Fabled Shore - From The Pyrenees To Portugal
English

About The Book

A Greek mariner from Marseilles compiled in the sixth century B.C. a topographical sailing book of his voyage from the Lands of Tin in the northern seas down the western coast of Portugal and round the Sacred Cape and so along the southern coast of the Iberian peninsula through the Pillars and along the Mediterranean coast to Marseilles his home. The later part of this sailing book from the Tartessos region (near Cadiz) to Marseilles had great detail describing each bay each cape each port for the benefit of those Greek merchant mariners who adventured and trafficked down that far and fabulous coast to the Pillars of Hercules and beyond these into the dark and questionable Atlantic where the silver mountains stood back from the Tartessian shore. From this sailing-log or rather from some later Greek version of it the late Roman poet Rufus Festus Avienus made towards the end of the fourth century A.D. the poem that he called Ora Maritima - dull and prosy verse enough but fascinating material; to those making part of the same journey every line has interest. And from Avienus I had thought to borrow the title of this travel book. But it did not go down well with my publishers for the booksellers believed that their clients would take it for a girls name and when they came to read the book be profoundly disappointed and return it. So I renounced Ora Maritima for a title less deceiving. Fabled Shore is a true description of this long strange coast and its haunted hinterland to which Homer sent Odysseus voyaging where in the regions about Tartessos dark Tartarus was placed and the Elysian plains the abode of the blest at the ends of the earth where life is easiest. No snow is there nor great storm nor ever any rain; but always Oceanus sends forth the breezes of clear-blowing Zephyrus. That as Strabo observed is obviously Iberia. As to the Islands of the Blest they lie opposite Cadiz. And it was in the Cadiz region too that Herakles killed Geryon and drove away his cattle. Herakles indeed was the hero of all this shore; he sought the Hesperides and their golden apples off it; and he it was who clove in two the bridge of land that joined Africa to Spain so that to this day its two halves are called the Pillars of Hercules. Indeed most Greek legends were at one time placed in that far western land that stretched mysterious and unknown beyond the Pillars and the familiar Mediterranean along the fabulous Outer Ocean to the Sacred Cape.
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