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periplus and from
The Periplus of the Erythraean Sea or Periplus of the Red Sea (, ) is a Greco-Roman periplus, written in Greek, describing navigation and trading opportunities from Roman Egyptian ports like Berenice along the coast of the Red Sea, and others along Northeast Africa and the Indian subcontinent.
The fourth century CE Roman poet on geographical subjects, Rufus Avienus Festus, in Ora Maritima (" Seacoasts "), a poem inspired by a much earlier Greek mariners ' periplus, records that Oestriminis was peopled by the Oestrimni, a people that had lived there for a long time, who had to run away from their native lands after an invasion of serpents.
The periplus was an itinerary from landmark to landmark of the ports along a coast, a forerunner of the guide.

periplus and on
The mainstream today recognizes periplus as a genre of navigational literature and concedes that there was only one work, " on the Ocean ," which was based on a periplus.
One, on Europe, is essentially a periplus of the Mediterranean, describing each region in turn, reaching as far north as Scythia.

periplus and which
" Though Schoff is unclear about which " Berenice " he is referring to and several possibilities exist for " Berenice ", it is actually Berenice Troglodytica which is documented, discussed at length and vividly described within the periplus text itself.
A periplus was also an ancient naval manoeuvre in which attacking triremes would outflank or encircle the defenders in order to attack them in the rear.

periplus and is
Each book is organized in the manner of a periplus, a point-to-point coastal survey.
The form of the periplus is at least as old as the earliest Greek historian, the Ionian Hecataeus of Miletus.
The Periplus of Pseudo-Scylax ( or Pseudo-Skylax, often abbreviated as Ps .- Scylax or Ps .- Skylax ) is an ancient Greek periplus ( periplous, ' circumnavigation ') often included among the ranks of ' minor ' Greek geographers.
It is the Eirinon of the periplus of the Erythraean sea.

periplus and possibly
The few fragments that have survived indicate that this material was a significant part of the periplus, possibly kept as the ship's log.

periplus and .
As the periplus was a sort of ship's log, he probably did reach the Vistula.
A periplus was a manuscript document that listed, in order, the ports and coastal landmarks, with approximate intervening distances, that the captain of a vessel could expect to find along a shore.
In that sense the periplus was a type of log.
This poeticised periplus resulted in a confused amateur's account of the coastal regions of the known world.
In Amsterdam, the periplus was published by Gerardus Vossius in 1639 and then by John Hudson in his Geographi Graeci Minores.
In Paris, the periplus was published in 1826 by Gail and in Berlin it was published in 1831 by R. H. Klausen.
A periplus such as the Periplus of the Erythraean Sea was a manuscript document that listed, in order, the ports and coastal landmarks, with approximate intervening distances, that the captain of a vessel could expect to find along a shore.

ship and from
My friends and I come from a ship which was destroyed by fire.
A year later another Salem ship returned from Burma with a cargo of gum lacquer which nobody wanted to buy.
The order to abandon ship was given, but cries of pain could be heard from the wounded below decks.
Following a talk by Mr. Clark at the New York State Natural Food Associates Convention, a man from the audience offered to ship his unsprayed apples to the school from Vermont.
Plane radios were not yet available, and once in the air, Fogg flew his ship by compass, a good memory for landmarks as seen from above, and a capacity for dead reckoning and quick computation.
Once the soldiers from the barracks had to hold the ship from blowing away while Fogg revved the engine and got the tail up.
On the third voyage, a near-mutiny rising from a quarrel between Dutch and English crew members on the Half Moon had almost forced him to head the ship back to Amsterdam in Mid-Atlantic.
With difficulty, Hudson persuaded him to rejoin the ship, and they sailed from Iceland.
Not long after moving in she turned up a richly carved desk, hewed from the timbers of the British ship H.M.S. Resolute and presented to President Hayes by Queen Victoria.
I know as well as the next man that a ship is called from the rigging she carries, where the live wind blows, and not from the hull.
He said that drawings of the Dreadnought and printed details about the ship were found reproduced in an undeveloped roll of film taken from Lonsdale when he was arrested with the two civil servants outside the Old Vic theater Saturday afternoon, Jan. 7.
At the very moment that every attempt is being made to take management out from under the irrationality of anti-trust legislation, a drive is on to abolish collective bargaining under the guise of extending the anti-monopoly laws to unions who want no more than to continue to set wages in the same way that ship operators set freight rates.
Virginia coal, delivered by ship in Wales, will be about $2.80 a ton cheaper than Welsh coal delivered by rail from nearby mines.
Her brain and intelligence controlled every function from navigation to such loading as a scout ship of her class needed.
Ra II, a ship built from papyrus, was successfully sailed across the Atlantic by Thor Heyerdahl proving that it was possible to cross the Atlantic from Africa using such boats in early epochs of history.
The last film is not based on any Christie work but displays a few plot elements from They Do It With Mirrors ( viz., the ship is used as a reform school for wayward boys and one of the teachers uses them as a crime force ), and there is a kind of salute to The Mousetrap.
Most coastal stations have offshore anchorages, and supplies are transferred from ship to shore by small boats, barges, and helicopters.
This is linked to the term to weigh anchor, meaning to lift the anchor from the sea bed, allowing the ship or boat to move.
He has a ship that can be rolled up like a tablecloth when not used, he relies on two talking ravens to gather intelligence, and he consults the talking head of a dwarf for prophecy ( he carries it around long since detached from its body ) ( Section 7 ).
A passage in Voltaire's Candide has the book's eponymous main character meet the deposed Ahmed III while on a ship from Venice to Constantinople.
In these versions, when Ajax came to the Capharean Rocks on the coast of Euboea, his ship was wrecked in a fierce storm, he himself was lifted up in a whirlwind and impaled with a flash of rapid fire from Athena in his chest, and his body thrust upon sharp rocks, which afterwards were called the rocks of Ajax.

ship and Marseilles
The barrels were collected and transported to Marseilles, where they were loaded on a ship bound for the United States.
In consequence of a high-spirited quarrel with his captain, he was put on shore at Marseilles, where, finding an old friend of his father's in command of a merchant ship, he was able to get a passage to Lisbon and so home.
In December 1855 Lyons went to Marseilles to attend peace conference for the Crimea, leaving his ship to sail to Malta.

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