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greek-geographyfeatured in 13 works

Nomoi (Customs of Peoples)

The ethnographic habit of cataloguing each people's customs — their laws, dress, food, worship, and rites of death — on the principle that 'custom is king of all.'

Nomoi are a people's customs and laws, and comparing them systematically is the heart of Greek ethnography: describing how each nation marries, eats, dresses, worships, and buries its dead, and noting that every people believes its own ways are best. Herodotus (5th century BCE) pioneered this comparative description and famously quoted Pindar's line that 'custom is king of all' — a near-relativist observation about cultural difference. Later geographers and historians such as Strabo and Diodorus Siculus carried the method forward.

How it traveled

  1. De aere, aquis, locis
    Kos · -370
    explains
  2. Geographiae Chrestomathia
    Amaseia · 24
    explains
  3. Varia Historia
    Rome
    explains
  4. De Rubro Mari
    explains
  5. Praeparatio Evangelica
    explains
  6. Apotelesmatica (= Tetrabiblos)
    Alexandria
    explains
  7. Antiquitates Romanae
    Rome
    explains
  8. De abstinentia
    Rome
    explains
  9. Epitome Historiarum
    Constantinople (Istanbul)
    explains
  10. Contra Celsum
    explains
  11. De Natura Animalium
    Rome
    explains
  12. Orationes
    Prusa
    explains
  13. Fragmenta
    explains

Key passages(20)

Fragments & Testimonia · Herodotus

Very high

Varia Historia · Aelian

Very high

Ονειροκριτικά · Artemidorus

Very high
Very high
Very high
Very high

Fragmenta Moralia · Chrysippus

Very high
Very high
Very high

Geographiae Chrestomathia · Anonymous

Very high
Very high

Apotelesmatica (= Tetrabiblos) · Claudius Ptolemaeus

High

De aere, aquis, locis · Hippocrates

High

De aere, aquis, locis · Hippocrates

High

De Natura Animalium · Aelian

High
High
High
High
High
High