THE MEDITERRANEAN COAST OF AFRICA IN PTOLEMY’S GEOGRAPHY AND IN THE STADIASMUS OF THE GREAT SEA Cover Image

СРЕДИЗЕМНОМОРСКОЕ ПОБЕРЕЖЬЕ АФРИКИ В «ГЕОГРАФИИ» ПТОЛЕМЕЯ И В «СТАДИАСМЕ ВЕЛИКОГО МОРЯ»
THE MEDITERRANEAN COAST OF AFRICA IN PTOLEMY’S GEOGRAPHY AND IN THE STADIASMUS OF THE GREAT SEA

Author(s): Dmitry A. Shcheglov
Subject(s): Regional Geography, Historical Geography, Maps / Cartography, Ancient World
Published by: Новосибирский государственный университет
Keywords: ancient geography; ancient cartography; periploi; Claudius Ptolemy; Ptolemy’s Geography; Ptolemy’s map; Stadiasmus of the Great Sea; the circumference of the Earth; the length of the stade;

Summary/Abstract: The paper argues that the depiction of the Mediterranean coast of Africa in Ptolemy’s Geography was based on a source similar to the Stadiasmus of the Great Sea. Ptolemy’s and the Stadiasmus’ toponymy and distances between major points are mostly in good agreement. Ptolemy’s place names overlap with those of the Stadiasmus by 80%, and the total length of the coastline from Alexandria to Utica on Ptolemy’s map deviates from the Stadiasmus data by only 1% or 1.5% (in different recensions). A number of serious disagreements between Ptolemy’s map and the Stadiasmus regarding the length of particular coastal stretches can be explained by assuming that Ptolemy had to tailor the distance data derived from periploi to his other sources, especially, to the longitudes of the key reference points, such as Cape Phyces, Cyrena, Berenica, Aesporis (Eperos), Thena, and Carthage. A notable stretching and the subsequent contraction of the coast between Alexandria and Cyrenaica, as are exhibited by Ptolemy’s map relative to the Stadiasmus’ data, can be explained by assuming that several points on this coast were tied to the position of Crete, which was moved to the west being pushed by the westward shift of Rhodes. A sharp contraction of the two coastal stretches of the Great Sirte, oriented along the north-south direction, can be explained by Ptolemy’s erroneously underestimated value for the circumference of the Earth.

  • Issue Year: XII/2018
  • Issue No: 2
  • Page Range: 453-479
  • Page Count: 27
  • Language: Russian