The Phoenician Circumnavigation of Africa
600 BCE
The Greek historian Herodotus records that around 600 BCE, Pharaoh Necho II of Egypt commissioned a Phoenician fleet to circumnavigate Africa — sailing south from the Red Sea, around the Cape of Good Hope, and back through the Strait of Gibraltar. The voyage took three years. Herodotus himself doubted the account because the sailors reported that the sun was on their right (north) as they rounded the southern tip of Africa — which is exactly what would happen in the Southern Hemisphere.