Nile shipwreck discovery proves Herodotus right – after 2,469 years
Guardian [U.K.],
by
Dalya Alberge
Original Article
Posted By: Ribicon,
3/17/2019 12:23:14 PM
In the fifth century BC, the Greek historian Herodotus visited Egypt and wrote of unusual river boats on the Nile. Twenty-three lines of his Historia, the ancient world’s first great narrative history, are devoted to the intricate description of the construction of a “baris”. For centuries, scholars have argued over his account because there was no archaeological evidence that such ships ever existed. Now there is. A “fabulously preserved” wreck in the waters around the sunken port city of Thonis-Heracleion has revealed just how accurate the historian was.(Snip) Originally measuring up to 28 metres long, it is one
Reply 1 - Posted by:
jir 3/17/2019 12:35:28 PM (No. 3855)
Thank you for posting. Very interesting!
24 people like this.
Way back when writers told us what they saw, not what they imagined. Too bad we have no scribes left to report reality instead of their constant flights of imagination.
28 people like this.
Reply 3 - Posted by:
Kate318 3/17/2019 12:55:35 PM (No. 3860)
I agree, #2. It’s always satisfying to see modern research catch up with ancient truths. The arrogance of academia and science has dismissed so much of the ancient written record as myth or nonsense. More and more, it turns out to be true.
23 people like this.
Reply 4 - Posted by:
Newtsche 3/17/2019 1:49:42 PM (No. 3852)
Would it be that hard to show a depiction of the vessel afloat? They seem to understand the concept with "an artistic treatment of the discovered shipwreck", c´mon.
17 people like this.
Reply 5 - Posted by:
Highlander 3/17/2019 2:10:06 PM (No. 3858)
It’s amazing what is lost to history over the vast stretches of time. I read somewhere only a very small fraction represents what we can know about our past. That is why it was such a surprise to see ancient temple relics, off the coast of India, exposed by the killer tsunami some years back. No one knew they were there before.
17 people like this.
Reply 6 - Posted by:
DVC 3/17/2019 2:59:04 PM (No. 3854)
A few sketches would go a long way in explaining what they are talking about. I am a woodworker, and a sailor, and this is still very unclear.
10 people like this.
Reply 7 - Posted by:
Rumblehog 3/17/2019 3:10:02 PM (No. 3859)
No one knows what a Roman cross looked like, although it was an extremely common instrument of death for vile criminals. "Historians" COULD say it never really existed, since they´ve never seen one. s/o
12 people like this.
Reply 8 - Posted by:
curious1 3/17/2019 3:11:20 PM (No. 3850)
#6, yeah, and you have to wonder what was accurately described in the Library of Alexandria before the mooslimes destroyed them, as is their behavior even today in occupied lands. (Regardless what ´21st century´ historians now claim; that they were ´probably´ destroyed before the mooslimes invaded in the 7th century.)
9 people like this.
Reply 9 - Posted by:
Pete Stone 3/17/2019 3:22:43 PM (No. 3861)
Most of the Library of Alexandria was destroyed accidentally by the Romans when Julius Caesar was fighting the Ptolemy forces (or anyway Cleopatra´s brother´s faction). Some Egyptian ships were burned and the fire spread to the library.
The library that Caliph Omar destroyed was a pale shadow of the original. On the other hand, #8 is right about one thing: Omar destroyed the library on purpose, not accidentally. Omar was an enemy of science and scholarship -- like the Omar in Afghanistan.
13 people like this.
Reply 10 - Posted by:
mean Gene 3/17/2019 3:54:40 PM (No. 3853)
Why wouldn´t his description of these ships be accurate.
Virtually everything else archeology can confirm from his accounts have been accurate, too.
He spoke for donations from the public in the square, not to please some emperor or governor.
16 people like this.
Reply 11 - Posted by:
PageTurner 3/17/2019 5:01:58 PM (No. 3857)
It’s gotta be tough to be Herodotus. You write the truth over and over and all these academic bozos keep disputing you.
18 people like this.
Reply 12 - Posted by:
voxpopuli 3/17/2019 6:38:10 PM (No. 3856)
wow..
thanks for posting..
wee just got back 15 minutes ago from visiting the Minnesota Institute of Arts and their exhibition on.. tada..
"the sunken port city of Thonis-Heracleion"
very good exhibition for this leftie run organization..
up until three hours ago i´d never even heard of this place!
and now.. an article in the Red Guardian about it!
25 people like this.
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