<P> The primary source for Hanno's expedition is a Greek periplus, supposedly a translation of a tablet Hanno is reported to have hung up on his return to Carthage in the temple of Ba'al Hammon, whom Greek writers identified with Kronos . The full title translated from Greek is The Voyage of Hanno, commander of the Carthaginians, round the parts of Libya beyond the Pillars of Heracles, which he deposited in the Temple of Kronos . </P> <P> In the fifth century, the text was translated into a rather mediocre Greek . It was not a complete rendering; several abridgments were made . The abridged translation was copied several times by Greek and Byzantine clerks . At the moment, there are only two copies, dating back to the ninth and the fourteenth centuries . </P> <P> The first of these manuscripts is known as the Palatinus Graecus 398 and can be studied in the University Library of Heidelberg . The other text is in the Codex Vatopedinus 655, found in the Vatopedi monastery in Mount Athos, Greece, and dated to the beginning of the 14th century; the codex is divided between the British Library and the French Bibliothèque Nationale . </P> <P> The text was known to Herodotus, Pliny the Elder, and Arrian of Nicomedia . </P>

Who is the famous 6th century phoenician explorer