Pausanias’ Messenian Itinerary and the Journeys of the Past
Abstract
Messene was unusual among ancient poleis. It was one of the few major settlements on the
Greek mainland to be founded in the Hellenistic period. Moreover, on account of this,
its claim to a culturally authoritative past rooted in the mythic period could not rest on
suppositions about the continuity of knowledge handed down through the continuation
of civic, cultic, and communal institutions. This chapter examines how Pausanias’ account
of Messenia (book four of his Periegesis) approaches this dilemma by making knowledge
both an artefact preserved unchanged in texts, and a conceptual possession encountered and
attained through travel. It goes on to argue that the interplay between these two forms of
knowledge is specifically relevant to this text, since the Periegesis also serves as a fixed, written
object, which nonetheless offers opportunities for autonomous exploration and experience
to the hodological reader-traveler.
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Paths of Knowledge: Interconnection(s) between knowledge and journey in the Greco-Roman World
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Open Access
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Creative Commons Licence CC BY-NC 3.0 DE