Not geography per say, but Theophrastus in 'On Stones' covers east to west, north to south (Italy, Spain, and out to India and Africa etc.). On balance given the Peripatetic school pre dates the Hellenistic era proper I think it fair to say at Athens at least Greek scholarship was not just Aegian biased (at least in sciences).I was basically saying that no geographer before Strabo covered the Western Med as extensively as he before his time
IN PATROCINIVM SVB Dromikaites
'One day when I fly with my hands - up down the sky, like a bird'
But if the cause be not good, the king himself hath a heavy reckoning to make, when all those legs and arms and heads, chopped off in battle, shall join together at the latter day and cry all 'We died at such a place; some swearing, some crying for surgeon, some upon their wives left poor behind them, some upon the debts they owe, some upon their children rawly left.
Hyperides of Athens: We know, replied he, that Antipater is good, but we (the Demos of Athens) have no need of a master at present, even a good one.
"First get your facts straight, then distort them at your leisure." - Mark Twain
οὐκ ἦν μὲν ἐγώ, νῦν δ' εἰμί· τότε δ' ούκ ἔσομαι, ούδέ μοι μελήσει
I know of the most general info, yes, but nothing more![]()
"First get your facts straight, then distort them at your leisure." - Mark Twain
οὐκ ἦν μὲν ἐγώ, νῦν δ' εἰμί· τότε δ' ούκ ἔσομαι, ούδέ μοι μελήσει
Sorry to necro this thread, but I'd like to see if you know any good translations by now, years later. I found an excellent article by Adolfo J. Dominguez from 2013 (described below), which summarizes the research and archaeological findings of many works stretching back to the 1990s about the influence of Emporion on native Iberian towns in the immediate hinterland in what is now Catalonia in Spain. This was a post that I made in jest to another about Emporion not being important enough or not having enough of a Greek presence to warrant a "minor Hellenistic polis" for the campaign map in the M2TW mod EBII:
I think it's awesome that we know this much about Emporion's influence over neighboring towns, and it's interesting to think about how much Greek material goods like pottery impacted the native Iberians. They seem to have had a real taste for Attic wares from Greece.
I know that I addressed this post in the past already, but now I want to tear it to shreds and rip it a new...fun hole...for saying this.
Now that I am armed with the right knowledge and filled with vim and vigor.
[Roma_Victrix cracks knuckles, inhales with a deep breath...]
You have some serious nerve saying nobody of distinction came from Western poleis, when Pytheas of Massalia is mentioned right in the OP, one of the greatest Greek explorers of all time, and he came from Massalia in Gaul, sailing all the way up to the British Isles from the Atlantic and maybe even Iceland given his descriptions about Northern Lights. For that matter, the Greek city-state of Syracuse in Sicily had a series of remarkable leaders who fought the Carthaginians AND even invaded their heartland in ancient Tunisia. Archimedes was one of the greatest mathematicians and engineers who ever lived and he came from Syracuse, a city-state that also produced some of the earliest artillery of the ancient world.
Also no, the Romans did not "wipe out" the colonial Greek cities of the Western Mediterranean during the Punic Wars, even with the sack of Syracuse. Emporion was the allied staging point for Gnaeus Cornelius Scipio Calvus land with troops and spearhead the Roman conquest of Carthaginian holdings in Spain. Massalia actively hosted Roman forces to stop the Carthaginian advance when Hannibal famously crossed the Rhone and then the Alps. The Roman Republic remained allies of both Emporion and Massalia all the way up until the civil war between Julius Caesar and Pompey the Great. That is when those cities finally lost their autonomy. So you got that point miserably wrong.
Also, we have a lot more than just archaeology for telling us how the Greeks interacted with Iberians and Gauls. As related above in my quote in the EBII subforum, even well known mainstream ancient Roman historians like Livy commented on how Emporion traded and interacted with the native Iberians (his writings only confirmed by archaeology), let alone writers like Strabo. I'm glad to correct the record after all these years, feels great. Get rekt.![]()
Last edited by Roma_Victrix; May 22, 2023 at 01:28 PM.
It's my theory that the Iberians tried to copy the Greek xiphos in iron, but making the leaf-like blade is a lot harder with iron (heard it from blacksmiths) so they just made it straight and that eventually gave us the gladius. The Iberians already copied the kopis with the falcata, which was heavily popular during and after Alexander's death, because Alexander used one.
Yeah, the cross cultural exchange across the Mediterranean, especially in the realm of military equipment, is often overlooked in the popular imagination until perhaps the very late Roman Republic (and let's face it, the general public doesn't know much about ancient history in general). Another fan of the Iberian falcata was Hannibal Barca, who equipped various units of his Carthaginian armies with that sword. For that matter, the Romans weren't the only ones to adopt lorica hamata chain mail armor from the Celts; the Hellenistic Greek states of the Eastern Mediterranean did the same before being conquered by the Romans. Influenced by the migrating Galatians, the Greeks, Thracians, and Illyrians also adopted the Thureos style oval shield of the Celts, which was more widely used than chain mail (the Roman use of the latter was far more systematic and widespread). Alexander the Great's armies spread the use of Greek weapons and armaments all the way to Afghanistan.
Damn, two lost posts in a row. The kopis also went to Indian where it is called the khukri/kukri. If one looks close they can see Hellenic influence in Western Indian artwork and in Buddhism.
My other talking point that got deleted was that the Sea Peoples were mercenaries from all over the Mediterranean. Once Troy was sacked in 1,200 BC, the same time the mercenaries hoped in the boats that they sailed on and became the Sea Peoples. When they sacked Cyprus, it screwed up the entire monetary system and trade in the Eastern Mediterranean. A terrible Earthquake and I think a drought made things worse. This explains why there are so many "cultures" in the Egyptian record books at the time about where the Sea Peoples came from.
It was Xenophon who was one of the first to suggest the kopis, especially on horseback, be used by the Hellenes.
Last edited by NorthernXY; June 07, 2023 at 12:02 AM.
Pirates, mercenaries, displaced groups, and/or whatever, but they weren’t a coherent group or a long-term coalition. It’s likely that pretty much everything you’ve read about them is much more tentative and speculative than you’ve been led to believe.
He was the first to write a self help book that survives to make such a suggestion. But he is predated by images and other archeological evidence.It was Xenophon who was one of the first to suggest the kopis, especially on horseback, be used by the Hellenes.
IN PATROCINIVM SVB Dromikaites
'One day when I fly with my hands - up down the sky, like a bird'
But if the cause be not good, the king himself hath a heavy reckoning to make, when all those legs and arms and heads, chopped off in battle, shall join together at the latter day and cry all 'We died at such a place; some swearing, some crying for surgeon, some upon their wives left poor behind them, some upon the debts they owe, some upon their children rawly left.
Hyperides of Athens: We know, replied he, that Antipater is good, but we (the Demos of Athens) have no need of a master at present, even a good one.
I'll try to read the post, but I wasn't under the assumption they were a coherent group. I just assumed that if the battle of Troy was real and happened around the time history says it did and the Sea Peoples showed up around the same time, there is probably a connection. Before I make too big of an ass of myself, I've read that they came as far away as Sardinia, or what the Egyptians called them.
Last edited by NorthernXY; June 17, 2023 at 08:35 PM.
There is Marseille Grecque (Monique Clavel-Lévêque) specifically on Marseille, in french, and Michael Dietler written about it too in Archeology of Colonialism, that is in english.
A lot of material is unpublished in actual books you can buy so it needs to read local stuff, for instance Antibes/Nice.
D’un monde à l’autre - Les colonies massaliètes de Gaule méridionale : sources et modèles d’un urbanisme militaire aux IVe-IIIe s. av. J.-C. - Publications du Centre Jean Bérard (openedition.org)
Roquepertuse et la polychromie en Gaule méridionale à l'époque préromaine - Persée (persee.fr)
Second is on sitting Gauls statues.
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Last edited by VINC.XXIII; August 13, 2023 at 08:03 AM.
In my opinion, it is a modern history’s mistake to see the Ancient western mediterrian territory as a “cultural” area isolated by “barbarians” with some sporadic contact.
It was an Europe very similar to the High medieval period - interconnected in a sense, that e.g. central European military power shaped Italian minor states, which were more developed. The Roman republic’s expansion was a product of the Celtic pressure on Etruscans. As for economical and cultural relations, an influence was bilateral, with a center in northern parts of Italy - everything in distance from this center in any direction was more barbaric - including Latins and Oscans. And all Italian territories were under a high cultural influence of Magna Graeca, and to less extent economically interdependent with it. So Romans and other Latins were on a distant periphery of both of these civilization centers. More than Oscans - Samnites being more Etruscan- and lately Celticentric, and Lucans with Iapygians more Hellenicentric. Civilisation crossovers were the centers of trade, and hence the more developed areas (Etruscans, and Magna Graeca), and they were than conquered by stronger barbarians. Romans have from all these barbarians in start a bonus of covered back by a sea. Hence four mutually fighting Samnites tribes, while more military apt, were in time conquered by them, and not vice versa.
Classical historians like to study the more developed cultures, which let us more nice artifacts, and sometimes written memories, nevertheless in reality it was the interplay among all players, which created a base for our modern civilization - all of them have given something from their cultures, and maybe more importantly, their interaction developed something more complex, not additively, but rather in form some potentiation, and acceleration.
I like to read about Celtic tribe of Boii (me born in Bohemia), which played a role in several of the dominant events not only in their Bohemia + Moravia, and later Pannonia, but also in penetration to northern Italy, highly probably including the sacking of Rome. Nevertheless, all is secondary evidence, often only archelogical. Part of them settled in northern Italy with center in today’s Bologna, and assimilated to large extent with previous Etruscan people of this area. A civilization exchange than continued later by their return back to the central Europe several generations later under pressure of expanding Romans, where they were later conquered and assimilated with gemanic tribe of Markomans, which than several centuries attacked northern bounderies of Roman imperium.
So, it is rather complicated to define exactly in chronological and geographical boundaries their influence on the development of these areas (including northern Italy), but is as important to similar extent as e.g. Hellenic poleis for Southern parts of Italy. However, scholars neglect their achievements to large extent, maybe due to the lack of remnants of their material culture.
My TW games "Battle Formations" projects:
Sinuhet's ETW Formations v2.0 – for ETW
Sinuhet's Battle Mechanics v5.0 – for MTW2
Sinuhet's Battle Mechanics v3.0 – for MTW2
Sinuhet's AI Battle Formations v7.0 – for RTW 1.5
In Patrocinivm Svb HorseArcher