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Histories (Herodotus)

The Histories (Greek: Ἱστορίαι, Historíai;[a] also known as The History[1]) of Herodotus is considered the founding work of history in Western literature.[2] Although not a fully impartial record, it remains one of the West's most important sources regarding these affairs. Moreover, it established the genre and study of history in the Western world (despite the existence of historical records and chronicles beforehand).

Histories
Fragment from Histories, Book VIII on 2nd-century Papyrus Oxyrhynchus 2099
AuthorHerodotus
CountryGreece
LanguageAncient Greek
GenreHistory
PublisherVarious
Publication date
c. 430 BC[citation needed]

The Histories also stands as one of the earliest accounts of the rise of the Persian Empire, as well as the events and causes of the Greco-Persian Wars between the Persian Empire and the Greek city-states in the 5th century BC. Herodotus portrays the conflict as one between the forces of slavery (the Persians) on the one hand, and freedom (the Athenians and the confederacy of Greek city-states which united against the invaders) on the other. The Histories was at some point divided into the nine books that appear in modern editions, conventionally named after the nine Muses.

Motivation for writing edit

Herodotus claims to have traveled extensively around the ancient world, conducting interviews and collecting stories for his book, almost all of which covers territories of the Persian Empire. At the beginning of The Histories, Herodotus sets out his reasons for writing it:

Here are presented the results of the enquiry carried out by Herodotus of Halicarnassus. The purpose is to prevent the traces of human events from being erased by time, and to preserve the fame of the important and remarkable achievements produced by both Greeks and non-Greeks; among the matters covered is, in particular, the cause of the hostilities between Greeks and non-Greeks.

— Herodotus, The Histories, Robin Waterfield translation (2008)

Summary edit

 
Candaules, King of Lydia, shews his wife by stealth to Gyges..., by William Etty (1830)

Book I (Clio) edit

  • The abductions of Io, Europa, and Medea, which motivated Paris to abduct Helen. The subsequent Trojan War is marked as a precursor to later conflicts between peoples of Asia and Europe. (1.1–5)[3]
  • Colchis, Colchians and Medea. (1.2.2–1.2.3)
  • The rulers of Lydia (on the west coast of Asia Minor, today modern Turkey): Candaules, Gyges, Ardys, Sadyattes, Alyattes, Croesus (1.6–7)
  • How Candaules made his bodyguard, Gyges, view the naked body of his wife. Upon discovery, she ordered Gyges to murder Candaules or face death himself[1]
  • How Gyges took the kingdom from Candaules (1.8–13)
  • The singer Arion's ride on the dolphin (1.23–24)
  • Solon's answer to Croesus's question that Tellus was the happiest person in the world (1.29–33)
  • Croesus's efforts to protect his son Atys, his son's accidental death by Adrastus (1.34–44)
  • Croesus's test of the oracles (1.46–54)
  • The answer from the Oracle of Delphi concerning whether Croesus should attack the Persians (famous for its ambiguity): If you attack, a great empire will fall.
  • Peisistratos' rises and falls from power as tyrant of Athens (1.59–64)
  • The rise of Sparta (1.65–68)
 
Edwin Long's 1875 interpretation of The Babylonian Marriage Market as described by Herodotus in Book 1 of the Histories
  • Croesus's defeat by Cyrus II of Persia, and how he later became Cyrus's advisor (1.70–92)
  • The Tyrrhenians' descent from the Lydians: "Then the one group, having drawn the lot, left the country and came down to Smyrna and built ships, in which they loaded all their goods that could be transported aboard ship, and sailed away to seek a livelihood and a country; until at last, after sojourning with one people after another, they came to the Ombrici, where they founded cities and have lived ever since. They no longer called themselves Lydians, but Tyrrhenians, after the name of the king's son who had led them there,". (1.94)[4]
  • The rulers of the Medes: Deioces, Phraortes, Cyaxares, Astyages, Cyrus II of Persia (1.95–144)
  • The rise of Deioces over the Medes
  • Astyages's attempt to destroy Cyrus, and Cyrus's rise to power
  • Harpagus tricked into eating his son, his revenge against Astyages by assisting Cyrus
  • The culture of the Persians
  • The history and geography of the Ionians, and the attacks on it by Harpagus
  • Pactyes' convinces the Lydians to revolt. Rebellion fails and he seeks refuge from Mazares in Cyme (Aeolis)
  • The culture of Assyria, especially the design and improvement of the city of Babylon and the ways of its people
  • Cyrus's attack on Babylon, including his revenge on the river Gyndes and his famous method for entering the city
  • Cyrus's ill-fated attack on the Massagetæ, leading to his death

Book II (Euterpe) edit

 
Nile crocodile allowing the trochilus to eat leeches in its mouth.[b] Drawing by Henry Scherren, 1906

Book III (Thalia) edit

Book IV (Melpomene) edit

 
Scythian warriors, drawn after figures on an electrum cup from the Kul'Oba kurgan burial near Kerch (Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg)
 
Relief of Darius I, Persepolis
 
Statue of Athena, the patron goddess of Athens

Book V (Terpsichore) edit

Book VI (Erato) edit

 
A Greek trireme
 
Miltiades
  • The order of Darius that the Greeks provide him earth and water, in which most consent, including Aegina
  • The Athenian request for assistance of Cleomenes of Sparta in dealing with the traitors
  • The history behind Sparta having two kings and their powers
  • The dethronement of Demaratus, the other king of Sparta, due to his supposed false lineage
  • The arrest of the traitors in Aegina by Cleomenes and the new king Leotychides
  • The suicide of Cleomenes in a fit of madness, possibly caused by his war with Argos, drinking unmixed wine, or his involvement in dethroning Demaratus
  • The battle between Aegina and Athens
  • The taking of Eretria by the Persians after the Eretrians sent away Athenian help
  • Pheidippides's encounter with the god Pan on a journey to Sparta to request aid
  • The assistance of the Plataeans, and the history behind their alliance with Athens
  • The Athenian win at the Battle of Marathon, led by Miltiades and other strategoi (This section starts roughly around 6.100)[8]
  • The Spartans late arrival to assist Athens
  • The history of the Alcmaeonidae and how they came about their wealth and status
  • The death of Miltiades after a failed attack on Paros and the successful taking of Lemnos
 
The plain of Marathon today

Book VII (Polymnia) edit

  • The amassing of an army by Darius after learning about the defeat at Marathon (7.1)
  • The quarrel between Ariabignes and Xerxes over which son should succeed Darius in which Xerxes is chosen (7.2-3)
  • The death of Darius in 486 BC (7.4)
  • The defeat of the Egyptian rebels by Xerxes
  • The advice given to Xerxes on invading Greece: Mardonius for invasion, Artabanus against (7.9-10)
 
Leonidas at Thermopylae, by Jacques-Louis David (1814)
  • The dreams of Xerxes in which a phantom frightens him and Artabanus into choosing invasion
  • The preparations for war, including building the Xerxes Canal and Xerxes' Pontoon Bridges across the Hellespont
  • The offer by Pythius to give Xerxes all his money, in which Xerxes rewards him
  • The request by Pythius to allow one son to stay at home, Xerxes's anger, and the march out between the butchered halves of Pythius's sons
  • The destruction and rebuilding of the bridges built by the Egyptians and Phoenicians at Abydos
  • The siding with Persia of many Greek states, including Thessaly, Thebes, Melia, and Argos
  • The refusal of aid after negotiations by Gelo of Syracuse, and the refusal from Crete
  • The destruction of 400 Persian ships due to a storm
  • The small Greek force (approx. 7,000) led by Leonidas I, sent to Thermopylae to delay the Persian army (~5,283,220 (Herodotus) )
  • The Battle of Thermopylae in which the Greeks hold the pass for 3 days
  • The secret pass divulged by Ephialtes of Trachis, which Hydarnes uses to lead forces around the mountains to encircle the Greeks
  • The retreat of all but the Spartans, Thespians, and Thebans (forced to stay by the Spartans).
  • The Greek defeat and order by Xerxes to remove Leonidas's head and attach his torso to a cross
 
The Battle of Salamis, by Wilhelm von Kaulbach (1868)

Book VIII (Urania) edit

  • Greek fleet is led by Eurybiades, a Spartan commander who led the Greek fleet after the meeting at the Isthmus 481 BC,
  • The destruction by storm of two hundred ships sent to block the Greeks from escaping
  • The retreat of the Greek fleet after word of a defeat at Thermopylae
  • The supernatural rescue of Delphi from a Persian attack
  • The evacuation of Athens assisted by the fleet
  • The reinforcement of the Greek fleet at Salamis Island, bringing the total ships to 378
  • The destruction of Athens by the Persian land force after difficulties with those who remained
  • The Battle of Salamis, the Greeks have the advantage due to better organization, and fewer losses due to ability to swim
  • The description of the Angarum, the Persian riding post
  • The rise in favor of Artemisia, the Persian woman commander, and her council to Xerxes in favor of returning to Persia
 
The Serpent Column dedicated by the victorious Greeks in Delphi, later transferred to Constantinople

Book IX (Calliope) edit

  • The second taking of an evacuated Athens
  • The evacuation to Thebes by Mardonius after the sending of Lacedaemonian troops
  • The slaying of Masistius, leader of the Persian cavalry, by the Athenians
  • The warning from Alexander to the Greeks of an impending attack
  • The death of Mardonius by Aeimnestus
  • The Persian retreat to Thebes where they are afterwards slaughtered (Battle of Plataea)
  • The description and dividing of the spoils
  • The speedy escape of Artabazus into Asia.
  • The Persian defeat in Ionia by the Greek fleet (Battle of Mycale), and the Ionian revolt
  • The mutilation of the wife of Masistes ordered by Amestris, wife of Xerxes
  • The death of Masistes after his intent to rebel
  • The Athenian blockade of Sestos and the capture of Artayctes
  • The Persians' abortive suggestion to Cyrus to migrate from rocky Persis

Style edit

In his introduction to Hecataeus' work, Genealogies:

 
Fragment from the Histories VIII on Papyrus Oxyrhynchus 2099, early 2nd century AD

Hecataeus the Milesian speaks thus: I write these things as they seem true to me; for the stories told by the Greeks are various and in my opinion absurd.

This points forward to the "folksy" yet "international" outlook typical of Herodotus. However, one modern scholar has described the work of Hecataeus as "a curious false start to history,"[9] since despite his critical spirit, he failed to liberate history from myth. Herodotus mentions Hecataeus in his Histories, on one occasion mocking him for his naive genealogy and, on another occasion, quoting Athenian complaints against his handling of their national history.[10] It is possible that Herodotus borrowed much material from Hecataeus, as stated by Porphyry in a quote recorded by Eusebius.[11] In particular, it is possible that he copied descriptions of the crocodile, hippopotamus, and phoenix from Hecataeus's Circumnavigation of the Known World (Periegesis / Periodos ges), even misrepresenting the source as "Heliopolitans" (Histories 2.73).[12]

But Hecataeus did not record events that had occurred in living memory, unlike Herodotus, nor did he include the oral traditions of Greek history within the larger framework of oriental history.[13] There is no proof that Herodotus derived the ambitious scope of his own work, with its grand theme of civilizations in conflict, from any predecessor, despite much scholarly speculation about this in modern times.[9][14] Herodotus claims to be better informed than his predecessors by relying on empirical observation to correct their excessive schematism. For example, he argues for continental asymmetry as opposed to the older theory of a perfectly circular earth with Europe and Asia/Africa equal in size (Histories 4.36 and 4.42). However, he retains idealizing tendencies, as in his symmetrical notions of the Danube and Nile.[15]

His debt to previous authors of prose "histories" might be questionable, but there is no doubt that Herodotus owed much to the example and inspiration of poets and story-tellers. For example, Athenian tragic poets provided him with a world-view of a balance between conflicting forces, upset by the hubris of kings, and they provided his narrative with a model of episodic structure. His familiarity with Athenian tragedy is demonstrated in a number of passages echoing Aeschylus's Persae, including the epigrammatic observation that the defeat of the Persian navy at Salamis caused the defeat of the land army (Histories 8.68 ~ Persae 728). The debt may have been repaid by Sophocles because there appear to be echoes of The Histories in his plays, especially a passage in Antigone that resembles Herodotus's account of the death of Intaphernes (Histories 3.119 ~ Antigone 904–920).[16] However, this point is one of the most contentious issues in modern scholarship.[17]

Homer was another inspirational source.[c] Just as Homer drew extensively on a tradition of oral poetry, sung by wandering minstrels, so Herodotus appears to have drawn on an Ionian tradition of story-telling, collecting and interpreting the oral histories he chanced upon in his travels. These oral histories often contained folk-tale motifs and demonstrated a moral, yet they also contained substantial facts relating to geography, anthropology, and history, all compiled by Herodotus in an entertaining style and format.[19]

Mode of explanation edit

Herodotus writes with the purpose of explaining; that is, he discusses the reason for or cause of an event. He lays this out in the preamble: "This is the publication of the research of Herodotus of Halicarnassus, so that the actions of people shall not fade with time, so that the great and admirable achievements of both Greeks and barbarians shall not go unrenowned, and, among other things, to set forth the reasons why they waged war on each other."[20]

This mode of explanation traces itself all the way back to Homer,[21] who opened the Iliad by asking:

Which of the immortals set these two at each other's throats?
Zeus' son and Leto's, offended
by the warlord. Agamemnon had dishonored
Chryses, Apollo's priest, so the god
struck the Greek camp with plague,
and the soldiers were dying of it.[22]

Both Homer and Herodotus begin with a question of causality. In Homer's case, "who set these two at each other's throats?" In Herodotus's case, "Why did the Greeks and barbarians go to war with each other?"

Herodotus's means of explanation does not necessarily posit a simple cause; rather, his explanations cover a host of potential causes and emotions. It is notable, however, that "the obligations of gratitude and revenge are the fundamental human motives for Herodotus, just as ... they are the primary stimulus to the generation of narrative itself."[23]

Some readers of Herodotus believe that his habit of tying events back to personal motives signifies an inability to see broader and more abstract reasons for action. Gould argues to the contrary that this is likely because Herodotus attempts to provide the rational reasons, as understood by his contemporaries, rather than providing more abstract reasons.[24]

Types of causality edit

Herodotus attributes cause to both divine and human agents. These are not perceived as mutually exclusive, but rather mutually interconnected. This is true of Greek thinking in general, at least from Homer onward.[25] Gould notes that invoking the supernatural in order to explain an event does not answer the question "why did this happen?" but rather "why did this happen to me?" By way of example, faulty craftsmanship is the human cause for a house collapsing. However, divine will is the reason that the house collapses at the particular moment when I am inside. It was the will of the gods that the house collapsed while a particular individual was within it, whereas it was the cause of man that the house had a weak structure and was prone to falling.[26]

Some authors, including Geoffrey de Ste-Croix and Mabel Lang, have argued that Fate, or the belief that "this is how it had to be," is Herodotus's ultimate understanding of causality.[27] Herodotus's explanation that an event "was going to happen" maps well on to Aristotelean and Homeric means of expression. The idea of "it was going to happen" reveals a "tragic discovery" associated with fifth-century drama. This tragic discovery can be seen in Homer's Iliad as well.[28]

John Gould argues that Herodotus should be understood as falling in a long line of story-tellers, rather than thinking of his means of explanation as a "philosophy of history" or "simple causality." Thus, according to Gould, Herodotus's means of explanation is a mode of story-telling and narration that has been passed down from generations prior:[29]

Herodotus' sense of what was 'going to happen' is not the language of one who holds a theory of historical necessity, who sees the whole of human experience as constrained by inevitability and without room for human choice or human responsibility, diminished and belittled by forces too large for comprehension or resistance; it is rather the traditional language of a teller of tales whose tale is structured by his awareness of the shape it must have and who presents human experience on the model of the narrative patterns that are built into his stories; the narrative impulse itself, the impulse towards 'closure' and the sense of an ending, is retrojected to become 'explanation'.[30]

Reliability edit

 
Dedication in the Histories, translated into Latin by Lorenzo Valla, Venice 1494

The accuracy of the works of Herodotus has been controversial since his own era. Kenton L. Sparks writes, "In antiquity, Herodotus had acquired the reputation of being unreliable, biased, parsimonious in his praise of heroes, and mendacious". The historian Duris of Samos called Herodotus a "myth-monger".[31] Cicero (On the Laws I.5) said that his works were full of legends or "fables".[32] The controversy was also commented on by Aristotle, Flavius Josephus and Plutarch.[33][34] The Alexandrian grammarian Harpocration wrote a whole book on "the lies of Herodotus".[35] Lucian of Samosata went as far as to deny the "father of history" a place among the famous on the Island of the Blessed in his Verae Historiae.

The works of Thucydides were often given preference for their "truthfulness and reliability",[36] even if Thucydides basically continued on foundations laid by Herodotus, as in his treatment of the Persian Wars.[37] In spite of these lines of criticism, Herodotus' works were in general kept in high esteem and regarded as reliable by many. Many scholars, ancient and modern (such as Strabo, A. H. L. Heeren, etc.), routinely cited Herodotus.

To this day, some scholars regard his works as being at least partly unreliable. Detlev Fehling writes of "a problem recognized by everybody", namely that Herodotus frequently cannot be taken at face value.[38] Fehling argues that Herodotus exaggerated the extent of his travels and invented his sources.[39] For Fehling, the sources of many stories, as reported by Herodotus, do not appear credible in themselves. Persian and Egyptian informants tell stories that dovetail neatly into Greek myths and literature, yet show no signs of knowing their own traditions. For Fehling, the only credible explanation is that Herodotus invented these sources, and that the stories themselves were concocted by Herodotus himself.[40]

Like many ancient historians, Herodotus preferred an element of show[d] to purely analytic history, aiming to give pleasure with "exciting events, great dramas, bizarre exotica."[42] As such, certain passages have been the subject of controversy[43][44] and even some doubt, both in antiquity and today.[45][46][47][48][49][50][51]

Despite the controversy,[52] Herodotus has long served and still serves as the primary, often only, source for events in the Greek world, Persian Empire, and the broader region in the two centuries leading up to his own days.[53][54] So even if the Histories were criticized in some regards since antiquity, modern historians and philosophers generally take a more positive view as to their source and epistemologic value.[55] Herodotus is variously considered "father of comparative anthropology,"[53] "the father of ethnography,"[54] and "more modern than any other ancient historian in his approach to the ideal of total history."[55]

Discoveries made since the end of the 19th century have generally added to Herodotus' credibility. He described Gelonus, located in Scythia, as a city thousands of times larger than Troy; this was widely disbelieved until it was rediscovered in 1975. The archaeological study of the now-submerged ancient Egyptian city of Heracleion and the recovery of the so-called "Naucratis stela" give credibility to Herodotus's previously unsupported claim that Heracleion was founded during the Egyptian New Kingdom.

Babylon edit

 
Reconstruction of the Oikoumene (inhabited world), ancient map based on Herodotus, c. 450 BC

Herodotus claimed to have visited Babylon. The absence of any mention of the Hanging Gardens of Babylon in his work has attracted further attacks on his credibility. In response, Dalley has proposed that the Hanging Gardens may have been in Nineveh rather than in Babylon.[49]

Egypt edit

The reliability of Herodotus's writing about Egypt is sometimes questioned.[51] Alan B. Lloyd argues that, as a historical document, the writings of Herodotus are seriously defective, and that he was working from "inadequate sources."[45] Nielsen writes: "Though we cannot entirely rule out the possibility of Herodotus having been in Egypt, it must be said that his narrative bears little witness to it."[47] German historian Detlev Fehling questions whether Herodotus ever traveled up the Nile River, and considers doubtful almost everything that he says about Egypt and Ethiopia.[56][50] Fehling states that "there is not the slightest bit of history behind the whole story" about the claim of Herodotus that Pharaoh Sesostris campaigned in Europe, and that he left a colony in Colchia.[48][46] Fehling concludes that the works of Herodotus are intended as fiction. Boedeker concurs that much of the content of the works of Herodotus are literary devices.[48][41]

However, a recent discovery of a baris (described in The Histories) during an excavation of the sunken Egyptian port city of Thonis-Heracleion lends credence to Herodotus's travels and storytelling.[57]

Herodotus' contribution to the history and ethnography of ancient Egypt and Africa was especially valued by various historians of the field (such as Constantin François de Chassebœuf, comte de Volney, W. E. B. Du Bois, Pierre Montet, Martin Bernal, Basil Davidson, Derek A. Welsby, Henry T. Aubin). Many scholars explicitly mention the reliability of Herodotus's work (such as on the Nile Valley) and demonstrate corroboration of Herodotus' writings by modern scholars. A. H. L. Heeren quoted Herodotus throughout his work and provided corroboration by scholars regarding several passages (source of the Nile, location of Meroë, etc.).[58]

Cheikh Anta Diop provides several examples (like the inundations of the Nile) which, he argues, support his view that Herodotus was "quite scrupulous, objective, scientific for his time." Diop argues that Herodotus "always distinguishes carefully between what he has seen and what he has been told." Diop also notes that Strabo corroborated Herodotus' ideas about the Black Egyptians, Ethiopians, and Colchians.[59][60] Martin Bernal has relied on Herodotus "to an extraordinary degree" in his controversial book Black Athena.[61]

British egyptologist Derek A. Welsby said that "archaeology graphically confirms Herodotus's observations."[62] To further his work on the Egyptians and Assyrians, historian and fiction writer Henry T. Aubin used Herodotus' accounts in various passages. For Aubin, Herodotus was "the author of the first important narrative history of the world."[63]

Scientific reasoning edit

On geography edit

Herodotus provides much information about the nature of the world and the status of science during his lifetime, often engaging in private speculation likewise. For example, he reports that the annual flooding of the Nile was said to be the result of melting snows far to the south, and he comments that he cannot understand how there can be snow in Africa, the hottest part of the known world, offering an elaborate explanation based on the way that desert winds affect the passage of the Sun over this part of the world (2:18ff). He also passes on reports from Phoenician sailors that, while circumnavigating Africa, they "saw the sun on the right side while sailing westwards", although, being unaware of the existence of the southern hemisphere, he says that he does not believe the claim. Owing to this brief mention, which is included almost as an afterthought, it has been argued that Africa was circumnavigated by ancient seafarers, for this is precisely where the sun ought to have been.[64] His accounts of India are among the oldest records of Indian civilization by an outsider.[65][66][67]

On biology edit

 
The Indian Gold Hunters, after Herodotus: gold ants pursuing gold hunters.

After journeys to India and Pakistan, French ethnologist Michel Peissel claimed to have discovered an animal species that may illuminate one of the most bizarre passages in the Histories.[68] In Book 3, passages 102 to 105, Herodotus reports that a species of fox-sized, furry "ants" lives in one of the far eastern, Indian provinces of the Persian Empire. This region, he reports, is a sandy desert, and the sand there contains a wealth of fine gold dust. These giant ants, according to Herodotus, would often unearth the gold dust when digging their mounds and tunnels, and the people living in this province would then collect the precious dust. Later Pliny the Elder would mention this story in the gold mining section of his Naturalis Historia.

 
The Himalayan marmot

Peissel reports that, in an isolated region of northern Pakistan on the Deosai Plateau in Gilgit–Baltistan province, there is a species of marmot – the Himalayan marmot, a type of burrowing squirrel – that may have been what Herodotus called giant ants. The ground of the Deosai Plateau is rich in gold dust, much like the province that Herodotus describes. According to Peissel, he interviewed the Minaro tribal people who live in the Deosai Plateau, and they have confirmed that they have, for generations, been collecting the gold dust that the marmots bring to the surface when they are digging their burrows.

Peissel offers the theory that Herodotus may have confused the old Persian word for "marmot" with the word for "mountain ant." Research suggests that Herodotus probably did not know any Persian (or any other language except his native Greek) and was forced to rely on many local translators when travelling in the vast multilingual Persian Empire. Herodotus did not claim to have personally seen the creatures which he described.[68][69] Herodotus did, though, follow up in passage 105 of Book 3 with the claim that the "ants" are said to chase and devour full-grown camels.

Accusations of bias edit

Some "calumnious fictions" were written about Herodotus in a work titled On the Malice of Herodotus by Plutarch, a Chaeronean by birth, (or it might have been a Pseudo-Plutarch, in this case "a great collector of slanders"), including the allegation that the historian was prejudiced against Thebes because the authorities there had denied him permission to set up a school.[70] Similarly, in a Corinthian Oration, Dio Chrysostom (or yet another pseudonymous author) accused the historian of prejudice against Corinth, sourcing it in personal bitterness over financial disappointments[71] – an account also given by Marcellinus in his Life of Thucydides.[72] In fact, Herodotus was in the habit of seeking out information from empowered sources within communities, such as aristocrats and priests, and this also occurred at an international level, with Periclean Athens becoming his principal source of information about events in Greece. As a result, his reports about Greek events are often coloured by Athenian bias against rival states – Thebes and Corinth in particular.[73]

Use of sources and sense of authority edit

 
Croesus Receiving Tribute from a Lydian Peasant, by Claude Vignon

It is clear from the beginning of Book 1 of the Histories that Herodotus utilizes (or at least claims to utilize) various sources in his narrative. K. H. Waters relates that "Herodotos did not work from a purely Hellenic standpoint; he was accused by the patriotic but somewhat imperceptive Plutarch of being philobarbaros, a pro-barbarian or pro-foreigner."[74]

Herodotus at times relates various accounts of the same story. For example, in Book 1 he mentions both the Phoenician and the Persian accounts of Io.[75] However, Herodotus at times arbitrates between varying accounts: "I am not going to say that these events happened one way or the other. Rather, I will point out the man who I know for a fact began the wrong-doing against the Greeks."[76] Again, later, Herodotus claims himself as an authority: "I know this is how it happened because I heard it from the Delphians myself."[77]

Throughout his work, Herodotus attempts to explain the actions of people. Speaking about Solon the Athenian, Herodotus states "[Solon] sailed away on the pretext of seeing the world, but it was really so that he could not be compelled to repeal any of the laws he had laid down."[78] Again, in the story about Croesus and his son's death, when speaking of Adrastus (the man who accidentally killed Croesus' son), Herodotus states: "Adrastus ... believing himself to be the most ill-fated man he had ever known, cut his own throat over the grave."[79]

Herodotus and myth edit

Although Herodotus considered his "inquiries" a serious pursuit of knowledge, he was not above relating entertaining tales derived from the collective body of myth, but he did so judiciously with regard for his historical method, by corroborating the stories through enquiry and testing their probability.[80] While the gods never make personal appearances in his account of human events, Herodotus states emphatically that "many things prove to me that the gods take part in the affairs of man" (IX, 100).

In Book One, passages 23 and 24, Herodotus relates the story of Arion, the renowned harp player, "second to no man living at that time," who was saved by a dolphin. Herodotus prefaces the story by noting that "a very wonderful thing is said to have happened," and alleges its veracity by adding that the "Corinthians and the Lesbians agree in their account of the matter." Having become very rich while at the court of Periander, Arion conceived a desire to sail to Italy and Sicily. He hired a vessel crewed by Corinthians, whom he felt he could trust, but the sailors plotted to throw him overboard and seize his wealth. Arion discovered the plot and begged for his life, but the crew gave him two options: that either he kill himself on the spot or jump ship and fend for himself in the sea. Arion flung himself into the water, and a dolphin carried him to shore.[81]

Herodotus clearly writes as both historian and teller of tales. Herodotus takes a fluid position between the artistic story-weaving of Homer and the rational data-accounting of later historians. John Herington has developed a helpful metaphor for describing Herodotus's dynamic position in the history of Western art and thought – Herodotus as centaur:

The human forepart of the animal ... is the urbane and responsible classical historian; the body indissolubly united to it is something out of the faraway mountains, out of an older, freer and wilder realm where our conventions have no force.[82]

Herodotus is neither a mere gatherer of data nor a simple teller of tales – he is both. While Herodotus is certainly concerned with giving accurate accounts of events, this does not preclude for him the insertion of powerful mythological elements into his narrative, elements which will aid him in expressing the truth of matters under his study. Thus to understand what Herodotus is doing in the Histories, we must not impose strict demarcations between the man as mythologist and the man as historian, or between the work as myth and the work as history. As James Romm has written, Herodotus worked under a common ancient Greek cultural assumption that the way events are remembered and retold (e.g. in myths or legends) produces a valid kind of understanding, even when this retelling is not entirely factual.[83] For Herodotus, then, it takes both myth and history to produce truthful understanding.

Legacy edit

On the legacy of The Histories of Herodotus, historian Barry S. Strauss writes:

He is simply one of the greatest storytellers who ever wrote. His narrative ability is one of the reasons ... those who call Herodotus the father of history. Now that title is one that he richly deserves. A Greek who lived in the fifth century BC, Herodotus was a pathfinder. He traveled the eastern Mediterranean and beyond to do research into human affairs: from Greece to Persia, from the sands of Egypt to the Scythian steppes, and from the rivers of Lydia to the dry hills of Sparta. The Greek for "research" is historia, where our word "history" comes from ... Herodotus is a great historian. His work holds up very well when judged by the yardstick of modern scholarship. But he is more than a historian. He is a philosopher with three great themes: the struggle between East and West, the power of liberty, and the rise and fall of empires. Herodotus takes the reader from the rise of the Persian Empire to its crusade against Greek independence, and from the stirrings of Hellenic self-defense to the beginnings of the overreach that would turn Athens into a new empire of its own. He goes from the cosmos to the atom, ranging between fate and the gods, on the one hand, and the ability of the individual to make a difference, on the other. And then there is the sheer narrative power of his writing ... The old master keeps calling us back.[84]

In popular culture edit

Historical novels sourcing material from Herodotus

  • Kapuściński, R. Travels with Herodotus.

Critical editions edit

  • Herodotus (1908) [c. 430 BC]. "Tomvs prior: Libros I-IV continens". In Hude, C. (ed.). Herodoti Historiae. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
  • Herodotus (1908) [c. 430 BC]. "Tomvs alter: Libri V-IX continens". In Hude, C. (ed.). Herodoti Historiae. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
  • Herodotus (1987) [c. 430 BC]. Rosén, H.B. (ed.). Herodoti historiae. Vol. I: Libros I-IV continens. Leipzig, DE. doi:10.1515/9783110965926. ISBN 9783598714030.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Herodotus (1997) [c. 430 BC]. Rosén, H.B. (ed.). Herodoti historiae, Volumen II, Libri V-IX. Indices. Vol. II: Libros V-IX continens indicibus criticis adiectis. Stuttgart, DE. doi:10.1515/9783110965919. ISBN 978-3-598-71404-7.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Herodotus (2015) [c. 430 BC]. "Tomvs prior: Libros I-IV continens". In Wilson, N.G. (ed.). Herodoti Historiae. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
  • Herodotus (2015) [c. 430 BC]. "Tomvs alter: Libri V-IX continens". In Wilson, N.G. (ed.). Herodoti Historiae. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.

Translations edit

  • Herodotus (1858). Book I – Book IX (full text, all books). Translated by Rawlinson, G. – via classics.mit.edu.
  • Herodotus (1920–1925). "Histories" (full text). Translated by Godley, Alfred Denis. Cambridge, MA.
    • vol. 1. librivox (audiobook).
    • vol. 2. librivox (audiobook).
    • vol. 3. librivox (audiobook).
    • Volume I : Books 1–2. 1920.
    • Volume II : Books 3–4. 1921.
    • Volume III : Books 5–7. 1922.
    • Volume IV : Books 8–9. 1925.
  • Herodotus (1954) [c. 430 BC, 1972, 1996, 2003]. . In Burn, A.R.; Marincola, John (eds.). The Histories. Translated by de Sélincourt, A. (revised once ed.). Archived from the original on 2015-05-04. Retrieved 2020-03-26.
  • Herodotus (1958) [c. 430 BC]. The Histories. Translated by Carter, Harry.
  • Herodotus (1992) [c. 430 BC]. The Histories. Translated by Blanco, Walter; Roberts, J.T.
  • Herodotus (2003) [c. 430 BC]. The Histories (full text).
  • Herodotus (2014) [c. 430 BC]. The Histories. Translated by Mensch, Pamela. with notes by James Romm.

Manuscripts edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Ancient Greek: [hi.storˈi.ai̯]
  2. ^ Herodotus (Book II, 68) claimed that the trochilus bird visited the crocodile, which opened its mouth in what would now be called a cleaning symbiosis to eat leeches. A modern survey of the evidence finds only occasional reports of sandpipers "removing leeches from the mouth and gular scutes and snapping at insects along the reptile's body."[5]
  3. ^ "In the scheme and plan of his work, in the arrangement and order of its parts, in the tone and character of the thoughts, in ten thousand little expressions and words, the Homeric student appears."[18]
  4. ^ Boedeker comments on Herodotus's use of literary devices.[41]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Herodotus (1987) [c. 430 BC]. The History Ἱστορίαι [The History]. Translated by Gren, David. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. pp. 37–38. ISBN 0-226-32770-1.
  2. ^ Herodotus; Arnold, John H. (2000). History: A very short introduction. Oxford University Press. p. 17. ISBN 0-19-285352-X.
  3. ^ Fehling, Detlev (1989). "Some demonstrably false source citations". Herodotus and His 'Sources' . Francis Cairns, Ltd. 50–57. ISBN 0-905205-70-7.
    Lindsay, Jack (1974). "Helen in the Fifth Century". Helen of Troy Rowman and Littlefield. 133–134. ISBN 0-87471-581-4
  4. ^ Herodotus. The Histories. Translated by A. D. Godley, Harvard University Press, 1920, http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus:text:1999.01.0126:book=1:chapter=94.
  5. ^ Macfarland, Craig G.; Reeder, W. G. (1974). "Cleaning symbiosis involving Galapagos tortoises and two species of Darwin's finches". Zeitschrift für Tierpsychologie. 34 (5): 464–483. doi:10.1111/j.1439-0310.1974.tb01816.x. PMID 4454774.
  6. ^ Geggel, Laura (March 19, 2019). "2,500 Years Ago, Herodotus Described a Weird Ship. Now, Archaeologists Have Found it". Live Science. Retrieved 2019-03-19.
  7. ^ Kim, Lawrence (2010). "Homer, poet and historian". Homer Between History and Fiction in Imperial Greek Literature. Cambridge University Press. 30-35 ISBN 978-0-521-19449-5.
    Allan, Williams (2008). "Introduction". Helen. Cambridge University Press. 22-24 ISBN 0-521-83690-5.
    Lindsay, Jack (1974). "Helen in the Fifth Century". Helen of Troy. Rowman and Littlefield. 135-138. ISBN 0-87471-581-4
  8. ^ "Herodotus, The Histories, Book 6, chapter 100, section 1". www.perseus.tufts.edu. Retrieved 2017-10-03.
  9. ^ a b Murray (1986), p. 188
  10. ^ Herodotus, Histories 2.143, 6.137
  11. ^ Preparation of the Gospel, X, 3
  12. ^ Immerwahr (1985), pp. 430, 440
  13. ^ Immerwahr (1985), p. 431
  14. ^ Burn (1972), pp. 22–23
  15. ^ Immerwahr (1985), p. 430
  16. ^ Immerwahr (1985), pp. 427, 432
  17. ^ Richard Jebb (ed), Antigone, Cambridge University Press, 1976, pp. 181–182, n. 904–920
  18. ^ Rawlinson (1859), p. 6
  19. ^ Murray (1986), pp. 190–191
  20. ^ Blanco (2013), p. 5
  21. ^ Gould (1989), p. 64
  22. ^ Homer, Iliad, trans. Stanley Lombardo (Indianapolis: Hackett Publishing Company, 1997): 1, Bk. 1, lines 9–16.
  23. ^ Gould (1989), p. 65
  24. ^ Gould (1989), p. 67
  25. ^ Gould (1989), pp. 67–70
  26. ^ Gould (1989), p. 71
  27. ^ Gould (1989), pp. 72–73
  28. ^ Gould (1989), pp. 75–76
  29. ^ Gould (1989), pp. 76–78
  30. ^ Gould (1989), pp. 77–78
  31. ^ Marincola (2001), p. 59
  32. ^ Roberts (2011), p. 2
  33. ^ Sparks (1998), p. 58
  34. ^ Asheri, Lloyd & Corcella (2007)
  35. ^ Cameron (2004), p. 156
  36. ^ Neville Morley: The Anti-Thucydides: Herodotus and the Development of Modern Historiography. In: Jessica Priestly and Vasiliki Zali (eds.): Brill's Companion to the Reception of Herodotus in Antiquity and Beyond. Brill, Leiden and Boston 2016, pp. 143–166, here especially p. 148 ff.
  37. ^ Vassiliki Zali: Herodotus and His Successors: The Rhetoric of the Persian Wars in Thucydides and Xenophon. In: Priestly and Zali (eds.): Brill's Companion to the Reception of Herodotus in Antiquity and Beyond. Brill, Leiden and Boston 2016, pp. 34–58, here p. 38.
  38. ^ Fehling (1994), p. 2
  39. ^ Fehling (1989)
  40. ^ Fehling (1989), pp. 4, 53–54
  41. ^ a b Boedeker (2000), pp. 101–102
  42. ^ Saltzman (2010)
  43. ^ Archambault (2002), p. 171
  44. ^ Farley (2010), p. 21
  45. ^ a b Lloyd (1993), p. 4
  46. ^ a b Fehling (1994), p. 13
  47. ^ a b Nielsen (1997), pp. 42–43
  48. ^ a b c Marincola (2001), p. 34
  49. ^ a b Dalley (2003)
  50. ^ a b Baragwanath & de Bakker (2010), p. 19
  51. ^ a b Dalley (2013)
  52. ^ Mikalson (2003), pp. 198–200
  53. ^ a b Burn (1972), p. 10
  54. ^ a b Jones (1996)
  55. ^ a b Murray (1986), p. 189
  56. ^ Fehling (1994), pp. 4–6
  57. ^ Solly, Meilan. "Wreck of Unusual Ship Described by Herodotus Recovered From Nile Delta". Smithsonian.
  58. ^ Heeren (1838), pp. 13, 379, 422–424
  59. ^ Diop (1981), p. 1
  60. ^ Diop (1974), p. 2
  61. ^ Norma Thompson: Herodotus and the Origins of the Political Community: Arion's Leap. Yale University Press, New Haven and London 1996, p. 113.
  62. ^ Welsby (1996), p. 40
  63. ^ Aubin (2002), pp. 94–96, 100–102, 118–121, 141–144, 328, 336
  64. ^ "Herodotus on the First Circumnavigation of Africa". Livius.org. 1996. Retrieved 12 June 2019.
  65. ^ The Indian Empire. Vol. 2. 1909. p. 272 – via Digital South Asia Library. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  66. ^ Jain, Meenakshi (1 January 2011). The India They Saw: Foreign Accounts. Vol. 1–4. Delhi: Prabhat Prakashan. ISBN 978-81-8430-106-9.
  67. ^ Majumdar, Ramesh Chandra (1981). The Classical Accounts of India: Being a Compilation of the English Translations of the Accounts Left by Herodotus, Megasthenes, Arrian, Strabo, Quintus, Diodorus, Siculus, Justin, Plutarch, Frontinus, Nearchus, Apollonius, Pliny, Ptolemy, Aelian, and Others with Maps. Calcutta: Firma KLM. pp. 504. OCLC 247581880.
  68. ^ a b Peissel (1984)
  69. ^ Simons, Marlise (25 November 1996). "Himalayas offer clue to legend of gold-digging 'ants'". The New York Times. p. 5. Retrieved 23 February 2016.
  70. ^ Rawlinson (1859), pp. 13–14
  71. ^ "Dio Chrysostom Orat. xxxvii, p11". Penelope.uchicago.edu. Retrieved 13 September 2012.
  72. ^ Marcellinus, Life of Thucydides
  73. ^ Burn (1972), pp. 8, 9, 32–34
  74. ^ Waters (1985), p. 3
  75. ^ Blanco (2013), pp. 5–6, §1.1, 1.5
  76. ^ Blanco (2013), p. 6, §1.5
  77. ^ Blanco (2013), p. 9, §1.20
  78. ^ Blanco (2013), p. 12, §1.29
  79. ^ Blanco (2013), p. 17, §1.45, ¶2
  80. ^ Wardman (1960)
  81. ^ Histories 1.23–24.
  82. ^ Romm (1998), p. 8
  83. ^ Romm (1998), p. 6
  84. ^ Strauss, B.S. (14 June 2014). "One of the greatest storytellers who ever lived". Off the Shelf (offtheshelf.com).

Sources edit

  • Archambault, Paul (2002). "Herodotus (c. 480 – c. 420)". In della Fazia Amoia, Alba; Knapp, Bettina Liebowitz (eds.). Multicultural Writers from Antiquity to 1945: a Bio-bibliographical Sourcebook. Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 168–172. ISBN 978-0-313-30687-7.
  • Asheri, David; Lloyd, Alan; Corcella, Aldo (2007). A Commentary on Herodotus, Books 1–4. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-814956-9.
  • Baragwanath, Emily; de Bakker, Mathieu (2010). Herodotus. Oxford Bibliographies Online Research Guide. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-980286-9.
  • Herodotus; Blanco, Walter (2013). The Histories. New York, NY: W.W. Norton & Company. ISBN 978-0-393-93397-0.
  • Boedeker, Deborah (2000). "Herodotus' genre(s)". In Depew, Mary; Obbink, Dirk (eds.). Matrices of Genre: Authors, canons, and society. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. pp. 97–114. ISBN 978-0-674-03420-4.
  • Cameron, Alan (2004). Greek Mythography in the Roman World. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-803821-4.
  • Dalley, S. (2003). "Why did Herodotus not mention the Hanging Gardens of Babylon?". In Derow, P.; Parker, R. (eds.). Herodotus and his World. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. pp. 171–189. ISBN 978-0-19-925374-6.
  • Dalley, S. (2013). The Mystery of the Hanging Garden of Babylon: An elusive world-wonder traced. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-966226-5.
  • Evans, J.A.S (1968). "Father of History or Father of Lies: The reputation of Herodotus". Classical Journal. 64: 11–17.
  • Farley, David G. (2010). Modernist Travel Writing: Intellectuals abroad. Columbia, MO: University of Missouri Press. ISBN 978-0-8262-7228-7.
  • Fehling, Detlev (1989) [1971]. Herodotos and His 'Sources': Citation, invention, and narrative art. Arca Classical and Medieval Texts, Papers, and Monographs. Vol. 21. Translated by Howie, J.G. Leeds, UK: Francis Cairns. ISBN 978-0-905205-70-0.
  • Fehling, Detlev (1994). "The art of Herodotus and the margins of the world". In von Martels, Z.R.W.M. (ed.). Travel Fact and Travel Fiction: Studies on fiction, literary tradition, scholarly discovery, and observation in travel writing. Brill's studies in intellectual history. Vol. 55. Leiden, NL: Brill. pp. 1–15. ISBN 978-90-04-10112-8.
  • Heeren, A.H.L. (1838). Historical Researches into the Politics, Intercourse, and Trade of the Carthaginians, Ethiopians, and Egyptians. Oxford, UK: D.A. Talboys. ASIN B003B3P1Y8.
  • Immerwahr, Henry R. (1985). "Herodotus". In Easterling, P.E.; Knox, B.M.W. (eds.). Greek Literature. The Cambridge History of Classical Greek Literature. Vol. 1. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-21042-3.
  • Jones, C.P. (1996). "ἔθνος and γένος in Herodotus". The Classical Quarterly. new series. 46 (2): 315–320. doi:10.1093/cq/46.2.315.
  • Jain, Meenakshi (2011). The India They Saw: Foreign accounts. Delhi, IN: Ocean Books. ISBN 978-81-8430-106-9.
  • Lloyd, Alan B. (1993). Herodotus. Études préliminaires aux religions orientales dans l'Empire romain; Book II. Vol. 43. Leiden, NL: Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-07737-9.
  • Majumdar, R.C. (1981). The Classical accounts of India. Calcutta, IN: Firma KLM. ISBN 978-0-8364-0704-4. Being a compilation of the English translations of the accounts left by Herodotus, Megasthenes, Arrian, Strabo, Quintus, Diodorus, Siculus, Justin, Plutarch, Frontinus, Nearchus, Apollonius, Pliny, Ptolemy, Aelian, and others with maps.
  • Mikalson, Jon D. (2003). Herodotus and Religion in the Persian Wars. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-2798-7.
  • Murray, Oswyn (1986). "Greek historians". In Boardman, John; Griffin, Jasper; Murray, Oswyn (eds.). The Oxford History of the Classical World. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. pp. 186–203. ISBN 978-0-19-872112-3.
  • Nielsen, Flemming A.J. (1997). The Tragedy in History: Herodotus and the deuteronomistic history. A&C Black. ISBN 978-1-85075-688-0.
  • Rawlinson, George (1859). The History of Herodotus. Vol. 1. New York, NY: D. Appleton and Company.
  • Roberts, Jennifer T. (2011). Herodotus: A very short introduction. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-957599-2.
  • Saltzman, Joe (2010). "Herodotus as an ancient journalist: Reimagining antiquity's historians as journalists". The IJPC Journal. 2: 153–185.
  • Sparks, Kenton L. (1998). Ethnicity and Identity in Ancient Israel: Prolegomena to the study of ethnic sentiments and their expression in the Hebrew Bible. Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns. ISBN 978-1-57506-033-0.
  • Waters, K.H. (1985). Herodotos the Historian: His problems, methods, and originality. University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0-8061-1928-1.

External links edit

  • Herodotus. "History". Perseus. — Complete online text
  •   Histories public domain audiobook at LibriVox
  • The Histories (online audiobook) (unabridged ed.) – via Internet Archive (archive.org).
  • Herodotus. "The 28 Logoi". . Archived from the original on 4 May 2015. Retrieved 1 October 2020. {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
  • Sheridan, Paul (2015-08-17). "The Inessential Guide to Herodotus". Anecdotes from Antiquity. Retrieved 2015-08-27.
  • Herodotus. "Books V–VIII". Histories. Translated by Godley, A.D. Direct link to PDF 2013-05-23 at the Wayback Machine (14 MB)

histories, herodotus, histories, greek, Ἱστορίαι, historíai, also, known, history, herodotus, considered, founding, work, history, western, literature, although, fully, impartial, record, remains, west, most, important, sources, regarding, these, affairs, more. The Histories Greek Ἱstoriai Historiai a also known as The History 1 of Herodotus is considered the founding work of history in Western literature 2 Although not a fully impartial record it remains one of the West s most important sources regarding these affairs Moreover it established the genre and study of history in the Western world despite the existence of historical records and chronicles beforehand HistoriesFragment from Histories Book VIII on 2nd century Papyrus Oxyrhynchus 2099AuthorHerodotusCountryGreeceLanguageAncient GreekGenreHistoryPublisherVariousPublication datec 430 BC citation needed The Histories also stands as one of the earliest accounts of the rise of the Persian Empire as well as the events and causes of the Greco Persian Wars between the Persian Empire and the Greek city states in the 5th century BC Herodotus portrays the conflict as one between the forces of slavery the Persians on the one hand and freedom the Athenians and the confederacy of Greek city states which united against the invaders on the other The Histories was at some point divided into the nine books that appear in modern editions conventionally named after the nine Muses Contents 1 Motivation for writing 2 Summary 2 1 Book I Clio 2 2 Book II Euterpe 2 3 Book III Thalia 2 4 Book IV Melpomene 2 5 Book V Terpsichore 2 6 Book VI Erato 2 7 Book VII Polymnia 2 8 Book VIII Urania 2 9 Book IX Calliope 3 Style 4 Mode of explanation 4 1 Types of causality 5 Reliability 5 1 Babylon 5 2 Egypt 5 3 Scientific reasoning 5 3 1 On geography 5 3 2 On biology 5 4 Accusations of bias 5 5 Use of sources and sense of authority 6 Herodotus and myth 7 Legacy 8 In popular culture 9 Critical editions 10 Translations 11 Manuscripts 12 See also 13 Notes 14 References 15 Sources 16 External linksMotivation for writing editHerodotus claims to have traveled extensively around the ancient world conducting interviews and collecting stories for his book almost all of which covers territories of the Persian Empire At the beginning of The Histories Herodotus sets out his reasons for writing it Here are presented the results of the enquiry carried out by Herodotus of Halicarnassus The purpose is to prevent the traces of human events from being erased by time and to preserve the fame of the important and remarkable achievements produced by both Greeks and non Greeks among the matters covered is in particular the cause of the hostilities between Greeks and non Greeks Herodotus The Histories Robin Waterfield translation 2008 Summary edit nbsp Candaules King of Lydia shews his wife by stealth to Gyges by William Etty 1830 Book I Clio edit The abductions of Io Europa and Medea which motivated Paris to abduct Helen The subsequent Trojan War is marked as a precursor to later conflicts between peoples of Asia and Europe 1 1 5 3 Colchis Colchians and Medea 1 2 2 1 2 3 The rulers of Lydia on the west coast of Asia Minor today modern Turkey Candaules Gyges Ardys Sadyattes Alyattes Croesus 1 6 7 How Candaules made his bodyguard Gyges view the naked body of his wife Upon discovery she ordered Gyges to murder Candaules or face death himself 1 How Gyges took the kingdom from Candaules 1 8 13 The singer Arion s ride on the dolphin 1 23 24 Solon s answer to Croesus s question that Tellus was the happiest person in the world 1 29 33 Croesus s efforts to protect his son Atys his son s accidental death by Adrastus 1 34 44 Croesus s test of the oracles 1 46 54 The answer from the Oracle of Delphi concerning whether Croesus should attack the Persians famous for its ambiguity If you attack a great empire will fall Peisistratos rises and falls from power as tyrant of Athens 1 59 64 The rise of Sparta 1 65 68 nbsp Edwin Long s 1875 interpretation of The Babylonian Marriage Market as described by Herodotus in Book 1 of the HistoriesA description the geographic location of several Anatolian tribes including the Cappadocians Matieni Phrygians and Paphlagonians 1 72 The Battle of Halys Thales predicts the solar eclipse of May 28 585 BC 1 74 Croesus s defeat by Cyrus II of Persia and how he later became Cyrus s advisor 1 70 92 The Tyrrhenians descent from the Lydians Then the one group having drawn the lot left the country and came down to Smyrna and built ships in which they loaded all their goods that could be transported aboard ship and sailed away to seek a livelihood and a country until at last after sojourning with one people after another they came to the Ombrici where they founded cities and have lived ever since They no longer called themselves Lydians but Tyrrhenians after the name of the king s son who had led them there 1 94 4 The rulers of the Medes Deioces Phraortes Cyaxares Astyages Cyrus II of Persia 1 95 144 The rise of Deioces over the Medes Astyages s attempt to destroy Cyrus and Cyrus s rise to power Harpagus tricked into eating his son his revenge against Astyages by assisting Cyrus The culture of the Persians The history and geography of the Ionians and the attacks on it by Harpagus Pactyes convinces the Lydians to revolt Rebellion fails and he seeks refuge from Mazares in Cyme Aeolis The culture of Assyria especially the design and improvement of the city of Babylon and the ways of its people Cyrus s attack on Babylon including his revenge on the river Gyndes and his famous method for entering the city Cyrus s ill fated attack on the Massagetae leading to his deathBook II Euterpe edit nbsp Nile crocodile allowing the trochilus to eat leeches in its mouth b Drawing by Henry Scherren 1906The proof of the antiquity of the Phrygians by the use of children unexposed to language The geography customs and history of Egypt Sections 2 182 Speculations on the Nile river Sections 2 34 The religious practices of Egypt especially as they differ from the Greeks sections 35 64 The animals of Egypt cats dogs crocodiles hippopotamuses otters phoenixes sacred serpents winged snakes ibises The culture of Egypt medicine funeral rites food boats 6 The kings of Egypt Menes Nitocris Mœris Sesostris Pheron Proteus Helen and Paris s stay in Egypt just before the Trojan War 2 112 120 7 More kings of Egypt Rhampsinit and the story of the clever thief Cheops and the building of the Great Pyramid of Giza using machines Chephren Mycerinus Asychis and the Ethiopian conqueror Sabacos Anysis Sethos The line of priests The Labyrinth More kings of Egypt the twelve Psammetichus and his rise to power Necos Psammis Apries Amasis II and his rise to power Book III Thalia edit Cambyses II of Persia s son of Cyrus II and king of Persia attack on Egypt and the defeat of the Egyptian king Psammetichus III Cambyses s abortive attack on Ethiopia The madness of Cambyses The good fortune of Polycrates king of Samos Periander the king of Corinth and Corcyra and his obstinate son The revolt of the two Magi in Persia and the death of Cambyses The conspiracy of the seven to remove the Magi The rise of Darius I of Persia The twenty satrapies The culture of India and their method of collecting gold The culture of Arabia and their method of collecting spices The flooded valley with five gates Orœtes s governor of Sardis scheme against Polycrates The physician Democedes The rise of Syloson governor of Samos The revolt of Babylon and its defeat by the scheme of ZopyrusBook IV Melpomene edit nbsp Scythian warriors drawn after figures on an electrum cup from the Kul Oba kurgan burial near Kerch Hermitage Museum Saint Petersburg The history of the Scythians from the land north of the Black Sea The miraculous poet Aristeas The geography of Scythia The inhabitants of regions beyond Scythia Sauromatae Budini Thyssagetae Argippaeans Issedones Arimaspi Hyperboreans A comparison of Libya Africa Asia and Europe The rivers of Scythia the Ister the Tyras the Hypanis the Borysthenes the Panticapes the Hypacyris the Gerrhus and the Tanais The culture of the Scythians religion burial rites xenophobia the stories of Anacharsis and Scylas population sections 59 81 nbsp Relief of Darius I PersepolisThe beginning of Darius s attack on Scythia including the pontoon bridge over the Bosphorus The brutal worship of Zalmoxis by the Getae The customs of the surrounding peoples Tauri Agathyrsi Neuri Androphagi man eaters Melanchlaeni Geloni Budini Sauromatae The wooing of the Amazons by the Scyths forming the Sauromatae Darius s failed attack on Scythia and consequent retreat The story of the Minyae descendants of the Argonauts and the founding of Cyrene The kings of Cyrene Battus I Arcesilaus I Battus II Arcesilaus II Battus III and the reforms of Demonax Arcesilaus III and his flight restoration and assassination Battus IV and Arcesilaus IV his revolt and death The peoples of Libya from east to west The revenge of Arcesilaus mother Pheretima nbsp Statue of Athena the patron goddess of AthensBook V Terpsichore edit The attack on the Thracians by Megabazus The removal of the Paeonians to Asia The slaughter of the Persian envoys by Alexander I of Macedon The failed attack on the Naxians by Aristagoras tyrant of Miletus The revolt of Miletus against Persia The background of Cleomenes I king of Sparta and his half brother Dorieus The description of the Persian Royal Road from Sardis to Susa The introduction of writing to Greece by the Phoenicians The freeing of Athens by Sparta and its subsequent attacks on Athens The reorganizing of the Athenian tribes by Cleisthenes The attack on Athens by the Thebans and Eginetans The backgrounds of the tyrants of Corinth Cypselus and his son Periander Aristagoras s failed request for help from Sparta and successful attempt with Athens The burning of Sardis and Darius s vow for revenge against the Athenians Persia s attempts to quell the Ionian revoltBook VI Erato edit nbsp A Greek triremeThe fleeing of Histiaeus to Chios The training of the Ionian fleet by Dionysius of Phocaea The abandonment of the Ionian fleet by the Samians during battle The defeat of the Ionian fleet by the Persians The capture and death of Histiaeus by Harpagus The invasion of Greek lands under Mardonius and enslavement of Macedon The destruction of 300 ships in Mardonius s fleet near Athos nbsp MiltiadesThe order of Darius that the Greeks provide him earth and water in which most consent including Aegina The Athenian request for assistance of Cleomenes of Sparta in dealing with the traitors The history behind Sparta having two kings and their powers The dethronement of Demaratus the other king of Sparta due to his supposed false lineage The arrest of the traitors in Aegina by Cleomenes and the new king Leotychides The suicide of Cleomenes in a fit of madness possibly caused by his war with Argos drinking unmixed wine or his involvement in dethroning Demaratus The battle between Aegina and Athens The taking of Eretria by the Persians after the Eretrians sent away Athenian help Pheidippides s encounter with the god Pan on a journey to Sparta to request aid The assistance of the Plataeans and the history behind their alliance with Athens The Athenian win at the Battle of Marathon led by Miltiades and other strategoi This section starts roughly around 6 100 8 The Spartans late arrival to assist Athens The history of the Alcmaeonidae and how they came about their wealth and status The death of Miltiades after a failed attack on Paros and the successful taking of Lemnos nbsp The plain of Marathon todayBook VII Polymnia edit The amassing of an army by Darius after learning about the defeat at Marathon 7 1 The quarrel between Ariabignes and Xerxes over which son should succeed Darius in which Xerxes is chosen 7 2 3 The death of Darius in 486 BC 7 4 The defeat of the Egyptian rebels by Xerxes The advice given to Xerxes on invading Greece Mardonius for invasion Artabanus against 7 9 10 nbsp Leonidas at Thermopylae by Jacques Louis David 1814 The dreams of Xerxes in which a phantom frightens him and Artabanus into choosing invasion The preparations for war including building the Xerxes Canal and Xerxes Pontoon Bridges across the Hellespont The offer by Pythius to give Xerxes all his money in which Xerxes rewards him The request by Pythius to allow one son to stay at home Xerxes s anger and the march out between the butchered halves of Pythius s sons The destruction and rebuilding of the bridges built by the Egyptians and Phoenicians at Abydos The siding with Persia of many Greek states including Thessaly Thebes Melia and Argos The refusal of aid after negotiations by Gelo of Syracuse and the refusal from Crete The destruction of 400 Persian ships due to a storm The small Greek force approx 7 000 led by Leonidas I sent to Thermopylae to delay the Persian army 5 283 220 Herodotus The Battle of Thermopylae in which the Greeks hold the pass for 3 days The secret pass divulged by Ephialtes of Trachis which Hydarnes uses to lead forces around the mountains to encircle the Greeks The retreat of all but the Spartans Thespians and Thebans forced to stay by the Spartans The Greek defeat and order by Xerxes to remove Leonidas s head and attach his torso to a cross nbsp The Battle of Salamis by Wilhelm von Kaulbach 1868 Book VIII Urania edit Greek fleet is led by Eurybiades a Spartan commander who led the Greek fleet after the meeting at the Isthmus 481 BC The destruction by storm of two hundred ships sent to block the Greeks from escaping The retreat of the Greek fleet after word of a defeat at Thermopylae The supernatural rescue of Delphi from a Persian attack The evacuation of Athens assisted by the fleet The reinforcement of the Greek fleet at Salamis Island bringing the total ships to 378 The destruction of Athens by the Persian land force after difficulties with those who remained The Battle of Salamis the Greeks have the advantage due to better organization and fewer losses due to ability to swim The description of the Angarum the Persian riding post The rise in favor of Artemisia the Persian woman commander and her council to Xerxes in favor of returning to Persia nbsp The Serpent Column dedicated by the victorious Greeks in Delphi later transferred to ConstantinopleThe vengeance of Hermotimus Xerxes chief eunuch against Panionius The attack on Andros by Themistocles the Athenian fleet commander and most valiant Greek at Salamis The escape of Xerxes and leaving behind of 300 000 picked troops under Mardonius in Thessaly The ancestry of Alexander I of Macedon including Perdiccas The refusal of an attempt by Alexander to seek a Persian alliance with AthensBook IX Calliope edit The second taking of an evacuated Athens The evacuation to Thebes by Mardonius after the sending of Lacedaemonian troops The slaying of Masistius leader of the Persian cavalry by the Athenians The warning from Alexander to the Greeks of an impending attack The death of Mardonius by Aeimnestus The Persian retreat to Thebes where they are afterwards slaughtered Battle of Plataea The description and dividing of the spoils The speedy escape of Artabazus into Asia The Persian defeat in Ionia by the Greek fleet Battle of Mycale and the Ionian revolt The mutilation of the wife of Masistes ordered by Amestris wife of Xerxes The death of Masistes after his intent to rebel The Athenian blockade of Sestos and the capture of Artayctes The Persians abortive suggestion to Cyrus to migrate from rocky PersisStyle editIn his introduction to Hecataeus work Genealogies nbsp Fragment from the Histories VIII on Papyrus Oxyrhynchus 2099 early 2nd century ADHecataeus the Milesian speaks thus I write these things as they seem true to me for the stories told by the Greeks are various and in my opinion absurd This points forward to the folksy yet international outlook typical of Herodotus However one modern scholar has described the work of Hecataeus as a curious false start to history 9 since despite his critical spirit he failed to liberate history from myth Herodotus mentions Hecataeus in his Histories on one occasion mocking him for his naive genealogy and on another occasion quoting Athenian complaints against his handling of their national history 10 It is possible that Herodotus borrowed much material from Hecataeus as stated by Porphyry in a quote recorded by Eusebius 11 In particular it is possible that he copied descriptions of the crocodile hippopotamus and phoenix from Hecataeus s Circumnavigation of the Known World Periegesis Periodos ges even misrepresenting the source as Heliopolitans Histories 2 73 12 But Hecataeus did not record events that had occurred in living memory unlike Herodotus nor did he include the oral traditions of Greek history within the larger framework of oriental history 13 There is no proof that Herodotus derived the ambitious scope of his own work with its grand theme of civilizations in conflict from any predecessor despite much scholarly speculation about this in modern times 9 14 Herodotus claims to be better informed than his predecessors by relying on empirical observation to correct their excessive schematism For example he argues for continental asymmetry as opposed to the older theory of a perfectly circular earth with Europe and Asia Africa equal in size Histories 4 36 and 4 42 However he retains idealizing tendencies as in his symmetrical notions of the Danube and Nile 15 His debt to previous authors of prose histories might be questionable but there is no doubt that Herodotus owed much to the example and inspiration of poets and story tellers For example Athenian tragic poets provided him with a world view of a balance between conflicting forces upset by the hubris of kings and they provided his narrative with a model of episodic structure His familiarity with Athenian tragedy is demonstrated in a number of passages echoing Aeschylus s Persae including the epigrammatic observation that the defeat of the Persian navy at Salamis caused the defeat of the land army Histories 8 68 Persae 728 The debt may have been repaid by Sophocles because there appear to be echoes of The Histories in his plays especially a passage in Antigone that resembles Herodotus s account of the death of Intaphernes Histories 3 119 Antigone 904 920 16 However this point is one of the most contentious issues in modern scholarship 17 Homer was another inspirational source c Just as Homer drew extensively on a tradition of oral poetry sung by wandering minstrels so Herodotus appears to have drawn on an Ionian tradition of story telling collecting and interpreting the oral histories he chanced upon in his travels These oral histories often contained folk tale motifs and demonstrated a moral yet they also contained substantial facts relating to geography anthropology and history all compiled by Herodotus in an entertaining style and format 19 Mode of explanation editHerodotus writes with the purpose of explaining that is he discusses the reason for or cause of an event He lays this out in the preamble This is the publication of the research of Herodotus of Halicarnassus so that the actions of people shall not fade with time so that the great and admirable achievements of both Greeks and barbarians shall not go unrenowned and among other things to set forth the reasons why they waged war on each other 20 This mode of explanation traces itself all the way back to Homer 21 who opened the Iliad by asking Which of the immortals set these two at each other s throats Zeus son and Leto s offended by the warlord Agamemnon had dishonored Chryses Apollo s priest so the god struck the Greek camp with plague and the soldiers were dying of it 22 Both Homer and Herodotus begin with a question of causality In Homer s case who set these two at each other s throats In Herodotus s case Why did the Greeks and barbarians go to war with each other Herodotus s means of explanation does not necessarily posit a simple cause rather his explanations cover a host of potential causes and emotions It is notable however that the obligations of gratitude and revenge are the fundamental human motives for Herodotus just as they are the primary stimulus to the generation of narrative itself 23 Some readers of Herodotus believe that his habit of tying events back to personal motives signifies an inability to see broader and more abstract reasons for action Gould argues to the contrary that this is likely because Herodotus attempts to provide the rational reasons as understood by his contemporaries rather than providing more abstract reasons 24 Types of causality edit Herodotus attributes cause to both divine and human agents These are not perceived as mutually exclusive but rather mutually interconnected This is true of Greek thinking in general at least from Homer onward 25 Gould notes that invoking the supernatural in order to explain an event does not answer the question why did this happen but rather why did this happen to me By way of example faulty craftsmanship is the human cause for a house collapsing However divine will is the reason that the house collapses at the particular moment when I am inside It was the will of the gods that the house collapsed while a particular individual was within it whereas it was the cause of man that the house had a weak structure and was prone to falling 26 Some authors including Geoffrey de Ste Croix and Mabel Lang have argued that Fate or the belief that this is how it had to be is Herodotus s ultimate understanding of causality 27 Herodotus s explanation that an event was going to happen maps well on to Aristotelean and Homeric means of expression The idea of it was going to happen reveals a tragic discovery associated with fifth century drama This tragic discovery can be seen in Homer s Iliad as well 28 John Gould argues that Herodotus should be understood as falling in a long line of story tellers rather than thinking of his means of explanation as a philosophy of history or simple causality Thus according to Gould Herodotus s means of explanation is a mode of story telling and narration that has been passed down from generations prior 29 Herodotus sense of what was going to happen is not the language of one who holds a theory of historical necessity who sees the whole of human experience as constrained by inevitability and without room for human choice or human responsibility diminished and belittled by forces too large for comprehension or resistance it is rather the traditional language of a teller of tales whose tale is structured by his awareness of the shape it must have and who presents human experience on the model of the narrative patterns that are built into his stories the narrative impulse itself the impulse towards closure and the sense of an ending is retrojected to become explanation 30 Reliability edit nbsp Dedication in the Histories translated into Latin by Lorenzo Valla Venice 1494The accuracy of the works of Herodotus has been controversial since his own era Kenton L Sparks writes In antiquity Herodotus had acquired the reputation of being unreliable biased parsimonious in his praise of heroes and mendacious The historian Duris of Samos called Herodotus a myth monger 31 Cicero On the Laws I 5 said that his works were full of legends or fables 32 The controversy was also commented on by Aristotle Flavius Josephus and Plutarch 33 34 The Alexandrian grammarian Harpocration wrote a whole book on the lies of Herodotus 35 Lucian of Samosata went as far as to deny the father of history a place among the famous on the Island of the Blessed in his Verae Historiae The works of Thucydides were often given preference for their truthfulness and reliability 36 even if Thucydides basically continued on foundations laid by Herodotus as in his treatment of the Persian Wars 37 In spite of these lines of criticism Herodotus works were in general kept in high esteem and regarded as reliable by many Many scholars ancient and modern such as Strabo A H L Heeren etc routinely cited Herodotus To this day some scholars regard his works as being at least partly unreliable Detlev Fehling writes of a problem recognized by everybody namely that Herodotus frequently cannot be taken at face value 38 Fehling argues that Herodotus exaggerated the extent of his travels and invented his sources 39 For Fehling the sources of many stories as reported by Herodotus do not appear credible in themselves Persian and Egyptian informants tell stories that dovetail neatly into Greek myths and literature yet show no signs of knowing their own traditions For Fehling the only credible explanation is that Herodotus invented these sources and that the stories themselves were concocted by Herodotus himself 40 Like many ancient historians Herodotus preferred an element of show d to purely analytic history aiming to give pleasure with exciting events great dramas bizarre exotica 42 As such certain passages have been the subject of controversy 43 44 and even some doubt both in antiquity and today 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 Despite the controversy 52 Herodotus has long served and still serves as the primary often only source for events in the Greek world Persian Empire and the broader region in the two centuries leading up to his own days 53 54 So even if the Histories were criticized in some regards since antiquity modern historians and philosophers generally take a more positive view as to their source and epistemologic value 55 Herodotus is variously considered father of comparative anthropology 53 the father of ethnography 54 and more modern than any other ancient historian in his approach to the ideal of total history 55 Discoveries made since the end of the 19th century have generally added to Herodotus credibility He described Gelonus located in Scythia as a city thousands of times larger than Troy this was widely disbelieved until it was rediscovered in 1975 The archaeological study of the now submerged ancient Egyptian city of Heracleion and the recovery of the so called Naucratis stela give credibility to Herodotus s previously unsupported claim that Heracleion was founded during the Egyptian New Kingdom Babylon edit nbsp Reconstruction of the Oikoumene inhabited world ancient map based on Herodotus c 450 BCHerodotus claimed to have visited Babylon The absence of any mention of the Hanging Gardens of Babylon in his work has attracted further attacks on his credibility In response Dalley has proposed that the Hanging Gardens may have been in Nineveh rather than in Babylon 49 Egypt edit The reliability of Herodotus s writing about Egypt is sometimes questioned 51 Alan B Lloyd argues that as a historical document the writings of Herodotus are seriously defective and that he was working from inadequate sources 45 Nielsen writes Though we cannot entirely rule out the possibility of Herodotus having been in Egypt it must be said that his narrative bears little witness to it 47 German historian Detlev Fehling questions whether Herodotus ever traveled up the Nile River and considers doubtful almost everything that he says about Egypt and Ethiopia 56 50 Fehling states that there is not the slightest bit of history behind the whole story about the claim of Herodotus that Pharaoh Sesostris campaigned in Europe and that he left a colony in Colchia 48 46 Fehling concludes that the works of Herodotus are intended as fiction Boedeker concurs that much of the content of the works of Herodotus are literary devices 48 41 However a recent discovery of a baris described in The Histories during an excavation of the sunken Egyptian port city of Thonis Heracleion lends credence to Herodotus s travels and storytelling 57 Herodotus contribution to the history and ethnography of ancient Egypt and Africa was especially valued by various historians of the field such as Constantin Francois de Chassebœuf comte de Volney W E B Du Bois Pierre Montet Martin Bernal Basil Davidson Derek A Welsby Henry T Aubin Many scholars explicitly mention the reliability of Herodotus s work such as on the Nile Valley and demonstrate corroboration of Herodotus writings by modern scholars A H L Heeren quoted Herodotus throughout his work and provided corroboration by scholars regarding several passages source of the Nile location of Meroe etc 58 Cheikh Anta Diop provides several examples like the inundations of the Nile which he argues support his view that Herodotus was quite scrupulous objective scientific for his time Diop argues that Herodotus always distinguishes carefully between what he has seen and what he has been told Diop also notes that Strabo corroborated Herodotus ideas about the Black Egyptians Ethiopians and Colchians 59 60 Martin Bernal has relied on Herodotus to an extraordinary degree in his controversial book Black Athena 61 British egyptologist Derek A Welsby said that archaeology graphically confirms Herodotus s observations 62 To further his work on the Egyptians and Assyrians historian and fiction writer Henry T Aubin used Herodotus accounts in various passages For Aubin Herodotus was the author of the first important narrative history of the world 63 Scientific reasoning edit On geography edit Herodotus provides much information about the nature of the world and the status of science during his lifetime often engaging in private speculation likewise For example he reports that the annual flooding of the Nile was said to be the result of melting snows far to the south and he comments that he cannot understand how there can be snow in Africa the hottest part of the known world offering an elaborate explanation based on the way that desert winds affect the passage of the Sun over this part of the world 2 18ff He also passes on reports from Phoenician sailors that while circumnavigating Africa they saw the sun on the right side while sailing westwards although being unaware of the existence of the southern hemisphere he says that he does not believe the claim Owing to this brief mention which is included almost as an afterthought it has been argued that Africa was circumnavigated by ancient seafarers for this is precisely where the sun ought to have been 64 His accounts of India are among the oldest records of Indian civilization by an outsider 65 66 67 On biology edit Main article Gold digging ant nbsp The Indian Gold Hunters after Herodotus gold ants pursuing gold hunters After journeys to India and Pakistan French ethnologist Michel Peissel claimed to have discovered an animal species that may illuminate one of the most bizarre passages in the Histories 68 In Book 3 passages 102 to 105 Herodotus reports that a species of fox sized furry ants lives in one of the far eastern Indian provinces of the Persian Empire This region he reports is a sandy desert and the sand there contains a wealth of fine gold dust These giant ants according to Herodotus would often unearth the gold dust when digging their mounds and tunnels and the people living in this province would then collect the precious dust Later Pliny the Elder would mention this story in the gold mining section of his Naturalis Historia nbsp The Himalayan marmotPeissel reports that in an isolated region of northern Pakistan on the Deosai Plateau in Gilgit Baltistan province there is a species of marmot the Himalayan marmot a type of burrowing squirrel that may have been what Herodotus called giant ants The ground of the Deosai Plateau is rich in gold dust much like the province that Herodotus describes According to Peissel he interviewed the Minaro tribal people who live in the Deosai Plateau and they have confirmed that they have for generations been collecting the gold dust that the marmots bring to the surface when they are digging their burrows Peissel offers the theory that Herodotus may have confused the old Persian word for marmot with the word for mountain ant Research suggests that Herodotus probably did not know any Persian or any other language except his native Greek and was forced to rely on many local translators when travelling in the vast multilingual Persian Empire Herodotus did not claim to have personally seen the creatures which he described 68 69 Herodotus did though follow up in passage 105 of Book 3 with the claim that the ants are said to chase and devour full grown camels Accusations of bias edit Some calumnious fictions were written about Herodotus in a work titled On the Malice of Herodotus by Plutarch a Chaeronean by birth or it might have been a Pseudo Plutarch in this case a great collector of slanders including the allegation that the historian was prejudiced against Thebes because the authorities there had denied him permission to set up a school 70 Similarly in a Corinthian Oration Dio Chrysostom or yet another pseudonymous author accused the historian of prejudice against Corinth sourcing it in personal bitterness over financial disappointments 71 an account also given by Marcellinus in his Life of Thucydides 72 In fact Herodotus was in the habit of seeking out information from empowered sources within communities such as aristocrats and priests and this also occurred at an international level with Periclean Athens becoming his principal source of information about events in Greece As a result his reports about Greek events are often coloured by Athenian bias against rival states Thebes and Corinth in particular 73 Use of sources and sense of authority edit nbsp Croesus Receiving Tribute from a Lydian Peasant by Claude VignonIt is clear from the beginning of Book 1 of the Histories that Herodotus utilizes or at least claims to utilize various sources in his narrative K H Waters relates that Herodotos did not work from a purely Hellenic standpoint he was accused by the patriotic but somewhat imperceptive Plutarch of being philobarbaros a pro barbarian or pro foreigner 74 Herodotus at times relates various accounts of the same story For example in Book 1 he mentions both the Phoenician and the Persian accounts of Io 75 However Herodotus at times arbitrates between varying accounts I am not going to say that these events happened one way or the other Rather I will point out the man who I know for a fact began the wrong doing against the Greeks 76 Again later Herodotus claims himself as an authority I know this is how it happened because I heard it from the Delphians myself 77 Throughout his work Herodotus attempts to explain the actions of people Speaking about Solon the Athenian Herodotus states Solon sailed away on the pretext of seeing the world but it was really so that he could not be compelled to repeal any of the laws he had laid down 78 Again in the story about Croesus and his son s death when speaking of Adrastus the man who accidentally killed Croesus son Herodotus states Adrastus believing himself to be the most ill fated man he had ever known cut his own throat over the grave 79 Herodotus and myth editAlthough Herodotus considered his inquiries a serious pursuit of knowledge he was not above relating entertaining tales derived from the collective body of myth but he did so judiciously with regard for his historical method by corroborating the stories through enquiry and testing their probability 80 While the gods never make personal appearances in his account of human events Herodotus states emphatically that many things prove to me that the gods take part in the affairs of man IX 100 In Book One passages 23 and 24 Herodotus relates the story of Arion the renowned harp player second to no man living at that time who was saved by a dolphin Herodotus prefaces the story by noting that a very wonderful thing is said to have happened and alleges its veracity by adding that the Corinthians and the Lesbians agree in their account of the matter Having become very rich while at the court of Periander Arion conceived a desire to sail to Italy and Sicily He hired a vessel crewed by Corinthians whom he felt he could trust but the sailors plotted to throw him overboard and seize his wealth Arion discovered the plot and begged for his life but the crew gave him two options that either he kill himself on the spot or jump ship and fend for himself in the sea Arion flung himself into the water and a dolphin carried him to shore 81 Herodotus clearly writes as both historian and teller of tales Herodotus takes a fluid position between the artistic story weaving of Homer and the rational data accounting of later historians John Herington has developed a helpful metaphor for describing Herodotus s dynamic position in the history of Western art and thought Herodotus as centaur The human forepart of the animal is the urbane and responsible classical historian the body indissolubly united to it is something out of the faraway mountains out of an older freer and wilder realm where our conventions have no force 82 Herodotus is neither a mere gatherer of data nor a simple teller of tales he is both While Herodotus is certainly concerned with giving accurate accounts of events this does not preclude for him the insertion of powerful mythological elements into his narrative elements which will aid him in expressing the truth of matters under his study Thus to understand what Herodotus is doing in the Histories we must not impose strict demarcations between the man as mythologist and the man as historian or between the work as myth and the work as history As James Romm has written Herodotus worked under a common ancient Greek cultural assumption that the way events are remembered and retold e g in myths or legends produces a valid kind of understanding even when this retelling is not entirely factual 83 For Herodotus then it takes both myth and history to produce truthful understanding Legacy editOn the legacy of The Histories of Herodotus historian Barry S Strauss writes He is simply one of the greatest storytellers who ever wrote His narrative ability is one of the reasons those who call Herodotus the father of history Now that title is one that he richly deserves A Greek who lived in the fifth century BC Herodotus was a pathfinder He traveled the eastern Mediterranean and beyond to do research into human affairs from Greece to Persia from the sands of Egypt to the Scythian steppes and from the rivers of Lydia to the dry hills of Sparta The Greek for research is historia where our word history comes from Herodotus is a great historian His work holds up very well when judged by the yardstick of modern scholarship But he is more than a historian He is a philosopher with three great themes the struggle between East and West the power of liberty and the rise and fall of empires Herodotus takes the reader from the rise of the Persian Empire to its crusade against Greek independence and from the stirrings of Hellenic self defense to the beginnings of the overreach that would turn Athens into a new empire of its own He goes from the cosmos to the atom ranging between fate and the gods on the one hand and the ability of the individual to make a difference on the other And then there is the sheer narrative power of his writing The old master keeps calling us back 84 In popular culture editHistorical novels sourcing material from Herodotus Kapuscinski R Travels with Herodotus Pressfield S Gates of Fire Novel has the Battle of Thermopylae from Book VII as its centrepiece Prus B Pharaoh Incorporates the Labyrinth scenes inspired by Herodotus description in Book II of The Histories Vidal G Creation Interprets many scenes from the Persian viewpoint Wolfe G Soldier of the Mist First of a series of novels by a popular fantasy author Critical editions editHerodotus 1908 c 430 BC Tomvs prior Libros I IV continens In Hude C ed Herodoti Historiae Oxford UK Oxford University Press Herodotus 1908 c 430 BC Tomvs alter Libri V IX continens In Hude C ed Herodoti Historiae Oxford UK Oxford University Press Herodotus 1987 c 430 BC Rosen H B ed Herodoti historiae Vol I Libros I IV continens Leipzig DE doi 10 1515 9783110965926 ISBN 9783598714030 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Herodotus 1997 c 430 BC Rosen H B ed Herodoti historiae Volumen II Libri V IX Indices Vol II Libros V IX continens indicibus criticis adiectis Stuttgart DE doi 10 1515 9783110965919 ISBN 978 3 598 71404 7 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Herodotus 2015 c 430 BC Tomvs prior Libros I IV continens In Wilson N G ed Herodoti Historiae Oxford UK Oxford University Press Herodotus 2015 c 430 BC Tomvs alter Libri V IX continens In Wilson N G ed Herodoti Historiae Oxford UK Oxford University Press Translations editHerodotus 1849 c 430 BC Histories full text Translated by Cary H New York Harper via Internet Archive archive org Herodotus 1858 Book I Book IX full text all books Translated by Rawlinson G via classics mit edu Herodotus 1904 Histories full text Translated by Macaulay G C via Project Gutenberg gutenberg org vol 1 vol 2 Herodotus 1920 1925 Histories full text Translated by Godley Alfred Denis Cambridge MA vol 1 librivox audiobook vol 2 librivox audiobook vol 3 librivox audiobook Volume I Books 1 2 1920 Volume II Books 3 4 1921 Volume III Books 5 7 1922 Volume IV Books 8 9 1925 Herodotus 1954 c 430 BC 1972 1996 2003 excerpts In Burn A R Marincola John eds The Histories Translated by de Selincourt A revised once ed Archived from the original on 2015 05 04 Retrieved 2020 03 26 Herodotus 1958 c 430 BC The Histories Translated by Carter Harry Herodotus 1985 c 430 BC The Histories Translated by Grene D Herodotus 1992 c 430 BC The Histories Translated by Blanco Walter Roberts J T Herodotus 1998 c 430 BC The Histories Translated by Waterfield R Herodotus 2003 c 430 BC The Histories full text Herodotus 2007 c 430 BC Strassler Robert B ed The Histories Knopf Doubleday Publishing ISBN 9781400031146 Herodotus 2013 c 430 BC The Histories Translated by Holland Tom The Penguin Group permanent dead link Herodotus 2014 c 430 BC The Histories Translated by Mensch Pamela with notes by James Romm Manuscripts editPapyrus Oxyrhynchus 18 Papyrus Oxyrhynchus 19 Papyrus Oxyrhynchus 2099 early 2nd century CE fragment of Book VIIISee also editSteganography The Padaei Otanes Goat of Mendes Sostratos of AeginaNotes edit Ancient Greek hi storˈi ai Herodotus Book II 68 claimed that the trochilus bird visited the crocodile which opened its mouth in what would now be called a cleaning symbiosis to eat leeches A modern survey of the evidence finds only occasional reports of sandpipers removing leeches from the mouth and gular scutes and snapping at insects along the reptile s body 5 In the scheme and plan of his work in the arrangement and order of its parts in the tone and character of the thoughts in ten thousand little expressions and words the Homeric student appears 18 Boedeker comments on Herodotus s use of literary devices 41 References edit a b Herodotus 1987 c 430 BC The History Ἱstoriai The History Translated by Gren David Chicago IL University of Chicago Press pp 37 38 ISBN 0 226 32770 1 Herodotus Arnold John H 2000 History A very short introduction Oxford University Press p 17 ISBN 0 19 285352 X Fehling Detlev 1989 Some demonstrably false source citations Herodotus and His Sources Francis Cairns Ltd 50 57 ISBN 0 905205 70 7 Lindsay Jack 1974 Helen in the Fifth Century Helen of Troy Rowman and Littlefield 133 134 ISBN 0 87471 581 4 Herodotus The Histories Translated by A D Godley Harvard University Press 1920 http www perseus tufts edu hopper text doc Perseus text 1999 01 0126 book 1 chapter 94 Macfarland Craig G Reeder W G 1974 Cleaning symbiosis involving Galapagos tortoises and two species of Darwin s finches Zeitschrift fur Tierpsychologie 34 5 464 483 doi 10 1111 j 1439 0310 1974 tb01816 x PMID 4454774 Geggel Laura March 19 2019 2 500 Years Ago Herodotus Described a Weird Ship Now Archaeologists Have Found it Live Science Retrieved 2019 03 19 Kim Lawrence 2010 Homer poet and historian Homer Between History and Fiction in Imperial Greek Literature Cambridge University Press 30 35 ISBN 978 0 521 19449 5 Allan Williams 2008 Introduction Helen Cambridge University Press 22 24 ISBN 0 521 83690 5 Lindsay Jack 1974 Helen in the Fifth Century Helen of Troy Rowman and Littlefield 135 138 ISBN 0 87471 581 4 Herodotus The Histories Book 6 chapter 100 section 1 www perseus tufts edu Retrieved 2017 10 03 a b Murray 1986 p 188 Herodotus Histories 2 143 6 137 Preparation of the Gospel X 3 Immerwahr 1985 pp 430 440 Immerwahr 1985 p 431 Burn 1972 pp 22 23 Immerwahr 1985 p 430 Immerwahr 1985 pp 427 432 Richard Jebb ed Antigone Cambridge University Press 1976 pp 181 182 n 904 920 Rawlinson 1859 p 6 Murray 1986 pp 190 191 Blanco 2013 p 5 Gould 1989 p 64 Homer Iliad trans Stanley Lombardo Indianapolis Hackett Publishing Company 1997 1 Bk 1 lines 9 16 Gould 1989 p 65 Gould 1989 p 67 Gould 1989 pp 67 70 Gould 1989 p 71 Gould 1989 pp 72 73 Gould 1989 pp 75 76 Gould 1989 pp 76 78 Gould 1989 pp 77 78 Marincola 2001 p 59 Roberts 2011 p 2 Sparks 1998 p 58 Asheri Lloyd amp Corcella 2007 Cameron 2004 p 156 Neville Morley The Anti Thucydides Herodotus and the Development of Modern Historiography In Jessica Priestly and Vasiliki Zali eds Brill s Companion to the Reception of Herodotus in Antiquity and Beyond Brill Leiden and Boston 2016 pp 143 166 here especially p 148 ff Vassiliki Zali Herodotus and His Successors The Rhetoric of the Persian Wars in Thucydides and Xenophon In Priestly and Zali eds Brill s Companion to the Reception of Herodotus in Antiquity and Beyond Brill Leiden and Boston 2016 pp 34 58 here p 38 Fehling 1994 p 2 Fehling 1989 Fehling 1989 pp 4 53 54 a b Boedeker 2000 pp 101 102 Saltzman 2010 Archambault 2002 p 171 Farley 2010 p 21 a b Lloyd 1993 p 4 a b Fehling 1994 p 13 a b Nielsen 1997 pp 42 43 a b c Marincola 2001 p 34 a b Dalley 2003 a b Baragwanath amp de Bakker 2010 p 19 a b Dalley 2013 Mikalson 2003 pp 198 200 a b Burn 1972 p 10 a b Jones 1996 a b Murray 1986 p 189 Fehling 1994 pp 4 6 Solly Meilan Wreck of Unusual Ship Described by Herodotus Recovered From Nile Delta Smithsonian Heeren 1838 pp 13 379 422 424 Diop 1981 p 1 Diop 1974 p 2 Norma Thompson Herodotus and the Origins of the Political Community Arion s Leap Yale University Press New Haven and London 1996 p 113 Welsby 1996 p 40 Aubin 2002 pp 94 96 100 102 118 121 141 144 328 336 Herodotus on the First Circumnavigation of Africa Livius org 1996 Retrieved 12 June 2019 The Indian Empire Vol 2 1909 p 272 via Digital South Asia Library a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Jain Meenakshi 1 January 2011 The India They Saw Foreign Accounts Vol 1 4 Delhi Prabhat Prakashan ISBN 978 81 8430 106 9 Majumdar Ramesh Chandra 1981 The Classical Accounts of India Being a Compilation of the English Translations of the Accounts Left by Herodotus Megasthenes Arrian Strabo Quintus Diodorus Siculus Justin Plutarch Frontinus Nearchus Apollonius Pliny Ptolemy Aelian and Others with Maps Calcutta Firma KLM pp 504 OCLC 247581880 a b Peissel 1984 Simons Marlise 25 November 1996 Himalayas offer clue to legend of gold digging ants The New York Times p 5 Retrieved 23 February 2016 Rawlinson 1859 pp 13 14 Dio Chrysostom Orat xxxvii p11 Penelope uchicago edu Retrieved 13 September 2012 Marcellinus Life of Thucydides Burn 1972 pp 8 9 32 34 Waters 1985 p 3 Blanco 2013 pp 5 6 1 1 1 5 Blanco 2013 p 6 1 5 Blanco 2013 p 9 1 20 Blanco 2013 p 12 1 29 Blanco 2013 p 17 1 45 2 Wardman 1960 Histories 1 23 24 Romm 1998 p 8 Romm 1998 p 6 Strauss B S 14 June 2014 One of the greatest storytellers who ever lived Off the Shelf offtheshelf com Sources editArchambault Paul 2002 Herodotus c 480 c 420 In della Fazia Amoia Alba Knapp Bettina Liebowitz eds Multicultural Writers from Antiquity to 1945 a Bio bibliographical Sourcebook Greenwood Publishing Group pp 168 172 ISBN 978 0 313 30687 7 Asheri David Lloyd Alan Corcella Aldo 2007 A Commentary on Herodotus Books 1 4 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 814956 9 Aubin Henry 2002 The Rescue of Jerusalem New York NY Soho Press ISBN 978 1 56947 275 0 Baragwanath Emily de Bakker Mathieu 2010 Herodotus Oxford Bibliographies Online Research Guide Oxford UK Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 980286 9 Herodotus Blanco Walter 2013 The Histories New York NY W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0 393 93397 0 Boedeker Deborah 2000 Herodotus genre s In Depew Mary Obbink Dirk eds Matrices of Genre Authors canons and society Cambridge MA Harvard University Press pp 97 114 ISBN 978 0 674 03420 4 Burn A R 1972 Herodotus The Histories London UK Penguin Classics Cameron Alan 2004 Greek Mythography in the Roman World Oxford UK Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 803821 4 Dalley S 2003 Why did Herodotus not mention the Hanging Gardens of Babylon In Derow P Parker R eds Herodotus and his World New York NY Oxford University Press pp 171 189 ISBN 978 0 19 925374 6 Dalley S 2013 The Mystery of the Hanging Garden of Babylon An elusive world wonder traced Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 966226 5 Diop Cheikh Anta 1974 The African Origin of Civilization Chicago IL Lawrence Hill Books ISBN 978 1 55652 072 3 Diop Cheikh Anta 1981 Civilization or Barbarism Chicago IL Lawrence Hill Books ISBN 978 1 55652 048 8 Evans J A S 1968 Father of History or Father of Lies The reputation of Herodotus Classical Journal 64 11 17 Farley David G 2010 Modernist Travel Writing Intellectuals abroad Columbia MO University of Missouri Press ISBN 978 0 8262 7228 7 Fehling Detlev 1989 1971 Herodotos and His Sources Citation invention and narrative art Arca Classical and Medieval Texts Papers and Monographs Vol 21 Translated by Howie J G Leeds UK Francis Cairns ISBN 978 0 905205 70 0 Fehling Detlev 1994 The art of Herodotus and the margins of the world In von Martels Z R W M ed Travel Fact and Travel Fiction Studies on fiction literary tradition scholarly discovery and observation in travel writing Brill s studies in intellectual history Vol 55 Leiden NL Brill pp 1 15 ISBN 978 90 04 10112 8 Gould John 1989 Herodotus Historians on historians London UK George Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 978 0 297 79339 7 Heeren A H L 1838 Historical Researches into the Politics Intercourse and Trade of the Carthaginians Ethiopians and Egyptians Oxford UK D A Talboys ASIN B003B3P1Y8 Immerwahr Henry R 1985 Herodotus In Easterling P E Knox B M W eds Greek Literature The Cambridge History of Classical Greek Literature Vol 1 Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 21042 3 Jones C P 1996 ἔ8nos and genos in Herodotus The Classical Quarterly new series 46 2 315 320 doi 10 1093 cq 46 2 315 Jain Meenakshi 2011 The India They Saw Foreign accounts Delhi IN Ocean Books ISBN 978 81 8430 106 9 Lloyd Alan B 1993 Herodotus Etudes preliminaires aux religions orientales dans l Empire romain Book II Vol 43 Leiden NL Brill ISBN 978 90 04 07737 9 Majumdar R C 1981 The Classical accounts of India Calcutta IN Firma KLM ISBN 978 0 8364 0704 4 Being a compilation of the English translations of the accounts left by Herodotus Megasthenes Arrian Strabo Quintus Diodorus Siculus Justin Plutarch Frontinus Nearchus Apollonius Pliny Ptolemy Aelian and others with maps Marincola John 2001 Greek Historians Oxford UK Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 922501 9 Mikalson Jon D 2003 Herodotus and Religion in the Persian Wars Chapel Hill NC University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 8078 2798 7 Murray Oswyn 1986 Greek historians In Boardman John Griffin Jasper Murray Oswyn eds The Oxford History of the Classical World Oxford UK Oxford University Press pp 186 203 ISBN 978 0 19 872112 3 Nielsen Flemming A J 1997 The Tragedy in History Herodotus and the deuteronomistic history A amp C Black ISBN 978 1 85075 688 0 Peissel Michel 1984 The Ants Gold The discovery of the Greek el Dorado in the Himalayas Collins ISBN 978 0 00 272514 9 Rawlinson George 1859 The History of Herodotus Vol 1 New York NY D Appleton and Company Roberts Jennifer T 2011 Herodotus A very short introduction Oxford UK Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 957599 2 Romm James 1998 Herodotus New Haven CT Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 07229 7 Saltzman Joe 2010 Herodotus as an ancient journalist Reimagining antiquity s historians as journalists The IJPC Journal 2 153 185 Sparks Kenton L 1998 Ethnicity and Identity in Ancient Israel Prolegomena to the study of ethnic sentiments and their expression in the Hebrew Bible Winona Lake IN Eisenbrauns ISBN 978 1 57506 033 0 Wardman A E 1960 Myth in Greek historiography Historia Zeitschrift fur Alte Geschichte 9 4 403 413 JSTOR 4434671 Waters K H 1985 Herodotos the Historian His problems methods and originality University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 978 0 8061 1928 1 Welsby Derek 1996 The Kingdom of Kush London UK British Museum Press ISBN 978 0 7141 0986 2 External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article History of Herodotus nbsp Greek Wikisource has original text related to this article Ἡrodotos nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Histories Herodotus History Classics dept Massachusetts Institute of Technology Complete online text Herodotus History Classics dept Massachusetts Institute of Technology Searchable textfileHerodotus History Perseus Complete online text nbsp Histories public domain audiobook at LibriVoxThe Histories online audiobook unabridged ed via Internet Archive archive org Herodotus The 28 Logoi Histories Archived from the original on 4 May 2015 Retrieved 1 October 2020 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help Sheridan Paul 2015 08 17 The Inessential Guide to Herodotus Anecdotes from Antiquity Retrieved 2015 08 27 Herodotus Books V VIII Histories Translated by Godley A D Direct link to PDF Archived 2013 05 23 at the Wayback Machine 14 MB Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Histories Herodotus amp oldid 1194324944, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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