Juba II


Imagem: Tenerife

"By Juba’s day whatever scattered bits of information of early exploration into the Atlantic that existed were perhaps as inconsistent and little understood as they are today. Strabo, a meticulous if opinionated researcher, was surprisingly vague about the African coast, and displayed no knowledge of the voyages of either Hanno or Polybios. When Juba became king, most reports on the Atlantic coast were over a century old and tended to be ignored, or even to be rejected as mythical. Thus one of his priorities as geographer king was to provide Augustan Rome with definitive information about this portion of his new kingdom. His interest may have been heightened because Polybios, one of the more recent explorers, had been received at the Numidian court in the days of Juba’s great-great-greatgrandfather Massinissa. Learning that the Atlantic coast was a way to India, the king may also have begun to see the commercial possibilities that this implied." (1)

Juba II (48 a.C. - 24 d.C.) será uma das personagens incontornáveis quando enquadrarmos as fontes remotas dos portugueses, nomeadamente quando os vemos recorrerem a Plínio (23-79).

(1) ROLLER, D. (2003), The World of Juba II and Kleopatra Selene. Routledge, New York

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