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COSMAS

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Source
Encyclopaedia Britannica (1911) / britannica_1911
License
public_domain
Chunk ID
1911:cosmas:b17c62219e69
Section
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sha256
Stored Hash
57a8709561fd36ca0104dffe47aee056a80ba919f8efc5d15316c1e8327f35fa
Computed Hash
57a8709561fd36ca0104dffe47aee056a80ba919f8efc5d15316c1e8327f35fa
Normalizer
ggnorm 1.0
Observed
2026-02-08 18:42:29
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Verified Text

cosmas, of alexandria, surnamed from his maritime experiences _indicopleustes_, merchant and traveller, flourished during the 6th century a.d. the surname is inaccurate, since he never reached india proper; further, it is doubtful whether cosmas is a family name, or merely refers to his reputation as a cosmographer. in his earlier days he had sailed on the red sea and the indian ocean, visiting abyssinia and socotra and apparently also the persian gulf, western india and ceylon. he subsequently became a monk, and about 548, in the retirement of a sinai cloister, wrote a work called _topographia christiana_. its chief object is to denounce the false and heathen doctrine of the rotundity of the earth, and to vindicate the scriptural account of the world. photius, who had read it, calls it a "commentary on the octateuch" (meaning the eight books of ptolemy's great geographical work; according to some, the first eight books of the old testament). according to cosmas the earth is a rectangular plane, covered by the vaulted roof of the firmament, above which lies heaven. in the centre of the plane is the inhabited earth, surrounded by ocean, beyond which lies the paradise of adam. the sun revolves round a conical mountain to the north--round the summit in summer, round the base in winter, which accounts for the difference in the length of the day. cosmas is supposed by some to have been a nestorian. although not to be commended from a theological standpoint, the _topographia_ contains some curious information. especially to be noticed is the description of a marble seat discovered by him at adulis (zula) in abyssinia, with two inscriptions recounting the heroic deeds and military successes of ptolemy euergetes and an axumitic king. it also contains in all probability the oldest christian maps. from allusions in the _topographia_ cosmas seems to have been the author of a larger cosmography, a treatise on the motions of the stars, and commentaries on the psalms and canticles. photius (_cod._ 36) speaks contemptuously of the style and language of cosmas, and throws doubt upon his truthfulness. but the author himself expressly disclaims any claims to literary elegance, which in fact he considers unsuited to a christian circle of readers, and the accuracy of his statements has been confirmed by later travellers. the _topographia_ will be found in migne, _patrologia graeca_, lxxxviii.; an edition by g. siefert is promised in the teubner series. see h. gelzer, "kosmas der indienfahrer," in _jahrbucher fur protestantische theologie_, ix. (1883) and c. r. beazley, _the dawn of modern geography_, i. (1897). there is an english translation, with introduction and notes, by j. w. mccrindle (1897), published by the hakluyt society.