What is the earliest mention of space travel?

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You should define more precisely what do you mean by "space travel" when you are talking about pre-Galileo times.

For example, Elijah, the prophet, was taken to heavens in a chariot of fire, according to the Bible (2 Kings 2:3-9). Mohammed also traveled to heavens, on a winged horse, according to Koran.

A travel to heavens is described in Dante's Divine Comedy (1320).

I doubt that these examples can be really described as "space travel" from the modern point of view.

Space travel in the modern sense begins in literature at the time after Galileo's discoveries, and one of the earliest examples is Kepler's Dream (1608) where he describes how Earth looks from the Moon, according to a traveler who arrived from there.

More famous is the novel of Cyrano de Bergerac (1657) which describes a travel from Earth to the Moon. In 18 century, space travel becomes a popular subject in fiction (for example Voltaire's Micromegas).

Ref. On the early history of space travel (that is before actual travels started) there is a good book by Willy Ley, Rockets, missiles and space travel.

Upvote:0

The earliest reference to space travel by means of a rocket was written by William Leitch in 1861 in "Good Words". He describes a rocket as the only means to travel through a vacuum. He goes on to describe a journey through the solar system on a comet, which he regarded as a natural rocket. As the article was printed in a religious journal there are many careful references to Gods Glory in the Heavens.

Upvote:1

One book which mentions many early stories of sort of space travel is Rockets, Missiles, and Men in Space by Willy Ley. My edition, published in the mid 1960s, starts with several chapters covering the prehistory of space travel stories from before the discoveries of Galileo to early stories of travel to the moon or other planets to 19th and early 20th century science fiction stories of space travel.

There is also Into Other Worlds: Space-Flight in Fiction From Lucien to Lewis, Roger Lancelyn Greene, 1975.

Science-Fiction Handbook, L. Sprague de Camp, 1953, 1975,1977, has a chapter or two about the history of science fiction.

The online article "Space Flight" in the Encyclopedia of Science Fiction, has links to many other articles in the Encyclopedia:

I hope these might be of some use.

Upvote:7

The Epic of Gilgamesh dates from as early as the Third Dynasty of Ur (c. 2100 BC), and mentions travel, e.g., see the Standard Babylonian version tablets II–V, specifically:

he spoke to Young Hero Utu, the son born of Ningal: ‘Now, when (as the Sun God) you make an opening in the Netherworld, bring his servant up to him from the Netherworld!’ He made an opening in the Netherworld, by means of his phantom he brought his servant up to him from the Netherworld. epubee.com

Also, see the Bull of Heaven portion of the story

Inanna [has brought] the Bull of Heaven [down from the sky.] archive.org

Furthermore, see this portion about climbing to the sky:

Who is there, my friend, can climb to the sky? Only the gods [dwell] forever in sunlight. As for man, his days are numbered, whatever he may do, it is but wind archive.org

Because this is a Mesopotamian story, you will not find texts from an earlier civilization. Perhaps a cave drawing depicting travel to/from the sky would be present somewhere though…

Upvote:9

Definitely not as old as the other answers, but a classic book about space travel is Jules Verne's From the Earth to the Moon, dating back to 1865. I'm quite surprised you didn't find that one.

Of course, the concepts were still pretty crude at the time (firing a spaceship with a cannon!), but it was the inspiration for many later works, including the first science fiction movie (A Trip to the Moon, Georges Méliès, 1902), was referenced in many subsequent works as well as by Neil Armstrong while returning from the Moon.

Even though the exact method wasn't quite the right one and many other details are very definitely technically incorrect with today's understanding, it nevertheless got quite a few things right, like a departure from Florida or a splash down in the ocean, and it's probably a lot more believable than most earlier stories.

Upvote:27

The earliest mention I know of the possibility was the novella A True History by Lucian in the 2nd century AD, where at one point the protagonists are taken to the moon by a whirlwind, meet the strange creatures living on the moon, and discover a war between the kingdom of the sun and the kingdom of the moon.

Outside of European / classical culture, the Hindu Ramayana (4th/5th century BC) supposedly features flying machines travelling in to space, but I'm not familiar with it, and have no idea now much of that comes from the text and how much is modern ideas finding unintended similarities in the past.

No idea whether there are similar ancient stories in say Japanese or Chinese literature, but since the fantasy idea of travel to the moon is a concept that several cultures have hit upon in ancient times, I'd expect there to be something of the sort in Asian cultures somewhere.

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