Why is Herodotus called The Father of History Mark Robinson

Giant gold-digging ants,

a furious king who orders
the sea to be whipped 300 times,

and a dolphin that saves
a famous poet from drowning.

These are just some of the stories
from The Histories by Herodotus,

an Ancient Greek writer from
the 5th century BCE.

Not all the events in the text
may have happened

exactly as Herodotus reported them,

but this work revolutionized
the way the past was recorded.

Before Herodotus, the past was documented
as a list of events

with little or no attempt to explain
their causes

beyond accepting things
as the will of the gods.

Herodotus wanted a deeper,
more rational understanding,

so he took a new approach:

looking at events from both sides
to understand the reasons for them.

Though he was Greek, Herodotus’s
hometown of Halicarnassus

was part of the Persian Empire.

He grew up during a series of wars
between the powerful Persians

and the smaller Greeks,

and decided to find out all he could
about the subject.

In Herodotus’s telling, the Persian Wars
began in 499 BCE,

when the Athenians assisted a rebellion
by Greeks living under Persian rule.

In 490, the Persian King, Darius,
sent his army to take revenge on Athens.

But at the Battle of Marathon,
the Athenians won an unexpected victory.

Ten years later, the Persians returned,
planning to conquer the whole of Greece

under the leadership
of Darius’s son, Xerxes.

According to Herodotus,
when Xerxes arrived,

his million man army was initially
opposed by a Greek force

led by 300 Spartans at the mountain pass
of Thermopylae.

At great cost to the Persians,

the Spartans and their king, Leonidas,
were killed.

This heroic defeat has been an inspiration
to underdogs ever since.

A few weeks later, the Greek navy
tricked the Persian fleet

into fighting in a narrow sea channel
near Athens.

The Persians were defeated and Xerxes
fled, never to return.

To explain how these wars broke out
and why the Greeks triumphed,

Herodotus collected stories
from all around the Mediterranean.

He recorded the achievements of both
Greeks and non-Greeks

before they were lost
to the passage of time.

The Histories opens
with the famous sentence:

“Herodotus, of Halicarnassus,
here displays his inquiries.”

By framing the book as an “inquiry,”

Herodotus allowed it to contain
many different stories,

some serious, others less so.

He recorded the internal debates
of the Persian court

but also tales of Egyptian flying snakes

and practical advice
on how to catch a crocodile.

The Greek word for this method
of research is “autopsy,”

meaning “seeing for oneself.”

Herodotus was the first writer
to examine the past

by combining the different kinds
of evidence he collected:

opsis, or eyewitness accounts,

akoe, or hearsay,

and ta legomena, or tradition.

He then used gnome, or reason,

to reach conclusions
about what actually happened.

Many of the book’s early readers
were actually listeners.

The Histories was originally written
in 28 sections,

each of which took about
four hours to read aloud.

As the Greeks increased in influence
and power,

Herodotus’s writing and the idea of history
spread across the Mediterranean.

As the first proper historian,
Herodotus wasn’t perfect.

On occasions, he favored
the Greeks over the Persians

and was too quick to believe
some of the stories that he heard,

which made for inaccuracies.

However, modern evidence
has actually explained

some of his apparently extreme claims.

For instance, there’s a species
of marmot in the Himalayas

that spreads gold dust while digging.

The ancient Persian word for marmot
is quite close to the word for ant,

so Herodotus may have just fallen prey
to a translation error.

All in all, for someone who was writing
in an entirely new style,

Herodotus did remarkably well.

History, right down to the present day,
has always suffered from the partiality

and mistakes of historians.

Herodotus’s method
and creativity earned him the title

that the Roman author Cicero
gave him several hundred years later:

“The Father of History.”

巨大的淘金蚂蚁,

下令鞭打大海 300 次的愤怒国王,

以及拯救
溺水的著名诗人的海豚。

这些只是公元前 5 世纪的古希腊作家
希罗多德的《历史》中的一些故事

并非文本中的所有
事件都

像希罗多德所报道的那样发生,

但这部作品
彻底改变了记录过去的方式。

在希罗多德之前,过去被记录
为一系列事件

,除了将事物视为神的意志之外,很少或根本没有试图解释
其原因

希罗多德想要更深入、
更理性的理解,

所以他采取了一种新的方法:

从双方的角度来看事件,
以了解它们的原因。

虽然他是希腊人,但希罗多德的
家乡哈利卡纳苏

斯是波斯帝国的一部分。

他在
强大的波斯人

和较小的希腊人之间的一系列战争中长大,

并决定尽他所能
找出这个主题。

在希罗多德的叙述中,波斯战争
始于公元前 499 年,

当时雅典人协助了
生活在波斯统治下的希腊人的叛乱。

490年,波斯国王大流士
派军队向雅典报仇。

但在马拉松战役中
,雅典人取得了意想不到的胜利。

十年后,波斯人回来了,
计划


大流士的儿子薛西斯的领导下征服整个希腊。

根据希罗多德的说法,
当薛西斯抵达时,

他的百万大军最初

在温泉关山口遭到由 300 名斯巴达人率领的希腊军队的反对

波斯人付出了巨大的代价

,斯巴达人和他们的国王
列奥尼达斯被杀。 从那以后,

这场英勇的失败一直激励
着弱者。

几周后,希腊海军
诱使波斯舰队

在雅典附近的一条狭窄海道上作战

波斯人被击败,薛西斯
逃走,再也没有回来。

为了解释这些战争是如何爆发的
以及希腊人为何获胜,

希罗多德收集了
来自地中海各地的故事。

他记录了
希腊人和非希腊人


时间流逝之前所取得的成就。

历史
以一句著名的句子开头:

“哈利卡纳苏斯的希罗多德,在
这里展示了他的调查。”

希罗多德将这本书定为“探究”,

允许它包含
许多不同的故事,

有些是严肃的,有些则不那么严重。

他记录
了波斯宫廷的内部辩论,

也记录了埃及飞蛇的故事

以及
如何捕捉鳄鱼的实用建议。

这种研究方法的希腊词
是“尸检”,意思是“亲自

观察”。

希罗多德是第一位

通过结合
他收集的不同类型证据来审视过去的作家:

opsis 或目击者的叙述、

akoe 或传闻,

以及 ta legomena 或传统。

然后,他使用 gnome 或推理


对实际发生的事情得出结论。

这本书的许多早期
读者实际上都是听众。

《史记》最初
分为 28 节,

每节朗读大约需要
四个小时。

随着希腊人的影响力
和权力的增加,

希罗多德的著作和历史思想
传遍了整个地中海。

作为第一位真正的历史学家,
希罗多德并不完美。

有时,他
偏爱希腊人而不是波斯人,

并且太快
相信他听到的一些故事,

这导致了不准确。

然而,现代
证据实际上已经解释

了他的一些明显极端的主张。

例如,喜马拉雅山有

一种土拨鼠在挖掘时会撒金尘。

古代波斯语中的土拨鼠
一词与蚂蚁的词非常接近,

因此希罗多德可能刚刚
成为翻译错误的牺牲品。

总而言之,对于
一个以全新风格写作的人来说,

希罗多德做得非常好。

历史一直到今天
,总是饱受历史学家的偏颇

和错误之苦。

希罗多德的方法
和创造力为他赢得了几百年后

罗马作家西塞罗
给他的称号:

“历史之父”。