Geography
Geographica — the inhabited world in seventeen books
Tradition: Hellenistic geography and Stoic philosophy
Geography as the philosopher's discipline — the known world surveyed with Stoic cosmology and empirical rigour
Strabo's Geography is the most comprehensive surviving geographical work from antiquity. Books I–II present a theoretical introduction, discussing the shape of the earth, the methods of geography, and critical assessments of predecessors (Eratosthenes, Posidonius, Polybius). Books III–XVII survey the known world region by region: Iberia, Gaul, Britain, Italy, Greece, Asia Minor, India, Mesopotamia, Egypt, and North Africa. Strabo integrates physical geography with ethnography, history, and mythology, arguing that geography is a branch of philosophy requiring broad learning. The work survives nearly complete — a rare fortune — while the rival geographies of Eratosthenes and Posidonius are known only through fragments, many of them preserved by Strabo himself.
Author
Editions cited
- The Geography of Strabo (Horace Leonard Jones, Loeb Classical Library, 8 vols, 1917–1932)
- Strabo's Geography: An English Translation (Duane W. Roller, Cambridge, 2014)
- Strabo: Geography (Stefan Radt, critical edition, 10 vols, Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2002–2011)
School Embodiments
Strabo's theoretical framework is Stoic: geography reveals the providential ordering of the earth for human habitation. The cosmos is a rational whole, and the geographer discerns its logos.
"Geography is rightly regarded as a branch of philosophy." (I.1.1)
Despite the Stoic framework, Strabo insists on first-hand observation (autopsia) and critically evaluates his literary sources against known geographical facts.
"I have traversed the earth from Armenia to Etruria, and from the Black Sea to the borders of Ethiopia." (II.5.11)
Strabo synthesises the entire Hellenistic geographical tradition: Eratosthenes, Hipparchus, Posidonius, and Polybius.
Books I–II are a sustained critical dialogue with Eratosthenes and Posidonius as predecessors.
The Geography serves Roman imperial needs: it describes the provinces, resources, and peoples of the empire for administrators and generals.
"Geography is useful primarily for the activities of statesmen and generals." (I.1.16)
Internal Tensions
The central tension is between Strabo's Stoic providentialism — geography reveals rational design — and his empirical data, which often resists neat providential interpretation. His treatment of Homer as a geographer with hidden truths sits uneasily beside his criticism of Homer's geographical errors.
I. Time
Cosmic time is infinite (Stoic); geographical time is linear and marked by geological and historical change. Strabo records how coastlines shift, rivers change course, and cities rise and fall.
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II. Space
Space is Strabo's subject. The earth is spherical (curved), three-dimensional, and the oikoumene is a finite, mappable portion of it. Strabo accepts Eratosthenes's measurement of the earth's circumference.
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III. Matter
Mountains, rivers, soils, and minerals are catalogued as real substances. Geological change conserves matter: land becomes sea, sea becomes land.
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IV. Observer
The geographer combines literary research with personal travel. Knowledge is mediated and cumulative. The Stoic cosmos is providentially ordered but observed from an embodied, terrestrial position.
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V. Energy
Geological forces — volcanism, erosion, seismic activity — are recorded as empirical facts. They are finite and irreversible in immediate effect.
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VI. Information
Geographical knowledge is conserved and transmitted through literary tradition. Strabo explicitly aims to preserve what Eratosthenes and Posidonius discovered.
Attributes
Personas that cite this work
Personas with the nearest attribute fingerprint
Historical figures whose own classification on the same six-dimensional grid lands closest to this work's. Computed by attribute-agreement on coordinates both address.
Computed school proximity
The work's attribute fingerprint scored against all schools using the same quiz scorer. Useful as a sanity check on the hand-curated embodiments above.
How Geography resolves each dilemma
51 resolved positions across 4 dimensions, including 3 distinctive where the majority of schools go the other way · 6 unaligned.
Each dimension is sorted so minority positions come first. Mainstream positions are folded into an expandable list.
Time · 9 dilemmas · 3 distinctive
Persistence, the future, and the direction of becoming.