Hyborian Age
From Freepedia
The Hyborian Age was devised by author Robert E. Howard as the post-Atlantean setting of his Conan the Barbarian stories, designed to fit in with the previous and less-well-known tales of Kull. The later were also written by Howard and were set at the time of Atlantis. The name "Hyborian" is a contraction of the Greek concept of the land of "Hyperborea", literally "Super-North-Land". This was a mythical place far to the north that was not cold and where things did not age.
Howard's Hyborian age, described in detail in his essay The Hyborian Age (published in The Coming of Conan the Cimmerian in 2003), is a mythical time before any civilization known to anthropologists. Its setting is Europe and North Africa – with some curious geological changes that were thought up prior to the ascendancy of the geologic theory of plate tectonics, though somewhat similar to what geologists theorize. They consider that during the Ice Age, Europe was quite different. The Mediterranean Sea formerly dried out intermittently, alternating with floods over the Straits of Gibraltar. Once there was a land-bridge across the English Channel between England and the Low Countries (but not across the Irish Sea) such that the Thames once flowed into a northern extension of the Rhine. And both the Baltic Sea and the Black Sea were once fresh-water lakes, the former (renamed the Ancylus Sea, after a fresh-water clam) covering much of the eastern half of what is now Sweden.
On a map Howard drew detailing it, his vision of the Mediterranean Sea is also dry. The Nile, which he re-named the River Styx, takes a westward turn at right angles just beyond the Nile Delta, plowing through the mountains so as to be able to reach the Straits of Gibraltar. Although his Black Sea is also dry, his Caspian Sea, which he renames the Vilayet Sea, extends northward to reach the Arctic Ocean, so as to provide a barrier to encapsulate the settings of his stories. Not only are his Baltic Sea and English Channel dry, but most of the North Sea and a vast region to the west, easily including Ireland, are too. Meanwhile, the west coast of Africa on his map lies beneath the sea. There are also a few islands, reminiscent of the Azores, but his stories are not about naval tactics.
In this general setting, Howard placed imaginary kingdoms to which he gave names from a varied series of sources. Khitai is his China, far to the East, deriving from an ancient name; Corinthia is his name for a Greek-like civilization, a name slapped together from the name of the city of Corinth and a reminiscence of the Middle Ages province of Carinthia. He imagines the Picts to occupy a large area to the northwest. The probable intended correspondences are listed below; notice that the correspondences are sometimes very loose, and are portrayed by ahistorical stereotypes.
| Kingdom, Region, or Ethnic Group | Correspondence(s) |
|---|---|
| Aquilonia | France, with occasional hints of England. The name derived from the town of Aquilonia, Avellino, Campania, Southern Italy, Italy, although it also resembles Aquitaine, a French region ruled by England for a long portion of the Middle Ages. |
| Argos | Sicily (?) or Carthage (?). The name derives from the city of Argos, Argolis, Peloponnesos, Greece. |
| Asgard | Sweden (Ásgard is the home of the Æsir in Norse mythology) |
| Border Kingdoms | German Baltic Sea coast |
| Bossonian Marches | Wales, with an overlay of colonial-era North America |
| Brythunia | Poland (?) |
| Cimmeria | Denmark, Southern Sweden, part of the North Sea and Scotland (The approximate region of the historical Cimbri, but not the region or culture of the historical Cimmerians) |
| Corinthia | Ancient Greece (Corinth is a Greek city) |
| Gunderland | The Netherlands ? Gunderland, count of Hesbaye (?-778) |
| Hyrkania | Ukraine (Hyrkanians = Scythians) ->Hyrcania |
| Hyperborea | Finland, Russia and the Baltic countries (Hyperborea was a land in "outermost north" according to Greek historian Herodotus. Howard's Hyperborea is a northern Evil Empire, ruled by wicked wizards, perhaps akin to the American view in the 1930s of the Soviet Union) |
| Iranistan | Iran |
| Keshan | |
| Khauran | |
| Khitai | China |
| Khoraja | |
| Koth | |
| Kush | From the kingdom of Kush, Nubia, North Africa. |
| Nemedia | From Nemed, leader of colonists from Scythia to Ireland in Irish mythology. |
| Ophir | Ancient Ophir, though clearly Howard saw it as situated somewhere in Italy. |
| Pictish Wilderness | Pictish Scotland, with an overlay of colonial-era North America, possibly even colonial-era New York. Howard bestows Algonquian names on his Picts. |
| Poitain | Aquitaine (?) (likely, although the name reminds of Poitou, an province Northeast of Aquitaine, but not mediterranean, and not properly part of the South).Putain is a Bad Word in French. |
| Punt | The Land of Punt on the Horn of Africa. |
| Shem | Mesopotamia, Syria, Palestine, and Arabia (cf. Semites, purportedly the sons of Shem) |
| Stygia | Egypt |
| Turan | The Ottoman Empire (?) or Byzantine Empire (?) or Persian Empire (?). The name derives from Turan, the areas of Eurasia occupied by speakers of Ural-Altaic languages. |
| Vanaheim | Norway (Vanaheim is the home of the Vanir in Norse mythology) |
| Vendhya | India (The Vindhya Range is a range of hills in central India) |
| Zamora | From the city of Zamora, Zamora province, Castile-Leon, Spain. |
| Zembabwei | The Munhumutapa Empire (Its capital city was the Great Zimbabwe) |
| Zingara | Spain |
| Other Geographic Features | |
| The River Styx | The Nile |
| Zaporoska River | The Don and/or the Volga. The river's name was probably influenced by Zaporizhian_Sich, a settlement of the Cossacks in Zaporizhzhia_(region). It was situated on the Dnieper_river, below the Dnieper rapids (porohy, poroża), hence the name, translated as "territory beyond the rapids". |
References
- Howard, Robert E., "The Hyborian Age", The Coming of Conan the Cimmerian (2003).
- de Camp, L. Sprague, Carter, Lin, and Nyberg, Björn (1978). "Hyborian Names". Appendix to Conan the Swordsman. Toronto: Bantam Books. ISBN 0-553-20582-X.



