Hecataeus of Miletus (flourished early 5th century bc, Ionia [now in Turkey]) was a groundbreaking Greek author of an early history and geography. When the Persian Empire ruled Asia Minor, Hecataeus tried to dissuade the Ionians from revolt against Persia (500 bc), and in 494, when they were obliged to sue for terms, he was one of the ambassadors to the Persian satrap, whom he persuaded to restore the constitution of the Ionic cities. He was presumably mature by this time; such tasks were not entrusted to young men.
One of Hecataeus’s two known works, the Genealogia (also known as Historiai or Heroologia), seems to have been a systematic account in four books of the traditions and mythology of the Greeks, but comparatively few fragments of it survive. More than 300 fragments (most of them place names), however, remain of the Periodos gēs or Periēgēsis (“Tour Round the World”); it was written in two parts—one covering Europe, the other “Asia” (which included Egypt and North Africa). The work describes the peoples who would be met in voyages around the Mediterranean and Black seas, in a clockwise direction, beginning with the Strait of Gibraltar and ending at Morocco. In diversions he also mentions Scythia, Persia, India, Egypt, and Nubia.
Hecataeus was in general the pioneer in those geographic and ethnographic fields that remained attractive to the Greek historians. His work was used freely by the 5th-century-bc historian Herodotus, who acknowledged it only when he found occasion to complain. That Hecataeus’s literary style was good, though simple, was allowed by the 1st-century-bc rhetorician Dionysius of Halicarnassus and other critics.