Los nueve libros de la Historia (1 de 2)

audiobook

Los nueve libros de la Historia (1 de 2)

by Herodotus

ES·~16 hours·10 chapters

Chapters

10 total

Índice

0:01

Los nueve libros de la Historia (1 de 2)

3:27

PRÓLOGO DEL TRADUCTOR.

8:11

NOTICIA SOBRE EL TRADUCTOR.

7:28

LIBRO PRIMERO.

3:51:14

LIBRO SEGUNDO.

3:27:31

LIBRO TERCERO.

3:29:47

LIBRO CUARTO.

3:14:37

ÍNDICE.

4:49

NOTAS

1:54:01

Description

Born into a noble family in the bustling port of Halicarnassus, the chronicler known today as the father of history set out early to escape the shadow of tyranny and to master the Ionic dialect. His wanderings took him across the great lands of the ancient world—through the deserts of Syria and Palestine, the Nile’s banks in Egypt, the rugged terrain of Greece, the steppes of Scythia, and even to the colonies of Magna Graecia in Italy. In each place he listened to local stories, measured distances, and recorded the customs that shaped the peoples he encountered.

The result is a sweeping nine‑book narrative that weaves together travelogue, ethnography, and investigative storytelling. Herodotus balances marvels of myth with careful questioning, inviting listeners to weigh hearsay against observation. This timeless work offers a vivid portrait of a world on the brink of change, where curiosity and a love of knowledge drive a lone traveler to preserve the memory of distant cultures.

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Details

Language

es

Duration

~16 hours (941K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Original publisher

Madrid: Imprenta Central a cargo de Víctor Saiz, 1878.

Credits

Ramón Pajares Box. (This file was produced from images generously made available by Biblioteca Digital Floridablanca, Fondo antiguo de la Universidad de Murcia.)

Release date

2024-01-19

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Herodotus

Herodotus

-484–-430

Often called the "Father of History," this pioneering Greek writer turned war, travel, politics, and storytelling into one sweeping account of the ancient world. His work still feels lively today because it mixes big events with vivid details about the people and places behind them.

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