Εγκυκλοπαίδεια Μείζονος Ελληνισμού, Μ. Ασία ΙΔΡΥΜΑ ΜΕΙΖΟΝΟΣ ΕΛΛΗΝΙΣΜΟΥ
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Agatharchides of Cnidus

Συγγραφή : Kamara Afroditi (20/2/2003)
Μετάφραση : Nakas Ioannis

Για παραπομπή: Kamara Afroditi, "Agatharchides of Cnidus",
Εγκυκλοπαίδεια Μείζονος Ελληνισμού, Μ. Ασία
URL: <http://www.ehw.gr/l.aspx?id=7034>

Αγαθαρχίδης ο Κνίδιος (2/11/2007 v.1) Agatharchides of Cnidus (3/9/2008 v.1) 
 

1. Introduction

The historian, geographer and philosopher Agatharchides lived in the first half of the 2nd c. BC, an era when original thinking was in decline and a tendency for the preservation of the old wisdom was prevalent. His work is lost almost in its entirety, apart from some fragments preserved by Photius and some others collected by Müller in his monumental work on minor Greek geographers.1

2. Biography

Sources for Agatharchides’ life are scarce and fragmentary. He was probably born during the last decade of the 3rd c. BC and maybe died in the decade of 130 BC. It is reported that in 132/1 BC he was seventy-five years old. He was born in Cnidus, but soon moved to Alexandria, either to study or to work,2 where he was associated with the court of the Ptolemies. He began his career as a teacher, but later managed to become the secretary of Heracleides οf Lembus, an important person in the court of Ptolemy VII and ambassador of Syria during the war with Antiochus IV (170-160 BC). Following Heracleides in his peace negotiations with Antiochus, Agatharchides experienced as an eye witness many important political events of his era. Due to his position he probably had access to the royal archives.3

Photius mentions that he was the “threptos (adopted son) of Kinnaeas”. This obscure information might be implying that Agatharchides was the adopted son of Kineas, one of the philoi (friends) of Ptolemy VI. In 145 BC, however, when Ptolemy VIII Physcon rose to the throne of Egypt, the tone abruptly changed for the scholars who in previous decades had sought refuge in the court of the Ptolemies. Whoever had achieved a favourable treatment by Ptolemy VI was persecuted. Thus, Agatharchides was forced, in an already advanced age, to leave the city where he had spent the greatest part of his life for an unknown direction. He might have gone to Athens, or back to his birthplace. He was certainly yet another victim of the disintegration of the kingdom of the Ptolemies and the crisis created by the imperialistic politcs of Rome.

3. Literary works

Agatharchides most probably took advantage of his position as secretary of Heracleides οf Lembus to find material from the archives of the Ptolemaic administration, which he used in his voluminous works. He wrote a History of Asia in ten books, a History of Europe in forty-nine books and the work Periplus of the Red Sea. His books on Asia were a source for Diodorus Siculus. From his voluminous work on Europe only some fragments were preserved by Athenaeus. Finally, the Periplus, which, according to a personal account, he left unfinished due to his advanced age, extended in five books, fragments of which were preserved by Photius and –at least in one occasion- Diodorus Siculus.4

The basic feature of his work is that he upgraded the role of ethnography, which he did not consider as a tool of geography, but as the foundation of history. He believed that civilization was harmful for the indigenous people to whom it was forced upon and he himself was indirectly opposed to the policy of the Ptolemies. His views were also contrary to Rome’s expansionist policy.

From a philosophical viewpoint, Agatharchides espoused the philosophy of the peripatetic school and he was an opponent of asianism. He was interested in metaphysics. On the contrary, he would seek in philosophy the means to catalogue and comprehend the vast amount of empirically collected data. In the philosophical theory of Agatharchides, one might often see the influence of Epicurean philosophy, especially in the detailed description of primitive people. As an adversary of asianism, which gave prominence to rhetoric, he was one of the precursors of the dissent between philosophy and rhetoric that shook the intellectual world in the end of the 2nd and during the 1st c. BC. However, he always made sure his narratives were eloquent and carefully composed and contained philosophical sayings. His style would later influence Posidonius.

4. Evaluation of his work

Agatharchides’ work must have been widely diffused in Antiquity, since he greatly influenced other authors of his time. His geographical work and the way with which he used his material influenced Diodorus Siculus,5 whereas the method with which he presented his views and allowed philosophy to permeate his historical writings influenced, as already mentioned, Posidonios. Finally, his eloquence was admired by Photius, who believed that the style of Agatharchides was grandiose but also interesting, since it framed and projected more effectively Agatharchides’ views.

1. Phot., Book 7, Cod.245-256; Müller, C. (ed.) , Geographi Graeci Minores, I (Paris 1855), p. 111-195.

2. The opinions on when Agatharchides moved to Alexandria vary. Gozzoli, S., “Etnografia e politica in Agatharchides”, Athenaeum 56 (1978), p. 54-79, believes he studied in Alexandria, a view which is supported by the fact he might have been the adopted son of Kineas. Verdin on the other hand, basing his opinion on Strasburger, reports that Agatharchides began his career in Alexandria .

3. Dio. Sic. 3.38.1.

4. Dio. Sic. 3.12.48.

5. The relation between Agatharchides and Diodorus Siculus is the subject of Peremans, W., “Diodore de Sicile et Agatharchide de Cnide”, Historia 16 (1967), p. 432-455.

     
 
 
 
 
 

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