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Logographer (history)
Early Greek prose chroniclers and mythographers before Herodotus From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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A logographer in the historiographical sense (λογογράφος, logographos) was an early Greek prose writer of genealogies, local chronicles, and accounts of peoples and places active before and alongside Herodotus. The center of activity lay in Ionia and adjacent islands, and the preferred dialect was Ionic written in a continuous or "running" style (λέξις εἰρομένη).[1][2] Their work systematized mythic traditions into prose narrative — especially city-foundations, ruling families, and ethnography — and supplied material later reworked by classical historians.[3]
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Chronology, geography, and method
Most named figures flourished from the later sixth century BC into the early fifth, with Pherecydes of Athens often treated as the latest representative of the group.[4] Activity concentrates in Miletus, Lesbos, Samos, and adjacent centers that mediated information about the eastern Mediterranean.[5] Typical outputs include genealogical compendia (Genealogiai), local chronicles organized by lists of magistrates, and descriptive "circuits of the earth" (Periēgēsis/Periodos gēs).[6] Aristotle characterizes their syntax as non-periodic, with clauses linked paratactically rather than arranged into balanced periods.[7]
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Transition to classical historiography
Hecataeus of Miletus is credited with early attempts to distinguish mythic narrative from plausible history in the Genealogiai and with assembling a prose geography in the Periēgēsis.[8] Herodotus cites Hecataeus by name and engages with earlier prose traditions, transforming logographic material into longer investigative narratives (logoi) integrated within a single historical design.[9][10] After Herodotus the distinct label "logographer" recedes, though Hellenistic local historians and chronographers revive similar formats.[11]
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Notable logographers
Writers highlighted by Dionysius of Halicarnassus (On Thucydides 5) as especially well known are marked ✓ in the final column.
Greek terminology
Ancient usage applies λογογράφος to early prose writers; λογοποιός (logopoios, "maker of stories/speeches") appears as a near-synonym in discussions of pre-Herodotean prose.[12] The label contrasts with poetic producers of narrative and with the later, technical sense of "logographer" for courtroom speechwriters.[13]
Sources and testimonia
Key ancient discussions and citations include Dionysius of Halicarnassus (On Thucydides 5), Aristotle (Rhetoric 1409a on λέξις εἰρομένη), and Herodotus' named references to Hecataeus.[14][15][16] Fragments are collected in F. Jacoby's Fragmente der griechischen Historiker and updated with commentary in Brill's New Jacoby.[17][18]
See also
References
Further reading
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