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Prior to the major European voyages of discovery
in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, European
knowledge of other cultures was limited and often
second hand. However, many seafaring cultures
of the ancient world had a wealth of information
about world geography and culture. Most information
was gleaned from merchants looking for trade routes,
or kings looking for territory to conquer.
As early as 2750 B.C., Egyptians were sailing
their papyrus boats in search of spices, precious
stones, and other valuables. Starting in the seventh
century B.C., Phoenician merchant seamen were
searching the Mediterranean Sea, the Atlantic
Ocean and the African coast for opportunities
to increase their vast economic empire. Through
both military victories and trading expeditions,
the ancient Greeks expanded their knowledge of
geography by adding England and India to their
maps by the fourth century B.C. Medieval Arabian
travelers knew much of the geography of Asia well
before Europeans made their presence known in
that area. Chinese explorers anticipated European
exploration in the South Pacific by almost half
a century. Polynesian seafarers, using their own
traditional means of open-ocean navigation, explored
the islands in the South Pacific well before the
time of recorded history.
ancient
world
egypt | phoenicians | greece | china | polynesia | arab
explorers
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