Anacharsis (; ) was a Scythians prince and philosopher of uncertain historicity who lived in the 6th century BC.
Few concrete details are known about the life of the historical Anacharsis. He is known to have travelled to Ancient Greece, where he possibly became influenced by Greek culture.
Anacharsis was later killed by his brother Saulius for having sacrificed to the Scythian ancestral Snake-Legged Goddess at her shrine in the country of Hylaea by performing an and shamanism ritual at night during which he wore images on his dress and played drums.
The ancient Greek author, Herodotus, claimed that Anacharsis had been killed because he had renounced Scythian customs and adopted Greek ones, although this claim was likely invented by Herodotus himself. The religious rituals practised by Anacharsis instead corresponded more closely to those of the transvestite Enaree priesthood of the Scythians.
The nephew of Anacharsis, Idanthyrsus, who was the son and successor of Saulius, would later become famous among the Greeks in his own right for having resisted the Persians invasion of Scythia in 513 BC.
The ancient Greek historian Ephorus later used this image of Anacharsis to create an idealised image of the Scythians.
Eventually, Anacharsis completely became an ideal "man of nature" or "noble savage" figure in Greek literature, as well as favourite figure of the Cynics, who ascribed to him a 3rd-century BC work titled the . Lucian wrote two works on him, Anacharsis or Athletics (Ἀνάχαρσις ἢ Περὶ Γυμνασίων) and The Scythian (Σκύθης).
Due to the transformation of Anacharsis into a favourite character of Greek philosophers, nearly all of the ancient writings concerning him are about Greek literature, which makes the information regarding the historical Anacharsis himself difficult to assess.
Anacharsis is mentioned in Apologeticus by Tertullian of Carthage, a North African Montanism Christian apologist who cited his argument against anti-intellectualism. He is also mentioned in another of Tertullian’s works, On the Pallium.
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