Theches: an elusive mountain
View/ Open
Date
2023Author
G. Brennan and J. Tuplin, Shane, Christopher
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
This article deals with the location of Mount Theches, the vantage point from which Xenophon’s Ten Thousand
famously got their first sight of the sea after a long and arduous march across eastern Anatolia. It discusses what the
written sources can and cannot tell us about this iconic spot, comments on the currently favoured identification
(stressing its dependence on an assumption about the route the army followed to and from the vantage point), and
presents three other places that can come into contention if different assumptions are made about the route. The aim
is not to insist that one or other of these is the correct solution but rather to underline the point that, since we do not
(and are never likely to) know how the Ten Thousand approached Theches, and since there are many points in the
Pontic Mountains behind Trabzon from which the sea can be glimpsed in the far distance, the identity of Theches is
a problem that does not admit of more than conjectural solution. This prompts broader reflections on the textual and
the topographical, and the relationship between landscape and narrative.
Collections
- Articles [3]