Charon of Lampsacus
Charon of Lampsacus | |
|---|---|
| Native name | Χάρων Λαμψακηνός |
| Occupation | Historian |
| Language | Ancient Greek |
| Nationality | Ionian Greek |
| Period | early 5th century BC |
| Notable works |
|
| Parents | Pythokles (Suda) or Pythes (Pausanias) |
Charon of Lampsacus (Χάρων ὁ Λαμψακηνός) was an Ionian historiographer active in the first half of the 5th century BC, credited with regional histories, a Hellenica, local horoi (chronicles), chronographic lists, and a periplous — all lost and preserved only in fragments and testimonia.[1] The Suda records his patronymic as Pythokles, while Pausanias gives Pythes.[1][2] Dionysius of Halicarnassus places him among historians earlier than Thucydides and before the Peloponnesian War.[3]
Name and identity
Ancient sources identify him as Χάρων Λαμψακηνός ("Charon the Lampsacene"). The Suda transmits Πυθόκλεους (Pythokles) as the father's name; Pausanias cites Πύθης (Pythes).[1][2]
Date
Testimonia converge on activity in the first half of the 5th century BC, sometimes synchronized with the reign of Darius I or the Persian Wars.[1] Dionysius of Halicarnassus lists Charon among pre-Thucydidean historians, fixing a floruit before 431 BC.[3]
Works
The Suda preserves the titles and book-counts of Charon's corpus; independent fragments confirm select items.[1]
| Greek title | English | Books | Genre / scope | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Αἰθιοπικά (Aithiopika) | Aethiopica | — | Ethnographic history of "Ethiopians" | Suda title only.[1] |
| Περσικά (Persika) | Persica | 2 | Persian history, including events around the Ionian Revolt and Mardonius' expedition | Fragments cited in later authors; attested as BNJ 262 Fr. (e.g., F 3, F 10).[1] |
| Ἑλληνικά (Hellēnika) | Hellenica | 4 | Greek history | Suda title; content scope reconstructed from testimonia.[1] |
| Περὶ Λαμψάκου (Peri Lampsakou) | On Lampsacus | 2 | Local history of Lampsacus | Connected with Lampsacene foundation lore preserved in later authors.[1][4] |
| Λιβυκά (Libyka) | Libyca | — | Regional/ethnographic history of Libya | Suda title only.[1] |
| Ὧροι Λαμψακηνῶν (Horoi Lampsakēnōn) | Chronicles of the Lampsacenes | 4 | Local chronicle/annals | Onomastic motifs attested in fragment indices.[1][5] |
| Πρύτανεις [ἢ ἄρχοντας] Λακεδαιμονίων | Prytaneis/Archontes of the Lacedaemonians | — | Chronographic list of Spartan magistrates | Characterized as chronological by the Suda.[1] |
| Κτίσεις πόλεων (Ktiseis poleōn) | Foundations of Cities | 2 | Colonization and foundation narratives | Ktisis material associated in fragments.[1] |
| Κρητικά (Kretika) | Cretica | 3 | Cretan institutions and traditions | Suda notes enumeration of laws attributed to Minos.[1] |
| Περίπλους τῶν ἐκτὸς Ἡρακλέους στηλῶν | Periplus beyond the Pillars of Heracles | — | Periplus of the outer sea | Suda title only.[1] |
Method and style
The fragments indicate a logographic mode built from local traditions, ethnographic excursus, chronological catalogues, and concise narrative reports. The Lampsacene dossier centers civic memory and onomastics; the Persica material records Persian-period events in Ionian contexts. No secure dependence by Herodotus has been demonstrated.[1][3]
Testimonia and selected fragments
| Source | Content synopsis | Likely Charonian work |
|---|---|---|
| Suda, s.v. Χάρων (BNJ 262 T1)[1] | Biographical notice; variant datings; list of titles and book-counts | — |
| Dionysius of Halicarnassus, De Thucydide 5[3] | Lists Charon among historians earlier than Thucydides and before the Peloponnesian War | — |
| Pausanias 10.38.11[2] | Attributes the Naupaktia to Carcinus, citing "Charon, son of Pythes" | Possibly Hellenica |
| Plutarch, Bravery of Women 18–19[4][6] | Lampsacus foundation narrative (Phocaeans; Mandron; his daughter Lampsace) and an explicit "as Charon of Lampsacus relates" | Local history (Horoi or Peri Lampsakou) |
Transmission and reception
All works are lost; the corpus survives through lexicographic entries, antiquarian citations, and anecdotal compilations. The Suda provides the fullest inventory; independent testimonia corroborate the Lampsacene material and the Persica.[1][3] Modern editors file Charon as FGrHist 262; BNJ provides updated text, translation, and commentary.[1]
Editions and scholarship
- Jacoby, Felix (1923–1958). Jacoby, Felix (ed.). Die Fragmente der griechischen Historiker. Vol. I–III. Leiden: Brill.
- Müller, C. (1841). Fragmenta Historicorum Graecorum. Vol. I. Paris: Ambrosio Firmin Didot.
- Ceccarelli, Paola (2016). "Charon of Lampsakos (BNJ 262)" (PDF). Brill's New Jacoby (open access). Retrieved 26 September 2025.
- "Müller–Jacoby Concordance for Charon". DFHG Project. Retrieved 26 September 2025.
Notes
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Ceccarelli, Paola (2016). "Charon of Lampsakos (BNJ 262)" (PDF). Brill's New Jacoby (open access). Retrieved 26 September 2025.
- ^ a b c Pausanias. "Description of Greece 10.38.11". Theoi Project (Loeb translation). Retrieved 26 September 2025.
- ^ a b c d e Schmitt, Rüdiger (2024). "Charon of Lampsacus". Encyclopaedia Iranica. Retrieved 26 September 2025.
- ^ a b Plutarch. "Moralia: Bravery of Women 18–19 (Lampsace)". UChicago Thayer (public-domain Loeb). Retrieved 26 September 2025.
- ^ "Charon 6 (De rebus Lampsaci) – index entries (Blepsus, Lampsace, Mandron)". Digital Fragmenta Historicorum Graecorum (DFHG). Retrieved 26 September 2025.
- ^ "Plutarch, Concerning the Virtues of Women, §18 (Of Lampsace)". ToposText. Retrieved 26 September 2025.