Euthymenes
Euthymenes of Massalia (/juːˈθɪməˌniːz/; Ancient Greek: Εὐθυμένης ὁ Μασσαλιώτης Euthymenēs ho Massaliōtēs; fl. early sixth century BCE) was a Greek explorer from Massalia (modern Marseille), who explored the coast of West Africa as far, apparently, as a great river, of which the outflow made the sea at its mouth fresh or brackish. His published accounts have not survived, but seem to have been known, at least at secondhand, by Plutarch, who writes "Euthymenes the Massilian concludes that the Nile is filled by Oceanus and that sea which is outward from it, the latter being naturally sweet."[1] Euthymenes thought that this river was the Nile, but the river in question may have been the Senegal.[2] Seneca the Younger also knew Euthymenes' account, which he reported in Naturales quaestiones (iv.2.22) and refuted, for various reasons:
The statue of Euthymenes (by Auguste Ottin) is featured on the façade of the Marseille bourse along with the one of Pytheas. Notes
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