Pytheas of Massalia

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A01=Lionel Scott
ancient exploration
ancient Greek exploration sources
Atlantic
Author_Lionel Scott
Carthage
Category=NHC
Category=WTL
Christian Topography
classical geography
Crow Flies
De Caelo 298a
De Nuptiis Philologiae
Drawn Back
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eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_travel
Equinoctial Hours
Frozen Sea
Gdansk Area
Greek astronomy
Habitable Zone
Loire Estuary
manuscript transmission
Massalia
Mediterranean trade routes
Mela's Description
Mela’s Description
Merchant Galleys
northern Europe antiquity
Northern Isles
Pliny
Pole Star
Pytheas Sets Off
Pytheas' Voyage
Strabo
Strabo's Comment
Strabo's Time
Strabo’s Comment
Strabo’s Time
Summer Tropic
Terrestrial Latitudes
Tidal Islands
Tin Islands
Ultima Thule
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032020068
  • Weight: 540g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 25 Sep 2023
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Pytheas of Massalia (Marseille), mariner, explorer, geographer and astronomer, made a pioneering voyage into the then unknown Atlantic around 325 BC, reaching Britain and the Baltic; this book collects and translates the references to him and his book (which is lost), and discusses and explains them.

The Greeks of Pytheas' time knew virtually nothing of northern Europe beyond the often-fantastical stories of traders, and Pytheas was the first person to provide factual, first-hand information on this region. His journey covered Iberia, France, Britain, from where he travelled so far north that he encountered ice floes; he then reached the Baltic. It was he who recorded Thule, and his astronomy enabled him to locate it on the Arctic Circle. Two thirds of our references to Pytheas come from Pliny and Strabo; their methods of work, as well as the perils of manuscript transmission, are explored in this volume. Scott also includes discussions and appendices on these areas to enable the scope of available references to be understood as a whole. There are some details of Pytheas' voyage that are lost, but the book offers balanced reasons for proposing how we may reasonably fill them in.

The breadth of Pytheas' achievements and the areas and topics his work covers mean that he has a wide range of appeal within classical studies and ancient history. This volume provides an invaluable resource to undergraduate and postgraduate students of early geography and astronomy, and Greece’s knowledge of and relationship to the rest of Europe in this period.

Dr Lionel Scott is a classically educated retired barrister, whose publications include Were There Polis Navies in Archaic Greece?, BAR Int Series 899 (2000) 93-115, and Historical Commentary on Herodotus Book VI (2005).

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