Herodotus (484408 B.C.)

Herodotus, the oldest historian of Greece, and the “Father of History,” born at Halicarnassus, in Caria, between 490 and 480 B.C.; travelled over Asia Minor, Egypt, and Syria as far as Babylon, and in his old age recorded with due fidelity the fruits of his observations and inquiries, the main object of his work being to relate the successive stages of the strife between the free civilisation of Greece and the despotic barbarism of Persia for the sovereignty of the world, an interest in which Alexander the Great drew sword in the century following (484408 B.C.).

Definition taken from The Nuttall Encyclopædia, edited by the Reverend James Wood (1907)

Herodians * Herophilus
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Hermes
Hermes Trismegistus
Hermi`one
Hermodeus
Hernia
Hero
Hero
Hero
Herod
Herodians
Herodotus
Herophilus
Herrera, Antonio
Herrera, Fernando de
Herrera, Francisco
Herrick, Robert
Herrnhut
Herschel, Sir John
Herschel, Lucretia
Herschel, Sir William
Hertford

Nearby

Herodotus in Chalmer’s 1812 Dictionary of Biography