Hurry - Only 2 left in stock!
|
Introduction 1. Greek Exploration before 500 BC 2. The Carthaginians North and South of the Pillars 3. The Atlantic Islands and Beyond 4. Pytheas of Massalia 5. Hellenistic Exploration on the Coasts of Africa 6. Late Hellenistic Exploration 7. Roman Exploration Epilogue Appendix
Duane W. Roller is Professor of Greek and Latin at The Ohio State University. His previous publications include The Building Program of Herod the Great (University of California Press, 1998) and The World of Juba II and Kleopatra Selene (Routledge, 2003)
The New Yorker-April 24,2006Briefly Noted section- review by Leo
CareyThrough the Pillars of Herakles, by Duane W. Roller
(Routledge; $100). There is no word in classical Greek or Latin
that exactly matches our sense of "exploring", Roller says, but he
thinks that ancient exploration beyond the Mediterranean has been
underestimated. By the end of the fourth century B.C., the Greeks
had sailed as far south as Zanzibar and as far north as Iceland
(Roller's persuasive identification of the land of Thule,
discovered by Pytheas). Much of Roller's work involves piecing
together the evidence of coastline descriptions known as periplooi.
He is wryly aware of the unreliability of many claims, some of
which made even the writers of later antiquity incredulous. The
explorer Mago said that he had circumnavigated Africa, but, Roller
notes, "if this is the same person who claimed to have crossed the
Sahara three times without drinking water, his veracity can hardly
be presumed."'Roller has performed a useful service in bringing
together material that is scattered about in various chapters in
the general histories of ancient geography and exploration and in
updating it with the results of recent studies.' – International
Journal of Nautical Archaeology
'Roller has performed a useful service in bringing together
material that is scattered about in various chapters in the general
histories of ancient geography and exploration and in updating it
with the results of recent studies.' – International Journal of
Nautical Archaeology'... a succinct account of these early
explorers, their discoveries, how they interpreted them, shaping
and shaped by contemporary conceptions of the world.' Ancient West
and East
Ask a Question About this Product More... |