General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels - Volume 18 - By Robert Kerr














































































































 -  The voyages of Hamilcar or
Himilco, as he is called by some historians, and of Hanno, are the most
celebrated - Page 66
General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels - Volume 18 - By Robert Kerr - Page 66 of 1007 - First - Home

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The Voyages Of Hamilcar Or Himilco, As He Is Called By Some Historians, And Of Hanno, Are The Most Celebrated, Or, Rather, To Speak More Accurately, The Only Voyages Of The Carthaginians Of Which We Possess Any Details, Either With Regard To Their Object Or Consequences.

Himilco, who was on officer in the navy of Carthage, was sent by the senate to explore the western coasts of Europe:

A journal of his voyage, and an account of his discoveries, were, according to the custom of the nation, inscribed in the Carthaginian annals. But the only information respecting them which we now possess, is derived from the writings of the Latin poet Rufus Festus Avienus. This poet flourished under Theodosius, A.D. 450, translated the Phaenomena of Aratus, and Dionysius's Description of the World, and also wrote an original poem, on the sea coasts. In the last he mentions Himilco, and intimates that he saw the original journal of his voyage in the Carthaginian annals. According to the account of Festus, the voyage of Himilco lasted four months, or rather he sailed for the space of four months, towards the north, and arrived at the isles Ostrymnides and the coast of Albion. In the extracts given by Avienus from the journal of Himilco, frequent mention is made of lead and tin, and of ships cased with leather (or, more probably, entirely made of that material, like the coracles still used by the Greenlanders, and even in Wales, for crossing small rivers). In these parts, he adds, the East Rymni lived, with whom the people of Tartessus and Carthage traded:

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