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CASSITERIDES (from the Gr. Kavo-irepos, tin, i.e. " Tin-islands ") , in See also: ancient geography the name of islands regarded as being situated somewhere near the west coasts of See also: Europe
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See also: Herodotus (430 B.C.) had dimly heard of them
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Later writers, See also: Posidonius, Diodorus, See also: Strabo and others, See also: call them smallish islands off (Strabo says, some way off) the See also: north-west See also: coast of See also: Spain, which contained tin mines, or, as Strabo says, tin and See also: lead mines—though a passage in Diodorus derives the name rather from their nearness to the tin districts of north-west Spain
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While See also: geographical knowledge of the west was still scanty and the secrets of the tin-See also: trade were still successfully guarded by the See also: seamen of Gades and others who dealt in the See also: metal, the Greeks knew only that tin came to them by See also: sea from the far west, and the idea of tin-producing islands easily arose
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Later, when the west"was better explored, it was found that tin actually came from two regions, north-west Spain and See also: Cornwall
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Neither of these could be called " small islands " or described as off the north-west coast of Spain, and so the Cassiterides were not identified with either by the See also: Greek and See also: Roman geographers
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Instead, they became a third, See also: ill-understood source of tin, conceived of as distinct from Spain or Britain
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See also: Modern writers have perpetuated the error that the Cassiterides were definite spots, and have made many attempts to identify them
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Small islands off the coast of north-west Spain, the headlands of that same coast, the Scillies, Cornwall, the See also: British Isles as a whole, have all in turn been suggested
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But none suits the conditions
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Neither the See also: Spanish islands nor the Scillies contain tin, at least in serious quantities
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Neither Britain nor Spain can be called " small islands off the north-west of Spain."
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It seems most probable, therefore, that the name Cassiterides represents the first vague knowledge of the Greeks that tin was found overseas somewhere in or off western Europe . |
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