Iambulus
Iambulus or Jambulus (Ancient Greek: Ἰάμβουλος, Iamboulos) was an ancient Greek merchant and the likely author of a Utopian novel about the strange forms and figures of the inhabitants of the "Islands of the Sun".
His work did not survive in the original, but only as a fragment in Diodorus Siculus' Bibliotheca historica. Diodorus, who seems only to have transcribed lambulus in his description of the Indians, relates that lambulus was made a slave by the Ethiopians, and sent by them to a happy island in the eastern seas, where he acquired his knowledge. The whole account, however, has the appearance of a fiction; and the description which lambulus gave of the east, which he had probably never seen, consisted of nothing but fabulous absurdities.[1]
Iambulus is mentioned in the humorous novel, "True Story" by Lucian as writing "a lot of surprising things about the Atlantic Ocean".[2] He is listed in the preface as an inspiration.
See also
References
- ↑ This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Leonhard Schmitz, Leonhard (1870). "Iambulus". In Smith, William. Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology. 2. p. 550.
- ↑ True History, page 3
Further reading
- Fernandez Robbio, Matías S. (2010). online "La travesía de Yambulo por las Islas del Sol (D.S., II.55-60). Introducción a su estudio, traducción y notas" Check
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value (help). MORUS – Utopia e Renascimento. 7: 27–41. - Rose, H. J. (1939). "The date of Jambulus". The Classical Quarterly. 33: 9–10.
- Winston, David (1976). "Iambulus' Island of the Sun and Hellenistic Literary Utopias". Science-Fiction Studies. 3: 219–227.
- "True History & Lucius or The Ass" by Lucian, translated by Paul Turner, Indiana University Press, 1974.