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A periplus in the ancient navigation of Phoenicians,
Greeks, and Romans is a manuscript document
that lists in order the ports and coastal landmarks, with approximate distances between, that the captain of a vessel could
expect to find along a shore. Several examples of a periplus have survived.
The Periplus of Hanno the Navigator,
(q.v.) a 6th century BCE Carthaginian colonist and explorer, described the
coast of Africa from present-day Morocco deep into the Gulf of Guinea.
The Periplus of the Erythraean
Sea (q.v.) was written by a Romanized Alexandrian in the
2nd century CE. It gives the shoreline itinerary of the Red (Erythraean) Sea, starting each time at the port of Berenice. Beyond the Red Sea, the manuscript describes the coast of India as far as the
Ganges River and the east coast of Africa (called Azania).
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