Himilco
Template:Short description Template:Other people Himilco was a Carthaginian navigator and explorer who lived during the late 6th or early 5th century BC, a period of time where Carthage held significant sway over its neighboring regions. Little is known of Himilco himself, but there are ancient sources for his voyages.
Himilco is the first known explorer from the Mediterranean Sea to reach the northwestern shores of Europe. His lost account of his adventures is quoted by Roman writers. The oldest reference to Himilco's voyage is a brief mention in Natural History (2.169a) by the Roman scholar Pliny the Elder.<ref>Pliny the Elder, Natural History 2.169a</ref> Himilco was quoted three times by Rufius Festus Avienius, who wrote Ora Maritima, a poetical account of the geography in the 4th century AD. <ref>Avienus, Rufius Festus and Murphy, J. P. (1977) Ora maritima: or, description of the seacoast from Brittany round to Massilia. Ares Publisher, Template:ISBN</ref>
Himilco sailed to the territory of the Oestrimini tribe living in Portugal, then on to northwestern France, likely in order to trade for tin (to be used for making bronze) and other precious metals. Avienius asserts that the outward journey to the Oestriminis took the Carthaginians four months.<ref name=Pliny>Template:Cite web</ref> Himilco followed the northern Atlantic trade route used by the Tartessians of southern Iberia, according to Avienius.<ref>Avienius, Ora Maritima, verses 112-118</ref>
Records of the voyages of Himilco also mention the islands of Albion and Ierne,<ref>Avienius, Ora Maritima, verses 111-112</ref> the ancient names for Britain and Ireland. There has been speculation that Himilco sailed further north along the Atlantic coast from the Iberian Peninsula to the British Isles,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> as Cornwall was part of the ancient Atlantic tin trade routes.<ref>Hawkins, Christopher (1811) Observations on the Tin Trade of the Ancients in Cornwall. London</ref> However, none of the ancient sources claim that he landed in Britain, nor is there any archeological evidence for direct trade contact with the Carthaginians.<ref name="Champion">Template:Harvp</ref>
Himilco described his journeys as quite harrowing, repeatedly reporting sea monsters and seaweed,<ref>Avienius, V. 113-128</ref> likely in order to deter Greek rivals from competing on their new trade routes. Carthaginian accounts of monsters became one source of the myths discouraging sailing in the Atlantic.<ref>Roller, Duane W. (2006). Through the pillars of Herakles: Greco-Roman exploration of the Atlantic. Taylor & Francis, pp. 27-28. Template:ISBN</ref>