ABSTRACT

The Routledge Companion to Strabo explores the works of Strabo of Amasia (c. 64 BCE – c. CE 24), a Greek author writing at the prime of Roman expansion and political empowerment. While his earlier historiographical composition is almost entirely lost, his major opus of the Geography includes an encyclopaedic look at the entire world known at the time: numerous ethnographic, topographic, historical, mythological, botanical, and zoological details, and much more.

This volume offers various insights to the literary and historical context of the man and his world. The Companion, in twenty-eight chapters written by an international group of scholars, examines several aspects of Strabo’s personality, the political and scholarly environment in which he was active, his choices as an author, and his ideas of history and geography. This selection of ongoing Strabonian studies is an invaluable resource not just for students and scholars of Strabo himself, but also for anyone interested in ancient geography and in the world of the early Roman Empire.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

Edited ByDaniela Dueck

part I|38 pages

Strabo’s point of view

chapter 2|13 pages

“Such is Rome …”

Strabo on the “Imperial metropolis”

chapter 3|10 pages

Looking in from the outside

Strabo’s attitude towards the Roman people

part II|289 pages

The Geography

chapter 4|13 pages

Strabo’s Mediterranean

chapter 6|10 pages

Strabo and Iberia

chapter 9|8 pages

Strabo’s Libya

part |52 pages

Human geography

chapter 11|12 pages

Strabo’s roads

chapter 13|13 pages

Strabo’s Cis-Tauran Asia

A humanistic geography

part I|29 pages

Mathematical geography

chapter 15|14 pages

Strabo

From maps to words

part I|55 pages

The art of writing geography

chapter 16|12 pages

Signposts and sub-divisions

Hidden pointers in Strabo’s narrative

chapter 17|12 pages

A river runs through it

Waterways and narrative in Strabo

chapter 18|14 pages

Spicing up geography

Strabo’s use of tales and anecdotes
Edited ByDaniela Dueck

chapter 19|15 pages

Strabo’s expendables

The function and aesthetics of minor authority

part |57 pages

Traditions and sources

part |27 pages

The text

part III|18 pages

The historiographic work(s)

chapter 26|16 pages

Strabo the historian

part IV|31 pages

Reception

chapter 27|12 pages

“So says Strabo”

The reception of Strabo’s work in antiquity