Herodotus on the First Circumnavigation of #Lybia [OR #Africa]: 😳 "The #Greek researcher and storyteller #Herodotus of #Halicarnassus (fifth century BCE) was the world's first historian. In #TheHistories, he describes the expansion of the #Achaemenid empire under its kings #Cyrus the Great, #Cambyses and #Darius I the Great, culminating in king #Xerxes' expedition in 480 BCE against the #Greeks, which met with disaster in the #naval ⛵️engagement at #Salamis and the battles at #Plataea and #Mycale. Herodotus' remarkable book also contains excellent ethnographic descriptions of the peoples that the #Persians have conquered, fairy tales, gossip, legends, and a very humanitarian morale." 📚🤓 Herodotus' story: Libya is washed on ALL sides by the sea except where it joins Asia 😱, as was first demonstrated, so far as our knowledge goes, by the Egyptian king #Necho, who, after calling off the construction of the canal between the Nile and the #Arabian gulf, sent out a fleet manned by a #Phoenician crew with orders to sail WEST about and return to Egypt and the #Mediterranean by way of the #StraitsOfGibraltar." 🤔 "The Phoenicians sailed from the Arabian gulf into the southern ocean, and every autumn put in at some convenient spot on the Libyan coast, sowed a patch of ground, and waited for next year's harvest. Then, having got in their grain, they put to sea again, and after two full years rounded the #PillarsOfHeracles in the course of the third, and returned to #Egypt." "These men made a statement which I do NOT myself BELIEVE, though others MAY, [TRUTH🤐] to the effect that as they sailed on a westerly course round the southern end of Libya, they had the sun on their right - to northward of them. This is how Libya was first discovered by sea." #HistoREAL #InREALTime #Lybia #Africa #Miseducation #MissMeWitThePapalBull 💩 Phoenicians been coming on this side over 3,500+ years ago mining copper and tin = BRONZE #Cahokia #MoundBuilders MyHeritage http://www.livius.org/sources/content/herodotus/herodotus-on-the-first-circumnavigation-of-africa/ (at Greece)