Conclusion of Herodotus
- Born:
- 484 bce?, Halicarnassus, Asia Minor [now Bodrum, Turkey]?
- Died:
- c. 430–420
- Flourished:
- c.484 BCE - c.420 BCE
- Halicarnassus?
- Turkey?
- Subjects Of Study:
- Greco-Persian Wars
- Egypt
- Greece
- Persia
Herodotus had his predecessors in prose writing, especially Hecataeus of Miletus, a great traveler whom Herodotus mentions more than once. But these predecessors, for all their charm, wrote either chronicles of local events, of one city or another, covering a great length of time, or comprehensive accounts of travel over a large part of the known world, none of them creating a unity, an organic whole. In the sense that he created a work that is an organic whole, Herodotus was the first of Greek, and so of European, historians. His work is not only an artistic masterpiece; for all his mistakes (and for all his fantasies and inaccuracies) he remains the leading source of original information not only for Greek history of the all-important period between 550 and 479 bce but also for much of that of western Asia and of Egypt at that time.
The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica