Herodotus

Herodotus's birth date: 474 BC ?
Herodotus himself does not tell us so we use calculations, based on Apollodorus's work which suggests that Herodotus was born 40 years before the foundation of Thurii in 444/3 BC. He is also believed to be born 'a little before the Persian wars' ie before 480 BC?

Herodotus's travels
We are unsure to what extent he has travelled. Some authors would have us believe that Herodotus did not go to every place he would have us believe that he has visited, such as Egypt. We can be fairly certain that he visited Samos, Athens and Thurii but beyond that one cannot provide conclusive evidence for his travels. He suggests he has been to Egypt (Book 2:150), Scythia (4:76 as he talked to Tymnes), Cyrene (4:163).

Herodotus's death
This is more uncertain than the date of his birth. Scholars believe that he does not mention anything beyond the date 430 BC and appears to be unaware of the destruction of the Aeginetans in 424 BC.

Thought to have lived between 484 - 425 BC, Herodotos, also called the 'Father of History', was born in Halicarnassus, now Bodrum. His work is the first history of ancient times. Halicarnassus was belonging to Caria, so he was a native of Caria, his father Lykses and his oncle Panyassis, a prose writer of his time, were of noble Carian birth.
The significance of Herodotos' history is twofold, first our knowledge of early history comes from his work »Historia« and second, he gives a wide picture of the social life with great detail. His Carian spirit never died, although he was exiled after the execution of bis uncle Panyassis bv the tyrant satrap Lygdames in Caria.
Leaving his homeland for good, Herodotos travelled all around Egypt, Mesopotamia, Persia, Iskhi, the Black Sea Region, the whole of Anatolia and Sicily, finally to settle in Samos. He completed his great prose in seven years, influenced by Pericles of Athens and Socrates, the philosopher of the time. This perhaps led him to adopt a biased view in favour of Hellenic people. However his book is a major work on Anatolian people and without Herodotos, there would have been no true account of earlier history. Especially his description oft he Carian people is now very valuable for archaeologists on the subject Caria.

Herodotus (484?-425 BC), Greek historian, known as the father of history, born in Halicarnassus (now Bodrum, Turkey). He is believed to have been exiled from Halicarnassus about 457 BC for conspiring against Persian rule. He probably went directly to Samos, from which he traveled throughout Asia Minor, Babylonia, Egypt, and Greece. The direction and extent of his travels are not precisely known, but they provided him with valuable firsthand knowledge of virtually the entire ancient Middle East. About 447 BC he went to Athens, then the center and focus of culture in the Greek world, where he won the admiration of the most illustrious men of Greece, including the great Athenian statesman Pericles. In 443 BC Herodotus settled in the Panhellenic colony of Thurii in southern Italy. He devoted the remainder of his life to the completion of his great work, entitled History, the Greek word for "inquiry."
The History has been divided by later authors into nine parts. The earlier books deal with the customs, legends, history, and traditions of the peoples of the ancient world, including the Lydians, Scythians, Medes, Persians, Assyrians, and Egyptians. The last three books describe the armed conflicts between Greece and Persia in the early 5th century BC. In the History the development of civilization moves inexorably toward a great confrontation between Persia and Greece, which are presented as the centers, respectively, of Eastern and Western culture. Herodotus's information was derived in part from the work of predecessors, but it was widely supplemented with knowledge that he had gained from his own extensive travels. Although he was sometimes inaccurate, he was generally careful to separate plausible reports from implausible ones.
The Historiesy may be the first known creative work to be written in prose. Both ancient and modern critics have paid tribute to its grandeur of design and to its frank, lucid, and delightfully anecdotal style. Herodotus demonstrates a wide knowledge of Greek literature and contemporary rational thought. The universe, he believed, is ruled by Fate and Chance, and nothing is stable in human affairs. Moral choice is still important, however, since the gods punish the arrogant. This attempt to draw moral lessons from the study of great events formed the basis of the Greek and Roman historiographical tradition, of which Herodotus is rightly regarded as the founder.