Amazon Queen of Czechoslovakia |
Then my review of
Adrienne Mayor’s thrilling book on the
Amazons appeared in New Statesman. It
is a global history of mounted warrior women, skilled in archery. Many
classical myths about Amazons turn out to have archaeological substantiation.
In the Tarim Basin (north-west China), a mass grave of the second/first century
BC contains the skeletons of 133 male and
female nomads killed in combat. One trouser leg was discovered, amazingly,
to be decorated with a centaur blowing a war trumpet like those blown by
Amazons and Scythians in ancient Greek art.
Just about the
only Amazon myth containing no truth is that they routinely cut off one breast;
this was a false etymology of Amazones,
a prehistoric Iranian ethnic term unconnected to the Greek word for ‘breast’, mastos or mazos.
Speaking of present
and absent breasts, I can’t be certain whether the man who in 1970 invented the
Page Three Girl would have encountered Greek etymology when he attended
Rastrick Grammar School in Yorkshire, but exposure to Latin and thus to Camilla, the Amazon of the Aeneid, is likely.
Lamb (right) with Bob Maxwell |
Did Camilla excite Larry Lamb? |
David Phalakros Dinsmore |
We will never
know. Lamb is no longer with us. To be fair, in his memoir Sunset he confided that the Page Three
Girl was probably a mistake. His view is not shared by the current Sun editor David Dinsmore, a
demented-looking hairless Glaswegian whom the Greeks would have called phalakros (‘penis-head’). Reports of the
demise of the Page Three Girl earlier this week were on Thursday proved to be
premature by Nicole from Bournemouth. Dinsmore is a graduate, of Paisley and Columbia, in Business and Management
Skills. I hope it was in the USA, not Scotland, that he learned to be such a
booby.
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