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Encyclopedia of society and culture in the ancient world ( PDFDrive ) 797

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Jerry Bentley, Old World Encounters: Cross-Cultural Contacts and Exchanges in Pre-Modern Times New York: Oxford University Press, 1993.. Hammond, eds., Th e Cambridge An-cient History

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FURTHER READING

William Y Adams, “Th e First Colonial Empire: Egypt in Nubia,

3200–1200 b.c.,” Comparative Studies in Society and History

26 (1984): 36–71.

Th omas Barfi eld, Th e Nomadic Alternative (Englewood Cliff s, N.J.:

Prentice-Hall, 1993).

Jerry Bentley, Old World Encounters: Cross-Cultural Contacts and

Exchanges in Pre-Modern Times (New York: Oxford University

Press, 1993).

Manfred Bietak, Avaris: Th e Capital of the Hyksos (London: British

Museum, 1996).

John Boardman, Th e Greeks Overseas: Th eir Early Colonies and

Trade (London: Th ames and Hudson, 1980).

John Boardman and N G L Hammond, eds., Th e Cambridge

An-cient History, 2nd ed., Vol 3, Th e Expansion of the Greek World

Eighth to Sixth Centuries b.c (Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge

University Press, 1982).

John Chapman and Helena Hamerow, eds., Migrations and

Inva-sions in Archaeological Explanation (Oxford, U.K.:

Archaeo-press, 1997).

Roger Cribb, Nomads in Archaeology (Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge

University Press, 1991).

Moshe Dothan and Trude Dothan, People of the Sea: Th e Search for the Philistines (New York: Macmillan, 1992).

Carol Dougherty, Th e Poetics of Colonization: From City to Text in Archaic Greece (New York: Oxford University Press, 1993).

Brian M Fagan, Th e Great Journey: Th e Peopling of Ancient America

(Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2003).

Clive Gamble, Th e Palaeolithic Settlement of Europe (Cambridge,

U.K.: Cambridge University Press, 1986).

A J Graham, Colony and Mother City in Ancient Greece (Manches-ter, U.K.: Manchester University Press, 1964).

János Harmatta, ed., History of Civilizations of Central Asia Vol 2,

Th e Development of Sedentary and Nomadic Civilizations: 700 b.c to a.d 250 (Paris: UNESCO Publishing, 1994).

Herodotus, Th e Histories, trans Aubrey de Sélincourt

(Harmond-sworth, U.K.: Penguin Books, 1954).

John Iliff e, Africans: Th e History of a Continent (Cambridge:

Cam-bridge University Press, 1995).

Geoff rey Irwin, Th e Prehistoric Exploration and Colonisation of the Pacifi c (Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press,

1992).

Steven J Mithen, Aft er the Ice: A Global Human History (London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 2003).

number of months and returned home with all speed to

give their countrymen an account of the island

Th e Th erans who had left Corobius at Platea, when they

reached Th era, told their countrymen that they had

colonized an island on the coast of Libya Th ey of Th era,

upon this, resolved that men should be sent to join the

colony from each of their seven districts and that the

brothers in every family should draw lots to determine

who were to go Upon this the Th erans sent out Battus

with two penteconters, and with these he proceeded to

Libya; but within a little time, not knowing what else

to do, the men returned and arrived back off Th era

Th e Th erans, when they saw the vessels approaching,

received them with showers of missiles, would not allow

them to come near the shore, and ordered the men to

sail back from whence they came Th us compelled, they

settled on Platea

In this place they continued two years, but at the end

of that time, as their ill luck still followed them, they

went in a body to Delphi, where they made complaint at

the shrine to the eff ect that they prospered as poorly as

before Hereon the Pythoness made them the following

answer: “Know you better than I, fair Libya abounding

in fl eeces? Better the stranger than he who has trod it?

Oh! Clever Th erans!” Battus and his friends, when they

heard this, sailed back to Platea: it was plain the god

would not hold them acquitted of the colony till they were absolutely in Libya So they made a settlement on the mainland directly opposite Platea, fi xing themselves

at a place called Aziris

Here they remained six years, at the end of which time the Libyans induced them to move, promising that they would lead them to a better situation So the Greeks left Aziris and were conducted by the Libyans toward the west, their journey being so arranged, by the calculation

of their guides, that they passed in the night the most beautiful district of that whole country, which is the region called Irasa Th e Libyans brought them to a spring, which goes by the name of Apollo’s Fountain, and told them, “Here, Hellenes, is the proper place for you to settle; for here the sky leaks.”

During the lifetime of Battus, the founder of the colony, who reigned forty years, and during that of his son Arcesilaus, who reigned sixteen, the Cyreneans continued

at the same level, neither more nor fewer in number than they were at the fi rst But in the reign of the third king, Battus, surnamed the Happy, the advice of the Pythoness brought Greeks from every quarter into Libya to join the settlement Th us a great multitude were collected together

to Cyrene, and the Libyans of the neighborhood found themselves stripped of large portions of their lands

From Herodotus, Th e History, trans

George Rawlinson (New York: Dutton

and Co., 1862).

(continues)

724 migration and population movements: further reading

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