Pomponius Mela Article Index for
Pomponius
Website Links For
Mela
 

Information About

Pomponius Mela




His little work (''De situ orbis libri III.'') is a mere compendium, occupying less than one hundred pages of ordinary print, dry in style and deficient in method, but of pure Latinity, and occasionally relieved by pleasing word-pictures. Excepting the geographical parts of Pliny 's ''Historia naturalis'' (where Mela is cited as an important authority) the ''De situ orbis'' is the only formal treatise on the subject in classical Latin .

Nothing is known of the author except his name and birthplace--the small town of Tingentera or Cingentera in southern Spain , on Algeciras Bay (Mela ii. 6, § 96; but the text is here corrupt). The date of his writing may be approximately fixed by his allusion (iii. 6 § 49) to a proposed British expedition of the reigning emperor, almost certainly that of Claudius in AD 43. That this passage cannot refer to Julius Caesar is proved by several references to events of Augustus 's reign, especially to certain new names given to Spanish towns. Mela has been without probability identified by some with L. Annaeus Mela of Corduba, son of Seneca The Rhetorician , and brother of The Great Seneca .

The general views of the ''De situ orbis'' mainly agree with those current among Greek writers from Eratosthenes to Strabo ; the latter was probably unknown to Mela. But Pomponius is unique among ancient geographers in that, after dividing the earth into five zones, of which two only were habitable, he asserts the existence of antichthones, inhabiting the southern temperate zone inaccessible to the folk of the northern temperate regions from the unbearable heat of the intervening torrid belt. On the divisions and boundaries of Europe , Asia and Africa , he repeats Eratosthenes; like all classical geographers from Alexander The Great (except Ptolemy ) he regards the Caspian Sea as an inlet of the Northern Ocean, corresponding to the Persian and Arabian ( Red Sea ) gulfs on the south.


Mela's descriptive method is peculiar and inconvenient. Instead of treating each continent separately he begins at the Straits Of Gibraltar , and describes the countries adjoining the south coast of the Mediterranean ; then he moves round by Syria and Asia Minor to the Black Sea , and so returns to Spain along the north shore of the Euxine, Propontis , etc. After treating the Mediterranean islands, he next takes the ocean Littoral --to west, north, east and south successively--from Spain and Gaul round to India, from India to Persia , Arabia and Ethiopia ; and so again works back to Spain round South Africa . Like most classical geographers he conceives the Dark Continent as surrounded by sea and not extending very far south.

The first edition of Mela was published at Milan in 1471; the first good edition was by Vadianus (Basel, 1522), superseded by those of Voss (1658), J Gronovius (1685 and 1696), A Gronovius (1722 and 1728), and Tzschucke (1806-1807), in seven parts (Leipzig; the most elaborate of all); G Paithey's (Berlin, 1867), gives the best text. The English trans. by Arthur Golding (1585), is famous; see also EH Bunbury, ''Ancient Geography'', ii. 352?368, and D Detlefsen, ''Quellen und Forschungen zur alten Gesch. und Geog.'' (1908).


EXTERNAL LINK

  • Pomponius Mela (English translation from the 1748 revised edition by the younger Gronovius)




REFERENCES