Fly
fishing as a way to
hunt goes back thousands of years. One of the first
tools used by early man was the fishing hook.
The earliest written history of fishing with a fly was by
the Macedonians).
Hesiod, THE THEOGONY
In
his book De Natura Animalium, Claudius Ĉlianus (170-230 A.D.), often called
Ĉlian, mentioned fly fishing for trout for the first time
. He explained that it was practiced on the river Astrĉus in Macedonia; a
Roman province at the time. The only clue to the river's position was that it
was "Between Berœa and Thessalonica." During the
past few decades there have been many attempts to identify which modern river
can claim to be Ĉlian's Astrĉus, but this research has been difficult and from a
reading of published work it is still not clear which river it might be. This is
our attempt to summarize the literature to date and to bring more light to the
subject.
The name Astrĉus in Greek mythology
The river Astrĉus probably got its name from Greek mythology.
One candidate is the mythical god called Astrĉus, a son of a king Hippotes. His
other name was Aeolus, and his wife was Eos, the goddess of dawn. By him she
bore the stars and the winds: Notus, the south wind; Boreas, the north wind;
Euras, the east wind; and Zephyr or Zephyrus, the west wind .
However, the most probable explanation was given by Hammond ,
who wrote that the name Astrĉus originated from the name of the nymph Astrĉa who
was the protector of river headsprings that are common in limestone karst
formations . She was one of Naiads, one of the
nymphs of flowing water. Astrĉa ("the star-maiden") was the daughter of Zeus and
Themis. She was, as was her mother, a goddess of justice and she was selected as
the nurse of the lady Beroe, the patroness of Berœa. Key features of this myth
fall within the area denoted by Ĉlian: near the city of Berœa.
Theories about the Astrĉus location
There are several theories about the modern location of the
Astrĉus, but before we begin it should be mentioned that there was both an area
of ancient Macedonia called Astrĉa and a city of Astraeum (and possibly there
were two separate locations with the same name). It is usually assumed that
those places were in Poeonia near the present city of Strumica, in the former
Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia. From this information it is tempting to conclude
that the modern day river Strumica, which flows through the area, was the
Astrĉus. However, that river had a different name in Ĉlian’s time - it was known
as the Pontus (Findlay map, 1849) and therefore it is almost certain that it was
not the Astrĉus .
A second theory was given briefly and without references by
Jardine . He identified Berœa as Stara Zagora, which
today is in the Republic of Bulgaria, and explained that the Astrĉus was
probably a river on Rodopi Mountain massif in south Bulgaria. Possible sources
for Jardine’s theory are the “Atlas of the Roman World” by Cornell and Matthews
or Encyclopedia Britannica where Stara Zagora is mentioned as a place formerly
called Beroea. It is worth mentioning that on Findlay’s historical map yet
another place called Berœa can be found in an area which is a part of modern
Bulgaria, but this is far from Stara Zagora and both places are very distant
from Thessalonica (Stara Zagora, for example is more than 300 km away).
Jardine’s Berœa was in fact an ancient Thracian, rather than Macedonian
settlement that in Roman times became Augusta Trajana and was subsequently
called Irenopolis by the Byzantines. There is also no evidence that there was
ever a river named the Astrĉus in this area. On the basis that it is improbable
that Ĉlian would have located a river by naming two places separated by several
hundred kilometers, Jardine’s theory doesn't seem very likely, although there
are many streams in the Rodopi Mountains which support trout. more>