Σκύλαξ,Skylax Karyanda
Σκύλαξ,Skylax Karyanda
Σκύλαξ,Skylax Karyanda
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Translation
Commentary
The entry in the Suda is notoriously confused. It names Skylax the inhabitant of Karyanda as a
mathematician and a scholar (or musician). There is no other evidence that he was accomplished
in these fields; it is likely a confusion with Skylax of Halikarnassos , an astrologer and magistrate
and friend of Panaetius (Cicero, De Divinatione 2.42 [88]; cf. F. J. Gonzlez Ponce, Suda, .
Sobre el ttulo, el contenido y la unidad de FGrHist 3C 709 GeogrAnt 6 (1997) 37). Of the works it
attributes to him, the two geographical works, the Circumnavigation of Lands Beyond the Pillars
of Herakles and the Circuit of the Earth , may correspond to the original account of Skylaxs
journey to the east, and to the later Periplous of the Mediterranean and the Atlantic coast of
Africa that circulated under his name; but the match is not exact. Gs Periodos would be a
reasonably accurate title for the original exploration account, as it took Skylax to the outer
edges of the known world (and it is a title used for Hecataios geographical work, which was
influenced by Skylax). Circumnavigation of Lands Beyond the Pillars of Herakles is more problematic,
as it does not describe the pseudonymous Periplous ts thalasss ts oikoumens Eurps kai
Asias kai Libus well. Vossius, followed by Mller (GGM vol. I, xxxviii), emended the title to
(outside and within) to make it conform better to the extant pseudonymous text, but
there is not sufficient warrant for this change, and Adler kept the original reading in her edition.
Periplous may in fact be an alternate title of the original account of his eastern voyage; it is used
by Harpokration as the title of Skylaxs work on the east (F 6). The Pillars may refer to some
boundary in the east, rather than the more commonly known Pillars at the Straits of Gibraltar
(Strabo [3.5.6] suggests that Pillars of Herakles were pointed out in India at the time of Alexander
s expedition). Others have suggested that Skylax made a subsequent venture into the Western
Mediterranean (so S. Hornblower, Mausolus (Oxford 1982), 20), and wrote a comprehensive work
describing the ends of the earth; but there is no evidence in the fragments definitely attributable
to him that he visited the west. The work on Herakleides belongs to the early Skylax, although
Jacoby did not accept it; see G. Schepens, Skylax of Karyanda No. 1000J. Bollanse, J. Engels, G.
Schepens and E. Theys (eds), FrGrHist IV A: Biography. I. The Pre-Hellenistic Period
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(Leiden/Boston/Kln 1998), 227). Herakleides, son of Ibanollis , led an ambush against the
Persian army in the course of the Carian revolt (Herdotos 5.121), and successfully engaged the
enemy; he also took part in the battle of Artemisium the famous battle against the Persians off
of Euboea , although some have seen him fighting offshore of an obscure Artemisium in the
Western Mediterraneanaccording to a fragmentary papyrus of Sosylos in Wrzburg (BNJ176 F
1; U. Wilcken, Ein Sosylos-Fragment in der Wrzburger Papyrussammlung Hermes 41 (1906),
103141; see V. Krings, Carthage et les Grecs c. 580-480 Av. J.C. (London/Boston/Kln 1998), 218-219).
As a contemporary of Skylax and king of neighboring Mylassa , Herakleides would have been a
suitable subject for a biography, which, if Sosylos description of Herakleides clever maneuver
derived from Skylax (so Krings, Carthage, 225), was favorable. The reply to Polybius is not the
Karyandans, and most likely belongs to the Halikarnassian.
T2a
Strabo 14.2.20
Translation
T2b
Stephanus Byzantius s.v.
Translation
Commentary
The Suda makes Karyanda a Carian city in the vicinity of the Halikarnassos peninsula; Strabo (in
the new Radt edition) puts it between Myndos and Bargylia , suggesting the northern coast of
the peninsula. Stephanos (here in the edition of MeinekeBillerbeck has not yet published the
volume that includes this entry) locates it near Myndos and Kos to the south; Pseudo-Skylax (99),
Strabos source, lists Karyanda as a (island and harbor and city). The
location of Karyanda is uncertain; G. E. Bean and J. M. Cook, The Halikarnassos Peninsula ABSA
50 (1955), 155160, argue that the town was moved in the Hellenistic period. They note that mss.
of Strabo and Stephanos both name a (lake), on which grounds they place the later
Hellenistic town at the modern village of Trkbk on the mainland near a small lake; but they
suggest that that the Archaic city was on the island of Salih , closer to ancient Bargylia . This
solution is followed in the Barrington Classical Atlas and P. Flensted-Jensen, 896. Karyanda M.H.
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Hansen and T.H. Nielsen (eds), An Inventory of Archaic and Classical Poleis (Oxford 2004), 111920.
But if Pseudo-Skylax is the source of the description, then the of Strabo and Stephanos is a
corruption--Radt prefers in Strabo. We need only seek a city on an island with a harbor, in
which case the island of Salih, which has ruins from the 4th Century BCE (PECS , Salihada)
suffices. Pliny s list of the cities of the peninsula (Naturalis Historia 5.107) is topographically
confused, but distinguishes Karyanda from Neapolis , which suggests he means the island.
Stephanos entry follows Strabo, except for the mention of Hekataios , on whom he draws
frequently; his description of Skylax as a logographos is simply a variant on Strabos syngrapheus.
T3a
Herodotos 4.44.1-3
Translation
Commentary
Herodotos (here in Rosns edition) represents the only preserved account of Skylax s
expedition; but the description leaves much uncertain. Herodotos has the expedition starting
from Kaspatyros . Surely the expedition was commissioned and assembled farther west; but the
account that survived must have begun at Kaspatyros; in which case all fragments referring to
lands around the Mediterranean are likely to be from a different work, written later and
preserved under Skylaxs name (of which the surviving Periplous is but one iteration).
Herodotos Kaspatyros is the same as the (more correct) Kaspapyros known to Hekataios , as
cited in Stephanos of Byzantion (s. , BNJ 1 F 295). Hekataios described Kaspapyros as
a Gandaran city, which he called a Skythian promontory/shore (Jacoby
accepted Sieglins emendation opposite the Skythians, which P. Daffin, On
Kaspapyros and the So-Called Shore of the Skythians AAntHung 28 (1980[1984]), 18, rejects).
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Herodotos has no certain idea where the city is. Elsewhere (3.102.1) he puts Indians at the border
of Kaspatyros in the Pactyan land, to the north of the other Indians (certainly not the modern
Afghan province of Paktika , nor the adjacent Paktia ), and says that their way of life resembles
that of the Bactrians ; he also credits these Indians with using gold-digging ants. In the list of
Xerxes army, he associates Pactyik with other eastern lands (7.85-6); but in Darius tribute list,
he joins the Pactyans with the Armenians , which makes no sense geographically (3.93.1).
Pactyik has no identifiable equivalent on the Persian royal inscriptions. Earlier attempts to
place Kaspapyros on the Indus , either around Multan in the Punjab or up in Kashmir , have been
abandoned (A.D.H. Bivar, The Indus lands CAH2 4 (1988), 202). O. Caroe, The Pathans 550 B.C.-A.D.
1957 (London 1957), 30-4, identifies Kaspapyros with Sanskrit Purushapura , which he locates
near modern Peshawar on the Kabul river; he points out that the river is not consistently
navigable upstream of Peshawar. W. Vogelsang, The Rise and Organisation of the Achaemenid Empire:
The Eastern Iranian Evidence (Leiden 1992), 196, while accepting that Gandara encompasses the
districts of Peshawar and Taxila , prefers to identify Kaspapyros with Capisa , farther up the
Kabul in the vicinity of Begram in Northeast Afghanistan .
Herodotos notes emphatically that Skylax sailed east, but the Indus flows south by southwest.
This discrepancy is partly accounted for if the voyage began on the Kabul; but even so, it is a
major misrepresentation of the journey, impossible to credit to Skylax. D. Panchenkos revival
(D. Panchenko, Skylax Circumnavigation of India and its Interpretation in Early Greek
Geography, Ethnography and Cosmography, I Hyperboreus 4 (1998), 21142) of a suggestion by J.
L. Myres (in J. L. Myres, An attempt to reconstruct the maps used by Herodotos GJ 8 (1896) 623)
that Skylax sailed down the Ganges fails to convince. Herodotoss description of the voyage is
lacking in verifiable details; indeed, he shows no knowledge of the Persian gulf, here or
elsewhere. Furthermore, thirty months is a long time for the journey, which covered over 5000
miles. But an excessively protracted period is not prima facie evidence of falsehood. A
circumnavigation of the gulf might account for some of the delay. Weather and sailing
conditionsthe summer monsoon in India, the prevailing northerly winds in the Red Sea
might be contributing factors as well. Furthermore, Skylax was likely charged with intelligence
gathering and conducting diplomacy, as was Demokedes in the west (Herodotos 3.135-137) and
the Fish-eaters sent by Cambyses to the Ethiopians (3.17.2, 21.2). Although Herodotos refers to
Darius conquest of India as a subsequent event, military operations may have been involved in
Skylaxs voyage as well (H. Schiwek, Der Persische Golf als Schiffahrts- und Seehandelsroute in
Achmenidischer Zeit und in der Zeit Alexanders des Groen BJ 162 (1962), 819).
Herodotos aside on the presense of the crocodile, Crocodylus palustris, in the Indus, may derive
from Skylax observation. Herodotos comments on the crocodile and on the general similarity of
Asia to Libya reflect what would become a common theme in Greek geography: namely, the close
connection, in climate and natural history, between the Nile and the Indus. While supporting
this connection, he implicitly rejects the idea that the Nile and the Indus are physically
connected--especially as he has the Nile start in the west of Africa (2.31-4), evidently confusing it
with the Niger .
T3b
Strabo 2.3.4 p. 98
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Commentary
The passage is an introduction to the pseudonymous Periplous , appearing before the title of the
work in the codex Parisinus 443. Most of the extract relates to the work of Pseudo-Skylax . Its
authorperhaps Marcianus , the late antique geographer who epitomized several of the writers
in the manuscript (so A. Diller, The Tradition of the Minor Greek Geographers (Lancaster, PA 1952),
45-6, 147-50; M.L. Allain, The Periplous of Skylax of Karyanda (The Ohio State University 1977), 7, 45
n. 3)emphasizes Skylax s antiquity, which suggests that he makes no distinction between the
early Skylax and the author of the surviving periplous. He suggests that the author lived shortly
before Alexander , the period in which most modern authorities put the Periplous of PseudoSkylax in its current form. The final comment, from Aelius , a student of Harpokration (so BNJ
629 T 3), must reflect actual knowledge of Skylaxs original text, which could have been
dedicated to Darius, even if it were written in Greek and circulated among Greeks .
T5
Avienus, Ora Maritima 32
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Avienus list of sources can not be related well to his surviving text, which covers, in disjointed
fashion, the Atlantic coast from Brittany to the straits of Gibraltar , and the northern
Mediterranean shore to Massalia , and cites only a few of the individuals named here. It is widely
thought to be based largely on an early periplous, possibly of Massaliote origin (whose early date
is challenged by J. Hind, Pyrene and the Date of the Massaliot Sailing Manual RSA (1992), 39
52). The work is part of a longer poem by a Roman senator of the fourth century CE, which
covered the shores of the Mediterranean and Black Seas. The list is a display of erudition: some
of the names are well-known, while others are more obscure. Hekataios of Miletus is
reconstructed by Schulten from Haec ad eus istic quippe erit mille suis (cf. D. Stichtenoth, Rufus
Festus Avienus. Ora Maritima (Darmstadt 1968), 16-7), but is not cited again in the text; Hellanikos ,
whose ethnography of peoples around the Mediterranean might have been useful, is not cited;
nor is Herodotos or Thucydides . Phileas , an Athenian geographer of the 5th century BCE (H.A.
Grtner, Phileas [1], BNP 11 (Leiden 2007), 14; F. Gisinger, Phileas (6), RE 19 (1938), 2133-6), is
cited on the division of Europe and Libya at the Rhone river (ll. 695-6). Euktemon , an astronomer
and geographer of the later 5th century BCE, wrote a Periplous of the Inner Sea that was
concerned with the western Mediterranean (W. Hbner, Euctemon, BNP 5 (Leiden 2004), 143; A.
Rehm, Euktemon (10), RE 6 (1907), 1060-1); he is cited on the nature of the Pillars of Herakles (ll.
350-352). Damastes of Sigeion , a minor historian of the 5th century BCE who wrote a Periplous
which may be the same as his Catalogue of Peoples and Cities (BNJ 5; cf. C. Van Paasen, The
Classical Tradition of Geography (Groningen 1957), 231-2), is cited by Avienus on the distance
between the Pillars of Herakles (ll. 370-2). Kleon of Syracuse , author of a Periplous (known
alternately as Peri limenn , On Harbors ), was a sycophant of Alexander and rival of
Kallisthenes (Curtius . 8.5, 7-10; F. Jacoby, Kleon (8), RE 11 (1921), 718-719); he is not cited in the
existing text. Pausimachus (F. Gisinger, Pausimachus (9), RE 18 (1949), 2423) and Bacoris (E.H.
Berger, Bacorus, RE 2 (1896), 2724), are known only from this reference. Significantly, the list
contains only geographical writers, not explorers (apart from Skylax and possibly Kleon ).
Avienus reference to Skylax the Karyandan is uncertain: the ms. gives Cariae dictus Scylax here
and at l. 372, which Schulten in his edition, following Heinsius, emended to Caryandaeus Scylax
(Stichtenoth, 16, and L. Antonelli, Il Periplo Nascosto (Padova 1998), 114, 132, retain the reading of
the ms.) It is unclear whether Avienus here refers to Skylax as the explorer of India , or as the
pseudonymous author of the Periplous of the Mediterranean. Avienus ll. 341-713, describing the
coastal route from the Pillars of Herakles to Massalia , corresponds in topic to Pseudo-Skylax 1-4,
but the former did not use the latter for detail. The one other place where Avienus cites Skylax,
his reading of the Periplous seems to be wrong (F 8).
T6
Marcianus, Epitoma 2
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(V)
(V) (V)
(V),
(V),
, ,
,
.
,
.
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Commentary
Menippus of Pergamum , a geographer of the Augustan Age (F. Gisinger, Menippos (9), RE 15
(1931), 862-88), wrote a periplous of the Black and Mediterranean Seas, of which sections survive
in an epitome by Marcianus of Herakleia , a late 4th-century geographer. The epitome is headed
by a proimion, which lists the geographical predecessors to the current text. It reflects
Marcianus erudition rather than Menippus , as it goes on (in 3) to list the latter in the tradition
of periplous writers. Marcianus list is miscellaneous, like Avienus , but includes more explorers,
suggesting that Marcianus put Skylax in their company. The best-known figure on the list,
Eratosthenes , the 3rd century BCE polymath and head of the Library of Alexandria (R. Tosi,
Eratosthenes [2], BNP 5 (Leiden 2004), 17-8), wrote a Geographika that contained descriptions of
the lands of the earth; and he was particularly concerned with measuring the earth. He relied on
the resources of the Library rather than his own travels (to the detriment of his reputation:
Marcianus here refers to his nickname Beta ); but he utilized the reports of explorers such as
Pytheas (Strabo 2.4.1-2 C 104). No travels are recorded of Phileas either. Eudoxos of Rhodes , an
early 3rd century BCE author, was known as the author of Historiai (F. Jacoby, Eudoxos (7), RE 6
(1909), 930); no other citations of a periplous survive, which raises the possiblity that he is here
confused with Eudoxos of Cyzicus , the better known explorer of the coasts of Africa (Strabo
2.3.4-5). The rest all deployed some autopsy. Nothing is known of the life of Isidore , an
Augustan-era geographer whose Parthian Stations , a description of overland routes through
Iran , survives (J. Oelsner, Isidorus [2], BNP 6 (Leiden 2005), 960; F.H. Weissbach, Isidoros (20),
RE 9 (1916), 2064-8); but his home in Charax (whichever one it was) suggests personal familiarity
with the lands of the east. About Apelles little is known, but he may be the same as Ophelas of
Cyrene (E.H. Berger, Apellas, RE 1 (1894), 2686). The rest are quite definitely explorers rather
than simply periplous-writers. Pytheas (H.A. Grtner, Pytheas (4), BNP 12 (Leiden 2008), 288-9)
and Euthymenes (K. Broderson, Euthymenes of Massalia, BNP 5 (Leiden 2004), 235) were two
early explorers of the Atlantic coasts of Europe and Africa ; accounts of their discoveries were
available to later writers such as Strabo , who nonetheless doubted their reliability. Hanno , the
fifth-century BCE suffete of Carthage , was credited with an exploratory voyage down the Atlantic
coast of Africa; an account in Greek under his name survives (K. Broderson, Hanno [1], BNP 5
(Leiden 2004), 1129-30; J. Blomqvist, The Date and Origin of the Greek Version of Hannos Periplous.
With an Edition of the Text and a Translation (Lund 1979)). Androsthenes (E. H. Berger,
Androsthenes (9) RE 1 (1894), 2172-3) and Kleon both accompanied Alexander ; the former was a
Trierarch who was sent to explore the Arabian coast (Arrian, Anabasis Alexandrou 7.20.7) and
later wrote a (Circumnavigaion of India ), while the periplous of the latter
was also undoubtedly based on his own observations. Timosthenes of Rhodes , the fleet
commander of Ptolemy the Second (H.A. Grtner, Timosthenes [2] BNP 14/1 (Leiden 2009), 706),
must have based his (On Harbors ) on first-hand knowledge. Skylax is linked most
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closely with Botthaios , about whom nothing is known; the name may be corrupt (E.H. Berger,
Botthaios, RE 3 (1899), 794). While Skylax presence in this list of explorers is not conclusive, it
does suggest that he is included because his account was based on first-hand knowledge and
therefore was reliable. Another clue that Marcianus here refers to the original Skylaxor at
least, that he knows of a version of the periplous that is prior to the extant oneis the reference
to his recording nautical distances by days sail. Pseudo-Skylax uses both days sail and stades,
and ends with a list of meridians, clear evidence of the composite nature of the text. Herodotos
was the first geographical writer to attempt to measure distances in stades, although he admits
that his method is to establish general equivalences between the two measuring systems, and to
use days sail measurements to estimate stade measurements (4.86). Thus, Marcianus must have
known of an early text of Skylax, quite likely the original account of his voyage.
F1
Herodotos 4.44
Translation
Translation
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, .
.
.
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Commentary
Although Athenaios (here in Olsons edition in the Loeb series) records the only quoted
fragments attributed to Skylax , his uncertainty about the author of this quote suggests that he
knew of it at second hand. The Polemon given as an alternative is probably the second century
geographer from Ilium (if the Cosmic Periegesis or Geography reported in the Suda is correct,
which K. Deichgrber, Polemon (9), RE 21 (1952), 1303-4, doubts). The reference comes
immediately after the extensive citation of Hekataios who he doubts as well, reporting that
Callimachus ascribes it to a Nesiotes describing artichoke growing on high mountains around
the Hyrcanian Sea (the Elburz south of the Caspian ), and in the mountains of the Chorasmians .
Hekataios may well have got his information about the landscape and flora of inner Asia from
Skylax, and may even have cited him (although he is not otherwise known to cite anyone in his
fragments). The plant to which Skylax refers is unlikely to be the globe artichoke (Cynara
scolymus) or its ancestor, the cardoon (Cynara cardunculus), which was native to the
Mediterranean ; but ancient plant identifications are notoriously uncertain.
F4
Athenaios 2.82 p. 70 C-D
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Commentary
Aristotle (here in Ross OCT edition) had access, at first or second hand, to the original account of
Skylax . Skylaxs observation about the physical or other distinction between the kings of India
and their subjects is the first hint of Greek knowledge of the Indian caste system, which appears
in the Alexander historians (Nearchus on the Brahmins: BNJ133 F 23; ) and later (such as the
more developed account in Megasthenes : BNJ715 F 19a [Arrian, Indika 11-12], b [Strabo 15.1.3941 C 703]). The citation suggests that Skylax made observations on encounters with the Indian
communities he met along the way; he may have made general ethnographic comments on the
Indians , of the type familiar from Herodotos (who may have been indebted in this regard to
Skylax).
F6
Harpokration s.v.
Translation
Commentary
Harpokration s, Philostratos , and Tzetzes comments on Skylax have profoundly shaped
perceptions of the ancient explorer, putting him at the head of the tradition of Wonders of the
East accounts continued by Herodotos , Ktesias and others (cf. Pliny, Naturalis Historia 7.21-32).
Primitives, called Troglodytes and the like, pygmies, and monstrous races, become a staple of
descriptions of lands to the East (J.B. Friedman, The Monstrous Races in Medieval Art and Thought
(Syracuse, NY 2000), 5-25; J. Romm, The Edges of the Earth in Ancient Thought (Princeton, NJ 1992),
82-94). Troglodytes or Trogodytes, after G. J. Pendrick, Antiphon the Sophist: the Fragments
(Cambridge, UK 2002), 190-1 and 379, following Jahn, Trogodytai, RE 7A (1948), 2497--are,
however, not necessarily fantastic; such cave-dwellers were often identified as peoples living on
the African coast of the Red Sea (J.-F. Salles, Le circumnavigation de lArabie dans lantiquit
classique J.-F. Salles (ed.), LArabie et ses Mers Bordieres, I. Itinraires et Voisinages (Lyon 1988), 80).
Harpokrations citation (in the edition by Keaney) raises a number of questions about his source
for Skylaxs use of the word. The Antiphon he names is almost certainly the sophist who was an
interlocuter of Socrates mentioned in Xenophon s Memorabilia 1.6.1-15, and who is credited
with a number of philosophical works. Whether he is to be identified with the orator Antiphon of
Rhamnus (as Harpokration believed) is an open question (see Pendrick, 1-26, and M. Gagarin,
Antiphon the Athenian (Austin, TX 2002), 37-52, for opposing views). Three of the surviving
fragments of On Concord from Harpokration (FF 45-47 Pendrick) refer to fanastic creatures
mentioned by Skylax (FF 7a-b): , , . It is tempting to
suppose that Antiphon read of all three in Skylax; but Harpokration says of the Skiapods that
they dwelt in Libya , and Harpokration cites Hesiod for the Long-heads as well. Harpokration was
more likely drawing from Skylaxs text to interpret Antiphon; in which case Skylaxs account
was available in Alexandria in the second century CE.
F7a
Philostratos, Vita Apollonii 3.47
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Commentary
Philostratos , the Athenian writer of the 3rd century CE (cited here in the Loeb edition by Jones),
uses his fanciful account of Apollonios visit to the Indians to critique the stories circulating
about the far east. He has Iarchos verify the underground Pygmies (although he puts them
beyond the Ganges , out of range of autopsy). He disparages Skylax s account of Shadefoots and
Long-heads; his skepticism implies a widespread view of Skylax as a fabulist. D. Panchenko
argues on highly circumstantial grounds that much of Philostratos description of Apollonios
travels through Asia is a reworking of Skylaxs account (D. Panchenko, Scylax in Philostratos
Life of Apollonios of Tyana Hyperboreus 8 (2002), 512); but C.P. Jones sees Philostratos debt to a
variety of earlier writers on the east (C.P. Jones, Apollonios of Tyanas Passage to India GRBS 41
(2001), 18599).
Skylax was not the first to describe such fantastic creatures: The Pygmies who battle cranes
appear in Homer (Iliad 2.3-6; eventually to be located in India : Pliny, Naturalis Historia 7.26), and
Hesiod is credited with references to Long-heads, along with Half-dog men and Pygmies (F 153
Merkelbach-West). But Skylax seems to have been the first to locate them in Asia. From
Herodotos on (2.104.3; cf. 3.94.2) the Makrokephaloi come to be associated with the Makrones ,
neighbors of the Kolchoi on the Black Sea (so Pseudo-Skylax 85; Scholion on Apollonios of
Rhodes 1.1024 p. 90; Palaephatus (BNJ 44 F 2; see Jacobys commentary); Strabo 11.11.8 (called the
Siginnoi ); Stephanos of Byzantion s.v. ). Hekataios (BNJ 1 F 327) named Skiapods
as an Aithiopian tribe, an identification reflected in the Suda ; in this, at least, he is not following
Skylax. Ktesias , on the other hand, places the Skiapods in Asia (688 FF BNJ 688 F 51b, BNJ 688 F
60), following Skylaxs tradition. Philostratos reflects dismissively on the geographical
uncertainty of these fantastic beings, placing himself in the skeptical tradition of Strabo (1.2.35;
cf. J. Romm, The Edges of the Earth in Ancient Thought (Princeton, NJ 1992), 95-103).
F7b
Tzetzes, Chiliades 7.629-630, 7.640
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/
, /
, /
/
/
. /
/
/
. /
. /
. / ,
/
, /
.
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Commentary
Tzetzes , in this passage (from the edition by Leone) which introduces a section on fantastic
tales, gives the most explicit testimony of an account written by Skylax about India , and
mentions some details not included in Philostratos and Harpokration . But the late date of the
sourcethe 12th centuryand its notorious unreliability (C. Wendel, Tzetzes, RE 7A (1948),
1959-2011) raises the question of whether he had access to the original account. Tzetzes,
following Harpokration and Philostratos, suggests that the account focuses exclusively on the
fantastic, without mentioning the real circumstances of Skylaxs voyage east. On the other hand,
Herodotos , who must have used Skylax account, while not mentioning fantastic semi-human
monsters, tells stories of the Indians way of life, including the gold-digging ants of India and the
Indians way of gathering the gold, that seem a mixture of observation and fantastic tales (3.98106). Such fantastic creatures may very well have occured in Skylaxs account; although whether
he claimed to see them himself, or merely to have heard of them, is not clear from the later
citations.
The term is a hapax, which is why Tzetzes sees fit to explain it. They may have given
rise to the medieval Panotii, all-ears (J.B. Friedman, The Monstrous Races in Medieval Art and
Thought (Syracuse, NY 2000), 23). Monophthalmoi, human monsters as opposed to the Cyclopes,
appear frequently at the ends of the earth: Herodotos makes them the Arimaspians who live in
the far north and (like the Indians) make a living by stealing gold from fierce creatures, in this
case griffins (3.116). This story originated in the poem Arimaspia by Aristeas of Prokonnesos
(Herodotos 4.13-14; Pausania s 1.24.6; Tzetzes, Chiliades 7.678-84); but a different strain,
originating in Skylax and perpetuated by Demachus and Megasthenes (BNJ 715 F 27a, 716 F 5),
puts the Monophthalmoi in India. The , creatures that bear a single young, were a
human version of the lioness, which Herodotos believed bore only one cub before losing her
womb ( it gives birth only once in its life, Herodotos 3.108.4 ). Ktesias
reported human single-bearers in India as well (BNJ 688 F 45:
, Photius, Bibliotheka 72 p. 45 a 50; cf. FF 45t, 52). T. Kiessling, Ioannis Tzetze
Historiarum Variarum Chiliades (Leipzig 1826), 264 proposed Entokoitoi, Ear-sleepers, used also by
Demachus and Megasthenes BNJ 715 F 27a, BNJ 716 F 5); followed by J. Romm, The Edges of the
Earth in Ancient Thought (Princeton, NJ 1992), 85, and R. French, Ancient Natural History
(London/New York 1994), 3), but the term is not more common that Henotiktontes, and Leone
prefers the reading of the mss.
F8
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Translation
Commentary
Fragments 8-13, listed by Jacoby as belonging to Der Periplograph, do not refer to lands
traversed in the journey of the original Skylax . They all apparently come from a version of the
later Circumnavigation of the Inhabited Sea of Europe, Asia and Africa which has survived in
Codex Parisinus 443; but several of the references make it clear that there were different texts in
circulation under Skylaxs name. Avienus (here in Schultens edition), if he is citing the extant
Pseudo-Skylax , has confused his sources somewhat; or he is using a different text. The existing
text gives the distance between the columns of Herakles as a days sail (1, 111); elsewhere, it
gives the width of the mouth of the Pontos at Hieron near the north end of the Bosporos as seven
stades (67). The measurement of seven stades for the Bosporos is generally accurateat Rumeli
and Anadolu Kava , where the Barrington Classical Atlas (Map 53) places Hieron , the width of the
Bosporos is just over a kilometerbut other authorities gave varying measurements of the width
of the strait (P. Counillon, Pseudo-Skylax: Le Priple du Pont-Euxin (Paris 2004), 71). It is a severe
underestimate, however, for the interval between the pillars of Herakles , which is somewhere
around 130 stades, whether the southern pillar is considered the Jebel Musa or Monte Hacho on
Ceuta ; but this too is less than a days sail.
F9
Scholion on Apollonios Rhodios, 4.1215
Translation
Commentary
The scholiast to Apollonios (perhaps one of the older ones, collected in Wendels edition) seems
to have a faulty memory, or a variant text, of Pseudo-Skylax 23. He attributes to Skylax the
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identification of the Nestaians as Illyrian, adding some information about its relation to a gulf,
the identification of which has dropped out; while Eratosthenes put them opposite the island of
Pharos , the Croatian island of Hvar (so M. S. Kos, Appian and Illyricum (Ljubljana 2005), 171-2, 185;
cf. 315). The existing text of Pseudo-Skylax does not explicitly state that the Nestaians are
Illyrians , but implies it by listing them after the Illyrians (22) and before the Manians (24), who
are described as Illyrians. The quoted phrase does not appear in the current text; instead, after
the entry Nestaians comes the phrase (from the Nestos
the journey is gulf-shaped), which is probably corrupt. The river Nestos, referred to in 22 as the
southern boundary of the territory of the Boulini , is probably the Cetina river; while as the
following sentence in Pseudo-Skylax shows, the gulf referred to is the Manian gulf. PseudoSkylax also lists new Pharos, a Greek island, founded by Paros in 385/4 (Diodoros 15.3.4; cf. Kos,
234).
F10
Scholion on Apollonios Rhodios 1.1177-1178a
Translation
Commentary
The scholiast to Apollonios (from Wendels standard edition) matches Pseudo-Skylax closely on
Kios: Pseudo-Skylax (93) describes Mysia in the following way: it is on the left of the Olbian gulf
[the Astacene Gulf , mod. Gulf of Izmit ] as one sails out to the Kian gulf up to Kios ...these are the
Greek cities in Mysia...the headland of the Kian Gulf and on the left Kios the city and the river
Kios. And the coastal voyage along Mysia to Kios is one day. The periplous does not specify that
the river is named after the city, or flows around it; but these could well be extrapolations of the
scholiast. The river may be the same as the Ascanian river (Pliny, Naturalis Historia 5.40,
although he lists the Ascanius separately from the Kios and the Hylas ), that runs from Lake
Ascania (Iznik ) to the gulf, at the head of which is Gemlik , on the site of ancient Kios. Kios was
founded by the Milesians in 626/5, according to Eusebius, Chronologia 97b, Helm (A. Avram, 745.
Kios M.H. Hansen and T.H. Nielsen (eds), An Inventory of Archaic and Classical Poleis (Oxford 2004),
9823).
F11
Strabo 12.4.8 p. 566
Translation
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Commentary
Strabo s version of the Periplous , referred to here in Radts edition, is more divergent from the
extant version of the periplous . The Bithynia entry lists the Sangarios river, the Artanes river,
the Thynias river, and the Rhebas river, all on the Pontic coast of Bithynia; it then goes on to the
Bosporos and the settlement of Hieron (cf. 67), and gives a measurement of the distance from the
Maryandinoi to the Olbian Gulf of three days sail, followed by a statement that the distance from
the mouth of the Maiotic lake to the mouth of the Pontos is nearly the same along the European
shore as it is along the Asiatic shore. Neither entry mentions Lake Askania or the settlement of
Mysians in Bithynia; indeed, Pseudo-Skylax includes the Bithynians with the Thracians , and
makes the Mysians seperate; while Strabo is intent to make the case, based on Dionysios of
Chalcis use of the term Mysian Bosporos, that the Mysians were Thracians.
F12
Strabo 13.1.4 p. 582-583
Translation
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Commentary
In the context of a discussion of Aeolis , Strabo is here demonstrating his concern with Homeric
geography, by reviewing the long debate over the extent of the Troad . Strabos citation of
Skylax for the extent of the Troad matches the existing text of Pseudo-Skylax fairly closely. The
periplous ends the section on Phrygia (94) with a list of cities on the Hellespontine shore, ending
with Abydos followed by the phrase (and
this is the mouth of the Propontis opposite Sestos), referring to Abydos position across the
strait from Sestos. The following section on the Troad (95) begins
(from here the Troad begins); so although Abydos is included in Phrygia, it also marks the
beginning of the Troad.
F13
Constantine Porphyrogenitus, De thematibus 1.2 Translation
Subject: genre: geography
Source Date: 10th century AD
Historian's Date: 6th-5th century BC
Historical Period: 519-516 BC
,
,
.
Commentary
Constantine Porphyrogenitus begins his account of the Armenian theme (in the edition by
Pertusi) with a review of early Greek writers, to demonstrate that the term Armenian, known in
Classical writers as a region and kingdom in eastern Anatolia , came to be applied to a region of
north central Anatolia around the Halys river in more recent times. As Constantine notes , the
Armenian theme was created by Heraclius in the early seventh century by the withdrawal and
restationing of the eastern Byzantine armies closer to home (M. Whittow, The Making of
Byzantium, 600-1025 (Berkeley/Los Angeles 1996), 120). The reference reveals that the tenth
century scholar-emperor had a copy of a text attributed to Skylax ; it would have to be one that
covered central Anatolia in order for Constantine to find it worth citing. He would most likely
have had the pseudonymous periplous or a variant of it, which covers the eastern and southern
Pontic shores in sections 70-92.
Commentary
Skylax s report of the expedition east was probably intended both for Darius and for a wider
readership. As all the references to places in the Mediterranean can be attributed to a version of
the later pseudonymous periplous , the original work most likely confined itself to the territory
covered by the actual expedition. It is not clear whether the account was written as a description
of the journey, similar to the account of the voyage of the Carthaginian explorer Hanno along
the Atlantic coast of Africa ; as a geographical treatise, along the lines of Hekataios Periegesis ;
or as a treatise on India , comparable to the logoi embedded in Herodotos and to Ktesias later
Indika . The evidence of Aristotle , Athenaios , and the later commentators suggests that the
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military functions. The closest parallel would be the expedition he sent to the west, comprised of
a number of Persians and a Greek, Demokedes (3.135-137); similarly, Cambyses sent an embassy
with gifts, to spy upon the land of the Ethiopians prior to a planned conquest (3.17.2, 21.2). The
ships that Skylax and his fellow travellers took must have been built in the east, as Alexander
would later do. Herodotos describes the mission as heading east towards the rising sun; this is
likely confusion on Herodotos part, rather than Skylaxs. The thirty months that the expedition
took is difficult to account for. Progress down the Indus might have been retarded in the
monsoon season, and the journey along the Iranian coast, possibly into the Persian Gulf , and
around the Arabian peninsula , must have been painfully slow, with the requirements of
diplomacy and intelligence-gathering further slowing progress. The expedition finished at the
northern end of the Red Sea . Darius completion of the canal from the Nile to the Red Sea may
indicate a desire to exploit the southern seas, although there is no evidence that the sea route
from the Red Sea to the Persian Gulf and thence to India became a regular trade route at this
time (C. Tuplin, Darius Suez Canal and Persian Imperialism H. Sancisi-Weerdenburg and A.
Kuhrt (eds), Achaemenid History VI. Asia Minor and Egypt: Old Cultures in a New Empire (Leiden 1991),
270278). It is impossible to say whether the account that circulated was the report he drafted
for Darius, or a subsequent work written for a Greek audience.
Skylax also wrote an admiring account of Herakleides of Mylasa , who fought the Persians in
Caria and at Artemesium (according to a fragment of Sosylos , who probably relied on Skylax),
which indicates that he was sympathetic to the Greek and Carian side in the Persian Wars. It is
therefore very likely that he returned to Karyanda after his service to the King, and may have
taken part in the Ionian Revolt. H. Bengtson, Skylax von Karyanda und Herakleides von Mylasa
Historia 3 (1954/55), 304305 raises the possibility that the tombstone in Athens inscribed in
Greek and Carian for Tyr[ ] son of Skylax the Carian indicates that the exploreror at least his
sonsettled in Athens after the Ionian Revolt; but Jeffrey claims on the basis of the letter forms
in the Greek that it dates to c. 525.
Bibliography
M. L. Allain, The Periplous of Skylax of Karyanda (Diss: Ohio State University 1977), 43-85
H. Bengtson, Skylax von Karyanda und Herakleides von Mylasa Historia 3 (1954/55), 301-307
P. Counillon, Pseudo-Skylax: Le Priple du Pont-Euxin (Paris 2004)
F. Gisinger, Skylax (2) RE 3A 1 (1927), col. 619-646.
F. J. Gonzlez Ponce, Suda, . Sobre el ttulo, el contenido y la unidad de FGrHist 3C 709 Geographica
Antiqua 6 (1997), 37-51
D. Panchenko, Skylax Circumnavigation of India and its Interpretation in Early Greek Geography,
Ethnography and Cosmography, I Hyperboreus 4 (1998), 211-42
A. Peretti, Il periplo di Scilace. Studio sul primo portolano del Mediterraneo (Pisa 1980)
A. Peretti, I peripli arcaici e Scilace di Carianda F. Prontera (ed.), Geografia e geografi nel mondo antico. Guida
storica e critica (Rome 1983), 69-114
G. Schepens, Skylax of Karyanda No. 1000J. Bollanse, J. Engels, G. Schepens and E. Theys (eds), FrGrHist IV
A: Biography. I. The Pre-Hellenistic Period (Leiden 1998), 2-27
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