Histories (Herodotus)

Histories  
Author Herodotus
Country Greece
Language Ancient Greek
Genre(s) HistoryAncient Greek language
Publisher Various
Publication date c.440 BCE
ISBN n/a

The Histories of Herodotus is considered one of the seminal works of history in Western literature. Written from the 450s to the 420s BC in the Ionic dialect of classical Greek, The Histories serves as a record of the ancient traditions, politics, geography, and clashes of various cultures that were known around the Mediterranean and Western Asia at that time. It is not an impartial record but it remains one of the West's most important sources regarding these affairs. Moreover, it established without precedent the genre and study of history in the Western world, although historical records and chronicles existed beforehand.

Perhaps most importantly, it stands as one of the first, and surviving, accounts of the rise of the Persian Empire, the events of, and causes for, the Greco-Persian Wars between the Achaemenid 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 through the ages divided into the nine books of modern editions, conventionally named after the Muses.

Herodotus seems to have travelled extensively around the ancient world, conducting interviews and collecting stories for his book. At the beginning of The Histories, Herodotus sets out his reasons for writing it:

This is the showing-forth of the inquiry of Herodotus of Halicarnassus, so that neither what has come to be from man in time might become faded, nor that great and wondrous deeds, those shown forth by Greeks and those by barbarians, might be without their glory; and together with all this, also through what cause they warred with each other.

Contents

Storyline

Book I (Clio)

View of Delphi, looking down from the theater.

Book II (Euterpe)

Statue of the Egyptian goddess Hathor.

Book III (Thalia)

The ruins of Persepolis, capital of the Persian Empire.

Book IV (Melpomene)

Scythian warriors, drawn after figures on an electrum cup from the Kul'Oba kurgan burial near Kerch (Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg).

Book V (Terpsichore)

Statue of Athena, the patron goddess of Athens.

Book VI (Erato)

Miltiades.

Book VII (Polymnia)

Leonidas at Thermopylae, by Jacques-Louis David (1814)

Book VIII (Urania)

A Greek trireme

Book IX (Calliope)

The Serpent Column dedicated by the victorious Greeks

Translations of the Histories

See also

External links