A native of Massalia (modern-day Marseille, France), Pytheas set out to explore the lands beyond the Mediterranean, venturing far beyond the known world of the ancient Greeks.
His journey, recorded in the now-lost work On the Ocean, is one of the earliest recorded explorations of northern Europe, including the coasts of Britain and the mysterious land of Thule, which is believed to be somewhere in the Arctic or Northern Europe.
Pytheas’s accounts, though fragmentary and often criticised by later scholars, provided invaluable information about the geography, climate, and cultures of far-off lands, influencing subsequent explorers and geographers.
During his journey, Pytheas is credited with pioneering early studies of the polar regions and tidal phenomena.
He noted the moon’s effects on tides in the North Sea, which was revolutionary for ancient Greek science. His description of Thule, a land of perpetual midnight sun, fascinated later writers and geographers, though its exact location remains debated.
Pytheas’s explorations were not just geographical but also cultural, as he reported on the customs of the peoples he encountered, including the Celts and other tribes of northern Europe.
Despite scepticism from contemporaries and later historians like Strabo, who ridiculed his accounts, Pytheas’s journey remains a pioneering exploration that helped expand the horizons of ancient Greek knowledge about the world beyond the Mediterranean.
The article first appeared on History Timelines.
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