could have happened
(pp.297-98).
Misprints occur, including jumbled numbers in references
(e.g. 13 n.18: read Diod. 17.77.3 for 77.17.3). B. dates
the Historia Augusta to the third century (p.275 n.26) and
does not distinguish Aristotle from Heraclides Lembus or the
pseudo-Aristotelian Mir.Ausc. (pp.16, 26, 96). Space
precludes cataloguing factual errors. More irritating, however,
is the inadequacy of the maps (nos. 1-3, 5-6): numerous sites in
the text are omitted. B.'s constant vacillation between modern
and ancient toponyms will confuse and frustrate many readers.
Further, the bibliography, featuring numerous Georgian
publications given in transliteration without accompanying
translations of the titles, defeats any scholarly purpose and
becomes a pedantic display.
In sum, this introduction to ancient Georgia could have been
a much better book. A division of the material into sections of
"Evidence" and "Studies" would have clarified much for the
uninitiated and protected unwary readers. Nevertheless, Western
scholars should thank B. for this update on Georgian archaeology
and bemoan a lost opportunity.