Herodotus in particular seems to have caught both Ethiopia's sybaritic allure and the exalted drum-driven dawn chants of the churches perfectly. |
|
Herodotus speaks of Ionians, Dorians, Herakleeidai, and Akhaians among the Greeks, that is, with aggregative self-definitions. |
|
For instance, Herodotus states explicitly that the Magians were a Median tribe. |
|
In making this journey we pass through the land of the Etruscans, the fabled Tyrrhenians of Herodotus. |
|
Herodotus rejoins that camels have four thighbones in their hind legs, and that their genitals face backwards. |
|
Once a year, according to Herodotus, it was the Babylonian custom to assemble all the village girls of marriageable age and hold an auction. |
|
The ancient Herodotus thought the Amazons did exist, but were extinct by the time that he lived. |
|
Themistocles is interesting, as Herodotus realized, precisely because he was not a martial hero. |
|
Aeschylus and Herodotus sanctified this act of birth of greek difference: a freedom that, above all, strives to be itself. |
|
But the Hindus either never had, or have unfortunately lost, their Herodotus and Xenophon. |
|
His well-thumbed copy of Herodotus, with its intriguing mementos inside, underscores the historic context. |
|
According to ancient writers, such as Herodotus and Arian, Alexander paid his respects to the tomb of Cyrus and had it restored. |
|
Herodotus taught Kapuscinski certain human and reporting skills which no amount of technology could have offered. |
|
Herodotus maintained that Egyptians had taught the Greeks the names of nearly all the gods as well as many of the religious practices. |
|
In his times, Herodotus notes, the magi had became Zoroastrian priests. |
|
Thus I learned that he was currently reading the letters of Chateaubriand and Jacques Lacarrière's book on Herodotus. |
|
Herodotus also reported that Egyptians would not kiss Greeks on their mouths because Greeks consumed their sacred animal, the cow. |
|
Dating back to the third century B.C., the landscape there approximates the Arcadian ideal and the site is famous for its oracle, who was mentioned by Herodotus. |
|
Xerxes laid plans to conquer it: according to the historian Herodotus, more than 40 nations furnished troops for Xerxes' army. |
|
It is no surprise, moreover, that world's first historian, Herodotus, was Greek. |
|
|
In the 5th century bc Herodotus noted that the Achaemenids would make important decisions in a drunken state, then confirm these decisions when sober, and vice versa. |
|
According to Herodotus, the Egyptians once considered themselves the oldest people in the world, but later conceded this distinction to the Phrygians. |
|
Historians Hippocrates and Herodotus thought that the Amazons had to fight until they had scalped three enemies before they were permitted to mate. |
|
Along with a colossal statue of Athena, bases for busts inscribed with the names of Homer, Herodotus and other noted literary figures were found here. |
|
Herodotus found the practice among the Pontic Scythians, and, according to the Maccabees, the ancient Persians tore away the scalp of one of their prisoners. |
|
Famous representatives of this genre, such as Herodotus and Marco Polo, as well as a host of minor peregrinators, never actually encountered the phenomenon in question. |
|
Autochthonous peoples of the Caucasus are mentioned by Herodotus and by later writers such as Strabo. |
|
Herodotus claims to be better informed than his predecessors by relying on empirical observation to correct their excessive schematism. |
|
Herodotus wrote his Histories in the Ionian dialect, yet he was born in Halicarnassus, which was a Dorian settlement. |
|
Herodotus would have made his researches known to the larger world through oral recitations to a public crowd. |
|
Eventually, Thucydides and Herodotus became close enough for both to be interred in Thucydides' tomb in Athens. |
|
The accuracy of the works of Herodotus has been controversial since his own era. |
|
The reliability of Herodotus is sometimes criticized when writing about Egypt. |
|
The ground of the Deosai Plateau is rich in gold dust, much like the province that Herodotus describes. |
|
Herodotus did not claim to have personally seen the creatures which he described. |
|
While Herodotus had not met these people whom he is discussing, he claims to understand their thoughts and intentions. |
|
But at Delphi the sun-god's spiritual bride was known in the days of Herodotus as the Pythoness, and later as Pythia. |
|
The Suda also informs us that Herodotus later returned home to lead the revolt that eventually overthrew the tyrant. |
|
Further, the Suda is the only source which we have for the role played by Herodotus as the heroic liberator of his birthplace. |
|
According to Eusebius and Plutarch, Herodotus was granted a financial reward by the Athenian assembly in recognition of his work. |
|
|
I am reading Herodotus, who describes in detail and with great fidelity these same galactophagous Scythians among whom I am living. |
|
In the fifth century BC Herodotus referred to Keltoi living around the head of the Danube and also in the far west of Europe. |
|
Herodotus visited Egypt in the 5th century BC and claimed that the Greeks were one of the first groups of foreigners that ever lived in Egypt. |
|
Herodotus was succeeded by authors such as Thucydides, Xenophon, Demosthenes, Plato and Aristotle. |
|
It is ascribed to Herodotus, and supposedly describes the basking habits of the Egyptian crocodile. |
|
Imagine Herodotus on steroids, not rambling in a roughly straight line from Cyrus to Xerxes, but diverging onto untrodden paths that transmogrify into fluvial streams of consciousness. |
|
Following Herodotus, this satrapy was in the 5th century BC, together with Egypt, the wealthiest and yielded the highest taxes to the central government. |
|
Herodotus seems to have known of the abacus as an aid for computation by both Greeks and Egyptians, and about a dozen stone specimens of Greek abaci survive from the 5th and 4th centuries bc. |
|
The Island of Meroe', as Herodotus called it, is comprised between the Atbara, the Nile, and is the inheritor of cultures going as far back as prehistory. |
|
Herodotus and Thucydides had no successors, only continuators who tried to bridge the chronological gap between the two historians or to continue the story beyond the end of Thucydides' texts. |
|
The Greek historian Herodotus, writing about 475 bc, put the time for the journey from Susa to Ephesus at 93 days, although royal riders traversed the route in 20 days. |
|
On the contrary, write historians Martin Pâquet and Michel De Waele, debates over the functions of history and memory are as old as Herodotus and Thucydides. |
|
Poets, historians, and medical pioneers-think of Sappho, Herodotus, and Hippocrates-began their trade in Ancient Greece, as did lawyers such as Solon, architects such as Phideas, and mathematicians such as Archimedes. |
|
He was a friend of Pericles, the statesman who made Athens the supreme city-state and centre of literature and art, and also of Herodotus, regarded as the father of history. |
|
The situation envisioned is the contest for a prize described in Herodotus 8.123 and cast in the form of ethopoeia. |
|
The Germania fits within a classical ethnographic tradition which includes authors such as Herodotus and Julius Caesar. |
|
In the fifth century BC, Herodotus referred to Keltoi living around the head of the Danube and also in the far west of Europe. |
|
Records of bird migration were made as much as 3,000 years ago by the Ancient Greek writers Hesiod, Homer, Herodotus and Aristotle. |
|
Herodotus says that the Neuri had Scythian customs, but they were at first not considered Scythian. |
|
Herodotus had mentioned these Sauromatai as a distinct people living near the Neuri. |
|
|
They had been mentioned by the Greek historian Herodotus in the 5th century BC, but Pliny made them better known. |
|
Here are presented the results of the enquiry carried out by Herodotus of Halicarnassus. |
|
It is possible that Herodotus borrowed much material from Hecataeus, as stated by Porphyry in a quote recorded by Eusebius. |
|
For Herodotus, then, it takes both myth and history to produce truthful understanding. |
|
Several English translations of The Histories of Herodotus are readily available in multiple editions. |
|
Herodotus attempted to reconcile origins and the blending of differing cultural concepts. |
|
The Greek historian Herodotus specifically uses the appellation to refer to such parts of Africa as were then known within the inhabitable world. |
|
The most likely vehicles were the ancient geographers and historians, such as Herodotus, who were all Greek. |
|
In his Histories, Herodotus gives the Persian and Greek accounts of a series of kidnappings that led to the Trojan War. |
|
In some Herodotus manuscripts, the name of the runner between Athens and Sparta is given as Philippides. |
|
Since the very first detailed account by Herodotus, Getae are acknowledged as belonging to the Thracians. |
|
The Agathyrsi were completely denationalized at the time of Herodotus and absorbed by the native Thracians. |
|
Other historians, such as Herodotus, Aristotle, and Flavius Josephus, mentioned similar creatures. |
|
According to Herodotus, both cinnamon and cassia grew in Arabia, together with incense, myrrh, and labdanum, and were guarded by winged serpents. |
|
Such aegides were still worn by the Lycians serving in the host of Xerxes, who according to Herodotus were emigrants from Crete. |
|
According to translations of Demosthenes and Herodotus, Naucratis was a, or the only, factory in the entirety of ancient Egypt. |
|
Herodotus has fixed the measure of the schene, in Lower Egypt, at four miles, or a league and a quarter. |
|
A few modern scholars have argued that Herodotus exaggerated the extent of his travels and invented his sources, yet his reputation continues largely intact. |
|
The surviving plays by Aristophanes are also a treasure trove of comic presentation, while Herodotus and Thucydides are two of the most influential historians in this period. |
|
Herodotus on one occasion uses Red Sea and Southern Sea interchangeably. |
|
|
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. |
|
Herodotus clearly writes as both historian and teller of tales. |
|
The disposition and precise identity of this former group is elusive, and sources such as Homer, Hesiod and Herodotus give varying, partially mythological accounts. |
|
Herodotus provides much information about the nature of the world and the status of science during his lifetime, often engaging in private speculation. |
|
Herodotus in particular, searched the various traditions presented him and found the historical or mythological roots in the confrontation between Greece and the East. |
|
The interplay of civilizations was more relevant to Greeks living in Anatolia, such as Herodotus himself, for whom life within a foreign civilization was a recent memory. |
|
Pliny strove to use all the Greek histories available to him, such as Herodotus and Thucydides, as well as the Bibliotheca Historica of Diodorus Siculus. |
|
It was Herodotus who first used the ethnonym Getae in his Histories. |
|
Herodotus also believed that the homeland of the Phoenicians was Bahrain. |
|
This fancy Herodotus regards with incredulity, but his mention of it is none the less valuable, for the were-wolf is a figure which constantly appears in modern folk-lore. |
|
Both Homer and Herodotus begin with a question of causality. |
|
Throughout his work, Herodotus attempts to explain the actions of people. |
|
Herodotus will at times relate various accounts of the same story. |
|
This is an archaeological manifestation of the historical Getae who, along with the Agathyrsae, are one of a number of tribal formations recorded by Herodotus. |
|