Wednesday, May 29, 2019

Herodotus :: Ancient Greece Greek History

HerodotusHerodotus (484-424 BC ?) a Greek historian, known as the father of history, who was the first historian to apply critical rating to his material, while also recording divergent opinions. He made his prose style resemble the finest poetry by its persuasiveness, its charm, and its utterly delightful effect. Although his writings have been praised, their trustiness has been questioned both in ancient and modern times. After four years in Athens, he traveled extensively in Egypt, Asia and the Black Sea character of E. Europe, before settling at Thurii in S. Italy in 443 BC. He wrote accounts of his various travels for the people of Greece. He read his, History publicly to the Athenians and was rewarded for this historical work. He create by mental act to set before his fellow citizens a general picture of the world, of its various races, and of the previous history of those nations which had one. He also was very careful to diversify his pages by scattering among his more s erious matter tales, anecdotes, and descriptions of a lighter character, which are very graceful additions to the main narrative. Two men are famous multiplication of Herodotus, Thucydides, and Xenophon, who were both from Athens. Thucydides (460 BC - 400 BC?) was a better historian than Herodotus and his critical use of sources and research made his History of the Peloponnesian War a significant influence on later generations of historians. Xenophon (430 BC - 355 BC?) began his Hellenica where Thucydides ended his work about 411 BC and carried his history to 362 BC. His writings were superficial in analogy to those of Thucydides, but he wrote with authority on military matters.Herodotus believed that many Greek rituals and customs were inherited from the Egyptians as the Greek civilization developed. He recorded the wide range of religious practices he encountered in his travels, comparing the religious observances of various crazeures, such as sacrifice and worship, with their Greek equivalents. He quite possibly followed the cult practices of Serapis, which is the Greek Name for Osiris the embodiment of goodness, who ruled the underworld. He identified Isis with Demeter, the Greek goddess of earth, agriculture, and fertility. About two centuries later, under the Greco-Egyptian Empire, which was created by Alexander the Great, the worship of Osiris (Serapis) was developed as a means of uniting the Greeks and Egyptians. He observed that the Egyptians strongly opposed the acceptance of foreign customs.

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