Next
to being the author of the most accurate coastal handbook
of Turkish Waters, Rod Heikell has a solid background and
ongoing interest in epistemology, the philosopy of scientific
progress. As expressed in my brief
article about Skylax, this ancient voyager seems to
be a milestone in the history of "handling science"
and Rod had noticed my pages. At a wonderful evening in
Gumusluk Rod, Lou and myself had the opportunity to let
our phantasies go around Skylax, Piri Reis and others, who
bothered to write down geographic observations several thousend
years ago and enrich our lives today.
Later,
Rod sent to me two mails, which, until we shall know more,
I will copy below without comments, but with some emphasizing:
The
first mail is of 25 October 2004:
"Dear
Yusuf,
At odd moments I have been pursuing the Skylax story. I
went to your web site and I think there is a fundamental
error here over Skylax. You mention Pseudo-Skylax
as a seperate person, but I believe that the Periplus of
Pseudo Skylax, which is the one that survives, is the same
Skylax of Karyanda. It is called Pseudo Skylax I believe
because it is not the original written by Skylax, but a
later copy (as most of what we have from this time is).
I have contacted a few people in the antiquity departments
of various universities for enlightenment. (...) The Periplus
of Skylax (or Pseudo Skylax) by the way has nothing on his
voyage to India, but is solely a pilot for the Mediterranean
and the Black Sea. We only know Skylax went to India through
Herodotus (as the earliest reference) and he could at times
be a little inaccurate in as much as he reported things
he heard as his own experiences.
Anyway thought you might be interested."
and
then on 28 October 2004 upon a reply from the University
of Leeds:
"(...)
the question of authorship and just who Skylax was is as
murky as you get. Wonderful academic detective work: I love
it.
Anyway below is the reply fron Graham Shipley on Skylax
and Pseudo-Skylax:
There is a vast literature (in relation to the size
of the text!) about the authorship of the work, which survives
in only one medieval copy and a few later manuscripts that
derive from it (if I remember right). There it is under
the name of Skylax of Karyanda, who is mentioned by Herodotos
in the 5th century BC and lived at the end of the 6th. But
evidence from within the text proves that it must date from
the mid-4th century BC, in which case we simply do not know
the name of its author; hence the appellation
'Pseudo-'. The question is, does any part of the text originate
earlier, and is any part the work of the real Skylax or
not? There are diametrically opposed views on this!
Independently,
between 7 and 11 fragments (i.e. quotations or paraphrases
in later authors) have been identified from the original
Periplous of Skylax of Karyanda, some referring to India.
Does
this help you? What is your interest in, and involvement
with, Pseudo-Skylax?"
The
really interested may click
here to get to a preliminary translation into
English of the Periplus
of Pseudo-Skylax by Prof. Graham Shipley.