
An illustration of ''The Hyborian Age'' primarily based upon a map hand-drawn by
Robert E. Howard in March 1932.
The 'Hyborian Age' is a phrase used by author
Robert E. Howard to refer to a specific epoch in a fictional timeline used for many of the
low fantasy tales of his
artificial legendry; in particular, the stories of ''
Conan the Cimmerian''.
The word "Hyborian" is a transliterated contraction by Howard of the
Ancient Greek "''
hyperborean''," referring to a "
barbaric dweller beyond the ''
boreas'' (
north wind)."
[1] Howard stated that the geographical setting of Hyborian Age is that of our earth, but in a fictional period in the past, circa
14,000 BC to
10,000 BC.
[2]
The reasons behind the invention of the Hyborian Age were perhaps commercial: Howard had an intense love for history and historical dramas; however, at the same time, he recognized the difficulties and the time-consuming research work needed in maintaining historical accuracy. By conceiving a timeless setting — a ''vanished'' age — that was not ours but that ''may once have been ours'' and by carefully choosing names that resembled our past history, Howard avoided the problem of historical anachronisms and the need for lengthy exposition.
[3]
Although he is not represented in Howard's library, nor alluded to in his papers and correspondence, there seems a strong likelihood that Howard's conception of the Hyborian Age originated in
Thomas Bulfinch's ''
The Outline of Mythology'' (1913), acting as a catalyst that enabled Howard to "coalesce into a coherent whole his literary aspirations and the strong physical, autobiographical elements underlying the creation of Conan."
[3]
In Howard's artificial legendary, the Hyborian Age is chronologically situated between several eras: ''The Pre-Cataclysmic Age'' of
Kull (circa
20,000 BC) and the onslaught of the
Picts (circa
9,500 BC).
[2]
The World
The 'Hyborian Age' was devised by author
Robert E. Howard as the post-Atlantean setting of his
Conan the Cimmerian stories, designed to fit in with Howard's previous and less known tales of
Kull, which were set in the
Thurian Age at the time of
Atlantis. The name "Hyborian" is a contraction of the
Greek concept of the land of "
Hyperborea," literally "Beyond the North Wind." This was a mythical place far to the north that was not cold and where things did not age.
Howard's Hyborian epoch, described in his essay ''
The Hyborian Age'' (most recently republished by
Del Rey 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 occasional references to Asia and other continents; e.g. ''Mayapan'', representing the American continent) – 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.

A larger map of Robert E. Howard's Hyborian Age.
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.
Etymology
In his fantasy setting of Hyboria, Howard created imaginary kingdoms to which he gave names from a variety of mythological and historical sources.
Khitai is his version of
China, lying far to
the East,
Corinthia is his name for a
Hellenistic civilization, a name derived from the city of
Corinth and reminiscent of the imperial
fiefdom of
Carinthia in the
Middle Ages. Howard imagines the Hyborian
Picts to occupy a large area to the northwest. The probable intended correspondences are listed below; notice that the correspondences are sometimes very generalized, and are portrayed by ''ahistorical''
stereotypes.
'Table of Correspondences'| Kingdom, Region, or Ethnic Group | Correspondence(s) |
|---|
| Acheron | A fallen kingdom corresponding to the Roman Empire. Its territory covered Aquilonia, Nemedia, and Argos. In Greek mythology, Acheron was one of the four rivers of Hades (cf. "Stygia"). |
| Afghulistan | Afghanistan. Afghulistan is the common name of the habitat of different tribes in the Himelian mountains. The name itself is a mixture of the historical names of Ghulistan (q.v.) and Afghanistan. |
| Amazon | Mentioned in Robert E. Howard's "Hyborian Age" essay, the kingdom of the Amazons refers to various legends of African Amazons, or more specifically to the Dahomey Amazons. In classical legend, Amazonia was a nation of warrior women in Asia Minor and North Africa. The legend may be based upon the Sarmatians, a nomadic Iranian tribe of the Kuban, whose women were required to slay an enemy before they might marry. |
| Aquilonia | The Carolingian Empire, France in the Middle Ages, with occasional hints of England. The name derived from the ancient city of Aquilonia in Southern Italy, between modern Venosa and Benevento, although the name Aquilonia also resembles Aquitaine, a French region ruled by England for a long portion of the Middle Ages. The name in Latin means ''aquilo'', -''onis'', "north wind." |
| Argos | Various seafaring traders of the Mediterranean Sea. The name comes from the Argo, ship of the Argonauts; or perhaps from the city of Argos, Peloponnesos, reputedly the oldest city in Greece, situated at the head of the Gulf of Argolis near modern Nafplion. Also hints of Italy in regards to the indigenous population's appearance, names and culture. Howard labels the populace of his Argos as "Argosseans," whereas the folk of the historical Argos were called "Argives." In Hyborian Age cartography, Argos takes on the shape of a "shoe" in its border boundaries as compared to Italy appearing as a "boot." |
| Asgard | Sweden. (Ásgard is the home of the Æsir in Norse mythology). |
| Border Kingdoms | German Baltic Sea coast. A lawless place full of savages, Conan once traveled through the Border Kingdom on his way to Nemedia. He befriended Mar the Piper and the King of the Border Kingdoms. He helped save the kingdom before returning to his quest to reach Nemedia. |
| Bossonian Marches (Aquilonia) | Wales, with an overlay of colonial-era North America.Possibly from Bossiney, a former parliamentary borough in Cornwall, South West England, which included Tintagel Castle, connected with the Matter of Britain. |
| Brythunia | The continental homelands of the Angles and Saxons who invaded Great Britain, which is the origin of the name, though the civilization depicted is similar to that of medieval Poland, Lithuania, Latvia. Semantically, the name Brythunia is from the Welsh ''Brython'', "Briton," derived from the same root as the Latin ''Brito'', Britannia. |
| Cimmeria | The Gaelic regions of the British Isles. Howard states in ''The Hyborian Age'' that "the Gaels, ancestors of the Irish and Highland Scotch, descended from pure-blooded Cimmerian clans." The name is based on that of Cimmeria, which was once hypothesized to be the homeland of the Celts, due to the word's similarity to the names of Celtic areas such as ''Cymru'' (the Welsh word for Wales), Cumbria, etc. Conan, a Cimmerian, has an Irish name, as do the Cimmerian gods Crom, Lir and Manannán mac Lir (the latter two mentioned in ''Xuthal of the Dusk''). |
| Corinthia | Ancient Greece. From Corinth (Korinthos), a rich city in Classical Greece. Possibly suggested to Howard by the Epistles to the Corinthians, or by the region of Carinthia. |
| Darfar | Howard derived this name from the region of Darfur, Sudan, in north-central Africa. Darfur is an Arabic language name meaning "abode (''dar'') of the Fur," the dominant people of the area. In changing the name to Darfar, Howard unwittingly changed the Arabic meaning to "the abode of mice." The original Darfur is now the westernmost part of the Sudanese Republic. |
| Gunderland (Aquilonia) | The Netherlands; perhaps Germany. Probably from Gunther (Gundicar) , King of Burgundy or Gunderic, King of the Vandals. |
| 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 amoral wizards, perhaps akin to the perception of the 1930s Soviet Union) |
| Hyrkania | Mongolia, Ukraine (Hyrkanians = Scythians) -> Hyrcania). In classical geography, a region southeast of the Caspian Sea or Hyrcanian Sea corresponding to the Iranian provinces of Golestan, Mazandaran and Gilan. The name is Greek for the Old Persian Varkana, one of the Achaemenid Empire satrapies, and survives in the name of the river Gorgan. The original meaning may have been "wolf land." In Iranian legend, Hyrcania was remarkable for its wizards, demons, wolves, spirits, witches and vampires. |
| Iranistan | An eastern land corresponding to modern Iran. Historically, the name of the country is derived from the Iran + the Persian ''istan'', ''estan'', "country." |
| Kambuja/Kambulja | The original name of Cambodia, now Kampuchea. |
| Keshan | The name comes from the "Kesh," the Egyptian name for Nubia. |
| Khauran | The Kingdom of Jerusalem and possibly the associated Principality of Antioch, County of Edessa and County of Tripoli, collectively known as Outremer. The name perhaps derives from the Hauran region of Syria. |
| Khitai | China. The name is derived from the English word "Cathay" and Marco Polo's Cathay (kăthā'), derived from the word Khitan and/or ''Khitai'', a Manchurian people who conquered northern China and founded the Liao dynasty (937–1125), and/or "Khitan," a medieval Tartar word for China. Also, the Kara-Khitai were a prominent tribe amongst Mongol steppe tribes. |
| Khoraja | Possibly Khazaria. The name itself was inspired by the references of Sax Rohmer to the fictional city of ''Khorassa'' in ''The Mask of Fu Manchu'' novel, and resembles the name of Khorasan, a north-eastern province of the Persian Empire. |
| Kosala | From the ancient Indian Aryan kingdom of Kosala, corresponding roughly in area with the region of Oudh. |
| Koth | From the ancient Hittites; The Kothian capital of Khorshemish corresponds to the Hittite capital of Carchemish. Perhaps from ''The Sign of Koth'' in ''The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath'' by H. P. Lovecraft. There is a town of Koth in Gujarat, India, but the connection is doubtful. Howard also used the same name in his interplanetary novel ''Almuric''. |
| Kusan | Probably from the Kushan Empire. |
| Kush | From the kingdom of Kush, Nubia, North Africa. |
| Meru | Tibet. In Hindu mythology, Meru is the sacred mountain upon which the gods dwell. 'NOTE:' Meru is not an original Hyborian Age country and was created by L. Sprague de Camp and Lin Carter. |
| Nemedia | The Germanic Holy Roman Empire. Nemedia was the rival of Aquilonia (which corresponds to the Carolingian Empire/France), and depended on Aesir mercenaries for their defence (as the Byzantine Empire hired Vikings as the Varangian Guard). The name comes from Nemed, leader of colonists from Scythia to Ireland in Irish mythology; perhaps the name is also meant to allude to Nemea, home to the Nemean Lion of Greek mythology. |
| Ophir | Ancient Ophir, a gold-mining region in the Old Testament, possibly on the shores of the Red Sea or Arabian Sea (e.g. western Arabia), though clearly Howard saw it as situated somewhere in Italy. |
| Pictish Wilderness | Pictish Scotland, with an overlay of North America during the European colonization of the Americas, possibly even colonial-era New York. Howard bestows Algonquian languages names on many, though not all, of his Picts (see also: Bran Mak Morn). Note that the name "Pict" comes from the Latin language term for "painted one," which could be applicable to a number of the Indigenous peoples of the Americas. The historical termed Picts were a confederation of tribes in central and northern Scotland which bordered Roman Britain. |
| Poitain (Aquilonia) | A combination of Poitou and Aquitaine, two regions in southwestern France. From the 10th to the mid-12th century, the counts of Poitou were also the dukes of Aquitaine. |
| Punt | The Land of Punt on the Horn of Africa. A place with which the ancient Egyptians traded, probably Somaliland. |
| Shem | Mesopotamia, Syria, Palestine, and Arabia. In the Bible, Shem is Noah's eldest son, the ancestor of the Hebrews, Arabs and Assyrians; hence, the modern "Semite" and Semitic languages (via Greek ''Sem''), used properly to designate the family of languages spoken by these peoples. |
| Stygia | Egypt. The name comes from Styx, a river of the Greek underworld in Greek mythology. In earlier times the territory of Stygia included Shem, Ophir, Corinthia, and part of Koth. |
| Turan | The Old Persian name for Turkestan. A Turkish/Persian land, possibly referring to the Timurid Empire, the Sassanid Empire, or the Mughal Empire. The name derives from Turan, the areas of Eurasia occupied by speakers of Ural-Altaic languages. The names of the various Turanian cities (e.g. Aghrapur, Sultanapur, Shahpur) are often in Persian language. King Yezdigerd is named after Yazdegerd III, ruler of the Sassanid Empire. The name of King Yildiz means ''star'' in the Turkish language. The city of Khawarizm takes its name from Khwarezm, and Khorusun from Khorasan. |
| Uttara Kuru | From the medieval Uttara Kuru Kingdom at the north of India. |
| Vanaheim | Norway and Denmark (Vanaheim is the home of the Vanir in Norse mythology) |
| Vendhya | India (The Vindhya Range is a range of hills in central India). The name means "rent" or "ragged," i.e. having many passes. |
| Zamora | The Roma people. The name comes from the city of Zamora, Zamora province, Castile-Leon, Spain, alluding to the Gitanos of Spain (see ''Zingara'' for discussion); or possibly it is based on the word "Roma." The name could also, in part, allude to Sonora, a region of Mexico that is "spider-haunted" like Zamora. Also hints of ancient Israel and Palestine. |
| Zembabwei | The Munhumutapa Empire. The name comes from Great Zimbabwe), a ruined fortified town in Rhodesia, first built around the 11th century and used as the capital of the Munhumutapa Empire. |
| Zingara | Spain/Portugal. Iberian Peninsula as a whole. ''Zingara'' is also Italian for "Gipsy woman"; this may mean that Howard mixed up the source names of Zingara and Zamora, with Zingara originally meant to apply to the Roma kingdom, and Zamora to the Spanish kingdom. |
| Other Geographic Features | |
|---|
| The Himelian Mountains | The Himalayas. |
| The Karpash Mountains | The Carpathian Mountains. |
| The Poitanian Mountains | The Pyrenees. |
| The River Styx | The Nile. |
| Vilayet Sea | The Caspian Sea. The name comes from ''vilayet'', the term for administrative regions in the Ottoman Empire. |
| 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, poroz.a), hence the name, translated as "territory beyond the rapids." |
See also
★
Conan the Cimmerian
★
Kull of Atlantis
★
Bran Mak Morn
★
Robert E. Howard
References
1. Harold Lamb, ''The March of the Barbarians''; 1940, Country Life Press, ASIN: B000GQ81MM.
2. Robert E. Howard's ''Hyborian Age'' essay adapted by Roy Thomas and Walt Simonson.
3. Patrice Louinet. ''Hyborian Genesis: Part 1'', page 434, ''The Coming of Conan the Cimmerian''; 2003, Del Rey.
4. Patrice Louinet. ''Hyborian Genesis: Part 1'', page 434, ''The Coming of Conan the Cimmerian''; 2003, Del Rey.
5. Robert E. Howard's ''Hyborian Age'' essay adapted by Roy Thomas and Walt Simonson.
Notes
★
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.
External links
★
Maps of the Hyborian Age
★
Conan the Barbarian at AmratheLion.com