The Silent Past - Ivar Lissner
The Silent Past - Ivar Lissner
The Silent Past - Ivar Lissner
LIBRARIES
COLLEGE LIBRARY
LYRASIS
http://www.archive.org/details/silentpastmysterOOinliss
World
World
The Caesars
Might and Madness
IVAR LISSNER
and
World
German by
M.A. {Oxon.)
MAXWELL BROWNJOHN,
FOUNDED
I8i8
G.
P.
PUTNAM'S SONS
NEW YORK
1962 BY G. P. Putnam's sons, new york, AND JONATHAN CAPE LIMITED, LONDON
This book, or parts thereof, must in any form without permission.
the
'"'^jXtioM
f
not
be
reproduced
Published
simultaneously
in
Dominion of Canada
published
in
Ratselhafte Kultiiren,
1961
NEW YORK
A WORD OF THANKS
I
SHOULD
like to
extend
my
and scholars whose advice and suggestions have been of such invaluable assistance to me and who have scrutinized individual sections of this book or shown me over palaces, temples and ruined
scientists
sites:
Professor Antonio Blanco Freijeiro of Seville University, Director of the Museo del Prado, Madrid, for checking the sections on
Tartessus.
Professor Carl
'
W.
Homeric Troy,
at the
for taking
V'
SoTiRis Dakaris,
Ephoros Archeotiton
Museum
of Archaeol-
J
i
i
-
Museum
much
raphy
William
in the British
Deputy Keeper of the Department of EthnogMuseum, for checking the section on Benin.
4
'^
t'
Nagoya, Universidad de Chile and CathoHc University, Washington, D. C, ethnologist and expert on prehistoric civilizations, American Indian tribes, especially those of Tierra del Fuego, and many other primitive peoples, who wilHngly answered all my questions and enlightened me on a number of unsolved problems.
University,
.,^,
Professor Dr. Wilhelm Koppers 4*, the distinguished authority on ethnology and prehistory to whom I shall always be indebted for his encouragement and instructive comments.
5
A WORD OF THANKS
Dr. Gerdt Kutscher of the Ibero-American Library, Berlin, for scrutinizing the sections on the Maya and oifering valuable suggestions
Professor Dr. Siegfried Lauffer of Munich University, for giving me so many valuable hints and checking the sections on Mycenaean
civilization
and Delphi.
di Cagliari, for
me on
Dr. Karl
J.
Narr, Lecturer
in Prehistory at
Gottingen University,
!*,
on
many
who was
the
first
to instruct
me on
Dr. Herbert Tischner, Custodian and Director of the Indo-Oceanic Department of the Museum of Ethnology and Prehistory, Hamburg, for looking through the section on the Sepik culture.
Concepcion Blanco
civilization.
De Torrecillas, Director of the Museo Arqueome access to rare relics of the Tartessus
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
JORDANIA
SYRIA
Birds of Passage 9
15
The Walls
of Jericho
Good
Living in Ugarit
First
25
SYRIA
The World's
Alphabet ....
34
43
52
LEBANON
NORTH AFRICA
WESTERN EUROPE WESTERN EUROPE WESTERN EUROPE
SYRIA
Queen of
the Seas
The
Silent Stones of
Malta
.
58
.
Their Faith
Moved Mountains
6^
The
Megaliths of Morbihan
...
76
Mari, the
Wonder
City
80
89
95
102
SARDINIA
SARDINIA
Island of 8,000
Towers
'
Pre-Christian
Madonna
GREECE
Linear
B
Mycenaean Age
....
Life in the
1 1
The
Cult of Apollo
120
126
133
.
The Delphic
The
Oracle
Pythia Replies
139
149
News
of
Dodona
156
165
SPAIN
CONTENTS
The
Civilization of Tartessus ...
SPAIN
173
CANARY ISLANDS
CHINA
INDIA
INDIA
182
194
203
2
A Man Named
Siddhartha
10
CENTRAL ASIA
CENTRAL ASIA
PERSIA
222
The
Silk
Road
of the
230
The Treasure
The
Scythians
Oxus
243 253
EURASIA
EURASIA EURASIA
Company
for the
King
. .
260
269
278
287
ARABIA
SOUTHERN RHODESIA
NIGERIA
The Bronzes
of Benin
294
301
311
NEW GUINEA
GUATEA/IALA
Men
of Maize
GUATEMALA GUATEMALA
CONCLUSION
APPENDIX
Cities in the
Jungle
320
327
Tikal, the
Enigma
Become New"
Bibliography
Sources of Illustrations
336
345
359
365
Index
INTRODUCTION
Birds of Passage
HISTORY
on
Unseen and unrecognized, the past lives way. Whether lying dormant in the unfathomable sea of the millennia or buried beneath the ground and swathed in a vast winding sheet of earth and stone, "past" civilizations are still with us even though their tangible remains lie
is
imperishable.
in us in
its
quiet, imperceptible
still undiscovered. One and all, the civilizations of the on in us, for our lives are rooted deep in the remote, mysterious and ancient civilizations of the past. Once a civilization has existed on earth, its effects are permanent. A memory, a new discovery, a visit to an exhibition any one of these may suddenly alert us to their mute presence. Civilization is a word of wide application. It is the sum total of human achievement, of techniques, of methods of building and transportation, of living conditions, of handicrafts and utensils, of written characters, of sciences; it is the moral and religious order of
hidden and
past live
things;
it is
it
embraces
all
man's
and morals,
his sense
religion.
All
are directed
toward the
and
transcendental, for
mind than the body. When man made the transition from thinking only of visible things from "conditioned" thought to abstract thought, the era of true humanity had arrived. From that moment, no more than six
hundred thousand or
a
spirituality has
And
it
cross,
to disavow,
not only
lifeless: it is
it
Man
it
with
life
which we shall observe in so many examples of human handiwork in works by the artists of Benin, for
and give
the sort of vitality
instance.
The
real
is
from
a sense of personal
inadequacy.
the
greater the
infuse with
number of
life.
Man's
9
intellect has
been dulled by
lo
a superfluity of
INTRODUCTION
mass-produced articles devoid of any breath of life. Only when the West has completely smothered the intellect will it succumb, not before. That is why it is so important to recognize that man's desire for spiritual sustenance will always be stronger than his craving for material objects and to acknowledge that our only means of preserving the world in which we live lies in that realization. Since all spirituality is essentially religious in conception, everything that is good on earth must have its foundation in a belief in God or gods. The same basic belief underlies all civilizations, and to examine them is to receive fresh confirmation of this truth. Our age yearns for a better knowledge of the buried past. People
and mysterious civilizations are part immensely exciting to spot the truth that lies behind a mystery, to delve beneath the ground and unearth cities, to realize that this was how they did things, this was how they thought, this was their intellectual contribution to our life to realize, in short, that during our brief sojourn on earth we are merely birds of passage.
sense that even the
alien
It is
most
man
and that he has always striven to reach beyond sensory perception and grasp the supersensual and divine. Strangely enough, no one has ever denied these attributes to the advanced civilizations of the ancient world, even though the catastrophes that afflict us today are rooted in the shocking and erroneous belief that scientific and technical achievements, social legislation and governmental intervention are the only things that can ameliorate
the spiritual aspects of
human
I
existence.
believe that
man ought
St.
Matthew, namely that he cannot live by bread alone, and that he should insist on his sovereign right to live with complete freedom, spiritually and in the spirit. As Friedrich Schiller said: "Each individual man carries, according to his disposition and determination, a purely ideal man within him" and the
realm of taste
I
is
a realm of freedom.
who
never actually
races
which in truth possessed a high degree of which we either cannot grasp or do not share.
cultmx
INTRODUCTION
I
life is
I
all civilizations and hold that their determined by the untrammeled mind of man, not by nature. believe in the essential unity of political history and cultural history
in this world which stand alone like isolated trees, unseeded, rootless and sprung from nothing. Either they must have taken seed from some vanished people, some civilization unknown to us, perhaps, but ever present, or their roots have become secretly and sub-
because
of civilizations
from what we
possess nor
is
from what we think but only from what we are. I believe that time indivisible and that all chronological subdivisions are the work of man; that time is, in fact, an integral, cosmic and divine work of
believe that mankind's conception of time
is
is its
art. I
greatest single
God can have a truly correct as it were, oblique view of time. Within the true span of our lifetime, therefore, we may have walked the massive walls of Jericho or stood atop the world's oldest
only
tower, four thousand years older than the
s.till
first
Pyramid.
We
may
remember Tyre, the famous Phoenician island city of twentyfive thousand inhabitants whose man-created water supply helped to make it the most impregnable fortress in the Mediterranean. We may have stoked King Solomon's smelting ovens in the guise of slaves, working in unendurable heat at the desert's edge. With a
past as limitless as ours, the eight thousand mysterious towers of the
Sardi
may seem
spirit
in the
Bronzethe the
Age
of 800
We
may
in us.
embodied
To survey the mysterious caverns, men who walked the earth long before us
life,
because
all
their achievements,
all
their art
and
beliefs are
still
endure forever.
World
JORDANIA
Jericho,
London, 1957
ancient. It was so old that not even the Abraham, Isaac and Jacob knew its origins. Roam the entire world in search of its oldest cities and you will always come back to the Near East, for it was there that man, having lived on earth for about 600,000 years as a nomad, food collector and hunter, first began to set stone on stone and build dwellings and,
eventually, cities.
to
Only when the biped Homo had once learned how sow and reap, capture wild animals and domesticate them, did fixed settlements become practicable. Very old advanced civilizations have been excavated near the
Hwang Ho,
below ground
it
near the Jordan derives immense significance from the fact that
dates the building of fortresses, houses
as far
back
as the close
of the
last Ice
Age.
In 600,000 years
interglacial
man has survived four Ice Ages and three warmer periods. The last Ice Age came to an end about 8000 b.c.
Even though the icy masses of the north never penetrated the Near East, the city is still a miracle, for the Ice Age was also a Stone Age in which technical aids were of the most rudimentary kind and man was a nomad. For 600,000 years, the longest homogeneous epoch in human history, tools and utensils were made exclusively of stone, bone and wood. Next came the art of molding clay and loam, then
the discovery of casting copper and bronze, and finally the Iron Age.
still
ignorant of clay
people of Jericho lived in a powerful city, yet they were people of the mesolithic or Middle Stone Age (10,000-7500 b.c),
The
Age (7500-
i6
4000
Jericho
is
so far; at
below
sea level
it
is
The summers
Fifteen miles northeast of Jerusalem and eight miles the Jordan flows into the In
it
from where
Dead Sea
stands the
cities
hill
of Tell Es-Sultan.
many
which
The site was excavated first by English archaeologists in 1865, then by an Austro-German expedition between 1908 and 191 1, and finally by
new
life
whose examination
as a true
Kenyon revealed the astonishing fact that Jericho had existed town in the pre-ceramic period, i.e. long before 5000 B.C.
It was earher supposed that men who had ceased to be nomads soon began to make bowls, jugs and other vessels from clay, such articles being much too fragile to be taken on long nomadic treks. Jericho shed a new light on this theory, for men lived there in per-
manent abodes for thousands of years before they discovered ceramics. Between the nomadic period and the time when clay vessels were first manufactured came an epoch which saw the emergence of thriving towns whose inhabitants made nothing but stone tools and utensils of bone or wood. Jericho's pre-ceramic period goes back some nine or ten thousand years and lasted from about 7800 B.C. to
about 5000
B.C. Its ruins
mark do traces of pottery come to light. The earliest houses were circular in shape and probably resembled beehives or, more precisely, halved eggs. The floors were earthen while the walls were of oval bricks with flat bases and curved sides which still display grooves made by the brickmakers' thumbs.
Since the streets of an old city acquire layers of debris and refuse in
the course of centuries, the floors of Jericho's houses eventually lay
below
street level,
still
make out
the steps
down
The
to them.
The
known
Syria Jordan
i8
b.c which saw the construction of houses rooms whose corners were carefully rounded as if to prevent their collecting dust, as in modern hospitals. These dwellings possessed small store chambers and a number of subsidiary rooms. Cooking was done on a hearth situated in an interior courtyard, and the many layers of ash which were found
long before
with
indicated that meals had been prepared in the same spot for decades
or centuries.
floors,
The
were
were
fitted together
which, Mrs. Kenyon tells us, with great accuracy. Even today, after eight or
it is
difficult to
dismantle
them or remove
floors,
indi-
When
women
archaeologists
much
as the
many
they found to their surprise that these had been polished with great care. The interior walls were also coated ^vith hard stucco and polished to a mirrorlike smoothness. Apparently the people of
Jericho appreciated comfort, for their rooms were carpeted with
by
on the
its
floors. It
was even
where an ant
way through
the carpet!
stone.
also
have been employed, but nothing of these materials has survived. The people of Jericho still made their tools, which included blades,
drills,
flint
or obsidian.
Nothing of the
sort
arrowheads which
may
have
city's defense as
is
the purpose of
may
have been
One
of altar or shrine, or so
it
The
pillar
neatly into
in
the niche.
Even
the rubble
of the
JORDANIA
of Jericho worshiped a god or gods.
19
ruined house, they seem to offer support for a theory that the people
The
largest
chamber
it
to be excavated
may also
and near
two
tiny figurines
goddesses of
cult or
fertility.
had some other directly religious significance are already from the Aurignacian period. These are the famous "Venus" statuettes found at Willendorf, Lespugue, Brassempouy, Gagarino on the Don, and Malta, northwest of Irkutsk. Some of the European Venus statuettes date back as much as thirty or fifty thousand years.
familiar to us
The
city
was
originally
feet high.
When
encompassed by it was
a stout wall
rebuilt,
some
sixteen
lapsed again
high.
and so solidly
in the world,
walls.
it
now
excavation, like
it
bastion.
The
oldest
its
tower
protective
or
more years
constructed it lived nine thousand about four thousand years older than
the oldest Pyramid. Inside the tower a flight of steps built of stone
slabs thirty inches
platform.
Below
and
together as
with stone slabs three feet long, found twelve skeletons lying close though the bodies had been buried in extreme haste. The
is
tower
is
enclosed
by two
The significance of this prehistoric building while it remained unconnected with the wall and had no defensive role is uncertain, but it was probably a cult site or perhaps a temple at whose summit sacrifice was made in honor of gods unknown to us. Kathleen Kenyon's theory is that the inhabitants of the earliest, conical, houses were forced to defend themselves against people who eventually captured the town and later erected the rectangular houses with the finely polished stucco floors. The victorious newcomers were certainly not nomads, for their well-planned methods of housing construction belonged to a highly developed sedentary
20
from existing towns, probably in the neighborhood of Jericho, and brought their knowledge of architecture from there. If this is so, other age-old stone citadels must lie elsewhere, probably in the Jordan valley, still awaiting
discovery.
The most important finds made at Jericho were ten human skulls which were dug up, one by one, from beneath some houses. They represent an extraordinary discovery, for through them we are suddenly made aware of man's quest for a higher spirituality, a quest pursued with means and at a period which seem well-nigh fantastic to us today. These skulls were skillfully coated with
plaster
and
their
shells
were
in
life.
Traces can
tried,
people of Jericho
still be seen of the paint with which the with considerable artistic skill, to re-create
the complexion and facial expression of their dead. It is yet another example of man's never-ending attempt to conquer death through art.
We
by
the earliest
human
portraits in the
man
carved on mammoth's
with
were found beneath almost all the houses in Jericho, that the heads were buried immediately below the floor
may
It is
powers and
in a life
hereafter for they would never have taken such pains had
they not been convinced that the dead and the unseen world of the
spirit
living.
The
bafflinCT
and desire for perpetuity decree of skill, and time when the world had
been thought to be devoid of towns makes it all the more incredible. The ruins of Jericho tell a storv embracing many thousands of years. The city was overwhelmed and occupied by a succession of invaders, and ultimately newcomers arrived who had already mastered the art of making pottery. They left behind no houses of any
JORDANIA
21
sort, so it is possible that the ancient city had fallen down and that they settled in the ruins, but they arrived with a well-developed knowledge of the potter's art. Mountains of broken clay vessels have
life
are discernible
from
this
One
discovery
made by
and a child, of which only the male figure was complete with head. Kathleen Kenyon has
limestone statues representing a man, a
woman
mute Messianic prophecy and an embraced a which may not have been so different from our own
seem to
offer a
first,
experience.
and better-baked clay vessels with time we can distinguish a cultural relationship between the Jericho people and others whose relics have been excavated near Sha'ar ha Golan on the river Yarmuk, at Byblos and in other places. It becomes apparent that by this stage (about 4750 B.C.) inventions were being introduced into Jericho from places outside.
next invaders
finer
The
made
first
Then
human
next message a
until
their
3200 B.C. dead beneath the floors of their houses, and the potter folk
which archaeologists can discover nothing. The voice from the grave, as it were does not arrive The pre-pottery neolithic town builders buried
from pottery, but the
hills
left virtually
no
post-3200
B.C.
around the
city.
Professor
Kenyon
whose remains
The
graves
were usually circular shafts leading downward through the rock into underground chambers which were sealed by one large stone or
several smaller ones.
rest,
no
less
than
human
The occuhad been supplied with bowls, large pitchers and numerous winepots. Archaeowhich
is
known
as
A 94,
22
logical
now
it is
possible to
were placed in the grave they were already in a skeletal condition. The dead must therefore have been stored somewhere until decomposition was complete and the skulls could be severed from the trunks. The skeletons themselves were carried into the grave and burned in the middle of the chamber, the skulls being arranged around them so that they could "watch" the burning of their own limbs. We know that the skulls were there
establish that
when
the heads
whereas the and must have been installed subsequently. Two hundred and fifty-one vessels were recovered from A 94. The radiocarbon method of dating, which has been widely used in recent years, reveals that the grave was built about 3260 B.C. Archaeologists think that the occupants of these tombs were nomads. Eventually, the early Bronze Age arrived. It lasted in Jericho from 2900 until about 2300 B.C. Once again massive walls were built, once again sentries must have stood guard on them, once again the city flourished, and once again the inhabitants of Jericho must, like their forerunners in the very early days, have lived in fear of attack by nomads. Throughout the whole of recorded human history, culturally advanced peoples who live in fertile, well-watered valleys have always been menaced by parched and famished nomads like those who provide the earliest figures in our Bible. History, as recorded in the Old Testament, goes back to 1700 b.c, the time of the Patriarchs. Archaeologists C. H. Gordon, E. A. Speiser and W. F. Albright have demonstrated that Abraham came from the neighborhood of Harran in northwest Mesopotamia. He left his native land and trekked southward through Palestine and the land of Canaan with his herds and tents. Isaac, Esau and Jacob lived in enmity after Abraham died. In the next generation, Jacob and his twelve sons, like his father and grandfather before him, led a nomad's life. Jacob's son Joseph must have acquired a respected position at the Egyptian court before he and his father and brothers were allowed to settle in the province of Goshen, but under the succeeding Pharaohs and after the fall of the Semitic Hyksos monarchy the Israelites ultimately became serfs until Moses saved his people and extricated the tribes of Jacob from Egypt. Palestine proper was
at
show
signs of scorching,
fire
JORDANIA
gradually occupied
is
23
by
which
seminomads, but they had developed a They marched through fertile plains past towns which were still in the hands of the original Canaanite
Israelites
still
The
were
with his people before the day for six successive days the Ark of the Covenant was borne around the city to the sound of trumpets. Then, on the seventh day, seven priests circled the city seven times and the walls "fell down flat" to the blaring of trumpets and a "great shout" raised by the besiegers. According to research conducted by the American archaeologist W. F. Albright, the events described in the Book of Joshua took place between 1375 and 1300 B.C., although they were not committed to writing until about
inhabitants, until ultimately Joshua stood
walls of Jericho.
Once
620
B.C.
dominated the passes into to capture it had to have precise information about its walls, its military strength and the hazards and difficulties involved. Accordingly, Joshua sent two spies into the city to lodge at the house of the harlot Rahab. When the King of Jericho learned of this and tried to have them arrested, Rahab concealed their presence and swore that although two men had visited her she had had no idea who they were and that, anyway, they had left before the city gates were shut for the night. In reality, she had hidden the spies and later helped them to escape, securing in return a promise that she and her family would be spared if the Israelites captured the city. Rahab was firmly convinced that Jericho was doomed. Bored and irritated by her smug Canaanite compatriots who lived so comfortably within the stout walls of their fortress, she was ripe for treachery. One more interesting detail emerges from the account in Joshua. Rahab's house was built abutting the city wall. Excavations at Jericho have brought to light just such houses, bounded on one side by the
place of great strategic importance, for
it
city wall
itself.
do not know why Jericho's walls collapsed. Perhaps its inhabitants were panic-stricken and opened the gates because reports of the besiegers' strength and of Jehovah's support had preceded them, spreading fear and despondency among the Canaanites. Ex-
We
24
by earthquakes
when
its
many
crumble within its walls, to be replaced by new cities. about 1300 b.c, the children of Israel chanced to hear of the skulls which men had once tried to preserve for eternity with artistically molded layers of plaster, they may well have assumed that it all happened an unimaginably long time ago and dismissed it as no more than a legend dating from a time when man was not yet man. Yet the whole fabulous city and its skulls were dug up in our own day. So real and so tangible that no one can doubt their existence, they testify to the amazing spirituality of man in times beyond our
cities
If,
in
Three thousand years separate us from Joshua and the children of Israel who conquered Jericho, but five thousand years separated Joshua from the men who made these first real attempts at human
ken.
portraiture.
SYRIA
GOOD LIVING
From
flow on
it is
IN
UGARIT
is
the
among
Claude
F.
1955
THIRTY years ago a hill was opened up to reveal a civilization which even today exercises a shadowy influence on our attitude toward life and death, God and the world to come. Behind all our
religious beliefs there stands, latent
and almost
lost in the
remote
reaches of history, a race that inhabited the Biblical lands long before
the Israelites.
Sometimes,
like a faint
glimmer of
light in the
gloom of evening,
we
At
ing events occurred the hour was already late and their civilization
prime. The Bible tells us that when Christ Tyre and Sidon he was confronted by an unfortunate woman whose daughter was mentally ill. The unhappy
its
child,
silent. Still
was like the elemental voice of prayer, the cry from the heart to which the Psalms sometimes give expression. It was an appeal for help from a heathen world, and
she persisted, saying: "Lord, help me." It
it with the words: "O woman, great is thy faith: thou wilt." This unique story and its moving climax contain a fundamental truth. They illustrate how boundless a belief in God could and can still inhabit the heathen breast, that it is age-old, and that a Canaanite
Jesus answered
be
it
even
as
woman was
The
race
whose
civilization
was unearthed
was
and the
after
woman who
a latter-day
God who lived long before the first They were the people whom the Greeks called Phoenicians, the people who ruled over the powerful maritime cities of Tyre and Sidon. The greatest seafaring race in the ancient
much-maligned seekers
figures in Biblical history.
26
Their greatest son, Hannibal, almost succeeded in conquerduring the Punic Wars. The Phoenicians, who began to roam the seas about 1250 b.c, gained fame as mariners, manufacturers of purple dye, merchants, city builders and, later, as a naval power to be reckoned with. The extremely interesting culture of this ancient race did not spring into clear focus until recent times. Resident in Syria and Palestine since about 3000 b.c, the Canaanites built upon the ruins of former cities and evolved a way of life and a social order which seemed unbelievably refined to the Israelite herdsmen who followed them. They enjoyed their highly developed culture and continued to look down with contempt from their city walls at the new arrivals
814
ing
Rome
from the desert, until they were eventually humbled by the Patriarchs. That sedentary races in thriving cities should be continually subjugated by invading nomads is the human tragedy and seed of
destruction inherent in almost
all
high cultures.
Armed
conquest
a people's culture.
For instance, the tough race of hunters known as the Tunguses conquered Peking and the whole of China down to the Yangtze in the twelfth century a.d., yet the Manchu Dynasty founded by their descendants was later vanquished by the insidious refinement of Chinese culture. The Romans conquered Greece, yet in a thousand aspects of cultural life the Greeks triumphed, and the spirit of Greece was ultimately disseminated by the victorious Romans throughout Europe and most of the Near East. In their material as well as their spiritual culture the sedentary Canaanites were undoubtedly superior to the newcomers, and the victorious Israelites were in constant danger at least until the time of Solomon, who lived circa 950 b.c of being bewitched and seduced by the race whom they had subjugated so long before. Between 3000 and 1200 b.c the Canaanites' fortifications, domestic architecture, street systems and town planning were true wonders of the contemporary world. In addition, they devised extremely practical sewerage systems, boasted skilled potters and artisans in bronze. Their contribution to the history of ideas is almost inestimable. Greece, Rome and eventually all Europe and half the world owed the Canaanites not only their alphabet but also elements of their religious observances, legends and myths, and the
basic principles of
town
construction.
SYRIA
27
Assur
Ugarit,
by
28
dug up. At Tanaach diggers unearthed the foundations of a Canaanite royal palace. At Gezer, whose outer walls were more than thirteen
feet thick, the Canaanites
by
below present ground level. During 1937 Gordon Loud explored the palace at Megiddo and was rewarded by finding beneath its foundation walls a cache of two hundred engraved ivory tablets. One of these plaquettes depicts a prince of Megiddo driving prisoners before his war chariot. The same tablet shows him seated on a throne, drinking from a bowl and listening to a harpist, much as Saul must have listened to David. Also at Megiddo, P. L. O. Guy excavated stables capable of housing three hundred horses and war chariots. These buildinCTs dated from the time of Kincr Solomon. We are told in I Kings: ix, 19, that Solomon constructed "cities for his chariots and cities for his horsemen" and also that he fortified the city of Megiddo. Archaeology's recent habit of producing tangible evidence of Old Testament accounts is positive compensation for the
more dangerous aspects of our overscientific era. made an exceedingly interesting discovery. Digging at Ras Shamra on the northern coast of Syria
In 1929 Claude SchaefiFer
The
many
back to paleolithic times. The lowest layer, in which flint tools were found, lay at a depth of 60 feet. It yielded no pots or receptacles of any kind. These had probably been made of wood or leather, materials which had crumbled away to nothing in the course of thousands of years. At a depth of between 52 and 55 feet Schaeffer found some stone bowls. do not know what sort of people lived here so long ago, but they probably differed from us very little.
We
It is generally correct to say that the people of the whole world, who have demonstrably belonged to Homo sapiens for at least thirty
more
closely re-
we
sapiens-like
no
less
than three
Im.
from the
period between 1450 and 1365 b.c. (j) Funerary gifts in the Minoan style, imported from Crete between 1900 and 1750 B.C. or made in Ugarit under the guidance of Cretan craftsmen, (k) Layer of earth. (1) Various pieces of jewelrv of the period between 2900 and 1900 B.C. (I) and (m) Here, 26 feet beneath the surface of the hill, were found the earliest examples of painted vases in Ugarit.
\-i''^:-i
0m
9,
30
hundred thousand years old and indicate that neither Peking nor Neanderthal man was the prototype of the human race. Between 6000 and 5000 B.C. the inhabitants of Stone-Age Ras Shamra and Jericho appear to have come into contact, or so similarities between the earliest stone vessels found in both places seem to indicate. Tools made of quartzite, obsidian and bone lie at depths of 40 and 50 feet, but even as early as this, man was beginning to produce painted pottery of amazingly high quality. King Sargon I, ruler of the Akkadian empire, one of the greatest Semitic statesmen in world history and the man responsible for uniting the Sumerians and the Semitic Akkadians, probably passed through the district of Ugarit about 2300 b.c. and may well have visited the city itself. Many thousands of years of history and grandeur lie buried beneath the hill of Ras Shamra, The French archaeologist A. Parrot, who unearthed the city of Mari beneath Tell Hariri on the middle reaches of the Euphrates, found a clay tablet among the royal archives there. A letter from the celebrated lawgiver Hammurabi ( 1 728-1686 B.C.), who held sway over the whole of Babylonia, Assyria and Mesopotamia, mentioned that the king of Ugarit had informed him of his wish to visit the palace of Zimrilim, residence
of the
last
king of Mari.
We
are
now
in a period
this
whose remains
lie
some 25
feet
below
ground
level.
Graves of
complete with eyes, necklaces and other articles of adornment made of bronze. These were traces of Europeans who had either come to Ugarit from the Balkans, the Danube, the Rhine or the Caucasus or had exported fine examples of their craftsmanship to the area. Similar objects have been found throughout these regions.
land of Egypt established relations with Ugarit, and must have been a splendid moment when the stone statuette of the Egyptian princess Shnumit was borne into the city. In Crete this was the time of the golden age of Minoan culture. Once again the soil yields information about the liistory of commercial relations between Ugarit and the maritime kingdom of Crete, for fragments
it
The mighty
come
to light.
One
grave, for
bowl no bigger than an eggshell, undoubtedly imported from Crete between 1900 and 1750 b.c. What happened after that is hard to tell, for some unidentified power destroyed the Egyptian statues found in Ugarit. Judging by
SYRIA
their refined tastes
31
life,
Ugarit's Semitic
inhabitants
destruction.
wanton
The
found there display an astonishing variety of artistic styles. People from the island of Cyprus, merchants from Egypt, scholars from Mesopotamia and craftsmen from all over the contemporary world must have congregated within the city's walls. Ugarit eventually fell prey to the most powerful and competent of Egypt's Pharaohs, Pharaoh Thutmosis III, perhaps the greatest political genius in the pre-Christian Near East. The mummy of this mighty ruler, which has survived, displays a truly royal countenance with a fine aquiline nose, resolute mouth and long occiput. The statue in the Temple of Karnak, too, conveys some measure of the enormous energy which must have animated this man. Thutmosis III needed bases for his campaigns and supply depots for his troops, and his best harbor in the north was Ugarit. The people who lived there
about 1500
the natives
B.C.,
of Ugarit themselves,
Egyptian conquest, and under the "pax Aegyptia" the city enjoyed a golden age which produced some truly amazing architecture.
Extensive residential areas were laced
by
tiles
and
by
small
were placed by the fountains to receive water. Living and sleeping quarters were probably situated on the second story, and were approached by stone
roofs supported on four legs. Large stone tubs
stairs
of considerable width.
comfort, the dead were certainly not negBeneath each house was a burial chamber with a vaulted roof, usually very neatly constructed of stone slabs. A passage led into the interior, and there, beneath their ancestral home, the dead conIf the living lived in
lected.
life
of the family.
They went
into eternity
articles
people of Ugarit buried their dead in truly royal fashion, which is why, unfortunately, almost all the graves have suffered from the depredations of thieves. However, grave robbers normally took
32
only objects of gold and funerary gifts of obvious value, leaving behind beautiful pieces of faience, ivory ornaments, alabaster vases
in
Many
of the
workMinoan
were buried with vessels containing brewed was lavished on the dead in Ugarit, and we
this implicit belief in
el
why
an
afterlife existed.
The
people of Ugarit had built houses equipped with every amenity, and
were found, as well as warehouses and storerooms of surprisingly modern appearance. In one such store chamber Schaeffer counted more than eighty earthen jars which must have contained oil or wine intended either for domestic use or for export. Some indication of the harbor's large turnover and commercial activity is provided by a building in which were stored more than a thousand large jars with handles, mostly of Cyprian origin and once used to hold perfumed oil which was exported to Palestine and Egypt.
here, too, graves of artistic design
ducks with expressions of comical surprise, and tiny falcons in bronze with inlaid feathers of gold prove that Egyptian art had gained a foothold here. Not that the pampered inhabitants of Ugarit
despised
Artists
have been
by
powdered matrons of
in a
One
grave in Minet
el
who
were emulated by the high society of Ugarit. Just over six inches high, it reposes in the Louvre at Paris and is one of the showpieces of what is the largest collection of art treasures in the world. Schaeffer found in the course of his excavations that an earthquake had destroyed the city about the middle of the fourteenth century b.c. Ruined houses, shattered walls, massive blocks of displaced masonry and widespread evidence of fire can all be clearly distinguished. Abimilki, King of Tyre, recounted the catastrophe
Male head forming part of the remains of three roughly life-size limestone statues [ of a man, woman and child excavated by Professor Garstang. In Kathleen Kenyon's opinion, these figures represent the earliest known prehistoric portrayal of a "Holy Family."
I ]
-C?^
[2]
Skull sculpture from Jericho modeled around an actual skull. It is roughly 10,000 years old and was probably associated with ancestor worship.
[3] This building was erected in Jericho 7,800 years before Christ's birth. The circular depressions are assumed to have held supporting beams. The people of Jericho were already living in an advanced residential culture by about 2,000 years after the end of the last Ice Age. Theirs is the only city of the period to have been excavated so far.
[4] Among the most amazing discoveries made at Jericho were human skulls coated with clay to preserve the features of the departed. The eye sockets were inlaid with shells and the entire sculpture painted to reproduce the natural color of the human face. (Profile and full-face views of the same head.)
[5] The oldest house so far excavated anywhere in the world (photographed from above). It abuts on the city vvall (right) and was built between nine and ten thousand years ago. When this house was erected the people of Jericho were still living in the Stone Age. Although they made no pottery, they were already city builders.
[6] Excavated at Ugarit, this small ivory carving of a Canaanite goddess dates from about 1350 B.C. and is now in the Louvre, Paris. The modeling of the face and the artistic coiffure, headband and necklace all reveal that the sculptor either came from Greece or was influenced by early Greek style.
archaeologist
It
Claude
was made between 1800 and i6oo b.c. The pictures show front and side view of the same figure.
[8] The harbor of Ugarit stood by the sea 4,000 years ago, but in the course of time the bay of Minet el Beida has become silted up. Roughly one half mile farther inland from the port
stands
the
city-mound of
.^J^Sfww^^SaSWRfw^as^^
-.
[g]
tall
Bronze
statuette of the
The
coiffure and head are covered with a layer of gold, the body with silver. This rare piece was excavated at Minet el Beida, the ancient harbor of Ugarit, and is now in
^'f
''I'
[lol
Clay tablet from the central archives of Ugarit. The text is written in the world's by the Canaanites about 3,400 years ago. The tablet bears the
seal of the royal dynasty. clay vessel (top) was probably used for mixing wine with water in Ugarit, 1600-1450 B.C. The twin vases (below) date from the period 1450-1365 b.c. They too were made out of clay and painted reddish-brown and black. [12] This fragment from an ivory plaque set into the footboard of the royal bed is one of the finest known examples of Canaanite art. It shows the king of Ugarit menacing a foreign ruler with his sword.
The
'^
[13]
Just over
inches
tall, this
very fine piece is more than 3,000 years old and was excavated at Byblos by Maurice Dunand.
14] Also in reddish terra-cotta, this head with tall hat and chin strap formed the neck of a Phoenician vase. Byblos, where this unusually fine piece was found, was probably inhabited by men with expressive features of this type.
[
SYRIA
to
33
words: "The royal city Half the city was burned; the other half has simply ceased to exist." It is one of the unsolved riddles of history why Ugarit, the Cretan city of Knossos, Troy and other large cities should all have suffered widespread devastation almost simultaneously during the fourteenth century B.C. It seems strange that an earthquake should have struck down such widely
in the following
Pharaoh Amenophis IV
by
fire.
same time.
Once more Ugarit revived, once more houses and palaces were built and once more the ladies wore splendid robes in the Egyptian and Mycenaean style more particularly the latter, since the Cretans were by now Ugarit's wealthiest citizens and its arbiters of fashion.
Then, about 1200
invaders bore
B.C.,
final
from the north, from Greece and Asia Minor. These "people from the sea" were armed with unfamiliar weapons of iron, and Ugarit did not withstand their onslaught. The city died with the Bronze Age, and was extinguished forever. The merchants ceased their busy calculations, the scribes laid down their styluses, and their clay tablets were scattered to the winds by the destroyers of their amazing city. The elegant ladies laughed no more, and layer upon layer of earth arose to form the hill which is still in the process of being explored at the
the fertile land of Syria
down on
present day.
SYRIA
THE WORLD'S
FIRST
ALPHABET
And Hiram king of Tyre sejit his servants unto Solomon; for he had heard that they anointed him king in the room of his father: for Hiram was ever a lover of David. Ajid Solomon sent to Hira7ti, saying, thou knowest how that David my father could not huild an house unto the name of the Lord his God for the wars which were about him. on every side, until the Lord put them under the soles of his feet. But now the Lord my God hath given me rest on every side, so that there is neither adversary nor evil occurrent. And, behold, I purpose to build an house unto the name of the
Lord
viy
God
I Kings:
v, 1-5
NO ARCHAEOLOGIST who
plies his
proposes to dig up
It is far
cities
and
civilizations
spade at random.
follows
What
we
is
a splendid
as
We
have
still
powers nor
his basic
wisdom have
It is one of the misfortunes of our time that we give complete credence to scientific research but tend to ignore those who have communicated the greatest spiritual truths to mankind, men like Buddha, Confucius, Euripides and Socrates all of whom, inci-
sands of years.
In 485 B.C. a child who was one day to be described as the father of history was born into a respected family in Halicarnassus. Herodotus traveled throughout the contemporary Mediterranean world.
A scholar
a
observation, he
was
also
man
He
took the
stories
satire.
homage to tradition but was fascinated by novelt)^. Although he had no expert military knowledge he gave a brilliant description of the great war in which Persia and Greece fought for supremacy of the known world. He was prejudiced against no people or race and beheved above all that a man endowed with
paid
34
He
SYRIA
reason and some knowledge of the past
is
35
free to
mold
unlike
his history
and
his
future that he
is
natural
the plaything of
later-day
prophets of Western decline, Herodotus never attempted to forecast the future of nations,
behavior
is
predictable,
Herodotus tells us in the fifth book of his Histories where the Greeks got their written script. The Phoenicians, he writes, came to Greece with King Cadmus, bringing with them many branches of knowledge, among them the art of writing, "which, so I believe,
the Hellenes did not possess before."
The
world's
first
the inventors of the alphabet from which the Greeks evolved their
own
alphabet of
sequence of written characters and which has become the all European languages. Although his accounts have
Herodotus has received century b.c. has been vindicated in our own, for Claude Schaeffer's excavations between 1929 and the present day have produced concrete evidence of all that Herodotus reported in such detail and with such accuracy
often been questioned
signal confirmation.
historians,
by modern
What
he wrote in the
fifth
city of Ugarit,
representing five
human
civilizations
1
Age
rest.
of many thousand years ago to The fifth layer is the oldest and naturally The first or topmost layer contains the flourished between 1500 and iioo b.c. At
100
when Ugarit
lies
disappeared.
ruins of a
which
covered the ruins of a large building with a courtyard at its center surrounded by several sizable rooms and approached through a massive door on the north side. A flight of stairs led upward to the second floor. The palatial building must have been a veritable university
this thriving
important of
by
the ancestors
36
script,
was at once apparent that the earliest alphabet in the world had been discovered. In April 1930, one year after the first tablets had been unearthed at Ugarit, the French scholar Virolleaud published texts written in
the mysterious script.
fessor
brilliant
member
Hans Bauer, was struck by the thought that a Semitic language similar to Hebrew or Phoenician must be involved. Accordingly, he tried to identify some Semitic words by comparing the juxtaposition
of different letters and actually succeeded in discovering the written
equivalents of the
names such
If this
all
words "three" and "four" and of several religious and Elah. sounds simple, it should be remembered that in this, as in
as Asherat, Ashtart, Baal, El,
by
knowledge of mythology.
Ashtart or Astarte.
STRT stands
for the
name
of the goddess
STRT
identified
BL.
Bauer eventually deciphered fourteen out of twenty-eight letters. In nine further cases he went astray, and the remaining five eluded him. The French have done yeoman work in deciphering this script and exploring Canaanite culture in general. After the French scholar Dhorme had succeeded in identifying more of the doubtful letters, Hans Bauer, this time aided by Dhorme's findings, set to work once more and solved the whole mystery with the exception of one letter. Professor Virolleaud began to study large numbers of Canaanite tablets and in 1948 the complete series was at last identified. It dates back to 1400 B.C. and is the world's most ancient alphabet. shall never know the name of the man who invented it, but he
We
was certainly a Phoenician. As Virolleaud points out, the race that produced such a marvel merits our highest respect and must be
allotted a special place in the history of
mankind.
SYRIA
37
The
letters
the Russian of 33. Today, any text written in the Canaanite cuneiform alphabet which has not been destroyed by time can be read with accuracy. Two kinds of clay tablets have been found, the larger containing legends and myths and the smaller bearing letters, inventories, accounts, instructions, hsts of merchandise such as oil, wine and purple, and legal contracts such as of adoption, gift and sale. It is fascinating to gain a glimpse of life in a city which bequeathed
us one of the most ingenious of
all
human
some three thousand years ago, was lost man named Yasiranu had legally adopted
For
instance, a
youth
called Ilkuya in
A
at
in
Sumer
but they expressed complete syllables or words. The Canaanites were the first to devise an alphabet as such. The text illustrated here deals with the legal relationship of Yasiranu to his adoptive son Ilkuya. The hatching indicates where the tablets have been damaged.
an
earlier date,
38
was
might sever the relationship without due notice. Should the adoptive father ever wish to break the bond, he had
him on way. Should the son take it into his head to leave the father, on the other hand, he had to raise his hands above his head and walk out into the street. This reveals the exemplary fashion in which contracts were drawn up in those days. The raised hands are a graphic indication that a disloyal son was not permitted to take anything with him when he left the paternal abode. We learn of royal gifts, of transactions by barter, sale and purchase. Owners exchanged houses, olive plantations, cattle, donkeys and sheep. Tlie entire inventory of Queen Ahatmilku's dowry has survived. It includes four pairs of gold pendants set with precious stones, gold rings and bracelets, golden cups, bowls and pitchers, two gold belts, twenty robes of fine Hurritic material and an equal number of Amurritic, numerous capes and cloaks, seat covers, three beds inlaid with ivory, gold-plated chairs, basins, jugs, crucibles, beakers and pitch-burning bronze torches, vessels "filled with sweet oil," twenty small rouge boxes and a large number of other items. Queen Ahatmilku appears to have been a wealthy, fastidious and pampered woman Reading of the slave trade, we are told that slaves were sometimes repurchased. In one instance the purchaser could not raise the necessary 400 silver shekels and arranged an advance of 140 shekels from his principal. However, the purchase price had to be paid in full upon delivery of the slaves. Since a shekel weighed just over half an ounce, the slaves cost about fifteen pounds of silvernot very much by modern standards, although it must be remembered that silver was much rarer and thus more valuable than it is today. The charger which was sold to the King of Ugarit by the King of Carchemish's master of horse was very expensive by comto give his adoptive son loo shekels of silver before sending
his
parison.
The
No.
16.180
tells
us that this
much
as the
whole consignment of
slaves.
We
also read
her daughter,
health. Is
"May
the gods
preserve
you
in the best of
SYRIA
39
writer of the letter went on to say that her house had been burned down, that all her possessions had been destroyed and that she was in urgent need of assistance. It seems apparent that the Queen of Ugarit and her mother hailed from Amurru, hence the latter's reference to the gods of that place. She was able to mention them because of the tolerant and liberal atmosphere in Ugarit (which perhaps explains why the Canaanites' own gods disappeared in so far as they were not absorbed into later religions). The deciphering of the clay tablets of Ras Shamra has meant that for the past thirty years our knowledge of Canaanite mythology has been steadily increasing. The French scholars Virolleaud, Dussaud and Nougayrol have shed light on the hidden secrets of this amazing people's religious faith. The main interest and im-
The
lie
from the fourteenth century B.C. their content is very much older. This information must either have been passed on verbally from generation to generation or transmitted through the medium of a very ancient and as yet nonalphabetical system of written characters. Since Canaanites and Israelites inhabited the same country, led a similar life, were familiar with the same legends and worshiped the same god, we are forced to assume that both peoples had a common origin. Thus the Ugarit tablets take us back into the
earliest history
is
one of
The
Canaanites' religion
primitive.
tightly
duty in the temples, which were numerous. The supreme deity was known as El, a word which means "god" in the Phoenician as well as in all other
organized priesthood served regular
Semitic languages.
the
The
Canaanites' El
is
Elohim,
Old Testament's term for the Almighty. El stood high above the dealings and activities of mere mortals and was far removed from mundane affairs. He was the "father of the years" and his hand was "as great as the sea." He did, however, live on earth, somewhere on the coast "where the rivers flow into the sea." The Canaanites probably regarded their supreme being much as do many races surviving today, particularly those of the circumpolar regions. The deeper we probe into early history and prehistory the more clearly we recognize that the supreme being
40
was
concerned with the petty affairs of mankind and, more was not a distributor of punishment. An upright stone or stele found in Ugarit marked the place where El sat enthroned and where the kings of Ugarit made sacrifice to him.
especially, that he
El's
whom we
rediscover
many
is
among
certain primitive peoples today and one with a tradition going far back into the Stone Age. The god who was most involved with the Canaanites' daily life was Baal, the hero of a great mythological epic preserved for us
in the Ugarit tablets.
We
know
whom
the
who
their cities
Israelites.
The two
bitter
largest
his father,
Dagon. Final testimony to the Jewish religion's against a slowly dying but tenacious adversary is
the devil, Beelzebub.
struggle
their
name
for
and zebub
is
the
or "devouring"
The age-old myths about this god were first disclosed by the Ras Shamra-Ugarit finds, so our knowledge of the background behind all Biblical references to Baal is only thirty years old.
tell us that the sister of the god Baal was called was so often the case in the East and in Egypt, in particular, brother and sister were married. Virginity, fertility and savagery were strangely combined in this goddess. From time immemorial, therefore, a close association existed between innocence, sacred birth, perversion and devotion to orgiastic cults.
The
clay tablets
that, as
Anat and
among
of our Bible.
mountain of gold. Anat mountain and there recounted her victories. an enormous snake called Litan or Lotan, the Leviathan Ugarit is the only place where we find a reference to
are told, a to this
we
name Leviathan
prior to
its
Book of
Job.
SYRIA
4(
This shows the great antiquity of the myths of a gold-guarding dragon or treasure-guarding snake.
The famous
came
cedars
of
Lebanon were
also
mentioned in the
When
Anat complained
to the
supreme god
El that her brother and husband Baal possessed no temple like other
were bidden to build a temple of brick and wood from the cedars of Lebanon. I Kings: vi, 9 records that Solomon, too, "covered the house with beams and boards of cedar.'" The wise king's collaborator in building this temple was no less ai person than the Canaanite king Hiram of Tyre. Hiram reigned from 969 until 936 b.c. and Solomon from 972 to 932, but the clay tablets of Ugarit tell of the building of a temple to Baal five hundred years earlier, and the story is probably much older still. The library of Ugarit also tells us of men's eternal wish to bring their nearest and dearest back from the world of the dead. While out hunting, Baal was lured into an ambush by his enemies and killed, together with his son Aleyn. Anat descended into the underworld and mourned her loved ones, sacrificing seventy oxen,
gods, celestial architects
seventy buffalo, seventy sheep, seventy rams, seventy ibex and seventy antelopes. This sacrifice was not only a funerary offering
but was intended to provide her son and husband with food in the
world
hereafter.
None
of
this,
life.
The
itself.
Anat alone knew of Mot's abode, and with the aid of the sickle. Only then did Baal and Aleyn return to the light of day. The same theme recurs in Greek myths of a later age, in which Heracles snatches Alcestis from
sun-goddess she slew him with a
death.
Long before
the
first
were
written,
its
them had
ceased to believe
ViroUeaud stresses that the Canaanites were never quite sure whether spring would really follo^v winter. Their uncertainty may have stemmed from an ancient
remembrance of the
all
last
Ice Age,
b.c.
At
prey to a short
of disquiet and
when the first rains were late in might mean the end of the world. This was
42
why
the victory of
The
tongues
Anat.
eat ye,
known
in
Hebrew
a feast
tablet: "Today and tomorrow Rephaim, and drink and do the same until the seventh day." The feast of the dead lasted for a week, after which the supreme god El called the souls and said: "Go now, ye Rephaim, into my house; enter ye the palace." Who, then, was Anat, the goddess who rescued Baal, vanquished the dragon and feasted the souls of the dead? She was the same Astarte to whom Pharaoh Thutmosis III erected a temple at Thebes in the fifteenth century b.c. She was the same goddess Asterot whom the children of Israel worshiped from time to time
To
when their faith in Yahweh faltered. The clay tablets of Ugarit were not deciphered until thirty years ago, so we are much more familiar with the Greek version of the
than three thousand years beneath the
name, Astarte, whereas the original name, Anat, lay buried for more hill of Ras Shamra.
The
may
certainly note-
on the island of Cyprus, which was inhabited by Canaanite seafarers and boasted the Phoenician city of Alasia, there were two world-renowned temples dedicated to Aphrodite, those of Paphos and Amathus. And also that to Homer, Aphrodite was a Cyprian goddess. The Greeks' tradition undoubtedly shows symptoms of an eastern and Semitic origin, for to them Aphrodite was the goddess of fertility and love just as Anat was to the Canaanites.
worthy
ideas
own religious concepone of the world's great mysteries that a mutual relaexists not only between all cultures but between all gods.
LEBANON
The conquest of the sea is marHs most important feat. New new stars have always held an irresistible attraction for the imagination of man. The sea enabled unknown island races to
conquer immense areas and establish lasting sovereignty oji foreign soil. In a remote time when no one had yet founded any proper trading colonies or established a navy, a S7nall people living on the eastern shores of the Mediterranean discovered the art of navigating by the Vole Star aiid, over a period of about a thousaiid years, built up a Tnaritime empire, a thalassocracy, which was safe from the clutches of any land-based army. 1,200 years before the Christian era, when the power of Egypt was wa?7ing, the Phoenicians gradually debouched upon the Mediterranean scene, where
for
many
centuries
they
dictated
the
cozirse of
other nations'"
economic activity in their capacity as veritable 7nerchant pri?2ces and grands seigneurs. And all this happened while Italy was still waiting for the dawn.
A. PoiDEBARD AND
J.
Lauffray, Sidon,
Beirut, 195
PHARAOH Rameses
made
a stronger
II
was
a high-spirited king.
this
No
Egyptian ruler
unusual
man whose
insatiable
lust for
He
Thebes, and
temple
now
At Luxor he ordered the completion of the huge Hall of Pillars in the Temple of Karnak. No Pharaoh erected larger statues, some of them hewn from a single block of stone. His statue at Tanis was nearly 90 feet high and had to be sculpted from a monolith weighing 900 tons. (A large modern truck can haul between 50 and 60 tons.) Rameses II may have desired to immortalize his fame in stone, but he also sought to enjoy his days on earth. Looking at his features portrayed in the colossal relief at the great Temple of Abu Simbel or in the granite statue in the Temple of Karnak, we can see a
as the
known
Ramaseum
own
death cult.
about
his
mouth.
We
numerous pampered proudly daughters whom he marriages brought him 79 sons and 59 for his temples. He ruled depicted in long reliefs on the walls of
that he
was
43
44
67 years, from 1290 until 1223 e.g., and died at the age of ninety. Even death has failed to conquer his body, for his mummy still
survives today.
it was this Pharaoh who caused the perform such feats of forced labor in Egypt, and still less surprising that Moses and Aaron one day presented themselves before Rameses II and asked him to allow their people to set off into the desert. Inquking ironically what god it was whose voice he was supposed to obey, the Pharaoh dismissed them with the words: "I know not the Lord, neither will I let Israel go." Since his urge to build was all-consuming and he knew that large numbers of Israelites lived in Egypt, he refused to sacrifice such a valuable source of manpower. On the contrary, he ordered them to step up their production of bricks. With all the delights of the world at his fingertips, he was
It is
Israelites to
still
memory
in stone for
all
eternity, so
commanded them to redouble their efforts. "Let there be more work laid upon the men and let them not regard vain words." The Israelite overseers, who were in turn appointed by Egyptian
he
.
.
taskmasters,
daily quota.
treaties
if
They
en-
ye are
idle!"
from the fifth chapter of Exodus. country had been ravaged by the ten plagues did the Pharaoh reconsider his decision and leave the children of Israel free to make their exodus from Egypt. This took place about 1300 e.g., or some 3,300 years ago. Later on in Exodus we read that Rameses II regretted his decision to let the children of Israel go and sent six hundred of his best chariots in pursuit of Moses and his people.
learn these historical facts
We
Not
until his
There
is
still
extant a letter
from
man
Aman-appag, one
army commanders. Its interest lies in the fact that it dates from a time when Rameses was still seeking to set the stamp of his mind and liis race upon the world, a time when Moses
of the Egyptian
was conducting one of the largest and most hazardous emigrations in history. The document, which now reposes in the British Museum under the name Papyrus Anastasi I, also mentions some of the thriving Canaanite cities which were later captured by the Israelites.
The
his
correspondent
as
Alahir, a Canaanite
word used
to describe
skillful
writer or gen-
LEBANON
erally erudite individual.
45
in his letter, and it is not uninteresting to read how friends corresponded 3,300 years ago. "When you halt in the evening your body is quite pulverized and your limbs in pieces. You have to harness your horses by yourself because no one comes to help you. Then people break into the camp and untie your horse, pilfering
him
and
stealing
your
clothes.
Your groom
They have
carried off
what is left and up you cannot find their your possessions. You tug at your
appropriates
What more
letter
The
it
look
like?
you about a city, Byblos Did you not visit it? Tell me about What does Uz look like? There is
which stands in the sea, Tyre by name. Water brought to it by ship, and it is richer in fish than sand." It is immensely informative to draw back the veil and look into past millennia. Paul Claudel has said that the past is even more unattainable than the future but is not the past a part of the present and the present a part of the future? The life of the world's
peoples,
especially
who
live
much
as
their
the informa-
teach us
much about
the Egyptian tourist in Syria. "Tremors seize you, and your hair
on end. Your heart is in your mouth. The chasm lies on one side, the mountain on the other. You continue, you walk beside your carriage and are afraid. Your heart thumps. You walk on foot. The sky is open. You imagine that the enemy is behind you. You ." Seldom has a lonely traveler's fear been more graphitremble.
stands
. .
cally portrayed.
"When you come to Joppa you find a field of verdure. You enter an unwalled vineyard, where you find a lovely girl guarding the grapes. She takes you as her companion and grants you delightful tokens of her favor. You are caught, and confess. They upbraid you, and you hastily surrender your apron of fine Upper Egyptian hnen.
Once more you
sleep
steal
46
crosses
long.
Your
carriage
to pieces.
You
me food and water,' you say, 'for I have arrived.' But they pretend to be deaf and do not listen." Has there ever been a letter which described a disastrous journey by a government official more vividly, more observantly or with more delicate sarcasm? Men have changed little since Rameses, Moses and the golden age of Syrian culture.
the sand. 'Give
Mahir roamed through the Phoenician cities, the maritime had a history of thousands of years behind them. They had felt the influence of Asia, Egypt and Crete. That the Egyptians maintained good relations with a city like Byblos is proved by the excavations carried out by Montet (1921-1924) and Dunand (1925-1957). It was at Byblos in 1923 that Pierre Montet made one of the most interesting finds of the century by discovering the sarcophagus of King Ahiram in a burial chamber there. In its interior, among other funerary gifts, were two Rameses II alabaster vases. King Ahiram was a contemporary of the great builder and Byblos was at that time the most important city in Phoenicia, although strongly under the influence of Egypt in politics, trade and art. One side of the stone sarcophagus depicts a bearded King Ahiram seated on a sphinx throne, his feet on a stool, a lotus blossom in his left hand and a cup in his right. Seven men stand before the king. The first is brushing flies from the sacrificial table with a swat. Two others are carrying in dishes and cups, while the other four are saluting the king with raised arms, palms
fortresses already
When
facing forward.
The
mourning
figures:
on
their
shoulders, a
man
The
lid
of the sar-
cophagus bears a life-size figure of the great king and something of inestimable importance an engraved inscription running along both its sides. It is the earliest Phoenician text in existence and antedates the alphabetical mode of writing, proving that even in 1300 B.C. the Phoenicians were on the way to that most important invention in human history: the alphabet. The find was important because it solved a mystery which had been puzzling scholars. It had long been assumed that the Greeks adopted their written characters from a foreign people, probably as early as the tenth
LEBANON
century
b.c.
47
But unless
it
the take-over
was open
Thieves had removed the most valuable objects from the burial chamber and the king's corpse was no longer there, but the sar-
cophagus itself now reposes in the National Museum at Beirut. Because the coastal city of Byblos was renowned for processing Egyptian papyrus, biblos became the Greek term for book, and our Bible owes its name to the same source.
One
cities
was Tyre, an
is
island
fortress possessed of
two
still
The
Sidonian harbor
not only
still
in
in use.
The
dis-
appeared. Since 1934 the French archaeologist Poidebard has been conducting explorations on the site of the former Egyptian harbor
et Belles-Lettres
cities,
Research in the past twenty years has shown that many vanished both on land and beneath the sea, are discernible only from
great altitude
where
Poidebard exploited
this
emerge more clearlyknowledge by taking aerial photographs down. When they reached the sea bed the
their astonished
On
a mile
entrance at
center.
The Egyptian
the sea by human endeavor, and was complete with quays, breakwaters, loading sheds and every other prerequisite of a thriving maritime metropolis. The city stood on an island. According to information given by the historian Arrian, who lived in the second century a.d., it had walls more than 160 feet high and was built on rocky ground. Since
was
small,
metropolis which stretched for eight miles along the coast. Today,
48
Tyre (now
forms the
tip of a
into the sea, testimony to the fact that Alexander the Great not
only conquered the world but altered geography itself. While preparing to capture Tyre in 332 b.c. he built a causeway out to the island city, which lay 650 yards from the mainland. Using rubble
from the
feet wide out into the sea. We can only guess how :manv thousands of laborers must have worked to realize Alexander's grand design. In the course of more than 2,000 years silt has gradually increased the width of the dike until today one can only imagine what the mightiest maritime fortress in human history must have looked like when it was still an island. Only about 6,000 people now live in Sur, whereas the former island was once the fulcrum of a great sea power and accommodated 25,000 inhabitants within its
two hundred
walls.
The
Tyre and
Fantastic as
On
south of Tyre,
was and
still
Leading
its
with food.
water for
They
also set
them to irrigate the fields that supplied them up a regular ferry service to carry water
and so provide
a
to the island
source of drinking
is
from the city's storage cisterns, and the system's efficiency vouched for by the fact that Nebuchadnezzar besieged Tyre in vain for thirteen years, from 585 to 572 b.c. In the coastal plain and the hilly country that rises to the north, all of which once belonged to Tyre, modern archaelogists have discovered widespread traces of habitation, among them graves, sarcophagi, remnants of houses, oil presses, cisterns and stone reliefs. The imagination boggles at the antiquity of Tyre. When Herodotus visited the place about 450 b.c. he was told that the Temple of Heracles Melkert was already 2,300 years old. But the city itself was far older. Who knows when the god Melkert ordered the first purple robe for his beloved, the nymph Tyro, from the purple refiners of Tyre? Weaving, glass manufacture, metalwork and,
distributed
LEBANON
above
wealth.
all,
49
purple
dye all
Tyre is a place where the beginnings of Christianity go back to the time of Jesus' presence on earth. A Christian community existed there in the middle of the first century a.d., and it was through the narrow alleyways of Tyre that Paul passed on the way back from
his third missionary journey. Even earlier, the prophet Ezekiel, who fought against the Phoenicians' gods, foresaw disaster: "How art thou destroyed, that wast inhabited of seafaring men, the renowned ." He even predicted that the city, which wast strong in the sea. southern harbor was destined to collapse into the sea, for he went on: "... I shall bring up the deep upon thee, and great waters shall
.
.
cover thee."
We
I sit
can also read in Ezekiel's prophecies something of must have inspired the Phoenicians at
".
. .
Thou
God,
[the prince of
in the
Tyre]
hast said,
am
God,
in the seat of
its
This mysterious race survived many vicissitudes in the course of long history. At the beginning of the third millennium b.c. forty
ships arrived in
ex-
The
Abusir
which
his
war
fleet
but not least, slaves without number. While Pharaoh Thutmosis occupied the throne between 1504 and 1450 b.c. the Phoenicians' great maritime cities played, as so often in their history, the role
last
III
of shrewd vassals. Tyre, Sidon, Berytos and Byblos sent the king
of Egypt corn,
oil
at his disposal.
Then
the "sea peoples" invaded Syria, and between 1200 and 750 b.c. the
maritime
In
cities fell
upon hard
Later they were forced to pay huge tributes to the kings of Assyria.
Tyre we see King Hiram not to be confused with Ahiram of Byblosaugmenting the surface of his island city by reclamation work, building new temples to Melkert and Astarte and erecting
a golden pillar in the shrine of Baal.
this
As we have already
heard,
his father
David
in person.
The
walls of
who
reigned from 918 to 910 b.c, was a victim of one such plot,
50
and
his
what
much we know, but we do not know them their unique yearning for travel. Perhaps they had inherited it from their predecessors, the seafarers of Crete.
country Canaan. This
instilled
in
At
all
open
sea
drove them to Spain, to the city of Tarshish (Tartessus) in the estuary of the Guadalquivir; and the merchants of Tartessus. in
England and the Baltic was probably not a Phoenician city, but the Israelites had learned the name from Phoenician sailors and so they called any large galleys "ships of Tarshish." The ships which Solomon and Hiram I of Tyre jointly sent to Ophir, the land of gold, were so described, although they sailed nowhere near Tarshish. The Phoenicians planted colonies everywhere: on the islands of Thasos, Cythera, Melos, Rhodes, Malta and Sicily, and on the North African coast. Their last colony, founded in 814 B.C., was Carthage, where
their turn, plied their trade as far afield as
Sea. Tarshish
way
of
life
mother
cities
in the
Graeco-Roman world.
The
wide-meshed nets were baited with mussels to attract which preyed on them. Then, when the snails had attached their long suckers firmly, the nets were raised and the valuable harvest reaped. The mollusks, the largest of which could weigh twelve pounds or more, were then smashed and their purple glands extracted. These were salted down and left to stand for three days, after which the mass was tipped into a leaden caldron and diluted in the proportion of 4V2 gallons of water to 4 hundredweight of purple. The caldron was heated to an even temperature by steam, which was introduced 3,000 years ago, it must be remembered through a long pipe leading from the furnace. When the caldron began to simmer, the fragments of flesh which rose to the surface were skimmed off. After about ten days the solution was clear and ready to be tested on wool which had previously been steeped in lye. If the initial test proved satisfactory the wool was immersed in purple for five hours. Exposure to the rays of the sun enhanced the wool's glowing color but also gave off a revolting stench. The Papyrus Sallier 2,
purple. Small
LEBANON
which was written
in the time of
51
Rameses
II,
gives us
any cloth."
Sunlight turned the dye first dark green and then violet or sometimes mauve. Generally speaking, however, the purple of the ancient world was almost always violet in shade. The Jews, who may have learned the art of purple refining during their sojourn in Egypt, became skilled in the technique of purple manufacture.
In later years the curtain which hung before their Holy of Holies was purple, and purple came to be used in religious ceremonies hence the four liturgical colors: white, violet, crimson and scarlet. Sacrificial tables and other sacred objects were draped in purple, too. The Egyptians, who imported purple from nearby Phoenicia, not only swathed the mummies of distinguished men in purple bandages and robed their dead in purple shrouds but also used purple on papyrus as a form of ink. In order to make clothes wear better, the ancients mixed purple with honey. Among the Lydians, purple was worth its weight in silver. Clement of Alexandria, who was born
in 150 B.C., tells us that a certain
talents for a purple
Egyptian courtesan paid 10,000 robe although she only charged 1,000 Attic
drachmas for her services. This meant, in modern terms, that her dress cost her about $250 while her regular fee was only fifty cents. However, nothing in life not even purple endures forever, and
the genuine purple of antiquity finally disappeared for good.
the
When
Mohammedans took
discontinued.
Is
man
smitten
by
a strange
this
man
not to open
one take my couch away nor carry me off elsewhere. I adjure kings and men not to uncover me nor lay me bare." The sarcophagus, which anyone can inspect in the Louvre in Paris, is empty.
NORTH
AFRICA
QUEEN OF THE
/ shall
SEAS
Carthaginia7is
describe the most notable of all wars, the war which the waged against the Roman people imder HamiibaFs
command. Never did 7nore powerful states and nations engage in arined conflict. The fortunes of war were so changeable and the
struggle so arduous that those
ger.
strength: the
Komans from displeasure that they, the victors, had been attacked by the vanquished; the Punians because they believed that Rome had often behaved toward them, the vanquished, like an arrogant and covetous overlord.
Titus
Livius, History of Ro?ne, xxi,
i
FEW
cities in
antiquity
were
as
wealthy
as
them met
as tragic
houses drinking the best Greek wine while their ships sailed to every
quarter of the world.
who from
their base
Tyre
beyond
known
to the
Romans
as
Gades and
to us as the
Spanish
called
town
new Tyre
(see
map
p. 54).
reputed to have been founded in 814 b.c, 38 years before the first Olympiad. The story of its founding is generally
Carthage
is
regarded
as a legend,
historical truth.
but such legends usually contain a grain of Timaeus, who lived between 356 and 260 b.c. and
in 38 volumes, gives us
wrote a history
founding.
(Virgil),
his great
some
details
of the city's
We
who
Maro
poem the Aeneid, a national epic which chronicled the wanderings of Aeneas. Elissa was the daughter of the king of Tyre. Her husband Sychaeus was murdered by his brother Pygmalion, who made himself king of Tyre and forced Elissa to flee the country, accom52
NORTH
port of
call
AFRICA
53
The emigrants, whose first was Cyprus, included a high priest of the goddess Astarte, who had stipulated that his family should supply the priesthood in any future colony. Also among the fugitives were eighty virgins who were to be at the disposal of emigrants and foreigners in the temples of Astarte. Eventually, at the point where the North African coast juts closest to the island of Sicily, the Tyrian refugees founded Carthage, having secured the land peacefully by paying
panied by a number of native Tyrians.
the indigenous population an agreed rent.
The king
ing to do sacrifice and then leaped into the flames. Elissa's Carthaginian
onto a pyre.
Elissa's
story
is
it
The
Carthaginians,
known
to the
Romans
as
Poeni and to us
264 and 146
as
b.c.
Although
their city
and Napoleon
history.
as
brilliant military
commanders
in
from modern Tunis. Slightly inland is the hill of Byrsa, and at its summit stood a temple dedicated to the Punic god Eshmun. The Carthaginians had built a wall around the sacred hill, turning it into a citadel. Today the heights are occupied by the monastery of the White Fathers and the Cathedral of St. Louis. It is no accident that the richest place in the ancient world not only gave its name to some of the world's most famous stock exchanges, notably the Paris Bourse, but also to that humbler article of use, the purse. Carthage had two harbors, one rectangular and the other round. These harbors were linked, leaving only one egress to the sea. The rectangular outer harbor was used for merchant ships and the
Carthage stood by the sea only about
six miles
which was
La Marsa/
Sidi-Bou-SaVd^
L'Ariana^
"EAncie
Tunis
Tunis Carthage
NORTH
of the
fleet.
AFRICA
55
Facilities
The only exit could, when necessary, be barred with iron chains and the whole city was protected by walls with a total length of over twenty miles. From this secure base, Carthage dominated the North African coast from Egypt to Gibraltar and sent forth her five-tiered galleys to southern Spain, to the islands of Sardinia and Corsica, and to Sicily, always maintaining contact with her erstwhile mother city Tyre. Carthaginian ships sailed far into the Atlantic Ocean. It is likely that they reached Britain via Cadiz, and they may well have
wharfs, quays and warehouses.
touched the Azores. Carthage derived immense wealth from her worldwide trading connections, for the shrewd merchant princes of Byrsa saw to it that foreign countries traded only with them and never with their colonies. Ships belonging to those who disregarded this rule were
ruthlessly captured or sunk.
The
imported from Spain and England and reshipped. Astute Punic businessmen sold textiles, African hides and thousands of slaves to customers throughout the known world, thereby filling the coffers of their countincrhouses and swelling the revenues of their miraculous city which, like some New York of the ancient world, was a place of tireless activity and ultramodern methods. Gold, pearls, Tyrian
from Arabia, Egyptian linen, fine vases from goods were displayed in the warehouses and market places of Carthage. The world's first joint stock companies originated there, and it was Carthage which floated the first govpurple, ivory, incense
Greece all
these
ernment
loans, built
military history.
slave girls
machines and invented the first artillery in Negro slaves and the loveliest dusky in Rome, Athens, Spain and the Bosporus were all suppHed
The
strongest
by
her.
(Some Carthaginian
aristocrats
owned
as
many
as
20,000
slaves.)
Carthage evolved a constitution which combined elements of monarchy, aristocracy and democracy, a system which certainly suited the contemporary world but may well have contributed to the city's ultimate downfall. At the head of the city-state were two men known in Latin as suffetes, from the Semitic shopet. (The word is translated as "judges" in the Bible.) These two annually elected
56
officials
ruled in conjunction with a parliament consisting of three hundred of the wealthiest citizens, all of whom held office for life. In addition to them there was the "council of the hundred judges." In reality there were 104 of these men, who controlled the courts and exercised considerable influence on general policy. All military matters were entrusted to a supreme commander. The moneyed aristocracy of this extraordinary city had devised a solution to their military problems which looked effective but contained latent dangers: the supreme commander had to win every war. If things went awry he was called to account and, if necessary, crucified. The sons of wealthy aristocrats would not deign to become soldiers and Carthaginians in general prided themselves on never having had to go to war in person, so the only answer was to maintain a large and potentially dangerous army of mercenaries recruited from every land. It is uncertain how many people lived in the Carthaginian metropolis during its prime. The Greek geographer Strabo puts the number at 700,000, which, allowing for foreign residents and slaves, does not appear to be an exaggerated estimate. Conditions in the city can be deduced from a thorough study of ancient sources. Magnificent marble temples, gold and silver pillars, statues and statuettes gleamed in the African sun. The goddess Tanit was worshiped here in peculiarly lavish style, for archaeologists have found
in
Carthage to sacrifice
us that one such sacrifice in the year 310 b.c. cost the lives
less
of no
sidered to be
name
my
help,"
"favored of Baal."
Viewed
in a
contemporary
light,
covered a period of 119 years, were world wars. When Hannibal suffered his first defeat at Zama, when Carthage was forced to pay
Rome
tall
the fantastic
sum of
make war again without Rome's perone of the most amazing sea powers in history was already sealed. Rome waited another fifty years, and
houses swore never to
NORTH AFRICA
then the city was burned, destroyed and smashed, house
57
by
house,
temple by temple and terrace by terrace. The walls were overthrown, the quays demolished, the lighthouses battered down and
who
still
by
the
Were
world more boldly than men had their voyages and explorations were almost unfamiliar lands, uncharted and unfriendly waters. Only stout hearts could have overcome such perils. The Carthaginians were not artists or poets. They were seduced neither by Greek nor Roman culture, nor did they live in the despotic style of the East. In the end, they defended their city and their way of life to the last man. They possessed something worth defending, for they lived in their metropohs by the sea in a style unequaled by any other race in the contemporary world.
cian stock sailed the seas of the
WESTERN EUROPE
artistic
we
usually attribute to
much
later generations.
THE
island of Malta is small, and there are few other places in the world where so many people live so closely packed together. Towns, suburbs and villages almost melt into one another, and all are seething with people. The peasants of Malta hate stones because they interfere with their plows and there are plenty of stones on
Malta, stones so big that they waste cultivable ground, stones that
its
greatest mystery.
is
inhabited
by
innumerable tiny
fields
which
honey
in
Europe.
The
fossilized
that
is
left
of a
Gozo, Comino and Filfla, is land bridge which once linked Africa with Italy.
islands of Malta,
Man was
ago
as 100,000 years or
capital, in
human
teeth
The
anthropologist
Arthur Keith suggests that two of these teeth belong to the Neanderthal people who roamed the world between 130,000 and
30,000 years ago.
To
ascribe
them
to the Neanderthalians
is,
how-
through
many
WESTERN EUROPE
available evidence would not take us back 30,000 years,
let
59
alone
130,000.
was on Malta's shores that Paul the Apostle was wrecked while way to Rome as a prisoner. "And when they were escaped, then they knew that the island was called Melita," we are told in
It
on
his
Acts: xxviii.
The
is still
celebrated
by
Nowhere
else in
early buildings as
Europe can we see such an amazing number of on this small group of Mediterranean islands where,
men
which bordered on the miraculous. In such a densely populated place every square foot of ground is valuable, and A4altese peasants have been clearing away the stones and stone buildings for thousands of years. However, enough still remains to provide an almost inexhaustible archaeological paradise. To catch a glimpse of this wonderland is to travel backward in time to a period which lies four or five thousand years in the past and to speculate about people who handled vast blocks of stone as though they were the legendary
Titans of old.
megalith
is
a large stone,
composed of huge individual blocks of stone. We shall never know exactly what prompted men to construct such immense megalithic buildings here in prehistoric times. The builders are no longer with us and we do not even know their precise race, although we can at
least
July 20, 19 1 5, Themistocles Zammit began to excavate some megahthic buildings near the village of Tarxien, about two miles south of Valletta. Two years later, the ruins of the golden age of these unknown builders had been unearthed. The superficial observer will not immediately discern any plan in the immense jumble of stones, yet each was laid with a deliberate intent. Semioval chambers were built in pairs with their axes of length parallel to one another and a central corridor connecting them. The ground plan can be likened to two Ds set close together but facing outward
in this fashion:
On
QD. The
the
two
oval chambers,
stone slabs,
wall.
whose side walls and floors consist of huge and the whole arrangement is surrounded by an enclosing
it
For decades
6o
Ramta
Victoria
Paul's,'
"
Cad/
'^
-Zebb^ug.,-.
Hoi/Saf//en,;J Tarscien
Siggiewi^-ADebdiefco-C'Luqa
--'Bur Mg/iez Hnqiar Kim Zurr-eq
^Zejtun,-
'"^^
;n
Naduf
HarDa/oijgJ
Malta
erected
by
more
ancient times.
were dwelling
purpose.
places,
palaces,
The broad
like
the apse of a
tables
and stone covers have been found which probably served as water catchments or fireplaces. Beneath a number of stone blocks diggers found fragments of receptacles, tools of stone or bone, shells and pebbles, all carefully placed there by human agency before the megaUths were superimposed on them. This indicates that the oval buildings were neither dwelling places nor palaces, but sanctuaries. Wherever in the
buildings. Several monoliths
may
have been
WESTERN EUROPE
world man has erected
his largest
6i
and
finest buildings
artistically,
and wherever
by
a religious impulse.
chamber at Hal Tarxien the lower portion of a female was excavated. The figure was seated on a block of stone decorated in relief and was almost life-size. Various statuettes in clay and stone were also discovered, mostly female figures which probably had rehgious significance. One thing we do know is that the prehistoric Stone-Age inhabitants of Malta worshiped a female deity. The director of the Valletta Museum, Professor Sir Themistocles Zammit, has also established by dint of exhaustive research that oracles were bestowed in the sanctuaries of Malta. Such deductions demand an extremely wide knowledge of other similar
In one
statue
places in
all
In the interior of
many
let into the ground. These were surrounded by walls on three sides and bordered by a stone step. Each block of stone had five holes in it, and in the right-hand corner
Zammit
is
also
balls
of
were discovered some yards away. This would suggest that we are dealing with an oracle. Perhaps the stone balls were thrown at the stone from a distance and the purport of the oracle depended on the particular hole in which they landed. Peculiar stone chambers with niches and apertures unearthed not only at Tarxien but at other sites such as Hagiar Kim, Mnaidra and Gigantia, all suggest that a system of sacrificial rites was practiced
varying
sizes
there
skeletons were found in the megalithic buildings, but were many bones belonging to domesticated animals, particularly oxen and sheep. Professor Zammit considers these bones
to be the remains of sacrificial beasts.
No human
Some
62
saw the discovery of the Hypogeum at Hal neighborhood of the Tarxien ruins, and in 1907 it was opened to the pubhc. Derived from the Greek hypogeion, the word is used to describe a subterranean vault and consisted in this case of recesses, passages and small chambers hewn out of the solid rock, together with some external buildings. In order to clear the Hypogeum a shaft thirty feet deep had to be driven into the ground. Debris from the mysterious catacombs ^vas carried out through this tunnel and electric lights were later installed so that the interior could be inspected with ease. In ancient times the Hypogeum must have been a sanctuary. It seems safe to assume this because the roof of one of the vaults is decorated with spirals in red ochre, a well-known feature of preSaflieni in the
The
Italian authority
chamber
one
of the
artificial
to wall
and chamber to
another feature of
In Zammit's opinion,
Hypogeum
at
Hal
Saflieni
known
oracles:
filled the visitor with reverence and directed his mind to the mystery and power of unseen spirits. Perhaps the Hal Saflieni caves and the Tarxien temples attracted people of distant lands who believed in the power of the oracle which could be consulted there."
they
Toward
Age
the
its
Hypogeum
two
levels
served as a
huge burial
Chambers on each of
were
filled
with red earth and the skeletons of over seven thousand people placed inside. The absence of large bones indicates most of them had not been buried in this spot originally, but had presumably been
in the
Hypogeum. The
then burying them elsewhere in a been identified in other places in the Mediterranean. The Hypogeum contained potsherds and fragments of
Two
One
women was
side.
one of the
finest
The
sculptors of Malta,
who
lived
roughly four or
five
thousand years
WESTERN EUROPE
ago, probably excelled
all
63
the other
artists
ranean, particularly
figure
was concerned.
The whole
who accomformed highly organized communities and were culturally very advanced, or they would never
ranean vault, was an astonishing achievement. People
plished such things had undoubtedly
feats.
sacrificed to a god or gods; we also were slaughtered before a sacred image and then burned. Complicated oracular rituals and the interpretation of god-sent dreams, too, have been inferred and all from the silent ruins, the echoing chambers and broken statuettes of the Hypogeum at Hal Saflieni. What a high degree of intellectual attainment, what
We
know
that animals
were
know
that they
an intricate system of religious observance it summons up! The Maltese islands offer us what is probably the most interesting example
of man's quest for spirituality in pre-metallic times. In the Mnaidra
sanctuary,
buildings, mountains
air,
this veritable
similar impression
the ruins of
Gozo. Blocks and slabs of stone must have been brought there from miles away, for heavy building materials were not available in the immediate area. Many of the Gigantia's upright stones are over sixteen feet high, and one is more than twenty-six feet long and
thirteen feet wide.
is the size of several monolithic pillars and Hagiar Kim, which, incidentally, means "standing stones." One of the pillars there is over sixteen feet high, and one of the slabs nearly two and a half feet thick, ten feet high and twenty-three feet long. It would be impossible to load such a weight onto a modern truck without using elaborate technical equipment. Analyzing the remarkable engineering feats of five thousand years ago, we can only assume that the immense stones were moved over a period of months or even years by a whole community employing levers, stone balls and wooden rollers. The almost incredible amount of energy expended by the prehistoric inhabitants of Malta in their timeless struggle with the huge stones is manifested by deep tracks cut into the hard limestone.
Equally astonishing
64
These
islands
and run
in
every
stone
first
balls
which
all
still
at its
an entirely alien population took over the island and the huge
No writing, no verbal tradiwere left behind by the people who piled these mighty blocks of stone one upon the other, nor is it possible to reconstruct their appearance or tell their race from the formation of their bones and skulls. The mute evidence is there. Once upon a time, with endless perseverance and enormous effort, thousands upon thousands of men reared the great rocks skyward. The people of Malta must have devoted their whole energies to building these sanctuaries for eternity, but what their motives were, what language they spoke and what gods they served must forever remain a mystery.
megalithic sanctuaries
fell
into decay.
tions,
no
Only
the stones
know
the answer.
particularly fine Punic gravestone, now in the Bardo Museum at Tunis. Some [15] historians assert that the Carthaginians did not beHeve in an afterhfe, but it is difficult
to believe that the creator of this stone
a life
after death.
irjlHISlv
'1
i6]
This gravestone depicts the face of a Carthaginian noblewoman. It is now in the Aluseum of the White
Fathers at Carthage.
[17]
[i]
at
number
mysterious city that was one of the greatest commercial centers in the ancient world.
glass
These small heads in brightly colored from the Museum of the White Fathers at Carthage are only a few centimeters high and may
[18]
[2-4]
[19]
two-floored, many-roomed subterranean building carved painted on the ceiling in red ocher indicate that the place
[2o]
The
"Sleeping
Woman
of
Malta" was found in the Hypogeum, and is A'lalta's finest neolithic sculpture. Four or five thousand years ago, the island's
sculptors
to
be
[21]
also
This terra-cotta head was found in Malta but appears to belong to a later period.
[ii]
between
and
1917.
of Hal Tarxien, excavated by Professor Themistocles Zammit These blocks and slabs of stone were cut by human hand and
assembled into megalithic buildings, probably about 3,000 years before the birth of Christ. Prehistorian Karl J. Narr, however, states that in his opinion the site is not older than the iMiddle Minoan period, somewhere between 2100 and 1600 b.c.
[23] Overall plan of the temple at Hal Tarxien, showing the characteristic double-oval shape of its buildings. The dark outlines indicate walls built of large vertical slabs, and the darkest gray, shaded portions represent the horizontal blocks composing the perimeter walls. Filling materials in the intervening spaces are shown in lighter gray, while the lightest tint indicates the position of large floor
slabs.
[24] Thousands of bizarre constructions like this can still be seen on the plains and hills of Portugal. They are the
remains
of
megalithic
graves.
-s^
discovered in the west of the Iberian Peninsula. The entrance {backgromid, center) can be
clearly distinguished.
ntzjr'
[26] Stonehenge is the most celebrated and interesting megalithic complex to have survived from the period between the end of the Stone Age and the beginning of the Bronze Age. It is generally assumed to have had religious associations. [27] This passage grave, known as Vjalkinge 9, was found in the Swedish province of Schonen. Folke Hansen discovered forty humeral bones there, together with the remains of hand and foot bones. It is estimated that twenty-five persons were buried in the grave during prehistoric times.
^Wm
"^
UpDBw-
[28]
The
palace of Mari was decorated with splendid mural paintings. Here we see a on the wall of "Courtyard 106" in ocher, red, black and white. This work of art is some 3,700 years old.
WESTERN EUROPE
Avebury and Stonehe?ige are amo?ig the most astonishing premonuments, not only in the British Isles but in the Old World. Each might be fairly compared to a cathedral.
V. Gordon
London, 1949
a hill overgrown with grass, undergrowth and get the feeling that there is something artificial about the rising ground, pause a moment. What lies beneath your feet may be a mass grave built by man in prehistoric times. Megas and lithos are the Greek words for "large" and "stone," so a megalith is a large stone. It was out of large stones like these that, between
roughly 3000 and 1500 b.c, man erected monuments whose existence has always been known but whose purpose has in many respects remained
a
years.
form of large
chambers
men
of
about four thousand years ago placed a single stone upright and so left us one of the famous menhirs. This term is derived from the Celtic words 7Jiae7i and hir, meaning "stone" and "long." All these things the single stones, the rings and complexes, coupled with the
creative impulse and the ideas that gave birth to
to
make up
call
we
the
divine
megalithic culture. There is a fascination in endeavoring to what thoughts animated the men who sought eternity through
medium
Extending in a huge arc from Norway, Denmark and southern Sweden to northwest Germany, England and Ireland, and from Brittany, Spain and Portugal to the islands of the western iMediterranean, the relics of this mysterious culture include barrows,
cairns, tumuli,
groups of monoliths, stone rings, tracks bordered by and monuments constructed of unhewn
rock and built to withstand the ages. Western Europe alone has between forty and fifty thousand megalithic graves. People have wondered why all these monuments were built either
65
66
This
may
have been because coastal areas have always held the lead in cultural
development.
educators; as
It is as if
if
sea travel
enhanced man's
capabilities,
made him
ideas
with
foreign peoples.
It
came into being around the shores Near East and that the Mediterranean was one of the principal cradles of architecture and religion. Civilizations developed much more slowly on the great continental land masses than in the maritime regions of Central America, on the coasts of China, in Greece, Italy, Spain and the Mediterranean islands. It was in the Aegean that man first learned how to hew blocks of stone, fit them together in layers
man's
earliest
advanced
and construct domed graves. In the remaining areas, in the western Mediterranean and on the Atlantic coasts, blocks of crude stone lying in the fields were merely piled up to form compartments, and menhirs were still being erected there long after the people of Mesopotamia, Syria and Egypt had started to hew stone into
squared blocks.
What
surprises
earliest stone
is
monuments erected
the village of
by Europe's
prehistoric inhabitants
materials used.
monuments ever
discovered.
com-
covered galleries (galeries convenes) 'all these bear witness, in their arrangement, planning and selection of stones, to a onceadvanced culture. Prehistorian Z. Le Rouzic believes that the alignements were cult sites or open-air temples and that the cromlech of Menec was the chief sanctuary. Cromlechs are megaliths arranged in a circle or rectangle. The alignements may have been processional routes used by a death cult. Certainly, the fact that the avenues of stones usually lead to an open space surrounded by a ring of stones and close to a megalithic grave suggests some connection with a
cult of that nature.
WESTERN EUROPE
67
The
German
menhirs.
68
rows in all the aligne?nents in Brittany corresponds to the rising and setting of the sun at certain astronomically determinate points in time. This would make them a sort of gigantic calendar which indicated the dates of a sun cult's religious festivals and had a connection with seedtime and harvest. A similar astronomical orientation has been attributed to certain very ancient roads in Brittany, but there is no scientific evidence for such a theory and it would seem to be no more than a product of wishful
the orientation of the
thinking.
The
alignements of
parallel
Menec extend
for a distance of
some
1,300
1,099 menhirs.
They
form eleven
rows running
in a west-southwesterly or north-
northwesterly direction.
The
in ten
alignejnents of
just
1,250 yards at a
depth of
rows.
aligneinents of Kerlescan are just under 1,000 yards long and
The
contain a total of 594 menhirs arranged in thirteen rows. Whereas at Carnac it is the sheer mass of the megaliths that
impresses one, at Locmariaquer
the individual stones.
er H'rolk, or "fairy stone,"
it is
has been christened Mane must have measured over sixty-five feet long when it was still intact. One day, we do not know when, it fell and broke into four pieces. This monolith is between ten and thirteen feet thick and its weight has been estimated at 350 tons. Five of our largest modern trucks would be needed to transport such a load. Not far away stands a magnificent dolmen called the Table des Marchands. This enormous stone slab was part of a subterranean chamber beneath a hill. A passage now leads into the chamber,
many
stone at Stonehenge
is
stone in the
Mount
County Carlo w, Ireland, weighs over a hundred tons. The megalithic grave at Bagneux in the neighborhood of Saumur, central France, boasts one stone which is just over sixty feet long and about sixteen feet wide and a roof stone weighing some
in
Browne dolmen
ninety tons.
It
how
the
men
of 4,000
The
70
immense weights. In 1840 one of Saumur was used to bridge a river. Thirtysix yoked oxen and huge oaken rollers three feet in diameter had to be employed to move it. It is certainly conceivable, therefore, that even in early days a large number of men using primitive devices
years ago
the largest megaliths at
such
as
wooden
rollers
A few years ago, British archaeologists undertook a further thorough examination of Stonehenge, which stands on Salisbury Plain just over two miles from the Wiltshire village of Amesbury. Some of the fallen stones were re-erected, and the Institute of Atomic
Research
at
fissures
by
Stonehenge
in the
world. Stuart Piggott declared in 1954 that it was the unique and individual creation of an architect whose sense of overall plan-
his
con-
He went
anyone on the lookout for comparisons would have The way in which the stones were fitted together, the ground plan and the technical mastery displayed were things which could not be deduced merely from the archaeological findings but it was at least possible to elicit the sequence in which the separate phases occurred and determine their
on
to say that
chronological boundaries.
In the center of the complex
stone,
is
whose exact
Around
it
in a
and
Five massive triliths formed an outer horseshoe, and around them stood a ring of thirty stones nearly fifteen feet high and linked by horizontal slabs. The whole arrangement was enclosed by a
circular rampart measuring 130 yards in diameter
by on
and approached broad avenue which ran straight through the altar stone. Also the path's axis but outside the whole circle and in front of the
a
surrounded by a small ditch. The slaughter or sacrificial stone may also have been situated here at one time. It has been estimated that the central axis is focused on the exact point on the horizon where, in the second millennium b.c, the sun would have risen on June 2 ist,
WESTERN EUROPE
though even
if this
71
that Stonehenge
were true it would be wrong to conclude simply was a sun temple. Most of the world's holy places,
from
prehistoric graves to
modern
birth, creation,
been symbolically
associated.
Piggott
tells
was
second millennium
more
was begun
dis-
The
Secondary Neolithic Culture of Britain. Radiocarbon tests conducted on charred remains which were dug up here in 1950 dated them somewhere between 2123 and 1573 b.c. Stonehenge is partly built of tertiary sandstone blocks which were once available on Salisbury Plain itself and are known in England as sarsens or Saracen stones. In addition, however, there are the socalled "bluestones" which form the inner circle and the smaller horseshoe. H. H. Thomas has ascertained that these bluestones came from the eastern end of Prescelly in South Wales, some 130 miles from Stonehenge as the crow flies. How were they transported to Salisbury Plain from so far away? By sea the route would have been roughly 400 miles long and overland they would have had
covered in the graves
are,
he
to cover a distance of
more than
170 miles.
As the
British archaeol-
ogist
Glyn Daniel
was an amazing technical achievement and covered, so far as we can ascertain, the longest route ever used by the builders of any
megalithic
discovered in the
grandeur of design and execution. Avebury, an even larger megalithic complex than Stonehenge, lies only a few miles away. Originally, more than 650 blocks of stone were erected there in circles and rows, but many of the larger boulders were removed at a later date, some by local builders in search of materials and others by overzealous medieval Christians who bore them off and piously buried them. Avebury's general outlines are hard to distinguish today because
the village of that
name
The
level
ground
in the center
gigantic
unhewn
slabs.
was once crowned by a ring of Each monolith measures about thirteen feet
72
both in height and width and is about two feet six inches thick. The ring was encircled by a rampart and ditch, the latter running inside the former. Inside the large ring were two nonconcentric smaller
rings whose edges almost touched. Of the stones which composed them, five and four have survived respectively. In the center of the southern inner ring stood a particularly tall stone, while the northern
What was
Obscure
a million
as the history
are apparent.
of the people of the time appears, two facts Having been a hunter and a collector of wild fruit for or six hundred thousand years, man began, in the neolithic
and megalithic period, to domesticate animals, inhabit a fixed abode and cultivate the soil. Concomitantly, there arose a desire to bury the dead in a more elaborate and secure fashion. Throughout the entire European and Mediterranean area there came into being enormous stone burial places, with Egypt leading the field by a considerable margin. The idea of building stone edifices for the dead was one that became disseminated throughout the regions mentioned
above. Everywhere save in Egypt, provision was normally
the interment of a considerable
number
tribe.
worldwide evidence of cave burial going back hundreds of thousands of years. The infinite pains which men took with the construction of megalithic graves indicate that they were concerned with preserving more for eternity than the mere physical remains of their dead. The size of the graves shows that they also served as cult sites and that there was a belief in something which survived after death. Contact and intercourse are practicable only with something that is alive, so it must be assumed that one of the driving forces of the amazing megalithic culture was a belief in the soul and its continued existence
after death.
Many of the later megalithic graves were sealed with stones which had a round or oval hole cut into them. This "soul hole" was intended as a means of communication between the souls of the
departed and the outside world, and
may
also
found
in
74
age-old significance.
Stonehenge, Avebury, and other megalithic buildings cannot have been only graves. Had that been their sole function, their builders would have been guilty of needless overelaboration. It is far more likely that these immense constructions were holy places, sanctuaries which had originated in and were bound up with the death cult and
other religious conceptions.
In the opinion of
some
authorities, the
all
subsequent megalithic
a point of departure
How
sites
how
is
cult
sites our
own
is fundamental truth in and all life from death. The secret of the menhirs, too, can only be elucidated in religiomagical terms. Wherever these stones occur in Europe, people living in their vicinity have believed that miraculous powers emanate from or are associated with them. Professor Horst Kirchner of
all
life
many
Breton peasant
woman
Cado menhir she gave birth to a fine healthy son, and a number of other women who had visited the stone told the same story. In Germany the Long Stone at Tiengen in Kreis Waldshut
Saint
was formerly called the Chindlistein ("little child stone") because wet nurses were supposed to remove newborn children from it at night. It is said of the Kindstein at Unterwiddersheim in Kreis Biidingen that anyone who lays his ear against it can hear children
crying inside. The Langstein at Sulzmatt in Upper Alsace is supposed to have revolved on its axis one Good Friday as the midday bells were ringing, and the young girls who witnessed the phe-
nomenon were
all
The German
often
the
menliirs
known
to
as Brautsteine
pilgrimages
by
the sick.
Some
marked medieval
WESTERN EUROPE
execution places,
Klettgau, the
75
as, for instance, the Long Stone at Tiengen im Long Stone near Ober-Saulheim in Rheinhessen and
It is
to be assumed that
some
vital
One
or
two
burial
found to contain
a single
chambers of the megalithic period were upright stone. The late Sir Arthur Evans,
who
Greek
unearthed the Minoan culture of Crete, suggested that the grave-pillar originally stood inside the burial chamber and
in the
it
form of a stele until later some magical significance from "burial-chamber days" because it was supposed to house the
retained
spirits
of the departed.
All this encourages one to assume that the menhirs, too, were not
as
body it went in search of another abode, and this other abode was provided by the menhir. It acted as a receptable for the soul of a person who was buried nearby or at some distance away, which may be why some menhirs were roughly hewn to represent the human form.
a
When
The
cross
from
menhir of
an army of silent dwellings for the human soul all these are an irresistible reminder that the people of the megalithic cultures who set up these "soul stones" four or five thousand years ago possessed a faith which almost literally moved mountains.
WESTERN EUROPE
we
are
groping
in the dark.
We
gift of observation
and draw certain conclusions from it. Our sole ai?n is our burning thirst for hiowledge. Despite the imperfections of our 7?iethods, we have attempted to probe the spiritual and mystical do?nains of our oldest ancestors a?id grasp the thoughts that guided their hand.
Marthe
and Saint- Just Pequart and Zacharie Le Rouzic, Corpus des Signes Graves des Monuments Megalithiques du Morbihan, p. 92, Paris, 1927
mystery surrounding megalithic monuments concerns on them. The massive stone slabs and supporting stones of dolmens in the region of Morbihan on the southern coast of Brittany have long aroused particular interest among archaeologists the world over. Although there is no doubt that the marks on them are genuine and actually date from the megalithic period, they remained undiscovered for centuries simply because many of them are extremely hard to see. Marthe and Saint- Just Pequart and Zacharie Le Rouzic have spent forty years working in Morbihan, examining stones and recording their observations, but not even they have managed to
greatest
THE
catalogue
all
the symbols.
The
following story
may
serve to
show
how
they can escape the eye. One year, the Pequarts and Le Rouzic discovered several signs on a stone in the dolmen known as Kerham. Returning next year to
easily
spent
many
It
until,
watched.
The
celebrated
dolmen known
Table des Marchands is adorned with a sun, but its existence has been denied and disputed in many learned treatises because it is clearly visible only between four and five o'clock in the afternoon, being indistinguishable at any other time of day. Many marks have disappeared in the course of time as a result of wind and weather, changes in temperature and growths of moss
as the
76
WESTERN EUROPE
The Table des Marchands is a dolmen a galerie or passage grave at Locmariaquer which was first explored in 1814. The supporting stone (i) and the
slab
77
engraved symbols which were discovered by Le Rouzic. This sketch shows how such a passage grave was laid out.
and lichen and one day, no doubt, it will no longer be possible to discern what people carved on these stones some four thousand
years ago.
These interesting signs appear on numerous menhirs as well as on dolmens, but because menhirs stand in an isolated position and are particularly exposed to the weather the signs carved on them have often been entirely obHterated by wind and weather. The menhir of Alanio, for instance, displays a pattern of fine serpentine lines, but only where the earth has been dug away from around its base. The portion which protruded from the ground exhibits no marks that could have been made by human hand. At Morbihan all the signs were pounded, not carved into the rock as they were in the Magdalenian, the paleolithic cultural phase of about 20,000 years ago. Hammer blows produced uneven furrows in the granite which normally provided the material for these stone monuments and the clarity of the lines suffered accordingly, but it has been ascertained that decoration was usually applied before the monoliths were placed in their allotted position.
78
of
the
Magdalenian period in
make
naturalistic, so that
they would
between them and the way, they reasoned, could they gain a hold over their potential prey. The engravings on megalithic monuments, by contrast, were left behind by people who had succeeded in reducing their ideas to the simplest possible terms. They had already abandoned art as a means of expressing their ideas and begun to evolve symbols and emblemlike designs. The pronounced schematization of these symbols in itself shrouds them in mystery, and the meaning of the ideograms has largely
achieve
identity
Only
in this
some
signs
is
quite obvious.
We
can
recognize axes, suns and sizable boats with raised prows and sterns.
as
are oxen,
over the interpretation of a number of signs. Cephalopods or marine mollusks such as the calamary or inkfish are very often depicted. I believe that I myself have identified the mollusk
rondeletiola
''^Allee
minor or
spirula spirula
in the
couverte du Lufang.^^ It is interesting to note that mollusks occur only in covered galleries near the sea. But, if dolmens are
also
found not
far
from the
coast,
we
are led to
people of the megalithic period never used them to depict cephalopods. This question has never been resolved.
No
of a
Petit
human form
found except on the dolmen called are shown. Perhaps they represent the
feet of the
man
lines
rounded by
a
monument
human
by round
which may,
may
not, be heads.
We
looked
do not know what the people of the megalithic cultures like, what race they belonged to or whether they were
light- or dark-skinned.
blond or dark,
Glyn Daniel
surmises that
WESTERN EUROPE
79
they belonged not to an Indo-European but to one or more Mediterranean linguistic groups, but it is just as likely that they resembled the present-day customers in the harbor cafes of Brest or the fisher-
men
never have been able to spread their building methods and religious ideas from coast to coast throughout western Europe. They must,
too, have had a firm belief in a life after death, or they would never have summoned up the energy to handle gigantic boulders as
though they were playthings. Is there any form of writing on megalithic monuments, do they express language in symbolic terms and do they bear alphabetical
symbols?
In 1893 the French scholar Letourneau identified certain similar-
between megalithic symbols and the earliest alphabets known, drawing for comparison on the neo-Punic, Phoenician, Etruscan and Coptic scripts. The Pequarts and Le Rouzic, however, decisively reject Letourneau's assumption of "Inscriptions on the Burial Monuments of Morbihan." By and large it is quite clear what the megalithic sculptors, if so they can be termed, had in mind. Their drawings had a ritual and religious significance and may have been instructions or notes on religious observance. The details, however, remain obscure, and
ities
away completely
in the next
few
SYRIA
MARI,
The story is told ?iot only by clay tablets but by walls which have been devoured by fire and demolished by picks, by paving stones which have been trodden by countless thousands of feet.
Never was ancient
architecture so alive.
Andre
Parrot, Le Palais, p.
6, Paris,
1958
THE
outstanding archaeological
site
found
in the
owed
its
and
one guessed that a nondescript hill in eastern Syria, Abu Kemal and close to the Iraq border, concealed one of the most famous cities of the third millennium b.c.
five miles
No
north of
Museums and the Ministry of Education. began on Tell Hariri on December 14, 1933. Only a few minutes after the surface had been broken by the first strokes of
National
Work
the pick,
some
statuettes
came
to light.
On
January
23,
1934, just
forty days after digging had started, small sculptures were un-
earthed
the
personalities:
Lamgi-
Mari, the king; Ebih-il, the city's senior dignitary; and Idi-Narum,
grain.
to
man who may have been responsible for supplying Mari with The statuettes bore written symbols which provided the key one of the great mysteries in the ancient history of the East. They
it
had found
temple dedicated
Mari.
The
city
name
of the
Engraved on the right-hand side of the back and the reverse of the right upper arm was the inscription: LaingiMari, King of Mari, the great Patesi of Enlil, has dedicated his
his person.
on
statuette to Ishtar.
From
Temple of
Ishtar
was
SYRIA
8i
Plan of Tell Hariri. Beneath the hill on the left (see arrow) lay the Temple of Ishtar. Adjoining it can be seen residential quarters. The large rectangle represents the palace, and the building adjoining its lower right-hand corner was a temple for the god Dagan.
laid bare,
an operation which entailed clearing an area of roughly be carried out very carefully.
by
inch,
away
in baskets.
is,
Considering
how
laborious this
process of disinterment
it
82
more than 30,000 cubic yards of earth had been removed from Andre Parrot, the brilliant French archaeologist, has labeled the various layers of the miraculous city by different letters, A, B, C, D and E, in descending order. It could be deduced from layer E that the Temple of Ishtar had remained in existence for a very long time. It was built of unbaked bricks and its floors were
Tell Hariri.
laid
The
form of a hearth house. On the short wall of the chamber the altar was erected, while the exit was situated in one of the long walls, as far as possible from the holy of hoKes. Adjoining it were rooms for priests and temple administrators. The whole
"cella" in the
found
number of
drink-offering
rites.
or cella must have occupied an exceedingly important position in the temple and was obviously regarded with
great reverence.
know this to be so because Parrot found some very peculiar objects there. Bronze wedges had been driven into
We
the ground, their apexes topped by handles set in bronze and adorned with small rectangular plates of lapis lazuli, white stone or
silver.
Just as
we
Mari used to sink foundation wedges, anchoring them in the ground for tutelary and religious reasons. Of the thirteen foundation wedges found within the temple boundaries seven were in the cella, which indicates the great sanctity of that room. The citizens of Mari presented their deities with statuettes, small figures of reddish stone, limestone or white alabaster which the priests arranged on shelves. Most of them were only six or eight inches high, but the largest measured about twenty inches. Mari's inhabitants were evidently of a pious disposition, for they commissioned these small statuettes as a means of worshiping their
particular
god or goddess. The figurines stood in the sanctuary where they would receive any blessings the deity might bestow,
their
Parrot has
these figures.
made some
let
interesting observations
on the nature of
old sculptures
not content to
themselves be personified
by any
fd
(d
<
"JUiw.
Mari
84
which could be interchanged at will. They demanded a likeness, and it is quite certain that they sat as models for artists in the city's
studios.
We
by
many
citizens of Mari,
long hair or cropped skulls, bearded or clean-shaven cheeks, warriors and governors of the city-state in
men with
women
who
lived
time which
now
lies
They
their
into
dark-pupiled eyes.
We
see
elegant coiffures,
we
we
is
one of the greatest life and artistry of a Semitic people who evolved an amazingly refined culture on the banks of the Euphrates in times beyond our ken. A man and a woman sit close together, his hand almost tenderly holding her forearm, just above the wrist. Although the heads are missing we can tell from the living quality of the stone that a great love united these two people "lovers without face or name," Andre Parrot calls them. The people of Mari were not without a sense of humor, either. A clownlike pair of musicians laugh at us in the same timeless way in which the pious citizens of Mari carried their reverence and their faith in Astarte with them into eternity. The fact that a Semitic people had so highly cultivated a way of life and such a highly developed religion as early as 3000 b.c. is remarkable in itself. During the first half of the third millennium B.C. the whole of Mesopotamia was Sumerian territory, and the Sumerians were not Semites. The beginnings of their culture go back to the fourth millennium b.c. and their sphere of cultural influence embraced the whole of southern Mesopotamia. It is well known what remarkable finds have been made in Sumerian cities such as Ur, Eridu, Larsa, Uruk, Lagash, Suruppak, Kish, Es-nunna and Upi to name some of the most celebrated archaeological sites in
treasures in the world:
the area.
Modern
lennium the "early dynastic period" of Mesopotamian history. It was not until the end of this epoch that the Semites emerged, and even then Sumerian culture was far from finished. Spiritually and culturally the Sumerians retained their dominance, but the Semites
SYRIA
85
About 2600
dynasty.
power under the Akkadian became the center of the known world, the Semites learned how to use cuneiform writing from the Sumerians, and the two races became fused. The Semites conB.C.
taste.
The whole
of
life
of Babylonian-
were permeated by old Sumerian elements. The Semitic city-kingdom of Mari had also inherited much from Sumer but it evolved its own individual style as well. Three thousand years before the birth of Christ, it was already far advanced in its art and architecture, in its religion and
way
general
way
of
life.
most remarkable feature was its palace, which is the grandest example of Near Eastern architecture of its period, the
Mari's
B.C.
Andre
Parrot,
who
ex-
two and a half acres and containing corridors, courtyards and three hundred rooms. The palace, which probably took many years to build, grew out
of various courtyard systems, for
undertaking.
it
when they began their huge once a royal residence, a fortress, a granary, a seat of government, an administrative center and, above all, a symbol of regal authority. even know that it was King Zimrilim who adorned the palace with its splendid murals. The excavations of the past forty years have shown that mural painting was a very ancient art in Mesopotamia, and that even in early times artists had acquired a high degree of technical proficiency in this
of A4ari had no fixed plan in mind
The
palace
was
at
We
field.
Zimrilim's frescoes
were based on
this ancient
beneath the
relics
pictures
in
Zimrilim's
palace
dress reveal
alien.
West
Semitic char-
ritual
jugs
ornamented with
lions,
86
plates of shell
pupils as
which men fight with animals and King Gilgamesh subdues some rampant monsters. The courtyard of the palace yielded the figure of a goddess inhaling the scent of a flower with evident delight. One of the most beautiful statuettes is the water-pouring goddess of fertility dating from 1800 b.c. Almost five feet high and sculpted in white stone, this figure has eyes inlaid with precious stones, plaited reddish hair, and six rows of necklaces. Even if what was discovered beneath Tell Hariri had been confined merely to the temple, the palace, the statuettes, the houses and the city walls, our knowledge of the ancient East would still have been immeasurably enriched. But Mari yielded up yet another huge treasure which affords us a profusion of information about the culture, daily life and history of these unique people and their relations with other city-kingdoms in the contemporary world. This hoard consists of the twenty thousand inscribed clay tablets which were found in King Zimrilim's palace. They represent the state archives of Mari and include the political and private correspondence of the city's last king. Many of the letters come from Shamsi-Adad of Assyria and contain instructions to his son YasmahAdad, who ruled Mari for some time on Assyria's behalf and was eventually succeeded by Zimrilim, the legal heir to the throne. The tablets make it clear that rulers of the time were always worried about war, that they besieged fortified towns, forged defensive alliances and carried off people into slavery. If a city resisted too stubbornly, the conqueror would sometimes enslave the whole population. When the fortress of Sibat was taken the victors acquired so many prisoners that even private soldiers received an allotment of slaves to serve their personal requirements. On capturing Mari, King Shamsi-Adad decreed that the young daughters of Yahdunlim should be brought into his son's house. There he had them trained as musicians, advising his son to make them play wherever and whenever he had a mind to. In another tablet Shamsi-Adad writes to his son Yasmah-Adad as follows: "I had resolved that you should keep the sons of Vilanum with you against the possibility of making a treaty with them later on. Now that I know it will never come to a treaty with Vilanum, have his sons arrested and execute them the same night. Let there
SYRIA
87
be no ceremony and no mourning. Prepare their graves, kill them and bury them. Take away their head ornaments and their clothes, their money and their gold, and send me their wives. Keep the two musicians yourself, but have Sammetar's serving-women brought to me. This tablet I send you in the month of Tirum, on the evening
of the fifteenth day."
God
is
He was
single
god,
was called Dagan. Also referred to is a god called Itur-Mer and, in the neighboring city of Terqa, another called Ikrub-Il. So Mari, too, was familiar with the Semitic
dominated the Old Testament. It was, however, the goddess Ishtar who bestowed war and peace and governed the daily life of Mari's citizens. Since nothing could ever happen without divine sanction, attempts were made to discover the will of the gods by reading auguries in the entrails of sacrificial beasts. The augurs were consulted on private matters and important govern-
god
II
or El
who
later
ment
decisions,
and were
As
most ancient
of snake
civilizations,
On
one
funerary
All this
sacrifice.
we learn from the twenty thousand cuneiform documents which have been found in the palace at Mari. We know that building operations were not confined to houses, temples and palaces but also embraced canals and river embankments. We read of sheep and cattle breeding and the danger of predatory animals. Lions were not to be killed because King Zimrilim had a special predilection for them. Once, when a lion got into a neighboring town and took up its abode on the roof of a house, the townsfolk had to feed the beast until the king decided what was to be done. Even when it had reduced the whole town to panic it was still not killed. Eventually
the garrison
to Mari.
commander caught
it
in a
it
off
Zimrilim's game with the lions one day came to an abrupt end. Hammurabi, the great king and lawgiver from Babylon who ruled from 1728 to 1686 B.C. and whose empire ultimately included the
88
whole of Babylonia, Assyria and Mesopotamia, launched a fearful by night. He defeated King Zimrilim and in the year 1695 B.C. devastated the city of Mari so completely that it never recovered from the blow. The great artists of Mari ceased to sculpt, paint and build. The Paris of the Euphrates forgot how to tailor elegant clothes, and life, which had once held such infinite charm, was finally extinguished, not to reappear until our own century. Mari is such an inexhaustible site of civilization that its remains are
assault
still
being explored to
this day.
SARDINIA
ISLAND OF
Numerous
sifJiilarities
8,000
TOWERS
and Aegean cultures on the island
between the
left
Sardinia}!
Aegean world
disti^ict traces
many
la
Sardaigne,
Paris,
1954
SARDINIA
are the
is
a hot
and barren
island
whose
hills,
silent
main features of this austere countryside, where one can walk for miles without encountering a living soul. At one time merged with Corsica in a single land mass, Sardinia is geologically very ancient. Older than the Alps and the whole of Italy, it protrudes from the sea as a reminder of a continent which has largely sunk from view. This took place several hundred million years ago, long before the Italian peninsula emerged. Indeed, geographers assume the existence of a land called Tyrrhenis which lay where the Tyrrhenian Sea is now but was eventually engulfed by
water.
however, remained to form a fragment of land which from times immemorial. It is by no means a sunny southern land, but a land pitilessly scorched in summer by the southern sun, which beats down as though with malevolent intent.
Sardinia,
has survived
The granite cliffs and basalt crags, the lonely magnificence of the mountains and the all-pervasive melancholy which seems to clothe the whole island grip the beholder and leave him with a sense of being far from Europe.
The winds
from the Sahara. The granite and gneiss cliffs in the east of the island tower steeply into the sky, often with vertiginous overhangs. Deep blue water pounds thunderously away
land shields the island
at gigantic natural walls so inhospitable to
man
The
eroded them
water booms and roars. Then, again, there are deserted beaches of snow-white sand, squat watchtowers dating from the time of the Arab occupation, cork woods, unfamiliar flowers, taciturn men with
90
smoldering tempers and an almost medieval code of chivalry, women who combine a regal bearing with madonnalike humility, beautiful
pitchers apparently floating through the countryside
heads of
girls
who
still
wear long
skirts
Many
the place
its
prehistory,
its
stones and
its
is
why
the
Greeks called it Ichnousa ("footprint") or Sandahotis ("sandal"). The island was certainly uninhabited during the last Ice Age, which lasted until about 8000 b.c, and no paleolithic sites yielding human relics have ever been found there. Man did not arrive until the neolithic period, which lasted here from 4000 until 2000 b.c. We do not know where these early immigrants came from or what they looked like, but we must assume that they were not Indo-Europeans. The islands of the Aiediterranean had been gradually populated from the fifth millennium b.c. onward by seafarers from the East who had rowed or paddled their way westward. On Sardinia they lived in caves, cavities in the rock or straw huts, mainly on level ground and at first always in the vicinity of the sea or by lakes and rivers. The island's many imposing caves have yielded relics of these bold mariners and their tools. A second influx, probably from Asia, peopled the island with one of the most interesting races in the world and one which, after their strange towers, we shall call Nuraghians. In complete contrast
to the neolithic inhabitants, these people possessed a considerable
knowledge of architecture and an advanced culture from the very start. The Nuraghians landed on the east coast during the third millennium b.c. and began to build the circular towers with sloping walls of natural stone which are their principal legacy to us. Finally, about 1400 b.c, a third race arrived, bringing an urban culture with them. These Sardi or Shardena probably hailed from
Asia also and intermarried with the earlier arrivals.
Of
still
the 8,000 nuraghi which once stood on the island about 6,500
in
exist
state.
Only
very small
We
left
do not know what language the Nuraghians spoke. They behind no recorded history because they unfortunately had
SARDINIA
91
no form of writing. But megalithic towers of this design and in this quantity are to be found only on Sardinia. The Sardinians themselves call them niirakes, miraxis, niiragies and other variants of the same name, according to the dialect spoken in the particular part of the island. Professor Giovanni Lilliu, the leading authority on ancient Sardinian architecture, thinks that the term derives from
pre-Indo-European tongue. In the interior of the island 7mra or means "mound" or "hollow," and nur-aghe means roughly "high pillar" or "hollow tower." The nuraghe consists of rough unhewn stones piled layer on
a
7iurra
layer to
form
walls.
Many
of the
nuraghi are only a few feet high, but some soar more than sixty
feet into the blue
and sixteen
but the
feet thick.
Mediterranean sky. Their walls are between six The low towers contain only one chamber,
tallest are
What was
come from
the world was their prototype imported? Did the idea for
Spain, Africa or the East?
We
yy
>--.,
This reconstruction of the Orrubiu nuraghe in Nuoro, Sardinia, shows the ultimate development of this type of defensive tower. It is the fruit of research carried out by Professor Lilliu into this remarkable building, which is more than 2,000 years old.
92
and
its
were ruled by
chieftains
who
where
were extended to form larger fortified systems hundred people could take refuge in an emergency. The island was repeatedly attacked by Ligurians, Phoenicians, Carthaginians and, eventually, Romans, so the Sardinians were obliged to fight and fight again, even though it was always a losing
time, the towers
battle.
Even
if
still
in mortal danger. The buildings were provided with doors opening on pitch-black cul-de-sacs and all manner of pitfalls and blind alleys from which the lurking Nuraghians could pounce with spear and
sword
to cut
down
the
unwary
intruder.
flat
by
a parapet,
probably of
wood, together with projecting attachments for the launching of stones and missiles, made any assault a perilous undertaking. The Sardinians' defensive bays were the first military installations of
their
Towers from
1500
B.C.,
which came
500
B.C.,
were steeper, and between 1000 and Age, nuraghe construction reached its
by the Semitic
Punians.
must have shed a great deal of blood in defense of their autonomy. A race of simple, hardy people, like their modern counterparts, they were in daily peril of losing their freedom, and defensive war must have become a sort of religion to them. Being accustomed to an austere life, they learned to be tough, unpretentious and mutually helpful in time of need. The last of the nuraghi were built between 600 and 250 b.c. and eventually served as hiding places, for by 231 the Romans had
political
island.
The
but the
SARDINIA
93
them down with trained bloodhounds. named after the island's capital, a hill has stood for more than 2,000 years which is known to the Sardinians as Su Nuraxi. In 1940 a few test diggings were made there, and in 195 Professor Lilliu started on the planned excavation of one of the most interesting prehistoric sites in Europe.
Romans
ruthlessly hunted
powerful
system of fortifications with an original central tower, four corner towers built subsequently, massive external walls and, in front of
them, a whole village with ruined stone roundhouses.
I
Lilliu,
who
archaeology
hill
had spent five years, from 195 to 1956, excavating the place. He had sent a fragment of wood from one of the supporting beams in the lower chamber of the central tower to the laboratory of the
overlooking the rest of the
1
me
that he
National
Museum
at
Danish
(A margin
be allowed
of error of
in
two hundred
years either
such
cases.)
the four outer towers were built, and during the third
fireplaces, sacrificial
which
could be launched
handicrafts
troughlike receptacles
for ground corn, stone seats, bakery equipment and traces of various
from the
which were covered by stones, debris and thousands of cubic yards of earth, must have made enormous physical demands on men working in such high temperatures, Lilliu merely looked down modestly at the papers in front of him and did not reply. However, anyone who has seen Barumini lying there in the plain, ringed by the desolate hills which are the sole surviving witnesses of the life that once flourished there, and anyone who knows the iron-hard
ground, the parching sirocco, the
arid,
94
by
the armies of
However, the tough and resilient Sardinians returned in later more amid the ruins and live on in the same "way and with the same customs as in the golden age of their
centuries to settle once
script, scholars
have attempted
as have remained unaltered for hundreds if not thousands of years. These are largely place names and names of animals, plants, mountains and rivers. It has been suggested that the Nuraghians came from Asia, since the island has certain expressions which could have originated in the Altai Range, Mesopotamia, Azerbaidzhan, the Caucasus, Nuristan (Kafiristan), Kazakhstan or even in Tibet and
Sinkiang.
Aegean buildings and, more particularly, to those of Tiryns, Mycenae and the Creto-Mycenaean civilization. And the spiritual
life and many aspects of the Sardinians' material culture also correspond to the Aegean culture as exemplified in Crete, Cyprus and
Greece.
In addition to their towers, the Sardinians bequeathed us yet
is
the
who were
art.
have the power to grip and enthrall us today. They regard us with expressions of vitality and taut attention, unique and incomparable figurines whose lonely
statuettes of Sardinia
still
The bronze
beauty
is
its
appeal and, in a
SARDINIA
A PRE-CHRISTIAN MADONNA
At the head of the nuraghi pantheon stood the Great Goddess. All figurative representations of her hark back to fertility and to
water. She is portrayed sometimes with a basket of fruit on her head, sometirnes embracing a child; so7neti?iies, again, holding a
jug on her head, and someti7nes nursing the lifeless figure of a young god, slain by some hostile power, on her lap. The goddess
reigns eternally over the birth and
growth of
all
creatures, over
the fertility
of the
soil,
eternal
Christian Zervos, La
Civilisation de la Sardaigne,
Paris, 1954
THE mountain,
first
natural features
Rehgion must
have played a very large part in the lives of the Sardinians as early as 2000 B.C. or even earlier, for archaeologists have found the re-
mains of cult sites all over the island. These holy places, the great majority of which were probably open to the sky, were situated
on
cliffs
The
altars
stood on mountaintops, on
nearness to
The holy
mountain, the
God, the "high places"these are ideas which human beings have brought with them from the earliest paleolithic times,
own
The
is
an age-old Mesopotamian
idea.
many
and poles led upward to the supreme being, that they repre-
sented the center of the earth and that the Pole Star stood above
them.
the
The Greeks rediscovered the cosmic mountain in Olympus, men of the Old Testament in their Mount Sinai. Tall mountains
to be the
abode of
the gods in ancient China, Japan, Finland, Crete, Phoenicia and the
The Tower
mountain.
The
a
dwelled in
96
prominent natural features, and, believing in the religio-magical power which emanated from high places, they sited their sanctuaries on remote hills or mountains. The sanctuary of Alazzani stands
nearly 2,300 feet up in the Villacidro mountains, Santa Vittoria de
Serri at almost 2,000 feet, Santa Lulla
sites
d'Orune
at
have
Acropolis
at
does not think that the spring, fountain or pool played so important
a role
on the island merely because of the scarcity and consequent importance of fresh water. Resurrection via water, emergence from water and water as a fructifying force are all ideas in which
humanity has believed from time immemorial, ideas which have found their culmination in the baptism of the Christian religion. Some springs on the island of Sardinia are said to cure eye diseases, and in the region of Mongolia known as Barga, far away in east Asia, I have personally visited a spring which, so the nomads believe, can give sight to the blind and make cripples walk. Thousands of pilgrims had stuck their crutches in the ground or hung their spectacles on branches in token of their recovery. It is certainly apparent that there were open-air temples in
Sardinia at a very early period.
By
nuraghi
were already laying out sanctuaries whose central or focal point was a healing spring or source of water. Examples of such places are Sardara, Mazzani, Rebeccu, Lorana and Mills. The sacred water was enclosed by stone walls or rings, and paths paved with blocks of stone led to the inner sanctum. Standing on the heights of Santa Vittoria de Serri and looking down from that mountain fortress on the landscape beneath, one can sense the air of tranquillity and of sanctity that pervades the place. Serri, which was excavated by the archaeologist Taramelli between 1909 and 1929, gives us some idea of the exalted significance which must have invested such a spot in 600 b.c. At the center of the sanctuary one can see the circular spring shaft and descend the ancient stone steps into its cool depths. Above, one can still make out the stone blocks of the enclosing walls. Everything is in ruins, but it is suddenly borne in on one what great religious significance the water from such a spring must once have possessed.
Sardinia
98
Is there any chance of learning more about the religion of the Old Sardinians? Their mythology will always remain a closed book to us, but the nuraghe bronze statuettes, those enigmatic
way of life, may yet reveal something. They are, at all events, unusual testimony to a vanished religion. The large, heavy-lidded eyes and delicate construction of these
manifestations of an extinct
little
figures
tell
is
us of a people
whose
art
is
Sardinian art
male acolytes of the cult and even musicians. Senior priests garment that fell to the thigh and a cloak thrown over one shoulder. They carried a staff or emblem of office in the
priests,
wore
left
a close-fitting
Priestesses
this respect,
The
earliest figurative
por-
Venus
which have been found throughout Europe, are presumed to be goddesses of fertility, and the portrayals of the goddesses and
priestesses of ancient Sardinia are their latter-day descendants. In
so far as
we
idea
we meet
is
always that
of the
tall
Magna Mater,
idols
The
at
basalt statuettes of
Macomer
Marble
Porto Ferro and in the environs of Senorbi. Rarely has the religious
conception of
a simpler,
has here.
From
the
first
Roman
domination,
vitality.
this
essential
The
Sardinians
the Romans'
language
(the
inhabitants
world to have preserved this day) but they rejected their religion and their gods. The islanders began to portray their deities at a very early
incidentally, the only people in the
to
date,
the earliest such portrayals being long stones three or four feet
high and half buried in the ground. As time passed, these stones were
SARDINIA
given
99
near
not.
Marmuradas of Tamuli, some vertical stones standing Macomer, betray female characteristics, but the remainder do
this it
From
female
early
deities.
which
later
drew on
it
these
is
religious
did,
and
Unique examples of
creative
B.C.
bronze statuettes
first
and reached a peak of perfection in the eighth century B.C., which means that the men who made them were contemporaries of Homer, the world's greatest epic poet. Bronzes are still found from the fifth and fourth centuries B.C., but Phoenician conquest and Punic colonization ultimately brought their manufacture to an end.
The
show what
their role
they hold a bowl probably containing drink offerings or consecrated water in their left hand.
The
cult
and contemplative, the little figures stand in their showcases in Cagliari Museum and gaze into eternity. The bronze statuettes also tell us that sacrifice was performed
serious, distant
by male
Paris,
priests.
represents a
animals in a satchel.
Cagliari
Museum
some
One
its right hand raised to shoulder height in supplication. Indeed, seems to have been a general practice among the Nuraghians to pray with the right hand raised and palm facing forward.
has
it
As
in the
Minoan
religious festivals were accompanied by games and dances performed to music. The musicians of ancient Sardinia are portrayed with haunting realism, beating tambourines and blowing horns in a state of orgiastic ecstasy. Religious festivals, it should be remembered, were also fertility rites. Like the inhabitants of Mari on the central Euphrates, the believers of 2,500 or 3,000 years ago used to set up statuettes of their
eastern
Mediterranean,
100
temples and pray to them, believing that these tangible embodiments of the divine would receive their prayers with benevolence. Had the incomparable Bronze-Age culture of the Nuraghians not been sustained by these religious ideas it would
deities in the
artistic zenith.
The
and which would not otherwise have been possible. Some statuettes were mounted on blocks of stone and others on bronze spits or pins, the lower ends of which were stuck into
tion of faith into bronze represents an expenditure of spiritual
The
reinforced
by
their length,
that,
fragility.
Apart from
many
were found on stone benches in the vicinity of altars, sometimes mounted in groups of three and possibly symbolizing a trinity composed of the earth-mother and two male beings associated
pins
with
her.
The Nuraghians'
in
whom
she
is
was dug up in the neighborhood of Urzulei, is only four inches tall. Another statuette of the mother-goddess and the young god was found at Santa Vittoria de Serri and also stands four inches high. The woman has her right hand raised as though in blessing. Her lips are twisted with grief and her eyes swollen from weeping. A third bronze, this time four and a half inches high, gives the mother an expression of such sympathy and the son a face so deathly calm that no one who sees the piece can escape its dramatic impact. The same museum possesses a highly stylized mothergoddess in marble dating from long before the Bronze Age. Over sixteen inches tall, this figurine was dug up at Senorbi and takes the shape of a simple cross, the cross of an age which lies well
over three thousand years in the past. It could well serve as an example to many of our modern sculptors. Evidence of many centuries of faith and suffering, conflict and daily toil has been found on the island, captured forever in bronze. Archaeologists have unearthed casting molds and discovered complete treasuries. Some of these depots contained whole or fragmentary
SARDINIA
loi
copper ingots, others double- or single-edged axes and still others blocks of metal and various objects in bronze. Seven hundred and fifty pieces were dug up at the Abini depot and no less than 1,976 pieces at that of Portotorres. Repositories of votive offerings and
religious objects were normally found near springs and pools which were probably cult sites. Other smelters' and bronze workers' stores contained no jewelry or bronze figures; only tools, weapons, casting molds and fragments of objects which were obviously destined for
recasting.
Of
Linear
B type. Since pecus means "cattle" in Latin, and pecimia was the Romans' word for "money," the Sardinians' hide-shaped
copper plates are far closer to the Latin expression than is the thought that hide was once used as a medium of exchange in ancient Rome. The Sardinians were a peaceful, hard-working, domestic-minded people, as we can see from relics of their livestock,
their agriculture
their
many-
sided daily
life.
A total of between four and five hundred bronze statuettes has been found so far, and fresh treasures are being brought to light every day. The value of a single nuraghe statuette is impossible to
assess
because
its
irreplaceability renders
it
literally priceless.
Such
pride,
whose considerable
still
mirrored today in
women
as
GREECE
LINEAR B
Among
quired to
all
the records
known
to us there
is
mention of only a
That
of course the family of the Neleids. Neleus, an invader from Thessaly, was the founder of the dynasty Nestor, sole survivor
is
of Neleus^ twelve sons, inherited the throne and through ^^three generations of me7i" he ruled over a realm of nine cities. It is most
likely that he, too,
was a
second of the
not more.
adviser
As the intimate associate, Agame?nnon he won fame and uniTroy. Nestor returned from where ten years later he
the
to reign at Pylos
received the
of Telemachus.
Carl
W.
THE
ruins of the
most famous
citadel in ancient
Greece
lie
only
900 feet above sea level, but the history of the place has provided an inexhaustible source of material for the poets, dramatists and artists of Western civilization as a whole. No family ever afforded
Europe more themes than the Mycenae. It was Agamemnon, king of this city-state, who mustered the tribes of Greece and sailed against Paris, the Trojan prince who had abducted Helen, the wife of his
the tragedians and playwrights of
lords of the citadel of
brother Menelaus.
Mycenae stands on the Peloponnesian peninsula, which the earliest Greeks looked upon as an island. The place was named after one of Agamemnon's ancestors and means literally "Pelops-island." The
Iliad paints
Agamemnon
as
basic
this
Mycenae lasted from 1400 to 150, and the battles that raged around Troy occurred in the ten years between 194 and 184. It was these centuries which
epic in the eighth century b.c, but the golden age of
1
1
saw the building of the great ramparts and Lion Gate of Mycenae, the palace, the huge tomb and the Treasury of Atreus, who was
probably the king responsible for planning these architectural
marvels.
GREECE
As we
all
103
know, Heinrich Schliemann accepted the historical Homer's accounts and proceeded to find tangible evidence of them by unearthing Troy not far from the entrance to the Dardanelles in modern Turkey, as well as Tiryns and Mycenae
authenticity of
in the Peloponnesus. Beside the remains of seventeen bodies, Schlie-
mann found a hoard of golden objects which weighed nearly thirty pounds and are now displayed in the National Museum at Athens. His discovery unleashed a spate of archaeological research into periods of Greek history which antedated Homer by many centuries. Agamemnon's citadel has given its name to the whole Greek way of life in the second millennium b.c. The most important sites of this pre-Homeric "Mycenaean" culture so far discovered are the fortresses of Mycenae and Tiryns, the ruins of Pylos and the palaces on the island of Crete. Arthur John Evans, later Sir Arthur Evans, was born at Nash Mills in England in the year 185 1. He studied at Oxford and Gottingen, traveled extensively in Finland, Lapland and the Balkans, and was arrested by the Austrians in 1882 on suspicion of having taken part in an uprising in Dalmatia. In 1893 Evans began to dig on the island of Crete, and, by unearthing the palace of Knossos, bequeathed us our knowledge of the splendid Minoan culture, which represents the earliest advanced civilization on European soil. Evans was knighted in 191 and died, an internationally respected figure, at the age of ninety, in 1941, just in time to miss the news that the Germans had landed on his beloved island and that the German General Staff had chosen to take up its quarters in, of all places, his Villa Ariadne near Knossos. The palaces of Crete were built at two separate periods, and each period ended in their almost total destruction. The first or "great" palaces came into being in Knossos, Phaistos and Malia about 2000 B.C. These famous buildings were destroyed after several centuries, and it seems likely that the first golden age of Cretan architecture ended in 1700 b.c. In about 1600 b.c. new palaces began to go up, though the period is principally famous for the "mansions" or personal residences of senior officials who probably performed governmental and religious duties. Then, between 1525 and 1520 b.c, a catastrophe occurred whose cause remains an enigma to this day. The mansions and the newly built palaces were, to all appearances, violently and suddenly destroyed. No one knows whether this
1
ro4
devastation
many
a small horseshoe-shaped
in the
known
in the ancient
world
as
Thera and
Irini.
Middle Ages
of
organic
life there.
Basing his
styles
Greek archaeologist Marinatos dates this upheaval at somewhere between 1550 and 1500 b.c. The eruption coated the slopes of the Elias Range on Thera with a layer of lava two hundred feet thick in places. Under a similar layer on the south coast of the small neighboring island of Therasia were found the remains of a Minoan settlement dating from between 1800 and 1500 b.c. The eruption was so immense that the whole of the volcanic cone caved in and
seawater gushed into the crater.
waves which caused widespread devastation along the coasts of He believes that the outbreak on Thera was four times as great as the one which killed 36,000 people on Krakatoa in the Dutch East Indies in 1887, and calculates that there were "83 square kilometers of devastated and sunken land on Thera as opposed to 23 square kilometers on Krakatoa." The same period also saw the destruction of palaces built in the
tidal
Crete.
Cretan interior during the second architectural phase. Marinatos admits that places like Knossos, Phaistos, Hagia Triada, Tylissos
and Sklavocampos could not have been directly affected by the tidal wave, but suggests that major earthquakes may have followed the Thera eruption, causing fire and destruction among the buildings of Crete
itself.
Crete
is,
by three
The
third possibility
is
were caused
by some human agency, namely an invasion by mainland Greeks. So much survived the holocaust that the island continued to throb
with
civilization
hundred years, until, about 1400 b.c, the began to wane and eventually all but disappeared. The three types of writing that have been found in Crete include
life
for another
GREECE
a
105-
very ancient picture script as well as the two linear scripts which, Evans christened Linear A and Linear B. The earliest or hieroglyphic script was used between 2000 and 1750 b.c. and consisted of pictograms such as heads, hands, stars and arrows. Between 1750 and 1450 these pictorial symbols were simphfied into the linear script which Evans called Linear A. This script has been found at many places in the island of Crete, and one palace a few miles from. Phaistos yielded no less than 150 clay tablets inscribed with it. The site, whose ancient name is unknown, is now called Hagia Triada after a chapel in the vicinity. It was early recognized, long before
tablets
were
in-
of agricultural products.
has been
found on the
island of
Melos
At some
Linear B.
superseded by a
It is
new form
of writing
in
noteworthy that
inscribed characters from the palace of Pylos. Original tablets have been photographed and traced so as to produce accurate
tablet
clay
with Linear
line
drawings
is
like
this
illus-
one.
third
The fragment
smaller
trated here
original.
Most tablets were only inscribed on one side, and fine lines were drawn between the separate rows of characters.
The
writing runs
from
left to right.
io6
only three or four thousand tablets in the palace at Knossos. The explanation may be that clay tablets survive for thousands of years only if they are baked hard. But the Minoans dried their tablets in
the sun, and sun- or air-dried tablets are not hard
enough
to with-
None
of
however, explains why Evans found such a quantity of Linear B tablets only at Knossos. Other palaces also went up in flames and any Linear B tablets which happened to be on the premises would likewise have been hardened and preserved, so the burning of Knossos does not alone account for the fact that the large majority
of Linear B tablets were found
Perhaps
at this
one
spot.
we
shall
come
a special
if, like the men who we ask ourselves whether there reason why the strange script was used
know what
language Linear
B was
devised to
express.
What was
Many
most audacious
Some attempted
with Phoenician or
Etruscan
texts.
But
still
Professor Carl Blegen of Cincinnati University set out to and excavate the palace of Nestor, the ancient Greek warriorking whose advice is repeatedly sought by his fellow countrymen in Homer's Iliad. Like Schliemann, Blegen proceeded on the assumption that the Homeric figures must have been historical. Homer tells us that Nestor lived in the citadel of Pylos, but no trace of the palace could be found on the site of the present port of that name. In 1939 Blegen began, in conjunction with the Greek archaeologist
find
Then
on the southwest side of the Peloponnesus, nearly ten miles north of modern Pylos. During his first year's work there he discovered six hundred clay tablets bearing the same Linear B script which had been found far away in the palace of Knossos on Crete. The Pylos tablets date from a period later than 1300 B.C. Tablets with Linear B
GREECE
107
The Aegean
inscriptions
area
were
the
also
found
in the citadels of
Of
the
House of
These
Wine Merchant
at
terest.
listed
might have
been sold to individual customers, including red and white safflower, caraway, sesame, coriander, mint, fennel and a medicinal plant
called polei.
io8
It
in
was known, therefore, that a mysterious script already existed Greece about 1300 b.c, long before the Greeks adopted their more familiar alphabet from the Phoenicians at about the time of the first Olympic Games in 776 b.c. and began to record their own
history.
at
had been discovered only in the palace at seemed natural to suppose that the script had been brought to the Cretan palace from Greece, either by visiting sailors or by invaders. This, however, was most improbable since the Knossos tablets were a hundred years older than the first examples of such tablets found in Greece. Or are we so sure? Is it possible that Evans and his collaborator Mackenzie dated the Knossos strata inaccurately and that Knossos was destroyed a hundred years or more after 1400? A third theory also seems possible. This holds that after the widespread devastation of Crete, Knossos was occupied by Achaeans that is to say, Greeks of the second millennium e.g. who ordered
Knossos,
it
Greek language.
seems odd that the Greeks should have gone to Crete for their
script
when others were available, Ave must remember that the cuneiform script of Mesopotamia required a knowledge of about 300 symbols and that anyone who wanted to read and write Egyptian hieroglyphs had to master at least 350. Linear B, on the
other hand, comprised only 80 syllabic symbols and a few abbreviations. It
was
So the palace scribes of Knossos modified Linear A into Linear B, and it was then introduced into Greece, though only for the lords and masters of great palaces and fortresses such as those at Pylos, Mycenae, Tiryns and Thebes. Evans himself had noticed that several cups in the Palace of Cadmus at Thebes bore similar preHellenic symbols and assumed that during the pre-Hellenic period the same language was spoken there as in Crete though precisely what language no one yet knew. Blegen's excavations at Pylos had yielded great scientific dividends. So many clay tablets in Linear B were now available that there were far more opportunities for comparative study than before.
GREECE
109
However, the characters had been scratched on the clay by many different hands and exhibited countless slight variations. The deciphering of a modern secret code would have presented less difficulty because the expert at least knows what language it disguises, whereas with Linear B neither script nor language was known.
a
number
In 1952 Michael Ventris, an Englishman, succeeded in identifying of the mysterious symbols and realized that the language
behind Linear B was Greek. Ventris was an architect, not a philologist, but he carefully established contact with all the scholars
who had
He was
one of the
first
to
command
Above
all,
Cambridge
who
collaborated so effectively in the young anda most important point provided the
For years beforehand, Ventris had mistakenly assumed that the language disguised by the mysterious symbols was that of the
Etruscans, and this had put
him
however, that what lay behind the clay tablets not only of Pylos, Tiryns and Mycenae but also of Knossos was an ancient form of Greek, and in the course of the intervening years all the characters have been identified. It is a truly remarkable scientific achievement and one, moreover, in which many scholars have collaborated, notably the Americans Alice Kober and Emmett L. Bennett (the leading authority on Linear B), A. Furumark of Sweden, Chantraine and Lejeune of France, Ernst Sittig and Hans Stoltenberg of Ger-
many, Fritz Schachermeyr of Austria, B. R. Palmer, E. G. Turner and A. P. Treweek of Great Britain, P. Meriggi, V. Pisani and C. Cappovilla of Italy and K. Ktistopoulos of Greece. Professor Fritz Schachermeyr, the Austrian authority on ancient
history, has recently explained in an extremely interesting paper
why
Linear
understand even
script in
which they
book
stood
Just as
many
modern businessman's
specialized
jottings can
by people with
commercial
training, so the
mean-
no
ing of the clay tablets must remain partially obscure because they were only an aide-?nemoire containing commercial terms which would have seemed quite unexceptional to literate businessmen of the time. Schachermeyr describes the Greek language of the Linear B texts as a "language of bookkeepers and specialists." He assumes not that Linear B was commissioned by the Greeks but that, as a variant of Linear A, it was already used for an ancient Cretan language and was subsequently adapted for Greek. As we have already seen, the finds at Knossos do not permit us to date the origins of Linear B with any accuracy. The tablets contain particulars of herds of rams and ewes, hegoats and she-goats, wild boar, bulls and cows. Bronzesmiths are
worked
all
in.
We
wine and many types of foodstuffs, memoranda on war chariots, entries deaUng with sales and purchases of male and female slaves. The Pylos tablets even record the quantities of oil and scent used by two groups of royal servingmen and serving-women. History invariably begins with writing. The knowledge that the Greek language could be recorded in writing as early as 1400 b.c. has pushed back the frontiers of Greek history by six hundred years; from Homer, as it were, to Nestor and the men who constructed the fabulous fortresses and palaces at Mycenae, Tiryns and Pylos. And so there unfolds before us a remarkably colorful and lively picture of people whose existence we could only guess at, until recently, from the mute ruins of their buildings and the relics of
kinds,
their art.
GREECE
LIFE IN
/
should
to have been a
historical character
who
flourished at
Mycenae about
B.
p.
1200
b.c.
Alan
Wage, Mycenae,
we can rarely see very far into the depths of prehistory. The Greeks are an Indo-European race. Before their
arrival,
Greece was inhabited by quite a different people, a pre-Indo-European population classified by ethnologists as Aegean. The Aegeans were resident not only in Greece but in the islands of the eastern Mediterranean, in Crete and southwest Asia Minor. The later Greeks called the original population Leleges, Carians and Pelasgi. We know that an Indo-European race migrated to the territories and islands of the Aegean because there is evidence that the whole of southern Europe was swept by an influx of Indo-Europeans. The Greek language is the end product of a development in age-old Indo-European tongues and originated in the great plains that stretch between Poland and Turkestan. Greek also contains many relics of pre-Greek language. For example, place names ending in nthos and ssos are un-Indo-European and cannot be reconciled with Greek linguistic conventions. Many names for plants, rivers, mountains and islands were obviously adopted by the Greeks from the
aboriginal population.
The Minoan language from the Aegean world and the texts written in the ancient Cretan script known as Linear A seem to have been composed in that tongue, although it is also possible a Semitic language was employed. We also know from Homer's Odyssey that Crete was inhabited by
Crete was a repository of "Aegeandom."
hails
is
almost cer-
spoke a "barbaric" or non-Greek language, as we are told by Herodotus. Towns and the concept of urban life were introduced into Greece between 3200 and 2500 b.c, imported from the East by the Aegean pioneering spirit, and because the idea of the city took root in the Aegean domain, Crete became the first advanced civilization in
112
Europe. Fritz Schachermeyr has demonstrated that the Hellenic polis or city-state, that foremost cultural and political achievement
of the ancient world, was based on the early penetration of Greece
The Greek talent for sculpture, the genre which reached perfection on Greek vases, and many other fundamental ideas notably that of the heroine in Greek myth all these things sprang from sources that originated in the dawn of the Aegean age. Those who visit Greece should, therefore, remember that at the back of Greek culture and the Greek people stands the ancient spirit of Aegeandom. The first Greek migration took place between 2000 and 1900 b.c. and came from the north. It is interesting to examine the surviving skulls of people who lived in the early dawn of Greek history. Twenty-seven skulls found at Asine and dating from between 1900 and 1580 B.C. prove that the population there was a mixture of Aegean and Indo-European. Twenty-one skulls were dug up at
by
the Aegeans' city idea.
portrayal
Kalkani in a burial place almost 4,000 years old. The men belonged to the Indo-European race, the women to the Aegean, so anthropology, too, confirms that a mingHng of two racial groups was taking
place.
native-born
wives, a
We
or Nestor
could read and write, but the clay tablets written in Linear
dating from between 1300 and iioo
at Pylos
and Professor
Wace
for
at
Mycenae make
probable that
his stewards'
Nestor
reports.
events, the
At all Homeric heroes were Greek in language, religion and way of life, and it is becoming ever clearer that they were historical
of Mycenae.
figures
Agamemnon, king
Viking epoch distinguished for its of adventure and thirst for booty. By the time the great age of the Mycenaean heroes began and the massive domed grave the Treasury of Atreus and the Lion Gate were built at Mycenae, about 1350 e.g., the burgeoning strength of that seat of power had already made itself felt throughout the
lived in a sort of
who
eastern Mediterranean.
Shortly before
this,
about 1400 B.C., the palaces of Knossos collast time. This third and final destruction of
Crete
many
scholars, the
work
of
Greeks.
of
its
intellectual
still
we
know
began to
tive energy,
Mycenae, Tiryns and Orchomenos. The relationship between Mycenaean culture and the Cretans' Minoan culture is by no means as obvious as is generally supposed. The whole of the pre-Homeric way of life has taken its name from the citadel of Mycenae because Schliemann discovered six shaft graves there in 1876, royal graves unopened since the sixteenth century b.c. and
Pylos,
containing the
gifts. It is
now celebrated hoard of gold vessels and funerary assumed that the nine men, eight women and two children
members of
masks.
a great ruling dynasty, for five of
14
book Mycenae, published in 1949, as to the real source of this fortified city's wealth. Why was it so powerful, large and prosperous
that
Homer
is
himself extolled
its
wealth?
The
countryside around
Mycenae
On
Nemea, an old copper mine has been discovered. Wace thinks that the Argive Hills behind Mycenae have not yet been explored sufficiently and that it is possible that they conceal other ancient copper mines which were exploited by the lords of Mycenae. Copper, one need hardly add, was an excellent basis for power and wealth during
114
the Bronze Age. The gold that was found at Mycenae undoubtedly came from far away, for Argolis itself possessed none. Did the Greeks carry their Mycenaean culture to Crete or did they, as it were, import elements of culture from that island? There
is
art
even a vague possibility that the Cretans themselves brought their and way of life to Greece.
authorities
Most
now
known
that a refined
way
of
life
always held
con-
standard of living has always been the magic door at which races with harder beds and ruder customs one day come knocking. In the opinion of the late Sir Arthur Evans, the distinguished
it was the Minoans northward to Greece. If, however, the Minoans had really crossed from Crete to the mainland, colonized the Peloponnesus and introduced Minoan culture into the peninsula, the palaces of the early Greeks would probably have been more labyrinthine in character, like that of Knossos, and would not have exhibited the clean-cut outlines of Pylos and Tiryns. Many things are common to both the Minoan and Mycenaean cultures: brightly painted murals and vases, the secondary role of sculpture, ivory carvings, long sea voyages, and a pleasure-loving and wealthy aristocracy. It is probably nearer the truth to assume that, while Greece was permeated by the culture of ancient Crete, the Greeks themselves brought a great many things with them when they migrated from the north. All these things differentiate their culture from that of Crete. For example, they brought their mode of dress with them. Warriors and hunters wore the short-sleeved chiton or brief shirt, and women depicted driving a wagon in a wall painting at Tiryns are similarly dressed. Cretan costumes, on the other hand, were much more elaborate and much more finely and artistically made. The fibula or safety pin did not exist in Crete, whereas the Greeks
British archaeologist
who
excavated Knossos,
themselves
who
used
it widely, as witness the fact that fourteen examples of this type of pin were found at Mycenae, four at Thebes, one at Tiryns and several at various other pre-Homeric sites. Amber, too, was very
probably brought from the north by the Greeks: in Crete it was a rarity. The horse was known in Greece far earlier than in Crete.
GREECE
graves very few.
115
A^ycenaean graves yielded numerous female statuettes, iMinoan Wars were conducted on the mainland, hence the fortresses and citadels there, strongholds so stoutly built that only starvation could reduce them; life in Crete was far more peaceable.
was from the north that the Greeks brousfht the idea of the megaron, the main hall found in large houses of the second millennium B.C., a throne room heated by a fire burning in a central hearth. (The term viegaron is derived from the Greek word ?negas, meanIt
ing "large.")
Almost all the early Indo-European religions have the same supreme deity, a being known to Indians, Greeks, lUyrians and Romans alike as Dyaus, Zeus, Jovis and similar variants. The Romans' Jupiter was derived from the additional title "father" which both the Indians and Greeks appended in very early times to the original name, making Dyaus pitar. This ancient tradition also gave rise to the idea
of the tribal father or patriarch, a feature of the social order
all
among
which was a Greek times. Anyone who inspects the fireplace in one of the Mycenaean palaces will grasp the profound relationship between paterfamilias, God and hearth, symbolized in these ruins by the
the hearth, the sanctity of
During
their golden
age between,
life
palaces about 2000 b.c. and the decline of their civilization about
The
and
to
bear witness
what were probably the most cultivated tastes of the age. It is also worthy of note that in ancient Cretan society the woman's status equaled that of man and that her appearance was enhanced by
clothing, jewelry and various beauty treatments to a degree unrivaled
no coincidence that a fragment from a chamber of state in the west wing of the palace at Knossos has been christened "the Parisienne." It depicts the head of a woman with large dark eyes, long braided hair falling to her shoulders, a red-tinted mouth and very elegant clothes. Cretan women's dresses create such a modern impression that they might well have originated in our own day.
until the present day. It
is
circa
1500
b.c.
ii6
shaped
were
in
Cretan version of the "princess line." Waists were invariably slim and tightly laced. Clothes were always sewn, never pinned, draped or held by clasps as were those of Greek women. The Cretans of 3,500 years ago lived in an age of haute couture and must have kept
a veritable
army of
They
also lived in
preparations.
On
The
which
dates
b.c.
and
is
modern fashion designer might find it a Minoan tiaras, earrings, necklaces, bracelets, pendants and rings all display the most intricate workmanship. One is continually struck by the white skin and lustrous dark eyes and hair of the Cretan women. It is noteworthy that they left their breasts uncovered, and that one of the frescoes at Tiryns also shows a lady-in-waiting with her breasts exposed by a short jacket. We can tell from murals, statuettes and the famous Poros sarcophagus, which was found in a burial chamber near the palace at Hagia Triada, that Cretan women were extremely graceful in their movements. The same conclusion can be drawn from our knowledge of the acrobatic "bullfights" probably a form of sacred cult in which young girls were obliged to participate. In these, female acrobats used to seize a charging bull by the horns, vault onto its back and then leap off. Slave girls were probably schooled from a very early age in this technique, which presents so much danger and
hand.
talented
rich source of inspiration.
difficulty that
it
or period.
Women
festivals
set the
They
and games unescorted. They were dancers, priestesses and spectators. They played a predominant role at all religious functions, and it seems likely that the fervent, indeed passionate, character of Cretan religion stemmed from feminine influence.
We
know
are ignorant of the true nature of the Cretan faith. that there
were no temples
in Crete
We
GREECE
sisted of caves, sacred groves
rites
117
were conducted
tables,
sacrificial
shelves,
rhytons and sacrificial jugs which have king himself was also a priest. Sacred emblems
pillar and the snake, but the symbol of the double-edged ax and the horns has never yet been explained satis-
had
a Mistress of
origins
lie
Since the Linear B tablets of Knossos, Pylos, Mycenae and Tiryns were deciphered, we have been able to catch glimpses of everyday life in 1400 b.c. and after, reading between the lines of the Homeric epics and glimpsing something of the remarkable administrative
organization of the time.
The
With
tablets.
Michael Ventris,
cident,
who
opened up an almost unknown world. We know that princes ruled at Knossos in Crete just as they did at Pylos in the southeastern Peloponnesus. A tablet from Pylos may even have supplied us with the name of one of these princes or kings: Ekhelawon. There were princes and retainers, feudal lords, mayors and slaves. There were also officials who governed towns on behalf of Pylos and Knossos, and were called pa-si-re-ii, a title which we rediscover in the Homeric basileiis and the Christian basilica. Work was strictly apportioned among specialist craftsmen. Many types of craftsmen are mentioned in the tablets, including wood carvers, masons, carpenters, bronzesmiths, bowyers, cabinetmakers and potters. Shepherds, goatherds and hunters are also listed, and there seem to have been professional incense burners, too. Women ground corn, made cloth, did the spinning, weaving and wool carding, performed sundry duties in the palace and acted as bath attendants. Cloth fulling was a male occupation, and clothes were probably made by men as well as women. There is also an allusion
to a doctor.
The
children
of unemancipated
became slaves by birth, a rule which applied even if only one parent was a slave. The huge labor force needed to build palaces was provided by prisoners taken in raids, and their womenfolk and
ii8
women
but
it is
not
known what
to note that
It is interesting
B.C.,
by Mycenaean
times, or
about 1300
almost
all
the
Greek gods
each tablet in which the name of a particular deity appears. Sacrifices were probably confined to wheat, barley, flour, oil, wine, figs and honey, and did not include human beings or animals. Tablet G 866 indicates that even wool was presented to the gods. The priest-king was assisted by a large number of auxiliary priests. The tablets have no direct historical or literary value and the texts are brief and meager, it is true, but a great deal of information can be derived from them if one is prepared to read between the
lines. girls,
One
^8 girl-children, 55
Another remarks: 8 women, 2 girls, 5 boys, and goes on to list the foodstuffs that were evidently allotted to them: ^00 quarts of grain and ^00 quarts of figs. Yet another tablet runs: In
16 boys.
grain, 1,110 quarts of figs. Tablet
Pylos, 57 female bath attendants, i^ girls, /j boys; i,i']o quarts of Ad 686 reports: In Ke-re-za, Pylos,
/J prisoners^ sons; Alkawon did not appear or did not report. Eo 02 we find a woman called E-ra-ta-ra and the description
On
tablet slave
Ae 04 tells us that Ke-ro-wo, the ox of Thalamatas. Tablet An 18 mentions: 16 fire makers, 10 me-ri-du-ma-te (?), 5 mi-ka-ta (?), 4 tackle makers, 5 weaponsmiths, 5 bakers. do not know the meaning of me-ri-du-ma-te and mi-ka-ta, but they were obviously tradesperhaps of a kind which no longer exists today. Several tablets list coast-guard commanders and their subordinates by name. There
of the priestess. Tablet
woman
herdsman
We
tributes
and
tablets
referring to textiles,
and furniture. Tn 996 mentions: 5 tubs for bath water with outlet, 5 water contai?iers, 5 cooking vessels, 2 amphorae, i hydria and 7 bronze jugs. Tablet 7 3 refers to stone tables and ivory inlays, ivory tables with feather patterns and small ebony tables, likewise
1
richly decorated.
Mycenaean culture
GREECE
and destroyed the old
lasting influence
citadels
119
and
palaces.
on every aspect of the plastic and graphic arts throughout the Greek world. What remained, too, was their almost
unrivaled proficiency in handicrafts, the idea of the fortified city (a
many
facets of their
mythology and
religion,
and
it
Mycenaean way of life are still felt in our own was not only the first but one of the strongest cultural impulses that Europe ever received.
The
effects of the
age, for
GREECE
seat of divinatio77.
adviser of inaiikiiid
who came
Delphi had of necessity to bestow oracles there or have them bestowed in his name. He came there less in order to de?nand and receive worship than to keep a personal watch over the oracle. His spirit pervaded the oracle far more than the saiictuary. As lord of the place, Apollo chose to reveal his thoughts neither through the ainbigiious rustlifig of leaves nor the hum of
.
swarming bees. He rejected the cojifused pictures which rufi through dreams or mirror themselves in the surface of springs. When speaking to mankind he used the speech of man.
Pierre de La Coste-Messeliere, Delphes, pp. 17 and 20, Paris, 1957
itself
and of the
oracle of Apollo. In earliest times, for instance, the seat of divi?iasaid to have belonged to
Ge.
Pausanias
Description of Greece,
Book x
THE
embodied
attained
in
in two words which express the summit of knowledge by mankind in its struggle for wisdom. Preserved for us an inscription on the Temple of Apollo at Delphi, they read:
KNOW
that
THYSELF.
is
There
God
mind.
They mean
barkens to
inner voice.
the
needed by
tion.
a civilization sated
to
know
demand
what
lies
fulfill his
destiny.
was one of the maxims attributed to the Sages, as the seven most prominent figures in the first half sixth century b.c. were called. These were: the aristocrat who gave his native city of Athens its first constitution; the
thyself"
"Know
Seven
of the
Solon,
tyrant
GREECE
Periander of Corinth,
121
who founded cities, sponsored Delphi and Olympia, ushered in a golden age in art, handicrafts and trade and prohibited idleness and luxury; Bias of Priene in Ionia, who, when forced to flee his native city empty-handed, remarked, "I am taking with me all that is mine"; the statesman Pittacus of Mytilene, who enacted a law by which any crime committed in a state of intoxication incurred a double penalty; Thales of A4iletus, who accurately
predicted the solar echpse of
May
28,
The
distilled
experience of these
who
in aphorisms engraved
that
any
conscience. The admonition "Know thyself" serves to show what sort of spirit ruled the place and to convey the unfathomable wisdom, infinite truth and human understanding of the Greek god. Delphi stands on the lower southern slopes of Parnassus, almost two thousand feet above the Gulf of Corinth. Here in the lonely splendor of the mountain scenery, the mind is impelled irresistibly toward God, eternity and the supernatural.
own
The site is one of the great enigmas in human history. It is as though the god who ruled there withdrew before the downfall of ancient Greece and the victory of alien religions were complete, to ensure that no one should degrade him, approach him or measure him by petty, human standards for all eternity to come. Poets and scholars, ancient historians, students of religion and archaeologists
have tried for two thousand years to discover the secret of the
veil
of
its
exalted
human
endeavor,
it
and excavation.
will
it
Pythian cult."
We
who was
and spoke there? Delphi was a holy place, not merely a source of opportune and practical advice. It was the largest and most important sanctuary in the Greek world, and the god who
that dwelt
god
122
owned
we
still
are in-
fluenced
less
by
all
we do and
think,
we know
this god than about great religious figures of the East Buddha, Zarathustra and Mohammed. Of all the gods of mankind Apollo is the hardest to comprehend, yet from time immemorial his oracle provided an abundant source of religious energy. Delphi was world-famous as early as i6oo B.C., although people of that time knew it not as Delphi but Pytho, a name probably derived from Python, a being that guarded the sacred place. Python was a large male snake and was the son of Gaea or Ge, a goddess who symbolized the earth, the abyss or subterranean realm. She and her kinswoman Themis were the first and earliest prophetesses to utter oracles on the slopes of Parnassus. This is yet another version of the ancient myth of the snake that represents God's eternal adversary. The snake symbolizes not only
about
as
such
the earth, demonic powers and dark forces but also healing, which
is
why
it
has
quakes.
It is
become the emblem of medicine. It is the monster Midgard Serpent, embraces the earth and causes earthall-knowing as well, and thus responsible for introducing
world.
Many
it
as
an oracular crea-
brought about the Fall, so Apollo became guilty of sin when he killed the Python. He then went to Crete, where he underwent a form of purification or atonement for the murder. Religious ceremonies of peculiar sanctity were performed in ancient Crete while the embers of the once-great Minoan religion still glowed. Snakes were not only feared and respected for their omniscience: the people of the ancient world kept them as domestic animals and used them, like weasels, to keep down mice. Children played with them and women used them to cool their necks and bosoms when the weather was particularly hot. At Delphi, however. Python the snake and Ge the earth formed the origin of the world's most famous oracular site. It was there that the spirit of the earth gave voice long ago, speaking to those in need of help and divine guidance. The French archaeologist de La Coste found traces of pre-Greek
ture. Just as the
snake in Genesis
sacrifices in Delphi. It
is
GREECE
small stones lying in a basin supported
123
on a tripod. Archaeologists found the spout of a Minoan fountain in the shape of a lioness's head among the ruins of the Temple of Apollo, a piece dating from a period fourteen, fifteen or sixteen hundred years before Christ's birth. At the spot where the altar once stood, the soil was found to contain traces of many organic substances and ash from burnt bones interspersed with fragments of Mycenaean pottery, ample proof that sacrifice was made there in Mycenaean times, or in approximately 1500 B.C. A still more important find was a small Minoan terracotta figure of a nude woman sitting in a three-legged chair. Since the Pythia does not go back as far as that, one is led to wonder if it portrays Themis or the earth-goddess Ge. With the decipherment of Linear B, the relationship between ancient Greece and Crete has become much clearer. It is probable that the priesthood of the Delphic oracle was yet another importation from the world of Minoan culture that is to say, from Crete. The Homeric Hymn to Apollo dating from the seventh century b.c. tells us that as the god was looking about him for priests he saw in the distance a shipload of Cretans outward bound from Knossos. Assuming the shape of a dolphin, Apollo lured the ship to Crissa, where the sailors built an altar to Apollo Delphinios. And this, so legend has it, was the origin of the name Delphi. We cannot tell when Apollo became the god of Delphi, but the oracle was undoubtedly in existence long before Apollo took up his abode there. Apollo was the most "Greek" of all gods, worshiped at many places in Greece and Asia Minor, but particularly in Sparta and other Doric cities. He was the most radiant and splendid figure in the Greek heavens and in the dwelhng place of the gods that lay above Olympus, at 9,570 feet the highest peak in the Greek peninsula and the massif whose isolated bulk separates Macedonia from Thessaly. Apollo was the supreme ideal of young
masculine beauty.
We do not know what Apollo was originally, although most probthe Greeks made of and god herdsmen, him. He was the guardian of herds of reminding us that throughout Greece and the Near East and from Bethlehem to Persia, herdsmen have always been close to God. Apollo was the healer of the sick, the preserver of crops and the patron of music, spiritual life and philosophy. He was the coordinator of measure-
we know what
124
ment and
the
at
god of the
oracle.
Greece and Asia Minor, and the methods of obtaining an oracle were very varied. In Argos, the priestess sought inspiration by drinking the blood of slaughtered lambs. At Hysiae, Apollo's decision was ascertained by drinking from a sacred spring. At Thebes, soothsayers read the future by inspecting the entrails of sacrificial beasts. At Colophon, in the oracle of the Apollo of Claros, soothsaying was performed not by a woman, as in Delphi, but by a priest who was told only the name of the oracle seeker. He would then descend into a cave and, having drunk water from a sacred spring, give advice in verse form on the unspoken problems of the applicant. This we learn in Tacitus's Amials, II, liv. At Patara in Lycia the priestess was locked up in the temple at night "whenever Apollo came," so Herodotus tells us in his HisApollo possessed oracles
places in
tories, II, clxxxii.
many
He
visited
It is
could have
come from
that
it
word
apella,
came from
Greek but
foreign.
On
Lycian name was borrowed from the Greeks, and that Apollo must therefore have been a Greek god in earlier times. But in Homer's Iliad Apollo is always on the Trojan side, never on the Greeks'.
Troy stood not far from the Dardanelles in what is no\s" Turkey, we can deduce that Apollo at one time belonged not to Greece but to Asia Minor. There are two more very interesting indications that Apollo was Asiatic in origin. The Greeks got their lunisolar calendar from Delphi, that is to say, from the Delphic Temple of Apollo, in the second half of the seventh century b.c. The oldest and most renowned center of astronomical study was Babylon, where a lunisolar calendar had been astronomically determined long before that. The Swedish historian and authority on Greek religion Martin P. Nilsson points out that festivals of Apollo fell on the seventh day of the month. The especial significance attributed to the seventh day or sibiitii is purely Babylonian. (Our own Sunday has a similar origin.) The
Since
GREECE
each decade corresponding to our week. Thus the seventh day
totally alien element in such a decimal system,
125
Greeks, however, divided their month into three spans of ten days,
is
is
he originated in Asia Minor. His mother's name, too, is of similar origin, for Leto was worshiped as a goddess in her own right principally on the southwest coast of Asia Minor. Nilsson thinks that
Apollo came from the interior of Asia Minor, from the Kingdom of the Hittites, which owed a great deal to Babylonian culture.
their
is so, we can only wonder at what the Greeks made of once foreign god. Thev based a great process of spiritual evolution on him, developed his morality to encompass the limits of human understanding and forgiveness, and made of him a god who substituted purification by atonement for the traditional blood
If this
feud, a
god who demanded repentance and granted divine forgivemurderer once he had submitted to purification and reconciliation. If Apollo came from the East, he must once have been a god of vengeance. The Greeks turned him into what Pindar described as "the most friendly of the gods," a European god and a true healer of the soul. But, whatever his origins, Apollo was endowed from the very first with the power to interpret all manner of signs and occurrences. Homer himself calls him "the seer." He was a god who not only accepted prayer but answered it, although ecstatic prophecy became
one of his attributes only at a later stage. We do not know when this form of soothsaying, which was performed in a state known as "mantic ecstasy," was first ascribed to him, but it, too, probably hailed from Asia Minor, an area famous for its oracles.
GREECE
After Theophile Homolle and Emile Bourgiiet, neither of ivho?n with us any longer, it was Pierre de La Coste-Messeliere, artist
scholar,
and
who
lifetime's research
to the sa?7ctuary.
He was
long time on very close terms with the ancient stone ruins.
Paris,
1957
DELPHI, sanctuary of the god Apollo, was the religious fulcrum and most important seat of divination in Greece. It was regarded as
the center of the earth or "navel of the world."
for navel
in the
holy of
holies, the
cella of the
there
was
temple of Apollo, near the golden statue of the god, stone which actually symbolized the navel of the world.
Apollo was more closely associated with the cult of stones than any other god, and a kindly fate has preserved this particular stone for us. Shaped like a small mound, the ancient design of heroic graves, it is only 1 1 inches high and 1 5 inches in diameter. This ancient and
sacred object was found against the southern wall of the cella
the French archaeologist F. Courby,
by
who
identified
it
as
the famous
Omphalos. The stone not only represented the center of the world but marked the grave of the murdered Python. Three letters from an archaic alphabet have been deciphered on the Omphalos: the
letters
GA,
signifying the
name of
the earth-mother
who
gave birth
to the Python,
of Delphi,
Plutarch knew.
The Omphalos may once have stood over a crevice in the rock which emitted steam, fumes or sweet-smelling vapors. These vapors, which were assumed to emanate from the sacred snake or other subterranean gods, were said to send the Pythia into prophetic ecstasies. She used to wash herself at the Castalian Spring, burn a little laurel and barley meal, and then ascend into the main chamber or adyton of the temple. There, seating herself on a tripod in front of the Omphalos, she drank water from the spring of Massotis, and
plunged into
a divinely inspired state of
"mantic ecstasy."
And
here
we come
are
mentioned
GREECE
127
Amphlssa\
Delphi
texts,
is
really old.
Do
which
It is
sent the
extremely
128
began to have visions of the future. Reports of this natural phenomenon and its effects spread rapidly, and many people came to inspect the place and experience the strange delirium. However, after the ground had swallowed up a large number of those who ventured too
near the crevice, the inhabitants of the region decided to appoint a
virgin to be sole prophetess and distribute oracles
mount
in order to
tells
prophesy
in safety.
Justin
us in
Book
in the middle of the heights of Parnassus there was a patch of level ground with a deep hole running down into the earth. A cold vapor rose from it as though borne upward by a strong wind. This vapor from the interior of the earth roused the souls of female soothsayers to frenzy and impelled them, inspired by the deity, to bestow answers upon people who had consulted the oracle. The famous geographer Strabo, who lived between 63 b.c. and A.D. 19, is our earliest source of information on the opening in the
ground, but unfortunately Strabo never visited Delphi in person and could only base his reports on hearsay. "They relate that the sanctuary is an antron, a deep cavity with a narrow opening from which the breath of inspiration ascends. Above the opening stands the tall tripod which the Pythia mounts in order to inhale the vapor and give the oracle in verse or prose." One of our best witnesses is Plutarch (a.d. 46-120), who knew the oracle well because he was himself a priest at Delphi for some time. He wrote: "The Oikos or room in which those who consult the god are seated becomes filled with a sweet-smelling vapor. This happens neither often nor regularly, but at varying intervals. The adyton allows this vapor to stream forth like a spring, comparable with the sweetest and most costly of perfumes." Plutarch speaks of a vapor, therefore, but does not mention any opening in the ground. Lucan, a Roman author who lived between a.d. 39 and 6^ and whose only surviving work is an epic poem about the civil war between Pompey and Caesar, gives in it (v, 169-174) a dramatic description of a Pythia who becomes crazed with excitement and eventually falls prey to her divinely inspired frenzy. Interesting though they are, all these accounts date from the postclassical period. Justin's Philippic Histories did
within a hundred
"^
fertility goddess from the palace of Mari, found in several [29] pieces and later reconstructed. In her hands she holds a vessel from vi^hich flowed the
"water of
life."
to the jug through a pipe ingeniously situated inside the statue itself. Height: 34".
[30] Statue with folded hands portraying the city administrator of Mari, Ebih-Il, and placed in the
his
back
Ebih-ll,
/y
.'
1-
'
[31]
Clay bathtubs
still
survive in
cesspool
below ground.
'^'y^.^M^!%:
[32I Looking up through the interior of a nuraghe. These austere buildings provided Sardinian chieftains with living quarters and their warriors with an almost impregnable stronghold.
'%
1^
[33] A typical nuraghe, a massive circular tower with inward-sloping walls, born of a people's love for liberty about 3,500 years ago.
[34]
*A
inhabited by simple but staunchly courageous people. Each ring of stones represents one of the numerous houses that were built close together by the shelter of the Barumini fortress about
1270
B.C.
[35]
her
hand
raised
in
prayer and her young son on her lap a pre-Christian "Aladonna" of 800-500 B.C.
-J
an
archer,
prayer,
Sardinia.
dug up
at
He
wears
Abini, coat
a
of
mail,
greaves
a quiver.
and
carries
[37] The priestesses of the nuraghe culture, circa 800 b.c, played an important role in the
holding a drink hand. The bronze statuette, which is only 4 inches tall, was found at S. Vittoria de Serri and is now in
This priestess
in
is
offering
her
left
Cagliari
Museum.
[38]
trays,
We
shall
this strange
mmf^
but it symbolic religious struggle. Six inches long and 4 inches high, one of the showpieces of it is the Archaeological Museum at
Cagliari.
[39] Gold death mask of a Mycenaean prince, found by Schliemann in Grave V in the citadel of Mycenae and designated as "Agamemnon." The remains of the man whose face the mask had covered were also found.
GREECE
years either side of the beginning of our era.
129
The
Pythia,
b.c.
was radiating
a period
built
its
when
were
and the kings of Lydia sent costly votive offerings. Classical authors such as Herodotus (c. 468 b.c), Euripides (c. 450 B.C.), Plato (c. 400 B.C.) and others tell us much about the oracle, the Pythia, the priests and the questions and answers, it is true, but they never mention the cleft in the rock. Was there a crevice in the rock or the ground, and was there any prophetic vapor, any mysterious pneuma, air or breath from the earth's interior? Let us hear what modern science has to say. The French archaeologist Emil Bourguet, who participated in the excavation of Delphi, tells us that he had expected the unearthed ruins to disclose the oracle's inner construction, i.e. its mode of operation, but adds resignedly that "what used to go on in the most important part of the prophetic sanctuary remains a mystery to us, too." The archaeologists were constantly pursued by one thought as they worked: "It seemed as though we were confronted by the products of systematic destruction." What was responsible for it heathendom on the retreat, or a youthful Christianity anxious to wipe out the heathen god once and for all? The last Pythia took the secret to her
grave.
If there
it
should
still
be
apparent today, Delphi was not built on the limestone of the mountain itself
but stood on
a
a sort
on the limestone and that this could have been the source of rising vapors. Oppe himself believes that the fabled cleft in the rock was really the Castalian Spring, which can still be seen between two walls of rock quite close to the sacred precincts of Delphi, and dismisses the vapor and the hole in the ground beneath the Temple of Apollo as fabrications by the priests and historians of antiquity. In 19 1 3 another French archaeologist, F. Courby, conducted a
shale reposed
where the
where the stomioji or was assumed to have been. He reached the conclusion that the ground beneath was undisturbed and declared that there had never
careful examination of the floor of the cella,
cleft
I30
been a fissure, natural or artificial, in the stone. He found no trace of an opening and could not see signs of any former geological
subsidences.
Robert Flaceliere, on the other hand, thinks that the tradition is unambiguous that there are no grounds for doubting the existence of the vapors and the cleft, and holds that landslides or earthquakes could have effectively changed everything. It may be added that Delphi is no stranger to earth tremors. Massive fragments fell from the Phaidriades or Shining Rocks and badly damaged the northern part of the temple terrace as long ago as the sixth century. Flaceliere suggests that the opening in the ground may already have ceased to play its role in the oracle by Plutarch's time, or about a.d. ioo, and that this would account for his silence on the subject. I would certainly agree that a biographer's or historian's silence is not always evidence for the nonexistence of a phenomenon. Herodotus visited the Pyramids at Gizeh but did not mention the Sphinx yet it was there. In fact, when Herodotus was in the area the enormous lion couchant had already been there for two thousand years! Plutarch may possibly have had
so
religious scruples
since he
was
at
about disclosing the mysteries of the pnezima, one period a Delphic priest himself and, as such, had
in the
Bourguet states flatly that there must have been a cleft rock which emitted stimulating vapors, and that we should not dismiss the phenomenon even if proof of it is no longer forthcoming.
Finally, E.
neither of which has received sufficient attention seem to be of the utmost importance. In the year 373 b.c. the entire Temple of Apollo at Delphi collapsed. The cause may have been either an enormous conflagration or as Homolle thinks an earthquake. The fact that apart from small quantities of ash no traces of fire have been found supports the earthquake theory, especially as the whole Parnassus massif lies in a traditional earthquake area. The effects of a violent earthquake might well have closed a narrow fissure in such a way that no trace of the opening would be
facts,
Two
hitherto,
more than two thousand years. thing: in the whole of the literature on Delphi I have found not a single reference to research carried out by a trained modern geologist who had a thorough acquaintanceship with the
visible after
One more
GREECE
131
limestone and shale formation of Parnassus. To my knowledge, the only geologist to ever work there was Professor Philippson. Admittedly, he thought that the famous cleft was nonexistent and that
the whole tradition
was
a "priestly fraud,"
but
too
would be
interesting to consult a
modern
geologist.
The
just
as
no one has done so is one more mystery surrounding Delphi the history of mankind in general is more a story of omis-
Another interesting theory was put forward and argued with great acumen by the American authority Leicester B. Holland in 1933. The Omphalos or mound-shaped stone over which the Pythia's tripod stood displayed one unusual feature: it had been pierced from
top to bottom, and thus had a small channel running through
center. Since the stone pedestal
its
on which
it
was
used to convey the vapor to the foot of the Pythia's tripod, and
that the sweet-smelling
smoke was
artificially
produced somewhere
The
idea of a pipe
is
ever, explain
why
phenomenon, but relies solely on statements was no natural opening in the rock. But, even if he is right, Delphi was certainly not a place devoted to trickery and witchcraft. However her ecstasy was induced, the Pythia herself was no fraud. Plato calls her condition "mania," an apt expression because it described a state of divine inspiration which had no psychopathic element. The Pythia's words were inspired by Apollo but recorded and announced in verse form by priests, who molded and interpreted them as it seemed politic to do. The Delphic god had many temple slaves, some of them prisoners taken in holy wars and others gifts from various cities and private citizens. It received a constant flow of foreigners from every part of the known world, laden with veritable fortunes in votive offerings, since the more they gave the
rather than a natural
by other
The
Panhellenic Pythian
into
a
Games (founded
formed Delphi
seat
The crowds
132
also
from which
and
tail
way
their
world.
The
tells
priests
plied
knives
diligently,
Plutarch
from head to
Sacrificial feasts
were not uncommon. During the oracle's prime, three virgins took turns in performing the duties of Pythia. Chosen from among girls of Delphi itself, they had to live a life of absolute chastity and were held under strict
surveillance in a "house of the Pythia" inside the sanctuary of
all
human
contact.
Xenophon
says that a
and heard nothing, so that she could confront her god with a truly virginal soul. The office was not without its dangers, since the vapors induced such an abnormal state of excitement and the Pythia had to expose herself constantly to such abnormal forces that several
priestesses lost their lives in the course of their duties.
GREECE
THE PYTHIA
Just as
171
REPLIES
who complained of now there are some
which
is
and equivocation, so
who
criticize
it
extremely
unjust ofid stupid. People of this kind are like children who take far ?nore delight iii rainbows, comets and mock suns than in the
sun mid
moon
themselves.
OF ALL the
seats of religion in
There was no important occurrence, no momentous undertaking, no war nor state of peace in which Delphi did not play a part. Forms of prayer, sacrifice, atonement, dedication and divine service were all prescribed by Delphi. Each individual Pythia was not only endowed with religious and civil power but was the supreme authority on ethics and morality in general. Delphi's influence radiated far into Asia. Even the Lydians consulted the Delphic oracles as to whom they should choose as their king, Gyges
greatest spiritual influence.
The Pythia advised on Gyges, and was the first ruler to be given the name "tyrant" probably a Lydian word. Naturally enough, the rulers who succeeded this king were among the most devoted adherents of Pythian Apollo. The priest who recorded and passed on the Pythia's words was known as the prophetes. This individual did not foretell the future but was simply the god's mouthpiece or medium of communication. The relationship between the prophetes and the Pythia is obscure.
or a of the former dynasty.
member
who
If his sole
ligible terms,
and
put them into plain speech or actually gave her guidance on her
no full solution to the problem, but we know that were anything but charlatans and frauds. They were excellent judges of human nature and men of wide knowledge. They were brilliant astronomers, as the Delphic calendar proves. They knew the history of the various city-states, were well informed
answers.
There
is
133
134
on geography, had a working knowledge of commercial practice and were acquainted with the burial places of all the heroes. The priests found it easy to solve run-of-the-mill problems, but if a question was vague or too skillfully framed the questioner received a vague answer. Exceptionally difficult or ambiguous answers could be laid before the exegetes, who examined them and
offered their considered and often valuable advice.
The
exegetes
remained
which was
The
original temple,
fire in
was
destroyed by
works of
art
which
In 1939 archaeologists found several 548 had been saved from the fire and concealed
by voluntary contribuwhich one of the biggest came from the Alcmaeonid familv, who had been banished from Athens and lived at Delphi in exile.
pleted in the year 510, having been financed
Croesus and the Egyptian king Amasis also lent their support.
During the reign of King Amasis there lived in Thrace a girl who was a slave belonging to a certain ladmon. (Strangely enough, the celebrated fabulist Aesop was a fellow slave of hers in ladmon's establishment.) Apparently, Rhodopis was purchased from ladmon by a wealthy slave trader from Samos known as Xantos. Being a shrewd salesman, he took the girl to the place where she would fetch most, in this case the famous trading settlement of Naucratis in Egypt. Before long a man from Adytilene called
called Rhodopis,
Charaxos fell in love with the delectable piece of human merchandise and bought her at a very high price. Having done so, Charaxos gave her her freedom, thereby incurring the mockery of the famous poetess Sappho, who happened to be his sister. Rhodopis used her new-found freedom to become the talk of the town not only in Naucratis, which lay between Alexandria and
present-day Cairo, but throughout the Hellenic world.
Her grace
to build
byword on every
enough
Herodotus tells us that although Rhodopis's fortune would not run pyramid she was extremely ambitious and wanted to leave the Greeks some souvenir which would always remind them of her. She accordingly made the Delphic sanctuary a strange bequest comto a
GREECE
prising a large
a
135
it
so big that
could accommodate
whole
(c.
ox.
The
B.C.),
capital.
could
still
be seen in
his
own
the
day
by
inhabitants of Chios.
The significance of this bequest was not understood until the German scholar Waldstein found a bundle of iron spits of equal length, tightly bound by iron bands at either end, in the Heraeum at
its way into the National A4useum Athens and remained there unnoticed for years, until the Greek archaeologist Svoronos made a detailed examination of the dusty relic. Thirty-two spits, each nearly four feet long, had survived intact, but the original bundle had contained 180. It was a heavy bundle of iron like this, weighing several hundredweight, which the industrious Rhodopis had once sent from Naucratis to Delphi. Like the 1,000 talents' worth of alum sent by King Amasis and the 20 minas sent by the Greeks of Egypt, this was a contribution toward the building of the temple. Thus, the answer to the enigma is that these spits were a very ancient form of money which the Delphians found they could not use and so stacked away behind the altar.
in
we
survived the
seized
by yet another Temple by voluntary contributions. This temple coming of the Romans and was repaired by Emperor
Emperor Hadrian tried to restore the sanctuary's Emperor Julian attempted to instill new life into the place after his abandonment of Christianity. However, the oracle's sole prediction to Julian was that its own end was nigh, and in the year 390 Theodosius closed it down in the name of Christianity. The Pythia spoke no more, and rubble and earth marked the former site of a place whose fame had spread throughout Greece and the contemporary world, a place to which kings, statesmen and sages from every quarter of the earth had once made pilgrimage.
Sulla.
by
On
called Kastri.
it
up and demolished
new
houses in a
Then, after years of work by the French School of Archaeology at Athens under the direction of Professor Homolle,
136
Delphi re-emerged and its temples, treasure chambers, sculptures and over five thousand inscriptions saw the light of day once more. Why did the Greeks' most sacred place meet its downfall? The
faith,
growth of enUghtenment and the Peloponnesian War between Athens and Sparta all these things helped to undermine the oracle's reputation. During the latter conrelaxation of traditional morahty, the
flict
grants of
first
money, thereby winning the Athenians' distrust for the time an attitude which Pericles did everything to foster. As
fell
mockery of
prey to the general disunity of the period, who have always been quick any age in short, skepticism. Here, as in
Egypt so long before, disbelief and doubt proved to be harbingers of doom; for a civilization survives only for as long as its members
are
still
god of
The veneration accorded to the Delphic Apollo during the oracle's prime can be assessed by the treasures assembled there by all the tribes and cities of Greece indeed, of the whole world. These included vast numbers of the three-legged bronze caldrons which were sacred to Apollo, and a multitude of sculptures erected in Delphi by the various competing clans and states. Although the Roman emperor Nero confiscated five hundred of them he left more than three thousand behind. Most of the questions addressed to the deity at Delphi were really requests for advice. Very few of them concerned the future. The Delphic oracle was consulted, for instance, as to when a new city should be founded or a devastated city rebuilt. The Pythia was questioned about the outcome of wars, about illnesses, physical infirmities and dire disasters such as crop failures, famines, epidemics and wartime defeats. Above all, the Delphic Apollo was, through his mouthpiece the Pythia, the divine authority and supreme arbiter in all religious matters. People went to the god of Delphi and consulted the virgin seated on her tripod at the center of the world to learn the will of the gods on subjects such as the founding of temples, the offering of sacrifice, dedicatory gifts to the dead, graves, cults, demons and
heroes.
GREECE
137
Thus there existed a single regulating and arbitrating authority equipped to deal with all the crucial problems, disputes and emergencies in the contemporary world: a god who did not remain dumb in the face of every request and every entreaty but had a mouthpiece through which he spoke directly to mankind.
wealthy gold- and silver-mining island of how long their good fortune would last. The Pythia answered that they should "secure themselves against the wooden horde and the red herald when their council house and market glimmered white." The Syphnians had decorated their market and council house with Persian marble, but they did not understand the oracle until the day when the ships of Samos (the wooden horde), painted with red lead, lay moored off their coasts. When the Syphnians refused the Samian envoy (the red herald) a loan, the Samians devastated the island. In common with all the Greek oracles, Delphi predicted a victory for Croesus, the fabulously rich and fortunate Lydian king who reigned from 560 to 546 b.c. In the autumn of 546 both King Croesus and his capital, Sardis, fell into the hands of Cyrus of Persia. The downfall of this noble and philhellene ruler and his kingdom exercised a decisive influence on the attitude adopted by every subsequent generation of Greeks toward the fickleness of fortune, the impartiality of fate and the envy of the gods. Having erred in the case of Croesus, the Delphic oracle tried a hundred years later to reinterpret history and so eradicate the poor impression made by its inaccurate prediction. By then convinced that the Persians were invincible, Delphi counseled the Greeks, through the Pythia, not to offer them armed resistance. The oracle was guilty neither of timidity nor pusillanimity nor Persian bias. As Nilsson so aptly puts it, this was one case where the god knew a httle too much about the future! Having been defeated by the Tegeans, the Spartans sent religious emissaries to Delphi to ask what they had to do in order to conquer
citizens of the
in the
The
Syphnos
The Pythia advised them to find the remains of Orestes. Not knowing where Orestes' burial place was located, the Spartans asked the god where Orestes lay buried. The Pythia answered: "At Tegea in Arcadia there is a large fallow field where two winds rage. There is blow and counterblow. That is where the earth harbors Agamemthem.
non's son Orestes."
The Lacedaemonians
yard com-
138
with two bellows (the raging winds) and hammer and anvil (blow and counterblow). Perhaps the Pythia's most bewildering pronouncement was made in response to a question from Chaerephon, a devoted pupil and follower of Socrates who went to Delphi and asked the oracle if any man were wiser than Socrates. The Pythia's unqualified reply was: "No one is wiser." The man most amazed by this answer was Socrates himself. Being fully aware how little he knew, he inferred from the oracle that other men who seemed to be extremely clever or erudite must know even less than he did. Accordingly, he examined the foremost of his contemporaries in the gymnasium, in the academy, in the Lyceum, in the market place and craftsmen's workshops, and refuted their belief in their own infallibility. "God alone
plete
is
I,
who know
is
nothing,
am
the wisest,
it
means
that
human knowledge
a cipher.
But the most fearful thing of all is to believe that one is learned in things of which one understands nothing." What sort of answer would Chaerephon receive today? No modern institution could
are
name
the wisest
man
no wise men
left,
but because
it is
He
men
in their
GREECE
OLYMPIAS, ZEUS
It is said
ii2to
AND ALEXANDER
was
initiated
fell in
who was
likewise
still
very yotmg
when she was locked 7ip in the bridal dreamed that a shaft of lightning pierced her body during a storm, and that fro?fz the stroke there arose a raging fire which burst into bright flames on every side and then was suddenly quenched. Plutarch, Lives, Alexander, ii
night before,
chaniber, the bride
The
THERE was once a woman who decisively affected the course of human history not by taking a personal part in international affairs but by exerting her influence in the secret and mysterious way that
is
woman's
alone.
sidelines of
mother of that brilliant and cometlike apparition, Alexander the Great. Although Alexander's grand design, a political amalgamation of Europe and Asia, was frustrated by his untimely death at the
age of thirty-three, Hellenism, the
the train of his armies and found
its
spirit
of Greece, followed in
to the Far East.
way
To
this
day every image of Buddha betrays the influence of the Greek artists of Gandhara. In her girlhood, Olympias was known as Myrtale. She was born
in the
Kingdom
set
The
Gulfs of Avlona,
Butrinto and Arta bite deep into the land there, and the mountains
from the Albanian border. The wind that blows there is quite different from the winds of Athens or the Peloponnesus. I have seen the village of Gardiki, the district where Olympias was born. There is an ineffable stillness about the place. Nothing
can be seen of the former royal city of the Epirotes save
grass-grown
hill
a circular
citadel or acropolis
I40
ruins
The importance
lief in
was the offspring of her association with Zeus, and therefore a son of God. Olympias' belief in Alexander's divinity took root and .lived on in him after her death. So we are confronted, 350 years before Christ's birth, by another man who claimed to be the son of God. His father Philip avoided Olympias because of her association with the supreme being, and
immediate nearness to God filled and obsessed Alexander is not generally known that Alexander was obsessed by the belief that he was the son of God, it is because
this sense of
throughout
history
is
his life. If it
written
There
is
by historians and not psychologists! no other possible explanation of the fact that
young
man who
spirit
of Greece to the entire Orient, should first have subjugated whole nations and empires and then made them thrive under the
impact of his genius for organization, should have blazed a trail to the Indus and deep into the wastes of Africa, should have given
mankind
world and,
finally,
conquered the world. To anyone who stands on the lonely hill above Passaron and reflects that Alexander's mother Olympias grew up there, such thoughts seem inconceivable. There is nothing to be seen but the open sky, an expanse of grass and marshland, and an apparently meaningless jumble of time-worn stones. Have we any means of discovering how Olympias came to
believe in her son's divinity?
As a child Princess Myrtale was taken to the island of Samothrace, which lies in the northeast corner of the Aegean Sea, there to undergo religious instruction. Samothrace was well known for its Mystery Cult, and the island was the site of a mysterious sanctuary dedicated to the Cabiri, who were probably gods of AsiaticPhrygian origin. Mystic and orphic rites were performed there and sacrifice was done in their honor. Little is known about these secret cults because initiates were
GREECE
141
Men
also
is
how
the
meet his princess. He immediately fell head over heels in love with her. Myrtale was still very young, but her eyes and lips seemed to have partaken of the wild beauty and solitude of the countryside of Epirus, and she devoted herself to the Mysteries and the gods of Samothrace
that
a hypersensitive girl
who had
way
to the
unseen gods and communing with them spiritually, as though in a dream. It was a faculty which must have exercised a great fascination over Philip, a gifted boy who had just come into contact with the
supernatural for the
first
life.
leaving her
succeeded to
Philip
demur when
He
was
pleased, for he
saw Macedon,
his
was shut up in the chamber in accordance with Greek custom, and there she had a dream which was to change her whole life. She saw a storm and in it a shaft of lightning that struck her body and caused bright flames to burst forth. Then, so Plutarch tells us, the fire was suddenly extinguished. What did the portent mean? To the Greeks there could be only one answer: a storm, a flash of lightning and peals of thunder signified the presence of no less a god than Zeus
the night before her marriage, Myrtale
bridal
himself.
On
twenty miles south of Passaron lies the lovely valley of Dramissos, site of the oracle of Dodona, a famous sanctuary dedicated to the Greeks' supreme god and, so we are told in Homer, Herodotus and Plato's Phaednis, the oldest oracle in Greece. It was the abode of heathen Europe's most important deity, Zeus, whom the Romans called Jupiter. Ju is Zeus, and piter or pater means father. Zeus is the Greek equivalent of the Indo-European Dieus. The Latin word for God, deus, and the French dieu are derived from Dios, the genitival form of Zeus. Zeus was also the origin of
Just under
142
Dodona
the Latin
word
Diewas, the Lettish Dews, the Gothic Tius and the Enghsh Tuesday are all derived from the name of the Indo-Europeans' supreme god.
The
of this god arrived from the north and became disseminated throughits way to Dodona. It seems likely god also touched the Mycenaean world during his travels, for the Mycenaean double ax became one of his emblems. Zeus never created any human or divine beings, but he was the paterfamihas and patriarchal chieftain of all Olympus. His daughter Athena and his son Apollo, the god of the Delphic oracle, were
that the
GREECE
children of
his.
143
intimately associated with him, and most of the other gods were
Dodona was spreading the spirit of Zeus abroad even in early heroic times, and was visited by some of the most illustrious people in the ancient world despite the long and fatiguing journey involved. The wealthy King Croesus consulted this oracle
oracle of
as well as that of Delphi.
The
Dodona
in
from Passaron to Dodona and stand in the up at the summit of the Tomarus can visualize what Olympias must have seen there as a child: the throngs of pilgrims arriving from all over the world to consult the oracle, the echoing caldrons on their tripods, the priests going about their duties. As for Princess Myrtale, she must have watched all this with wondering eyes and sensed the omnipresence of Zeus. The god was no stranger to her. On the contrary, he was by her side day and night. And her dream held an extraordinary significance
travel
Those who
not only for the subsequent careers of Philip and Alexander but for
the history of mankind as a whole.
Without it, Alexander might kingdom a far-flung empire. Epirus is truly a land of kings and gods, a land where the mountains still converse secretly with the sky. It was the proper site for a place which, like Dodona, mediated between earth and
never have become "the Great" nor
his
heaven.
Has everything
really vanished,
and
is
nothing
left
of Dodona?
Two
"No
Yet the oracle is a reality and can still be seen, even though Zeus speaks no more and his cult is extinct, even though the god who
once dominated Europe has retreated forever into the past. The correct location of Dodona was long ago predicted by the
Frenchman Gaultier de Claubry, and Christopher Wordsworth mentioned in 1868 that the ruins of Palaeokastrion were connected with the former sanctuary of Dodonaean Zeus. Palaeokastrion, which means "old citadel," was the name given in more recent times to
144
the walled city complete with acropolis which stood at the of the hill overlooking the sanctuary of Zeus.
In 1876 the
various
When
be written questions addressed to the oracle by pilgrims. They covered a wide range of subjects. One, put by a certain Lysanias, inquired whether the child which his wife was expecting was really his. Another man wanted to know whether the purchase of some land was likely to be advantageous. Although the priests' answers were mostly given orally, they were sometimes written on the reverse of the tablets. Such tablets are of great value because they give us an inkling of the actual nature of an oracular pronouncement. Answers were given in a form of officialese. One tablet, for instance,
bore the words: Reference plot of land: the matter is profitable. Someone who was obviously worried about his health received the
reply: Reference health: sacrifice to Zeus.
concerned missing
articles
and whether
it
Although Carapanos had found the actual sanctuary, he did not it correctly. The small finds made round about were important enough in themselves, but Carapanos had partially unearthed the ruins of a Christian basilica and, since he found votive offerings dating from pre-Christian times in an annex belonging to the church, concluded that he had found the Temple of Dodona
identify
itself.
It
was not
until
Dodona moved
votive pedestals.
buildings, a grave and numerous found copper statuettes, handmade pottery, fragmentary copper vessels and other votive offerings, all of which offered evidence that the origins of Dodona went back to the second millennium B.C. Digging was discontinued in 1935 and was not recommenced until a short time ago. The man in charge was Sotiris Dakaris, a young and talented archaeologist who was born in the district
two Roman
He
also
GREECE
and has known every
district since childhood.
145
and valley of
his
native
we
must examine the relationship between Zeus and his sacred tree, the oak. The cult of the oak hails from a very early period during which the tree was sacred to many Indo-European peoples. The Swedish authority on Greek religion, Martin Nilsson, interprets the significance of the oak in religious history by suggesting that its fruit provided mankind's first food. Edible acorns were described by Hesiod circa 700 b.c. and by Ovid at the time of Christ's birth as the food of the "Golden Age." They were no
doubt thinking of the sweet acorns that supplied the whole of the northern hemisphere with its principal source of vegetable nourishment before the age of grain cultivation. The oak was reputed to be the world's first tree. Pliny, who lived from a.d. 23 to a.d. 79, referred in his work on natural history to oaks that were as old as the earth and mentioned the ancient tradition that human beings sprang from oaks. There are, however, far more intelligible grounds for this belief in the sanctity of the oak tree. Oaks can attain a very advanced age. One oak tree at Schwanheim, near Frankfurt, displayed 630 welldefined annual circles. With a diameter over 9 feet, the oak of
Bischofswald, ten miles east of Helmstedt,
years old.
is
estimated to be 1,190
When
oaks which had long been held in veneration by the Indians as landmarks and meeting places. Two such oaks played a role in American history the famous Charter Oak at Hartford, Connecticut, and the
Wadsworth Oak
in circumference,
near Genesee,
New York, a venerable tree 27 feet under whose lofty branches Robert Morris and
Another
struck
by
lightning
very
pine,
early.
In
1
more frequently than other trees, and the medium was recognized one wood near Lippe-Detmold composed of 70
3
percent birch,
it is
percent spruce,
1 1
recorded that the numbers of trees struck by lightning over a period of sixteen years were as follows: 310 oaks, 108 pines,
34 spruces and 33 birches. Subsequent inspection brought to light a further 34 oaks struck by hghtning as compared with 12 other
146
deciduous
tree.
The
how-
not,
from its reputation in prehistoric times, for trees struck were regarded as sacred. The most renowned of all sacred oaks stood in the grove at Dodona in Epirus. Since we know that the cult of the oak was an ancient Indo-European conception, we must assume that the first Greeks to migrate to Epirus brought this cult with them from their original home. Writing about 450 b.c, Herodotus mentioned that Dodona was regarded as the oldest oracle of the Hellenes. Religions are composed of many overlapping cultural strata and often represent an amalgam of the very old and the more recent,
by
lightning
many
The oak
tree
is
custom of theirs was never to remove dust or earth from their feet, on the grounds that it would be desecration. Thus, oak and earth formed the nucleus of the earliest cult at Dodona, which lasted until about the thirteenth century b.c. Zeus did
not arrive there until after the oak, but he was the newer god and
stronger, greater and
tree.
who accompanied
(Dione
is
new
name
Dios.)
At Dodona
the
new god
name Naios,
who
lives in
was congod manifested his will through the tossing of its massive branches. Dodona must already have been very ancient when Homer composed his epics about 750 B.C., for he mentions in Book XIV of the Odyssey that Odysseus asked the sacred foliage of the great oak of Zeus Dodonaeus for advice as to how he was to journey home to Ithaca.
the idea that Zeus and his consort Dione dwelt in the tree
stantly stressed,
and
it
was held
that the
But how did the holy place come into being in the first place? Herodotus of Halicarnassus, ever an inquisitive student of early
Western
history, visited
Dodona
in
GREECE
H7
Dodona
According to Herodotus, these were the routes taken by the black doves that flew from Egyptian Thebes to Dodona and Siwa.
They
told
him
upon
Thebes, one to Libya and the other to Dodona. The latter, it was said, had perched on an oak in Dodona and demanded in human
tones that an oracle sacred to Zeus be established there.
The
oracle
was duly founded and the branches of the oak became a favorite haunt of the sacred doves of Zeus. The other bird, which had flown to Libya, commanded the Libyans to found an oracle sacred to Ammon, and the Libyans likewise complied. The oracle of Ammon at the oasis of Siwa in northwest Egypt was also dedicated to Zeus, as we read in Herodotus's Histories (II, Iv). It was no mere coincidence that Alexander the Great had it in mind to bestow upon the sanctuary of Dodona the enormous sum of 1,500 talents (the equivalent of 9 million Attic drachmas or between fifteen and sixteen million dollars), and that he undertook the perilous march to the oasis of Siwa in order to visit his "father" Zeus-Ammon. Alexander also planned to build a huge Temple of Zeus at Dodona, but his premature death put an end to the project. At Dodona, as in the Parthenon on the Athenian Acropolis, one forgets only too easily that this is a holy place and that one is standing on holy ground. The ancient abode of the earth-goddess
148
sway
Gaia and the oak became the abode of Zeus and Dione. Zeus held there for twenty centuries until, about a.d. 350, he forfeited his sovereignty. Yet even today an aura of sanctity permeates the
the bright and open valley, and even
silent ruins in
now
they
tell
GREECE
At
sacrifice
Herodotus,
Histories,
I,
Hi
soTiRis DAKARis,
who
life
to a study
of the
me
through the
whole
ebbed.
district of
It is
Dodona. It is a place where life has long since one of mankind's earliest and most important sites of
few people
it is
visit
it.
Dodona
in the world.
Next
to
a building
been determined. Its perimeter walls have already been laid bare, but only test diggings have been carried out so far. It may have been an adyton or cult chamber corresponding to the holy of holies, or it may, alternatively, have been the enkomitirion used by pilgrims for the "temple sleep" in which they were visited by oracular dreams. There is a pilgrimage site of this type at Epidaurus. Only a few yards away from the building can be seen the foundation walls of the sanctuary itself, the oracle of the Greeks' oldest god, around which are scattered the ruins of several smaller temples together with the remains of a much more recent Christian basilica. It is a scene that effectively conveys the impermanence of human handiwork and the remoteness of God from all human considerations. At some stage, probably between a.d. 360 and 370, the Christians dethroned Zeus, destroyed his temple and silenced the sacred oak forever. Then they built the basilica to their own god, only to see life in the valley extinguished for a second time
149
I50
by
church was destroyed, although its walls continued to point at the sky, lonely and neglected, until at long last even they collapsed. Torrents gnawed at the stones, earth clothed the ruins, and ultimately everything was blotted out. The sacred oak, of course, was not enclosed in a temple. The earliest rites of Zeus were performed in the open air around the tree, which was surrounded by bronze tripods supporting caldrons. When the caldrons brushed together or were struck by hand the vibrations were taken up by each in turn, filling the air with sound. The Greek expression dodona'wn chalkeion, meaning "Dodonaean bronze," was used to describe loquacity because these caldrons
metal drums did not always
continued to reverberate for a long time after being struck. The make the same sound, however. Their
way they were struck, with the wind, and with the temperature and humidity of the air, and it was from the nature of the reverberations that priests and priestesses interpreted the oracle and translated it into words.
tone varied with the
This, at
least, is
how we
Dodona
functioned,
although
in
we
335 and 323 B.C., declared that there were not as many tripods the sanctuary as one might suppose. Aristotle described
from Corfu which consisted of two pillars. On one of them stood a caldron and on the other a bronze statue of a boy with a whip in his hand. The chains suspended from the whip hung free, so that with every breath of wind they touched the caldron, producing a sound which was interpreted as an oracle. Korkyraion mast'ix or "whip of the Corcyrans" was yet another
a votive offering
Numerous fragments
century b.c, and Dakaris infers from them that the sanctuary was surrounded by bronze vessels at that period. This would correspond with a report by the Athenian historian Demon (circa 330 e.g.),
who
no walls but
are based
on conditions prevailing
as
GREECE
151
Plan of Dodona
Dodona
such
date
from
that period.
as pots, stone
goes back even further into the mists of prehistory. Excavation has
brought to
as
light
even older
and
it is
now
home
1900 or 2100
B.C.
sizes.
Where
archi-
152
is
The
only
2
1
oldest temple,
feet
by
structure without
and a small projecting Between 350 and 325 b.c. a low wall of
a largish
built,
forming
by
the tripods.
On
its
southeast
was made perhaps the most sensational of all the revelations of Dodona. Sotiris Dakaris came upon a deep pit in the natural rock containing hewn stones which had evidently belonged to an altar, and a few votive offerings. It was the cavity that had once housed the mighty roots of the sacred oak! The oak must, therefore, have existed, and the Christians were so anxious to eradicate it that they removed the roots that represented the vital link between the abode of Zeus and the earth itself. So Dakaris has positively identified the exact location of the oak which was
until recently often dismissed as a fable,
and
we now
possess,
through
the
medium
supreme
who
ruled from
was the
a
last
Greek
Romans
forming
the sacred
tree,
with Ionic
A small Doric temple with four pillars was erected at about the same time, probably for the cult of Heracles, together with another, Ionic temple with vestibule dedicated to the cult of Dione, wife of Zeus Dodonaeus. On a hill to the north of the sanctuary stood the old city, today known as Palaeokastrion, crowned by an acropolis built of uniform stones. This fortress was fortified by ten wall turrets and two corner towers. The wall of the acropolis that faced the temples had only one rectangular tower built into it to enhance its appearance when seen from the sacred buildings in the valley 100 feet below. Like the acropolis, the theatre also came into being during the
GREECE
reign of
153
King Pyrrhus.
It is a
kind
solid
diffi-
The
culties.
The
all.
theatre
is
divided
by two
precipitous
gangways
into
58
in
The
known
as
the
was reserved for privileged spectators. Between the lowest semicircle and the orchestra, or stage, was a narrow gangway 3 Yz feet wide with a groove running along it. This was a channel for the rainwater that accumulated there from all over the theatre, inproedria,
were found
stalactites
up
to 8
Ten
by
side
steps led
The
side
were placed
they would stretch for nearly 4/2 miles. The audience could gaze down at the orchestra or past it into the blue vistas
of one of the most beautiful valleys in the world. The stage itself was backed by a wide hall supported by thirteen octagonal pillars. A stone proscenium or antestage was added later, supported by
eighteen Ionic half
pillars.
which
still
survives
today.
theatre
It
were drama and religion, and that dances and songs used to be performed around the altar. Choros was, in fact, the Greek word
for "dance."
theatre's
They
did not,
however, succeed in destroying the building's chiseled beauty and strength. To increase the size of the orchestra they removed the first five tiers of seats and built a nine-foot-high wall between the
orchestra and the crescent-shaped auditorium to protect the spectait possible to stage duels, gladiatorial contests and with wild animals. At the extremities of the arena one can still make out the stone cells where trained or savage beasts were kept in preparation for the slaughter to follow. Large quantities
tors.
This made
fights
154
though
what they were used. The huge semicircle of the theatre is bounded at either end by massive buttresses and further strengthened by three monumental towers. A flight of steps leads up through the first tower to the middle and upper sections of the crescent, the latter being on the
impossible to say for
same level as the acropolis. Acropolis, theatre and sanctuary thus formed a unified and magnificent complex of buildings protected by an immense exterior courtyard. It was a fortified area of vast proportions and one that must have evoked the admiration and envy of the entire ^vorld in the third century b.c.
my head extreme corner of one of the highest tiers. Wherever the eye turns, there is a harmony and elegance about the theatre's lines and perspectives. Looking up from the stage, one can see the seats towering up and away into the
I
have looked
down on
I
swim with
vertigo.
have also
It
is
For some reason probably a violent earthquake the massive stone blocks composing the spectators' benches had been thrown into disorder. Dakaris has restored them to their original position, a very laborious task even with the help of modern engineering equipment. Dodona's amphitheatre fills the puny mortals who stand before its massive bulk with a sense of wonder and admiration. It helps us to understand why the dramatists of the West are still feeding on the unquenchable source of inspiration provided by a small nation which, two and a half thousand years ago, evolved all the basic themes that are still in use today. Far from increasing in beauty since then, stages and theatres have become no more than wretched little huts in comparison with their grandiose predecessors. When Pausanias, the Greek traveler and geographer, visited Dodona about a.d. 150, the great oak was still standing, the oracle was still giving voice and the Roman emperors had rebuilt all that their own legions had destroyed during the conquest of Epirus. Two hundred years later, the world's earliest place of pilgrimage stood desolate and forlorn, and the people who lived on the hill above the sanctuary had fled to loannina. loannina stands dreaming by the lake a few miles northeast of Dodona, a small and remote Balkan township with white walls and
gray roofs. Expert craftsmen, carpet knotters, weavers, embroiderers
GREECE
and probably the best silversmiths
in
155
Greece
live in this
rugged,
Anyone who ascends the hill overlooking the town and visits the Asian Aga mosque, now a museum, can discover in the relics displayed there the wonder
industrious, garrulous and congenial place.
that
If
we
down on our
life
little
world
in a godlike
it
and
timeless fashion
we
crawls across
at
an almost
it moved on to loannina and soared to a splendid prime there. loannina became the capital of Epirus and the seat of venerable archbishops. It was annexed to Serbia, was conquered by sultans and witnessed desperate Christian uprisings. Under Ali of Tepeleni it became a world-famous center of learning whose schools taught Greek literature, Latin, French and other branches of knowledge. Pressing onward, history left the town in its wake. loannina struggled for mastery over the whole of Greece. Emissaries from France, England and Russia met there and
Growing apprehensive that one pasha should command so much power, the Turkish government besieged Ali in the fortress above the town. Finally he surrendered, and on February 22, 1822, was treacherously assassinated on an island in the lake, ordering with his last breath that his wife should be killed to prevent her falling into the hands of his enemies. His severed head \\'as publicly displayed in loannina, and the inhabitants filed silently past their former master. Ninety-one years later, on the anniversary of his murder, loannina was recaptured by the Greeks. loannina weaves the tapestry of its life from timeless threads, but twelve miles away in the lonely valley of Dramissos the bare brown mountains face the sky in mute inquiry. Who tore the ancient oak from the bosom of its mother earth? Why was the plaintive voice of the bronze caldrons stilled? Where did the priests go, and how did the priestesses meet their end? And why did Zeus, the god in whose language our New Testament was composed, leave heaven and earth forever without hope of resurrection?
SPAIN
muddy
estuary
show
that
Plato
and he is ki?id enough to was the Libyan or the Iberian or the Celtic coast. He says that PoseidoTj's second son Eiimelos was also called Gadeiros and that Gadeiros's allotted (eastern) end of the island of Atlantis lay near the Pillars of Heracles and extended into the region of Gades. That is his sole fairly precise topographical allusion to Atlajitis, but
it is
of inestimable value.
who
of "fortunate isles" in the Atlantic Ocean probably Madeira and the Canary group. The Sicilian writer Diodorus went so far as to give a glowing description of Madeira, probably based on reports
by
the
explorer
Pytheas
of
Massiha
(Marseilles),
who
toured
northern Europe about 325 B.C. and reached the Shetland and Orkney islands. As the author of a book entitled The Ocean (unfortunately not extant) Pytheas probably gave an account of Madeira's wonder-
and temperate climate and its extremely fertile soil. From Defoe and Thor Heyerdahl, poets, explorers and sailors have always dreamed in company with their readers of faraway islands, perilous or paradisiac.
fully mild
Homer
to Daniel
156
SPAIN
157
Was
The world has had to wait until our own day before seeing a ray of light shed on the mystery surrounding the country and its
inhabitants.
new
continent in
the Atlantic Ocean in 1492, there has been a tendency to equate America with Atlantis. Despite the hundreds of volumes devoted to
solving the riddle of Atlantis, recent scientific research into the subject justifies yet another attempt to define the Atlantides and
their culture geographically, for there
Atlantis existed.
abundant evidence that Troy, too, would have been an "Atlantis" had no
is
one dug it up! The most celebrated reference to the city and island of Atlantis is to be found in the writings of Plato, who was born in May of the year 427 b.c. The son of an aristocratic Athenian family, he received a first-rate and comprehensive education. He might well have become a great statesman, but a study of political events in Greece convinced him of a truth which was destined never to lose its validity: that the social and political conditions of a country will never improve until politicians become philosophers or the destinies of a nation are controlled by philosophers with statesmanlike qualities.
The word
"philosopher"
is
We
and statesmanship are not merely special branches human wisdom. Plato wrote poems, epigrams, dithyrambs and tragedies, but his true immortality arose out of his friendship with Socrates, the unique genius whose teachings he enriched with the fruits of a deeper and more widely based education. After Socrates' execution in the year 399 B.C., Plato traveled to Megara, southern Italy and Syracuse, where, at the court of the tyrant Dionysius I, he formed an intimate friendship with that ruler which endured until the latter's death. Plato was the originator of higher education in western Europe, for with his Academy, a school of philosophy outside the gates of Athens named after the hero Academos, he laid the foundations of all future universities. He taught there without fee until his death in the year 347 b.c, displaying true charity and self-sacrifice in his
fact that politics
it
He
realized that
human
life
158
focused far more on the ideal than the material, and recognized the
existence of "ideals" as such. This
but
grandiose discovery.
He
had
was something real and imperishable was not a universally accepted truism four hundred years before Christ's birth, but he realized that material things perish while only what is intangible and ideal
survives.
He
also
knew
whim
more perfect world divorced from the specious reality of material objects. Thus Socrates and Plato must be numbered with men like Confucius, Buddha, Mohammed and Paul among the truly great geniuses of history, overshadowed only by the incomparable figure of Christ.
virtue, his
treatises
They
are
and
Critias.
The work was really intended to be a trilogy, but for reasons unknown to us the philosopher never came to write the third or
concluding volume, and even the second, Critias, remained uncompleted. Plato wrote these essays while Athens was going through
probably intending to console his fellow mortals with the picture of a remote and better world. It was a bold undertaking. He recounted the story of mankind's earliest beginnings and described the nature of man and his physical and moral constitutiona colossal and all-embracing design. Timaeiis and Critias cannot be compared to his most brilliant works, as, for example, the Symposiimi. They are not purely literary in conception and their often dry and didactic flavor robs them of any element of drama.
a critical period,
All in
all,
there are
few more
beyond
difficult
books to
assess in the
whole
insight
human
contained in them
is
praise.
Generations of scholars have puzzled over the contents of this unfinished work. Albert Rivaud, professor at the Sorbonne, declared
in
1956 that
it
That
embodied not only ancient traditions but also the contemporary research carried out during Plato's distinguished French scholar who had spent decades
SPAIN
studying the Platonic texts should reach
significant
this
159
conclusion
is
most
because
it
invests
the
geographical
and
ethnological
allusions in the
greater weight.
Plato
It is possible that as
man
work
Was
Was
his
account
of a happy island that ruled the world merely a sympathetic refurbishing of legends handed
down from
The
the
dawn
of prehistory?
Or
who
lived
immediately
who
between 335
and 275
write a
and taught philosophy at the Academy, was the first to commentary on Plato's Timaeus. The philosopher, scientist
B.C.
b.c.)
made
It
has been
sought in every part of the world, from America to Australia, from Spitsbergen to England, from Helgoland to the southern coasts of
Africa,
from India
1
Italian Dominican, described a "sun city" composed of seven circles divided by walls and ditches
In 161
Thomas Campanella, an
Campanella later atoned for his "heretical theories" by spending thirty years in the dungeons. Francis Bacon asserted that
Plato's Atlantis
in
1628
Nova
Insula Atla?Jtis.
The
Swedish scholar Olf Rudbek wrote in 1675 that Plato's allusions fitted no other place on earth so accurately as Sweden and, in particular, Uppsala and its environs. (Rudbek was Rector of Uppsala University.) Georg Caspar Kirchmaier suggested at Wittenberg in 1685 that Atlantis lay in South Africa, while Jean Sylvain Bailly declared in London in 1779 that the Atlantis of antiquity was really the Nordic island of Spitsbergen. Undeterred by the fact that
Plato's island sank beneath the waves, Bailly explained that Spits-
bergen had only been "frozen up," not engulfed by the sea. In the same year Jean Baptiste Claude Delisle de Sales transposed Atlantis
i6o
in Palestine,
commentaries on Plato's works, declared that the Egyptians and had an obscure tradition concerning a Western continent, namely America, and that the latter was Atlantis. The French scholar Cadet surmised that there were traces of the sunken island in the Canary Islands or the Azores. One of the wildest and most fantastic theories was put forward by the American Augustus Le Plongeon, who declared that the Maya race had recorded the downfall of Atlantis as early as 2500 B.C., and that it had taken place 11,500 years earlier. The famous student of Africa, Leo Frobenius, concluded from the results of his scientific work and numerous travels that the vanished city must have stood somewhere in the neighborhood of Benin in Nigeria. Protheir Asian neighbors
H. H. Borchardt believed that Atlantis once existed in Herrmann conducted excavations in Shott el Djerid in southern Tunisia and found remains of settlements "which are peculiarly reminiscent of Plato's city of Atlantis." Finally, mention must be made of two Germans, Professor Hermann Wirth of Marburg, who identifies Atlantis with a StoneAge realm of Nordic civilization located near Iceland, and Pastor
fessor Dr.
Jiirgen Spanuth,
who
is
lies
in the
North
belonging to the ancient citadel thirty or forty feet below the sur-
Twelve of the blocks of flint which Spanuth brought up, under the impression that they revealed signs of human handiwork, were examined by the Institute of Geology at Kiel University. The Department of Marine Geology found, however, that the plateshaped stones had been split naturally and not by human agency. Anyone attempting to solve the mystery would be well advised to stick closely to Plato's text. While traveling in Egypt, he reported, Solon learned to his astonishment how far back the Egyptians' knowledge of history went. Apparently an Egyptian priest had confided certain secrets to him. We read in Timaeus (25 and 26):
face.
sail
through
was
The
travelers
of those times
[40]
No
one will
ever
tity
buried
Shaft
Grave IV
this
Mywore
cenae, but he
his face.
Excavated
Museum
Athens.
at
[41]
Solid
a
lion's
gold
head.
vessel
rhyton
of
in the shape
This
a
ritual
sheet
is
of
metal and
a re-
markably
of art.
It
fine
work
also
was
[42] Head of a bull vaulter in ivory, found in the palace of Knossos (circa 1550 B.C.). This fragment is part of a complete bull-vaulting group, but the remainder of the sculpture is lost.
Spouted jug and cup decorated with the double sacred emblem in ancient Crete. These fine pieces were found in the New Palace at Phaistos.
[43]
ax,
a
(Circa 1500
b.c.)
This bronze statuette of a man praying from was made around 1550 B.C. and shows the stance customarily adopted during prayer. The figurine is only 6 inches tall.
[44I
Tylissos, Crete,
[45
people of ancient Crete, who trained girls and boys in the technique from an early age. Since men were always painted in red and women in white, we can
right) and one boy (center) dangerous maneuver illustrated here. (Fresco in a small courtyard in the east wmg of the palace of Knossos, circa 1500 b.c.)
tell
that
two
girls (left
and
in the
.III!
i.-',i,'*\l**,^<
IJsrr^
...
H ^v'^.ii:t<f?^m^ih\\\*Uu
'V.
tf
III
1 1
1 1
11 11
.:
. .
1 i
1 1 i
1 1 1
nH
11
1 1 1 1 1
lYiVi 11
ii
11
11
mi
1 1
i^.*
n m
1
1'
1 1
so-called temple grave at Knossos, beneath which lies a pillared vault. Visible in the background are the forecourt and entrance hall. [47] Throne room in the palace of Knossos. The throne and benches are of alabaster and the frescoes painted in vivid colors. The chamber has been restored with
[46]
The
complete accuracy.
m.'
^.^^:^<^
^^^
^-^
Delphi, site of the Pythian Games. This view shows the track and spectators' benches. [49] On the right, the massive Temple of Apollo at Delphi; on the left, the amphitheatre. Built in the 2nd century B.C., it had thirty-five tiers of seats and could hold 5,000 spectators not many compared with the 16,000 seats in the Theatre of Dionysus at Athens.
[48]
The
stadium
at
[50] Caryatid
girls
as
they
dance.
They
are
a hair style
common
to priestesses.
b.c.
[51] Figure of an
Amazon on
[52] Portrayed on the frieze on the north face of the Siphnian Treasury are the god Apollo, the goddess Artemis and a fleeing giant. The treasury was dedicated to the Delphic sanctuary by the people of the island of Siphnos.
^^
enlargement of a remarkably fine seal dating from 420 b.c. (The original inches in diameter.) It was found south of loannina in the neighborhood of the Dodona oracle. The relief shows Orestes and his mother Clytemnestra, who has been stabbed in the heart with a dagger and is seeking refuge on the altar. Orestes is trying to drag her from it in order to complete the revenge of his father Agamemnon's
[53] Fivefold
is
only
Vz
murder.
i^..
[54]
of
Dodona and
are over 3,500 years old. They were found in the oracle offer evidence that the sanctuary came into existence before 2000 b.c.
[55] An example of the most durable pottery ever made in Greece, this Minyan bowl of gray clay dates from the period 1900- 1700 b.c. The Minyans were the people who built the domed graves at Orchomenos, and whose culture immediately pre-dated the Mycenaean period. This vessel was found in the Dodona district and is now in the Archaeological iMuseum at loannina.
,'
1-
'
"
'
'
"
>
*^
[56! This Phoenician sculpture from circa 500 b.c. was discovered in San Fernando, not far from Cadiz. The features are distinctly Phoenician with a Nubian admixture, and the subject may have been brought to Spain by the Carthaginians.
SPAIN
islands they could reach the
i6i
sea
which
really merits
its
name
[Atlantic].
On
On
The
land which
it
term. On this island of Atlantis kings had founded and wonderful empire which ruled the whole island and many other islands and parts of the continent. It possessed in addition, on our side, Libya [Africa west of Egypt] and Europe down to the Tyrrhenian [western Italy]. In later times there were frightful earthquakes and inundations in Atlantis, and during a single day and a single terrible night the island of Atlantis sank beneath the sea and vanished. Because of obstruction by deep silt, the submerged remnants of the vanished island, the ocean there is difficult to navigate to this day and can hardly be explored.
in the true sense of the
a large
was
In Critias (114) Plato goes on to say that the island's earliest king called Atlas and that it was he who gave the island and the whole
tip of
ocean their names. His twin brother was given the extreme
the island near the Pillars of Heracles and opposite the Gadeiran
region hence Gadeiros, his name in the language of the country. So Atlantis can only be located somewhere m jront of the Pillars of Heracles, i.e. to the west of Gibraltar, not in the Mediterranean but on the Atlantic coast in the area of Gades, the presentday town of Cadiz, and the "Gadeiran region" must therefore be assumed to be somewhere north of it.
The
From
which were completely at odds with the they had a highly developed sense of topography. the time Schliemann excavated Troy and Evans unearthed
Knossos,
poetically
modern archaeology
is dangerous therefore to dismiss Plato's accounts as pure fantasy, especially in an age when sensational archaeological discoveries have been made on the basis of ancient sources. Apart from that, well-known geographical details are rarely tacked onto
fabricated. It
The "Gadeiran
is
which
why German
scholars as meticu-
62
lous as Richard
The
late Professor
his life to
an
his
historical
and
archaeological
study
of
Spain.
In
1940,
on
He
for
cultural
services,
the
Grand Cross of
the
Order of
Alfonso X.
in the
year
As soon
an opportunity presented
itself,
Schulten set
Douro, where he carefully scrutinized a hill near its banks. At 2 p.m. on August 12, 1905, he and his six laborers began to dig, and four hours later he had discovered Nurmantia, the lost Iberian city which people had been vainly seeking for centuries. By autumn 1908 Schulten had also excavated Scipio's seven camps. He published his archaeological findings in five volumes, wrote a geographical, ethnographical and historical survey of the Iberian Peninsula and a study of Iberian customs, edited twelve volumes of classical references to the peninsula complete with Spanish commentary, and wrote a book about the Etruscan city of Tarragona. He also identified Atlantis with the city of Tartessus.
off for the
we
must
first
examine what
is
known
is
to say, in
to this
day the
as the richest
country
us a
be
called,
was praised
left
for
its
fertility
by Pliny about
a.d.
100.
Posidonius has
first
Posidonius
original
tells
name) were densely populated, and that the river was navigable for 1,200 stadia (135 miles), from the sea to Cordoba and a little beyond. The land near the river was intensively cultivated. Posidonius mentions olive groves and large plantations, and tells
SPAIN
us that "Turdetania"
as
163
was extremely rich in exportable goods such wax, honey, pitch and ruddle. Ships were built of indigenous wood, and there was an abundance of oysters, mussels and fish.
Turdetania and the adjoining regions were particularly rich in metals; in very few places in the ancient world were gold, silver,
copper and iron available in such quantity or quality. Posidonius silver, copper and tin. Even though we read his reports at second hand in Strabo, the
goes on to describe the extraction of gold,
latter's
The
are
still
not exhausted
sailors exchanged their and whose precious metals found their way into the treasuries at Olympia and Delphi. Southern Spain is the home of one of the oldest mining industries in the Western world. It was probably in the valley of the Baetis, near the copper mines of Rio Tinto, that copper was first alloyed with tin to make bronze. And Tartessus was a metropolis which stood bv the sea somewhere in the estuary of the Guadalquivir. It was the predecessor of Seville and an international seaport like Lisbon, Bordeaux, Antwerp, Hamburg or London. The city was founded about 1150 B.C. by seafarers from the ancient Lydian city of Tursa, which, incidentally, is not to be confused with Tyre, the famous Phoenician port on the Mediterranean coast of what is now Syria. Gades, present-day Cadiz, was established by the Phoenicians as a trading station on the southwest
coast of Spain.
Tursa, on the other hand, has vanished from the face of the
earth.
This
is
a great misfortune,
because
if
we
where the Etruscans came from, for the Tyrseni or Tyrrheni, Strabo tells us, were the race whom we know by the later, Roman, name Etruscans. Strabo adds that the Tyrrhenians were of Lydian stock and came from Asia Minor. Lydia occupied the center of modern Turkey's southern
vate Tursa
we
belonged to the Etruscan world. One of the kings of Tartescalled Arganthonius, a name which in the late Professor Schulten's opinion is connected with the Etruscan name arcnti.
sus thus sus
was
64
Moreover, Andalusia has a number of Etruscan place names which the Lydian home of the Tyrrhenians. read in the Old Testament of the kings of Tarshish and the ships of Tarshish, noblest of harbors. "The ships of Tarshish did sing of thee in thy market: and thou wast replenished, and made very glorious in the
come from
We
midst of the seas," writes Ezekiel: xxvii, 25. The year a.d. 400 saw the appearance of an important
work by
and author who described, for the benefit of a friend, the shores of the Mediterranean from Spain to the Black Sea. Avienus was a student of ancient geography, so his picture of these coasts, countries and islands was not a contemporary one but based as far as possible on ancient sources. Thus for his description of the Spanish coast he used a report by a Greek sailor from Massilia (Marseilles) who undertook a voyage from Tartessus to Massilia in 530 B.C. His account is of inestimable value, for he gives a description of the west coast of Europe, then regarded as the edge of the world, from Gibraltar to the far north. In it we find the first recorded mention of Albion (England) and references to Oestrymnis (Brittany), the island of lerne (Ireland) and the countries of the North Sea, renowned for their amber. The Greek seaman from Massilia also described the legendary city of Tartessus, which apparently stood on the west coast of
Roman
aristocrat
Spain somewhere near the place where the Guadalquivir joins the
There is a description of the Tartessus River, i.e. the Guadalfrom its mouth to the "Mountain of Silver." Tartessus ruled large tracts of the west coast of Spain and its influence extended deep inland to the metal-rich Sierra Morena. The inhabitants of Tartessus evolved what was probably the most advanced civilization in the contemporary Western world. Wandering through the Andalusian countryside today, one realizes
sea.
quivir,
how how
culture of Tartessus
still
of southern Spain once enjoyed, and with what uncanny clarity the emerges from the numerous objects on
cities
is,
show in museums there. Did this ancient and still undiscovered city really stand at the mouth of the Guadalquivir, or is Tartessus identical with modern
Seville?
Was
it,
in
any
case,
which Plato
called Atlantis?
we
shall
SPAIN
CITY BENEATH
And
so,
THE SANDS
of riches in their country, the
by assembling
all
manner
and
dry docks, and in addition developed the whole of the rest of the country. They built bridges across the curved inlets that enclosed their native city and so opened up a road to the royal residence and to the outside. Each king inherited the palace from his predecessor and enha?7ced
what
his predecessor
IN EARLIER times and until about 500 b.c there lay not far from the estuary of the Guadalquivir a lake known in the ancient world as the Lacus Ligustinus. In those days the river flowed from the
lake in three channels, forming several islands or one large island
and from Pausanias' works on between 500 and 100 b.c, the river's outlets were reduced to two in number because the central channel had
in the estuary.
become
silted up.
marsh and the northern outlet of the Guadalquivir is also silted up and unrecognizable save as a chain of lagoons. If the island formed by the channels in the estuary of the Guadalquivir was the Atlantis described by Plato in Critias
is
Today
and Tiinaeus,
number of
things
become
mentioned
by
mud" and
We
why
two thousand years. The Guadalquivir marsh by only one channel now, so the island no longer
upon the
brilliant
city
of Tartessus and
ancient
Atlantis
were
He
the
on the
by
two
now known
by
Plato.
i66
E.v.H.
Tartessus
Plato's Atlantis
extended
in the
as far as
been somewhere
According to
enclosed
by
between the three mouths of the Baetis, the modern Guadalquivir. Atlantis was not actually on the coast but stood on a connecting channel or estuary nearly six miles inland: Tartessus stood on an
island just over six miles north of Sanlucar, a
town
in the estuary
wine of
itself
A4anzanilla.
The former
island
may
farther into the Atlantic or farther inland, but the vanished city
may
six miles
from the
coast
SPAIN
in an area
167
which
by
the formation of
marshes.
We
at this point
is 220 yards, flowed through and then flowed into the sea.
We
canals,
system of oblique canals in the valley of the Guadalquivir. Plato's account is extremely precise and for that reason unlikely to be mere invention. The ancient river-mouth
cities
kind, but
many such canals have been found on the Atlantic coast. The wealth of Atlantis was reputedly so great that it has never
been rivaled before or since: Tartessus was not only the wealthiest city in the West but one of the richest cities in the whole of the contemporary world, and its store of precious metals must have been fabulous. Critias mentions that silver, gold, iron and copper
which
68
would have applied equally well to the city on the Spanish coast. The sacred bulls mentioned by Plato are an equally consistent feature, for the bull was a sacred animal in ancient Iberia. The cult of the bull probably came to Spain from Crete and the Cretan art of bull vaulting later became transformed into the bullfight. Atlantis was a great maritime empire whose influence extended to Egypt and Tyrrhenia, or western Italy: Tartessus must have been the most powerful maritime power of its day, for the ships
of Tarshish penetrated deep into the Mediterranean and sailed as
and perhaps even farther. According to Critias the Atlantides used the river that linked them with the sea as a harbor: the inhabitants of Tartessus lived on the landward side of their island and used the Baetis as their access to the sea, just as the city of Seville, some thirty-eight miles up the Guadalquivir, does today. The people of Atlantis were in contact with the "islands of the ocean" and, via these islands, with the "mainland opposite" (Timaeus). We do not know if Plato was referring to the islands of Brittany or to England or even to the American continent, but sea voyages to continents and islands must have been made by the ships of Tarshish mentioned in the Old Testament. The Atlantides' chief sanctuary was a temple by the sea dedicated
far north as Scotland
on which were engraved the laws of Poseidon and other official records. The geographer Strabo tells us that Tartessus had prose records, poems and laws which were six thousand years old. Both Schulten and Niebuhr before him recognized the advanced nature of Tartessus' civilization. Its inhabitants seem to have been among the most intellectually active people in Europe between r loo and 500 b.c. Atlantis was a kingdom, a great metropolis whose industries,
trade, bustling activity, docks, large-scale
made
it
a jewel in the
crown of
the
The
ruled
by
kings,
for
we know two
as the
of their names:
Geron and
tells
known
Arx
us of a
similar fortress.
Finally,
Atlantis,
and
SPAIN
169
by
There
are
two
interpretations of
Plato's story.
He may
by
B.C.,
two of
Adolf Schulten was convinced Atlantis should be equated with Tartessus. When I visited the elderly scholar at Erlangen in 1956 he advised me to dig, or encourage someone else to dig, on the former island in the Goto de Dona Ana. There was sadness in his voice, for his own excavations there had been unsuccessful and although he yearned for his beloved Spain, he felt too old at eightysix to travel and try again. Between 1922 and 1926 Schulten explored the extensive Goto de Dona Ana hunting preserves in company with General Lammerer. At the close of their investigations, Lammerer wrote: "There is no doubt that in early antiquity a sandy island some 8 kilometers long lay obliquely in front of the estuary of the Guadalquivir, which was then wider and more lakelike. The banks of the two arms through which the waters of the Guadalquivir used to flow into the sea could be distinguished from the surrounding countryside with con1
siderable accuracy."
Schulten,
who was
the
first
some time
combing the
shore.
In 1922 he discovered a
Roman
between 1923 and 1926 revealed that the Roman settlement covered an area measuring about 200 by 750 yards. On October 4, 1923, Schulten found beneath a Roman house a stone on which lay a copper ring with a Greek inscription on its inner and outer circumference.
or
in
The
Owner, be
-fortunate!
Guard
Rehm
sixth or even the seventh century B.C.the days of Greek voyages to Tartessus. The Roman settlement dated from a.d. 200-400 and had been inhabited by fishermen. The finds made there included about twenty graves, late Roman pottery and amphorae for wine and oil. Indeed,
from the
everything was of
Roman
lyo
no deeper excavations could be few boreholes sunk to a depth of twenty feet yielded no trace of any older ruins, but Schulten's view was that the stones of the Roman fishing village were originally brought partly from the district of Huelva and partly from Cadiz. Considering that the town of Sanlucar "was already in existence when the Romans erected their village, one is tempted to wonder why the fisherfolk did not get their stones from there, and this leads one to infer that building materials were available nearer at hand, namely in the ruins of Tartessus. The people of Tartessus may have brought them by ship from the area of Huelva and Cadiz, ultimately to be reused by
water
carried out.
Roman
site
fishermen 700 years after their city had collapsed in ruins! Schulten believed that the fishing village was located on the very
of ancient Tartessus, that
it
was
from
the ruins of Tartessus, and that the latter have been at least partly
absorbed by the
village. It
is
well
known
that
many
ancient cities
were built of rubble taken from even more ancient settlements. At any rate, what Plato says about the location of his Atlantic city is remarkably consistent with the site which Schulten excavated without success.
Tartessus flourished for 600 years, from
tion in 500
B.C.,
1
its
it
destruc-
for
me
two made
fifteen feet or more beneath the Roman settlement could well prove informative. Further excavations would have to be pursued with the latest technical aids, although to clear an area of any size would be a costly business and powerful pumps would be needed to drain off the groundwater. Schulten insisted that Tartessus lay buried somewhere beneath the dunes of the Marismilla. If these dunes were already covering and therefore protecting the ruined city in ancient times there was a distinct hope that sizable remnants
There
is
an eerie
stillness
It is a
wilderness
boar and rabbits, a paradise for the successive owners of the hunting rights. Somewhere in the solitude of the Marismas, Tartessus has slept for 2,500 years. The broad ribbon of the Guadalquivir flows slowly down to the Atlantic through an infinity of reddish dunes to mingle its
of pines, dunes and marshy tracts inhabited
deer,
by
SPAIN
But Tartessus
is
171
Somewhere on
Digging is equally difficult there because groundwater begins at a depth of six feet. Yet the city was so wealthy and its inhabitants so pampered and fastidious that the "sybaritic life" has become
proverbial.
It
was
millennial sleep.
his
He was
a true scholar,
shown by
Numantia, Scipio's camps and numerous other Spanish sites. But Tartessus was not just a city; it was also the capital of a country whose culture is the greatest single archaeological discovery of the past twenty years. The kingdom of Tartessus embraced the whole of southern Spain, notably Andalusia, Granada and Murcia. Professor Schulten was aware of this before he died, and described the kingdom and its culture as "a marvelous historical phenomenon." Tartessus was the earliest city-state in the pre-Roman West, and ruled over towns inhabited by an Iberian, that is to say, pre-Phoenician and pre-Roman, population. The aristocrats of Tartessus referred
to their Iberian subjects as Turdetanians.
The men
who
live in the
region today.
They
loved
owned
was held
Seville,
Traveling through the south of Spain, through Jerez, Cadiz, Cordoba, Granada and Cartagena, one can still sense some-
thing of the spirit of this proud and ancient seafaring race. Iberians,
Etruscans, Phoenicians, Celts, Greeks and
Romans
Its
all
contributed to
art in-
works of
The
cultural heritage of
Tartessus
makes itself felt today. Life in the south has a brisk, vital flavor born of nearness to the sea. Heir to Tartessus, Seville boasts the hottest summers in Europe and the loveliest springs, warm autumns and mild winters, subtropical palms and magnificent gardens that still blaze with color in October, enchanting patios with
still
172
little
drowsy nooks.
Seville
is
dominated by one of
how
Moorish mosque
has
become transformed
high Giralda, and in Seville Cathedral one can stand before the tomb
of Europe's greatest explorer, the discoverer of the
whose remains
back to
Seville
are said to
lie
in the sarcophagus
from Cuba
The narrow
and craftsmen's establishments very like those of ancient Rome and Carthage. The bodegas and halls of Jerez still serve dry wines like those that were drunk there 3,000 years ago, and southern Spain offers the finest lobsters, cuttlefish, mussels and other more exotic varieties of seafood prepared much as the people of Tartessus must have prepared them more than 2,500 years before. The air is filled with the roar of the breakers as they pound at the jutting rocks around Cadiz, erstwhile center of the tin and copper trade, whose walls tower as much as fifty feet into the sky. And if one listens, in the thunder of the waves, one can almost hear the ocean singing the ancient song of vanished Atlantis.
SPAIN
and agriculture. The power of attraction which Tartessus must once have exerted can be inferred from the location of the Phoefiician colonies on the Andalusian coast and from the Greeks'
attempt to establish themselves at Mainake, near present-day Malaga. The discoveries of the past few years the Valdegamas jug,
the Carriazo bronze
problem
whose
solution
the
picture
of
Tartessus given by
with an old and major civilization which had expressed their literature, urban life and social order.
itself in
Antonio Blanco
Freijeiro,
Madrid
Swedish scholar called Johan Podolyn While staying in Madrid he had met a certain Father Florez, a distinguished numismatist with a thorough knowledge of his subject. The priest showed Podolyn some rare coins which had been found in the Azores and went so far as to present him with a few. What Podolyn learned subsequently was to shed an interesting light on sea travel in 400 b.c. One day in November, 1749, a violent Atlantic storm was battering the coasts of the Azores. On the beaches of Corvo, a small island only seven square miles in extent, the waves undermined a stone building and demolished it, revealing a black clay vessel. It was smashed to pieces, but among the fragments a quantity of coins was found. Taken to Lisbon, they were later forwarded to Madrid,
in the year 1761, a
WRITING
where Father Florez had already made his name as a numismatist. In those days, when archaeology was not as well-founded and reputable a science as it is now, the majority of such finds were lost. And, in fact, only nine pieces reached Madrid: two Carthaginian gold coins and seven copper coins of which five were Carthaginian and two Cyrenaican.
173
174
The Azores
have been
by
the Portuguese between 1430 and 1460, but the island group must
known
earlier, since
we
find
it
ing as
it
Magnanimous (14 16-1458). In fact, amazfrom Carthage must have reached the
end of the fourth century b.c. It is well known that the Phoenicians were the greatest navigators of the pre-Christian era. Nevertheless, the Azores lie more than 1,100 miles out in the Atlantic Ocean, west of Gibraltar, and the fact that the primitive ships of the time could have made such a voyage casts an entirely new light on the range of Phoenician sea travel. Some authorities, notably Alexander von Humboldt, have suggested that the coins were brought to Corvo in the Middle Ages by Vikings or Arabs, but there is no evidence that Vikings or Arabs ever put in at the Azores. Then, too, it is far more likely that the coins
islands at the
were brought to the islands when they were still accepted currency, or they would not have been so carefully hidden. Professor Richard Hennig, who wrote an interesting work on the subject in 1927, concluded that there was absolutely no doubt that the Azores were
visited
by
Carthaginians.
One
strange feature
is
storm or were
to return and collect their buried hoard or never left the island at
would have been cast up from which carried the coins must, therefore, have been manned. Having sailed from Madeira, Porto Santo, some port on the coast of southern Spain, or even from Carthage itself, it had traversed an immense distance, perhaps 1,250 miles. Such, at least, was the remarkable story told by the nine mute and abandoned coins. Mysterious inscriptions in an unknown tongue were said to have been found with the coins, or so J. Mees reported at Ghent in 1901,
Gibraltar,
it is
The
ship
SPAIN
175
Southern Spain
but the engraved tablets have disappeared, whereas Podolyn's original account at least contained illustrations of the coins.
In the year 1628 a the Azores
work
at
was published
Madrid.
The
author,
Manoel de Faria
statue,
whose
it.
pedestal
We
know
We
also
know
that
somewhat
Tartessus, a place
which
in those days
inhabited
by people of
What makes
is
two mysterious
cities
so interesting
that Cadiz
was
metropolis. Thus,
whereas the vanished city of Tartessus was an Etruscan-Tyrrhenian two centers of international trade belonging to
176
two very
were
is
Only
was only a market place or harbor at the mouth of the Guadalquivir, whether the real capital stood farther inland, or whether the name Tartessus was applied to the whole kingdom. Nevertheless, the fact that our
shall
we
never
know
only evidence of the antiquity of the great Tartessus civilization consists of written traditions and that archaeological finds belonging
to that civilization are of
existence of the
The
may
deserve credence
even if no archaeological evidence is forthcoming, and that the absence of such evidence is not sufficient reason to discount written traditions. For instance, Odysseus' palace has never been discovered, but this does not mean that Homer's assertion that it was in Ithaca is incorrect. have found no tangible evidence of the Spaniards' march across the Andes, through Patagonia and the Amazon jungle
We
we know
that
it
took place.
The
left
daring
nothing
we know
in the eleventh
few archaeologically
we know that their voyages to the west are an historical fact. Any settlement has to survive a number of storms, has to thrive and eat its way into the ground if it is not eventually to be blotted
but out by the passage of time. A myriad traces of human existence have been swallowed up by the past, and where natural catastrophes, floods, tidal waves and earthquakes have taken their toll the sites of whole cities can easily become lost beyond all hope of rediscovery. So it is a reasonable assumption that the Phoenicians were already in the far west, in Spain and perhaps even in the Azores before the eighth or ninth century b.c, and that the Tyrrhenians were living in the city and kingdom of Tartessus at an even earlier date.
made of some people who with Tartessus and whose domain extended far into the north, to Ireland and the fjords of Norway. These were the
In this connection, mention should be
in contact
were
SPAIN
177
Dutch and English. Avienus tells us that the Ostimians were renowned for their hardiness, daring and commercial
Atlantic coast
Julius
from Portugal to the North Sea. The Celtologist Pokorny informed me that leather boats were also used by
were known to the Celts as Fir-bolg, or "people of the hide-boats." Dio Cassius, an historian of the imperial age of Rome, stated that the coastal peoples of the Western Ocean were using leather boats in his day (xlvii, 18). We do not know if the people of Tartessus used leather boats of this kind because both wood and leather would have disintegrated in the course of more than 2,500 years. Much
older boats have survived in Egypt, of course, but only because
as
cult objects in
The
"ships
of Tarshish,"
by
contrast,
commercial link between places hundreds if not thousands of miles apart and have vanished into the void, either sunk at sea or burned or destroyed in unidentified ports and harbors throughout the ancient world. are told that vessels like these could cover 1,200 stadia (about 135 miles) in twenty-four hours. This not only indicates that the people of Tartessus possessed sailing ships but is consistent with Avienus' reference to the fact that a ship entering Tagus Bay needed first a westerly and then a southerly wind.
a
formed
We
Such relics of the Tartessus culture as have been found in the past few decades are interesting principally because they are a late reflection of a rich and glorious past. Anyone who sees them will realize that they date from the evening of a splendid civilization. On September 30, 1958, workmen on a building site on the hill of El Carambolo near Seville came upon a priceless hoard consisting of necklaces, armbands, pendants, breast ornaments and plates which had once formed a crown or belt. These objects, all made of gold and twenty-one in number, were evidently the product of a highly
developed goldsmith's technique.
Professor
178
adornment correspond with those found on Mycenaean vases, ivory gaming boards from Megiddo and mural paintings in the Assyrian and Syrian palaces of Khorsabad, Arslan Tash and Tell Barsib. Yet nowhere else in the world have pieces of jewelry quite like these
more
likely
components of a crown than a belt. Similar pieces have been found in an ancient grave in Cyprus, so it is thought that the idea of this type of ornamentation may have come from there. The necklace bears a series of punched impressions reminiscent of the Phoenician-Punian culture. Despite all these influences, however, the El Carambolo cache is evidence of an independent and creative
goldsmith's art in the southern part of the Iberian Peninsula, evidence
becoming more
tangible."
The
century b.c. and were deliberately hidden by someone who scooped out a cavity in the side of the hill and buried them in a vessel of some kind. Another who concurs with this view is the
sixth
Spanish professor
J.
Maluquer,
who
times a small house or hut stood on the site of the discovery and that
destroyed by fire. saw the discovery near Don Benito of a bronze wine jug 1953 which, once again in the words of Antonio Blanco, surpassed in
it
was
later
beauty all vessels of this type found in the Iberian Peninsula so far. A farm laborer had turned up the jug while plowing a field on the Valdegamas estate, which adjoins Don Benito. Having no conception
of the value of his find, the peasant threw the jug onto a pile of
had come to light among the ruined walls, it was realized that the site had once been a settlement. The Donoso Cortes family, who owns the Valdegamas estate, took the bronze jug into safekeeping. Professor Blanco has identified its style as part Greek, part Phoenician, and attributes it with a fair degree of certainty to the sixth century b.c. But where did it come from? Was it manufactured by the Phoenicians of Gadir
beneath the
soil,
and
may
SPAIN
179
lie
By
the fields
site
of Evora.
Some
we
it
only
or so to the
Dona Ana. Be that as it may, the fields of Evora probably conceal the Roman town of Ebora, which, like so many thousands of buried settlements, remains unexcavated to this day. An eight-year-old boy, Francisco Bejarano, found a number
north on the Goto de
of gold ornaments in freshly plowed
his father.
soil
them
to
The
articles
were soon
sold,
field
alerted the
hoard in the
down and
by
The
and
now
ornamented
the pressure
of pure gold.
A few
by
of the earth and most have lost their inset stones. All of
them arm-
bands, earrings, rings, diadem components, necklace and pendantsfifth century b.c. Once again there is evidence of part-Greek, part-Oriental-Phoenician influence, and once again it is uncertain whether these fine pieces were imported or manufactured by an indigenous goldsmith. They may even, so de Torrecillas believes, have originated at the court of King Arganthonius
knew
would be
able to
preserves
recently found there has brought fresh confirmation of earlier suppositions about the splendor
legendary
jar
metropolis,
whose
On
February
cache of jewelry in a
buried only three feet beneath the ground at La Aliseida on the northern slopes of the San Pedro Range. They had evidently un-
covered the burial place of an Iberian noblewoman, for the presence of 194 small dress ornaments implied that the dress itself was once buried there. Among the fine examples of goldsmith's work in the cache were a gold headband used for keeping a veil in place, a gold
i8o
the
window of a modern jeweler. De Torrecillas, who is a director of the Museum of Archaeology at Cadiz, showed me a sarcophagus which has raised a number of
archaeological problems.
It
is
fit
the
human body, and contained the remains of a distinguished nobleman. Coffins of this type are known as anthropoid sarcophagi and this particular archaeological relic is known in Spain as the Sidonian
Sarcophagus. P. Bosch-Gimpera states that
cian
it is
of genuine Phoeni-
workmanship but betrays the stylistic influences of Egypt and ancient Greece. The bearded and majestic features of the prince show him to have been a man of truly royal mien with certain
Semitic
traits.
body.
Was
The interior of the marble coffin still contained his he brought posthumously from Phoenicia in one of the
famous ships of Tarshish? Was he a king of Gadir who wished to be interred in his native soil? We may never know, but we can
at least see in this
magnificent piece of
fifth-
or fourth-century
b.c.
made in southern work of art found in the whole Iberian Peninsula is still the so-called Lady of Elche. Elche (the Ilici of ancient Iberia) is near Alicante and has an even warmer climate than the latter town. The summers are unusually hot there,
interesting archaeological discovery
The most
is
One hundred and seventy thousand of these trees, many of them well over 100 feet high, stand "foot in water, head in the fire of the sky," as an Arabic proverb has it, artificially irrigated by water brought from over three miles away. The Lady of Elche was unearthed in 1897. It is a remarkably beautiful bust sculpted in chalky limestone, and is twenty inches high. Traces of color indicate that the figure was once painted all over. The pupils of the eyes were probably filled with molten glass. Since the figure was found in a burial ground, it was at first assumed that the Lady of Elche (also known in Spain as the Reina Mora) was an effigy of a dead woman decked out in her ceremonial finery. However, Professor Blanco says that "her expression reflects an
also the site of
SPAIN
i8i
encounter between the human and the divine" and beUeves that the unique figure may have been a goddess.
I have inspected the sculpture closely in the little room on the lower floor of the Prado where it has reappeared after being bought by the French and then returned to the Spaniards. The longer one looks at this pre-Christian Madonna the more the beauty and serenity of her features work their uncanny spell. The head orna-
ments and the heavy chains on her breast intended to represent metals such as bronze,
to the Instituto Valencia de
are,
so
it
is
believed,
I
silver
or gold.
went
Don
Juan, a little-frequented
museum
Lady
of Elche.
The
similarity
was
so striking that
was
left
con-
stylistic traits
can be discerned
in the figure,
"Mona
Lisa."
Sculpted some 2,500 years ago, it fits Strabo's descriptions of what the women of ancient Spain wore in the way of jewelry. The circular ornaments on either side of the head are, in Blanco's opinion,
decorative disks of silver similar to fragments of other ornaments
from Estremadura which he found in the Museum of Archaeology at Madrid. Since they were of a type worn in an artificially enhanced coiffure they may have been partially formed by the hair
itself.
When
tumes today they wear a similarly elaborate hair style with so-called "snails" on either side of the head. Twenty-five thousand years are a mere drop in the ocean of human history and prehistory. Perhaps
the girls danced as passionately in the
as
they do
south of Spain
CANARY ISLANDS
THE GUANCHES
I talked of them Euphenos of Caria told me that on the journey to Italy he was blown off course by a storm and driven into the outer sea, where no one ever ventures as a rule. There, he said, are many desert islands and other islands inhabited by savage people. They had not wanted to land because they had been there and encojtntered the inhabitants on a?i earlier occasion, but once again they were forced to put ashore. These islands were called the ''''Saty rides'''' by the sailors. The inhabitants are fiery red and have tails on their hind quarters as big as those of horses. They came to the ship when they saw it, uttering not a sound but laying hands on the ship^s wome7ifolk. hi their fear, the sailors eventually marooned a barbarian woman, on who7n the Satyrs took their
Since
with
many
pleasure.
Pausanias,
IN
lie
I,
xxiii,
and 6
THE
Atlantic, only fifty miles off the coast of the Spanish Sahara,
by
volcanic eruption,
mountains
as
high
as
of geraniums,
lilies,
dahlias
and
and well provided with pure springwater. The thirteen small islands lie scattered across the ocean for a distance of more than 300 miles, with Madeira another 300 miles farther away to the north. The Canary group was known in ancient times as the Islands of the Blest, and the islands and their fortunate inhabitants provided a favorite theme for historians, geographers and poets. Plutarch may have described them as the Atlantides but we do not know if he was really referring to the Canary Islands. Gains Plinius Secundus (Pliny the Elder), who was born in a.d. 23 and lost his life during an eruption of Vesuvius in a.d. 79, mentioned the islands in his work on natural history, which he entitled Naturalis Historia. Plinv had gleaned his information about these distant islands from a certain Statius Sebosus and the works of Juba, the Numidian king of Mauretania, who lived between 50 b.c. and a.d. 23. Juba was brought to
Rome
as a
boy
campaigns
in Africa,
and received
his
education there.
He
wrote a
CANARY ISLANDS
183
large number of books in the Greek language dealing with Libya, Arabia, Syria, philology, botanies and probably archaeology as well.
Pomponius Mela from Tingentera near Gibraltar, who wrote a geography of the inhabited world in three volumes about a.d. 40, Ukewise mentioned the Gorgonian Islands under the name Hespehave visualized them as the site of the Elysian which souls retire after the death of the body to receive suitable recompense for their behavior during their lifetime. The great poet saw the Elysian meadows as the end of the world, a place where the hero Rhadamanthus dwelled, where people lived in tranquillity and bliss, where there was no snow and where mild breezes were forever wafted from the ocean to cool the inhabitants
rides.
Homer may
Fields to
Why
The
and
all
were formerly the Islands of the Dead, them at the western extremity of the inhabited world because the dead were thought to
Islands of the Blest
as
it
sank to
its
The
of para-
dise to
be on geographically determinate
time of Hesiod
and Homer, somewhere to the north of Spanish West Africa, i.e. the Rio de Oro; and toward the end of the Roman Republic and at the beginning of the Imperial era, on Madeira and the Canary group. Place names often have very ancient historical and ethnological associations, and the word Canaria is no exception. Some authorities trace the name back to Canaan. Pliny speaks in Book V, xv, of the Canarii people in northern Rio de Oro, while the African writer
Arnobius,
to
who
died circa a.d. 330, extended the scope of the calling them Canariae hisulae.
name
Canary
commonest assumption is that the name from the Latin word cams, "dog,"
because the inhabitants used to fatten hairless dogs for eating just as people did in certain of the advanced civilizations of Central
America.
reed, but
it
is
name
in the ancient
by the Arabs and did not find its way to the Canaries until later. But when the islands were conquered, sugar cane became their most important
world. Sugar cane was introduced into southern Spain
The Canary
source of revenue.
Islands
The
conquistadors
made
vast fortunes
from
their
mills,
and
it
was not
West Indies from the Canaries that Canary sugar was ousted from the world market by the competition from that new source of supply. There is probably no justification for the theory that anyone reached America from Europe before the Vikings, but a passage in
CANARY ISLANDS
Pausanias does hint at the possibihty that someone
185
may
have been
in Asia
175,
a.d.
by
a storm. Pausanias, a
Greek born
which was
much
valuable in-
geography and art of the ancient world. Where did Euphenos, the Carian mentioned by Pausanias (I, xxiii, 5 and 6), actually land? A storm had driven him through the Strait of Gibraltar and out into the Atlantic Ocean, to the Satyrides, islands inhabited by fire-red savages. This sounds at first as though they may have been American Indians, but it is more likely that Euphenos had encountered the inhabitants of the Canary Islands. The islanders apparently behaved in a very hostile fashion and forced their attentions on the women in the stranded ship so that the sailors got away unscathed only by leaving behind a barbarian (i.e. non-Greek) woman, whom the natives shamefully maltreated. Probably the first men to visit the islands in more recent times were the Arabs. Putting ashore at Gando Bay, Grand Canary, in the year 999, Admiral Ben Farroukh found the local inhabitants willing to barter and trade. They told him that strangers had landed there earlier, but we shall never know who they were, nor do we know how the Arab sea captain managed to communicate with the natives, although the Arab historian Ebu Fathymah reports that he visited several of the other islands. The Arab geographer Edrisi, who hved between 1099 and 11 64, tells us that observers on the African coast saw plumes of smoke issuing from two mountain peaks, and Alexander von Humboldt confirms the likehhood of this report.
formation about the
religion,
The
islands
were
also visited
by
and explorers, among them the Genoese, whose fleet landed there in 1 29 1 but never returned. Learning that a French sailing ship had reached the islands in the year 1330, Alfonso IV of Portugal sent ships there four years later, but their crews were driven back into the sea by the natives of the island of Gomera. The Portuguese visited the Canary Islands yet again in 1341 and brought back a great deal of information. In 1344 Pope Clement VI, who resided at Avignon, commissioned a French prince of Spanish origin, Louis de la Cerda, to sail to the mysterious islands and convert the natives there to Christianity as best he could. In 1360, missionaries landed on Grand Canary, converted a few natives and taught them one or two handicrafts, but most of the worthy men
86
of God died a martyr's death. In the year 1393 the Spaniards dispatched an expeditionary force which contented itself with plundering the island of Lanzarote and achieved little else of consequence.
The
in 1402
Norman
Having
island,
nobleman
who sailed
so,
home
to ask
Henry
of Castile for
sr.ilors.
Gomera
As so often in the history of foreign conquest, the natives welcomed the strangers with great hospitality and the best of intentions. Only when they realized that the white man was chiefly interested
in
on the
sailed
Gomera with
when he
away
swam
An
to
still
when the remains of King Yore fell to dust, white houses would come from across the sea to save the people. When Bethenwhich,
court's caravels approached the island for the first time, their
sails
gleaming white in the distance, the archpriest hurried to the burial place of King Yore. Seeing that his bones had crumbled to dust, he
once declared that the redeemers from the sea had arrived. HowHierro natives soon turned to hostility. In the neighborhood of the present capital, Valverde, there stood a tree (later called El Garoe) from whose foliage water dripped
at
in sufficient quantity to
The
tree
may
have stood by
At
all
camouflaged the tree and probably the spring, too, with twigs and dry grass to give the strangers the impression that there was no fresh water on the island. Inevitably, one of the island girls fell in love with a Spanish caballero and betrayed the secret. Fighting broke out, many natives were carried ofl^ as slaves, and the girl was con-
demned
to death
The known
islanders of
as Idafe
by her own people. La Palma had an old would collapse if ever the
were conquered,
CANARY ISLANDS
187
and one of their prayers was: "Idafe spare us." When the Spaniards were trying to storm the interior of the island, the islanders prayed that Idafe would fall. The crag duly broke off and plunged to the ground, crushing the last heroic defenders of the island and entombing them forever. The native prince Tanausu was captured alive and taken to Spain, but died of self-imposed starvation. After many bloody engagements, during which the inhabitants of various islands helped the invaders to subdue their neighbors, the entire Canary group was conquered by the Spaniards. The natives were remarkably courageous fighters and put up some very stiff resistance, but after sundry fluctuations in the tide of battle the Spanish conquistadors, notably Diego de Herrera, Diego de Silva and Don Alfonso Fernandez de Lugo, secured the Canary Islands for the Spanish crown. When a large English fleet commanded by Sir Francis Drake and
Sir
islands in 1595
they were repulsed off Las Palmas. Later Admiral Nelson himself
lost one arm to a cannon ball when his fleet tried to capture Santa Cruz on Tenerife in 1797. The natives of the Canary Islands represent one of the most fascinating and puzzling problems in the field of anthropology and early history, a problem which remains largely unsolved to this day. It seems likely that the average Guanche was tall and well built.
The
inhabitants of the
more westerly
islands
who were
However,
womenfolk were
girls
who would
attractive
weeks
at sea!
The
is
Not
the
had fraternized with the invaders and some of the Guanches had married Spanish or Portuguese wives. As a result, although the islanders' racial characteristics became submerged in those of their conquerors, the features of the
natural death, but not until the
women
The
islanders' old
way
of
life,
with
its
primitive tools of
wood,
88
bone and stone, survived until the sixteenth century, but evidence of an advanced neolithic culture has also been found in the large subterranean buildings on Grand Canary, which are reminiscent of ancient Mediterranean cultures, in the ground plans of temples, in ruined houses, former roads and elaborate burial practices. Many Guanches lived in artificial caves carved into the mountainside and others lived in natural caves, but where cave life was not practicable they built small circular houses and fortifications. Their clothing was made of goatskin or vegetable fibers, materials of which many traces have been discovered on Grand Canary. Necklaces and other articles of adornment made of wood, bone and mother-of-pearl were worn by men as well as women. The Guanches painted their bodies in bright colors, using stamplike implements made of baked clay. Clay vessels, either undecorated or with primitive finger-impressed ornamentation, have been dug up together with wooden spears, clubs, lances and shields. The Guanches were unfamiliar with iron, the potter's wheel or the bow and arrow. Their spear points were either fire-hardened or tipped with horn spikes. One puzzling feature is that the Guanches never learned to sail. They could often see across from their own island to the next, but the Spaniards reported that they had no form of communication with each other. It is probable, however, that the islanders were in touch at lengthy intervals and that a raft or primitive boat occasionally
managed
Italian
to
make
the crossing.
Leonardo Torriani, a native of Cremona, visited the Canary group in 1585 and in 1590 wrote a most interesting book on the islands and their aboriginal population. His view was that the Guanches possessed dugout boats with sails of matting and palm leaves. He believed that these boats were an indigenous cultural asset and that the islanders already knew how to sail before
traveler
The
it
is
hard to understand why no remnants of such vessels have been found. All in all, the problem remains unsolved.
It is a fact that the Guanches overcame the difKculties of verbal communication over great distances by means of a type of birdcall, passing messages from hill to hill in a "whistle language." Curiously
enough, a few modern islanders still command the art of transmitting various signals and even names by whistling.
CANARY ISLANDS
189
dogs and rabbits, all of which animals were used as food. Plump young dogs were considered an especial delicacy. All food was
boiled, the staple diet being fish caught in the shallow
water around
many
made
one stick with another or rubbing them together. When a Guanche grew very old or had contracted an incurable disease and was no longer fit for work, he could ask for death. Relatives were not permitted to refuse such a request, but laid the dying man to rest in a remote cave with a little food and left him
drilling
by
to die in solitude.
The
all
or seven pounds.
The The
stage in the
to gut the
body of
priests
by
social outcasts.
or priestesses
who
embalmed by members of
own
sex,
who
with the dark red resin of the dragon's-blood tree. Dragon's-blood trees have always grown in these islands and can reach an age of 3,000 years. The few surviving examples are under official protection.
Their gum does, in fact, make an excellent preservative, but we shall never know who originally discovered its properties. Mummies were swathed in straw mats and as many as six goatskins or sheepskins, which were sewn together. Then, if the dead man was
was hidden
hill.
in
No
and the
priests carefully
grave.
Guanche kings went to eternity in a standing position, whereas wives were laid to rest lying on their side. A king often remained unburied for years and was interred only on the death of his successor. In this way there were always two kings, one living
their
and one dead, the latter acting as adviser to the former! Ordinary mortals were embalmed and their mummies simply placed one on top of the other in layers, men with their arms at
ipo
women with arms folded. The departed were buried with bowls and jugs of butter and milk, dried figs and other fruits. It seems reasonable to suppose that the custom of embalming hailed from Egypt, and some authorities have gone so far as to deduce that the earhest inhabitants of the islands were Egyptians who later intermarried with Nubians. However, the Egyptian proctheir sides,
ess
Islands.
Moreover,
when
form of writing. If they had come from Egypt they would presumably have brought a system of writing with them, yet no linguistic similarities have been found either. On the other hand, marriage between brother and sister was not only permissible on the island of Hierro but customary, just as it was among the
the islanders had no
The
natives
very
Guanches or Vanches, may be derived from Chinet, the hill on Guam-Chinet would thus have meant
"people of Chinet,"
a
name subsequently
distorted
by
the Spaniards
into
Guanche.
islands
The
cians
were
certainly
known
and their Carthaginian cousins long before the Romans extended their sovereignty to Spain. The Carthaginian navigator Hanno, who was dispatched t*^ "^^est Africa about 480 b.c, found the archipelago seemingly uninnabited but discovered the ruins of some large buildings. One cannot infer from the apparent absence of human beings that the aboriginal population had become extinct and that new immigrants had not yet found their way there. Hanno may have landed on an island that happened to be uninhabited, or perhaps he did not look farther than the beach. In any case, like
the Spaniards and Portuguese in the time of the conquistadors, the
many
islands
Thus unwelcome cenfor the world heard virtually nothing more of the Canaries their until turies, and there was no further news of the natives island home was rediscovered by the Arabs,
Anthropologically, the Canary Islanders belonged to the CroMagnon type and were similar to the begetters of the Aurignacian
CANARY ISLANDS
culture in continental
191
Europe and
Asia,
who made
the celebrated
Venus
later
much
North
The
of
some of the men and women and that they were endowed with colossal physical strength. These romantic descriptions of "noble, handsome, courageous but culturally primitive cave dwellers" were energetically impugned by Dominik Josef Wolf el in 1939, and it is hard to disagree with him. Many explorers, even those of the nineteenth century, had a penchant for sending back highly colored reports about unknown countries. The islanders believed in the immortality of the soul and in a supreme and invisible being known on Grand Canary as Acoran, on Tenerife as Achaman, on Hierro as Eraoranham, and on La Palma as Abora. Archaeologists have unearthed the remains of extensive temples protected by strong exterior walls. Tradition had it that there were also a male and a female deity who lived in the mountains and came down to hear the prayers of the people. Belief in an evil spirit was equally widespread. This demon, who was known on Tenerife as Guayota, lived at the summit of the Teide, a 10,750foot peak. In times of extreme drought the Guanches used to drive their herds to holy places where they separated the lambs from the ewes in the hope that their melancholy bleating would melt the heart of the supreme being. All personal feuds and wars had to be postponed during religious festivals. The islands evidently had a sort of caste system founded upon a complicated mythology. There were many social strata, ranging from serfs to priests and royalty. On some islands the king was an absolute ruler, while on others the chieftains and nobility formed a
state.
Again,
were inhabited by numerous small tribes who owed allegiance to no single master. The title of king or prince was handed down from father to son. The emblem of authority was the armbone of a deceased king or, according to other sources, a dead king's skull. Oaths were sworn on such relics at coronations, and they were also used as scepters during councils of state.
one or two
islands
all
the
192
names
corresponded to Berber words and some were common to all the islands. Aemon meant "water" on Lanzarote, Hierro and probably
some of the other islands. Aho meant "milk" on Lanzarote, Grand Canary and Tenerife. On many of the islands the danger of overpopulation was so great that men were punished with death if they so much as approached a strange
woman
It
is
though the islands were, twin paths were laid out in the mountains of Tenerife and Grand Canary for just this reason, one for men and one for women. From time to time,
interesting to note that, small
when
a this
kill all newborn babies, the only exceptions to inhuman measure being firstborn children. All this proves that at the time of the Spanish conquest a considerable number of Guanches lived on the islands and that in earlier times the islands may well have been even more densely populated. On Lanzarote there was a pit into which those who had been condemned to death were lowered and given the choice of either food or water. However, the death pit was abolished after one
general decree to
prisoner chose milk and stayed alive so long that the penalty lost
its
meaning.
strange symbols which have been found on the rocks of La Palma and Hierro remain an unsolved scientific mystery. Scholars have been unable to recognize any form of writing in these inscriptions, and, apart from that, they seem to have been made not bv the Guanches but by an older race which had long been extinct
The
when
the islands were taken by the Spaniards. Only some 500 years have elapsed since we discovered
the natives
we
tried to turn
them
is
How much
symptom
of primitive think-
of life to be the only one worth imitating, and insist on exporting their machine-made comforts at all costs. On the Canary Islands, so Leonardo Torriani reported, people had been living "healthily for a long time without
ing
nations imagine their
serious illness or need of a doctor."
when advanced
own way
devoting
[57]
The
is
in doubt. It may have been sculpted by a Greek artist and brought to a port on the Atlantic coast of southern Spain or it may, on the other hand, be a product of native Tartessus art.
ure
still
[58]
Roman amphorae
influence,
sea
off
Phoenician
exhibiting salvaged
from
the
Cadiz.
The
sion in seawater.
most interesting
b.c. sarcophagus complete with original occupant and closely fitting lid (left). It is assumed that the sarcophagus was brought to Cadiz from the Phoenician city of Sidon, but we shall never know why the prince for whom this handsome stone coffin was made should have
found
This fine Greek bowl was transported to [61 Tartessus in one of the famous "ships of Tarshish" which King Solomon knew so well, and is probably between 2,500 and 2,600 years old.
1
'^
V'4
palm tree and [62] Unusual burial stele in the Aluseo Arqucologicu at Seville. The doe with calf are reminiscent of Tartessus art but probably hail from the later,
Roman
period.
[63]
of
Greek
away
300
evil
spirits,
and
500-
dates
from
the
period
B.C.
[64] This handsome children's drinking vessel in the shape of a cockerel belongs to the Tartes-
sus culture
now
in
the
Museum
of
Archaeology, Cadiz.
[65]
this sort
[66]
"The
at
Lady
of
Elche,"
Elche on the east coast of Spain. This Mona-Lisa-like portrayal is a unique example
found
of the artistic
skill
of the 5th
century b.c. The head ornaments, coiffure, ear pendants and chains are testimony to the splendor of the vanished culture of Tartessus.
[67I The celebrated treasure of El Carambolo, which was unearthed on September 30, 1958,
comprised
twentv-one
articles
of solid gold. In Professor Blanco's opinion, the plates are not components of a belt but of a crown. This valuable find bears witness to the remarkable technique of Tartessus goldsmiths.
'
* w.
gives us
Guanches are extinct as a people, but this wooden bust of a Guanche girl some idea of their racial type, which mav have been related to that of the Berbers of North Africa. The Spaniards described them as tall and strong-boned.
[681 The
stone building erected by the Guanches shows how far advanced place was enclosed by a massive wall and probably served religious purposes. [70] Stone pestle and mortar used by the Guanches for grinding corn. Hand mills of this type have been found on several of the Canary Islands. (House of Columbus, Las Palmas.)
[69]
This model of
The
..a.^'!
[71]
A
is
tripod
of this
type
known
as a ting.
seen on each of its three The probable age of this sacrificial vessel
sides.
is
2,500 years.
[72]
This
Shang Dy-
(1766-1123 B.C.) bowl is 23 Yz inches high and has a fine olivegreen patina. The center of its girth is occupied by a T'ao-t'ieh mask in which the crescent moons have be-
nasty
come
horns.
modified
into
a
Top
center, the
CANARY ISLANDS
sufRcient study to them.
193
Gone are the Guanches' buildings in the rock and beneath the ground, gone the work of their carpenters, ropemakers and tanners, gone their secret recipe for brewing an elixir of life from tree sap, gone the leather lines and goats' bones, the nets made of grasses and palm leaves with which they once
fished so skillfully.
Never again
engage in mortal combat with the balls of clay which they used for sport as well as war, dangerous missiles which only the agile could avoid; never again will spears quiver in the clear air, hurled by the
The people of these islands loved life and solitude and they beHeved in a supreme god. They made music and their songs drifted out across the waters of the Atlantic. Today only the thunder of the surf tells the story of their
vanished
way
of
life.
CHINA
THE MASK OF
T'AO-T'IEH
The study of ancient bronzes has been industriously pursued in China by generations of scholars, who have the greatest veneration for the written script and find it better preserved on bronze than on stone, while the more perishable materials used in early times, such as tablets of wood and rolls of silk, have long since disappeared.
Stephen
W.
London,
19 14
ALL
Homo
tion
sail the seas, but once he had invented boats and ships the exchange of cultural blessings and evils became still more widespread. One nation, however, has always felt itself to be the center of the
from continent to continent and from one next. This was so even before man learned how
to
world and has thus remained more withdrawn and self-contained than any other advanced civilization, namely the Chinese though the men who live in Sinkiang, the Gobi desert and Manchuria or by
the
Hwang Ho,
rivers differ so
widely
in their
less a
peoples.
With
its
millions,
China
nation's strength
its
and ca-
on the foodstuffs available per head of population and above all on what each such head contains. In our century a country's technical progress can be likened to a ship, which goes no better with a crew of four thousand men than with a complement just large enough to supervise the efficient functioning of all its equipment. Availability of food should never be a dominant factor in the life of any nation. The equating of manpower with military strength ceased to be valid after the end of the Second World War.
are dependent
The
is
not
its
1,
the Chinese
CHINA
numbered only
105 millions; in 1766, 182 millions; in 1872,
195
some
330 millions; and today, almost 700 millions. This huge nation is endowed with certain attributes which Westerners either consistently forget or simply refuse to take into ac-
count. For thousands of years, ideas and trade goods entered China
via endless caravan routes or
by
sea.
The
stratification of various
is
so fan-
turies to
come before
it
we shall have to dig and explore for cenwe succeed in identifying even a few of the
manyseems
lie
layered complexity,
as
enclosed
years.
by
The
reason
may
in China's
arts,
when
their
numbers stood
far
below the
fifty-million mark.
The
the
they have to deal are inferior to themselves. Every Chinese is fundamentally convinced, for instance, that Tibetans, Turkestanis, the inhabitants of Outer Mongolia and the primitive peoples of Siberia belong to his own nation. China has never acknowledged another people or country as the center of the world.
in the
whom
by any country world for five thousand years. China was the "Kingdom of the Center," and the Chinese have always regarded other nations as barbarians, an attitude which still persists today. Racially and culturally, China has always swallowed her neighbors, conquerors and defeated enemies, assimilated and absorbed them. The Chinese thought of their country as the largest and most powerful in the world and looked down on their Western conquerors with conIn fact, she has scarcely been surpassed in culture
tempt.
They
all,
Germans
and,
above
the
the Russians,
into
who were
always trying to
infiltrate across
Amur
196
Turkestan.
Since the Chinese were not a great seafaring race and their rela-
with other advanced cultures were, in a sense, unconscious, in their nature to belong to a family of nations. This fact, together with their ignorance of other peoples' cultural achievements, their thousands of years of practice in their own individual way of life and their innate sense of superiority, has always made them seem arrogant in foreign eyes. If it is arrogance, however, it is an ancient arrogance unengendered by any sort of inferiority complex. It has always been difficult to conclude treaties with the Chinese and quite useless to expect them to adhere to an agreement. Like most river-valley peoples, the inhabitants of the Hwang Ho and Yangtze plains have been astute businessmen for thousands of years. They produced great poets, talented writers, incomparable painters and some of the world's foremost sculptors. They were excellent smiths, fine weavers and silk manufacturers, brilliant architects, magnificent cooks and appallingly bad cattlemen. During the first five dynasties, or from 2205 B.C. until a.d. 220, this unusual people evolved a Bronze-Age culture which ventured to plumb the profoundest secrets of light and darkness, sun and moon, beast, man and god. Under the Shang and Chou dynasties (1766-256 B.C.) bronze was in general use and represented China's most important metal. Articles of bronze being as durable as they are, the Chinese have contributed a vast literature to the study of this art. The Illustrated Description of Antiques in the Hsiian-Ho Palace, compiled by Wang Fu at the beginning of the twelfth century, comprised thirty volumes. A study of antiques edited by Lii Ta-lin in 1092 contained
tions
it
was never
ten volumes.
bronze collections in the palace at Peking, published in 1751 by Emperor Ch'ien Lung, occupied no less than forty-two volumes and the supplementary catalogue was housed in a further fourteen. Thus there is a veritable library of works by Chinese art historians and archaeologists devoted to the rich and extensive subject of bronze art, and modern students of this extraordinarily difficult field are forced to refer repeatedly to Chinese descriptions and catalogues
for advice.
CHINA
The
Hsia
earlier
197
Chinese dynasties
2205 B.C-1767
B.C.
Shang
Chou
Ch'in
Han The
Sui
"Six Dynasties"
220-A.D,
589-A.D.
589 618
T'ang
Five Dynasties
906 960
1279
Sung
During the Chou dynasty (1122-256 b.c.) Chinese writers comwork on contemporary art, the celebrated K^ao kung chi. This book lists the ratios to be used when alloying copper and tin to make various bronze articles. Bells, gongs, large bowls and other sacred vessels and objects consisted of five parts copper to one part tin. Axes and mattocks required four parts copper to one of tin. Double-edged swords and agricultural implements were cast from two parts copper to one part tin. Yet another alloy was prescribed for making arrowheads and small knives, and the famous Chinese mirrors were made of the above two metals alloyed in equal propiled a portions.
tin,
little
gold, a
combination of metals which produces a beautiful patina when an object has lain in the ground and been subjected to chemical changes over a period of hundreds or thousands of years. Being familiar with the chemical properties of his country's soil, the Chinese antiquarian knows how the lovely greens, turquoises and reds are conjured up
on bronze and can distinguish fake from genuine by patina alone. Patina is often faked, but a spurious coating can usually be removed with a knife blade or boiling water, whereas genuine patina penetrates
Very
of
which were
60 tons,
maximum
circumference of 36
198
feet
bells
about
foot thick.
The
Cast on the spot where they were destined to remain, they were
suspended on tree trunks mounted on massive wooden frames. Then, when the earth had been dug away from beneath them, a swinging
wooden beam was hung inside to summon them to sonorous life. The earliest bronzes, which served religious ends, were associated
with ancestor worship and certain
court. Special vessels
rites
performed
at the imperial
many
vessels
The
as a great
good fortune by the Chinese because they thought that the article's sanctity in some way transferred itself to the finder. Thus it was a sacred duty to keep bronzes carefully and pass them on from one generation to the next. In the fifth month of the year
stroke of
ii6 B.C. a three-legged caldron of the sort
as ting
known
to the Chinese
was unearthed on the southern bank of the river Fen in Shansi Province. This happy event was regarded in such an important light that the reign of the emperor of the day, Wu Ti, was
thereafter
known
as
Yuan Ting.
T'ang dynasty, a bronze caldron was discovered on the left bank of the Yellow River in the city of Yung Ho. The name of the place was forthwith changed to Pao Ting Hsien, or "City of the Costly Tripod." Not until about a.d, 960, when the Sung dynasty came to power, did bronzes lose their reputation for sanctity. From then on they were systematically dug up and placed in imperial palaces and museums, where they were catalogued and their inscriptions deciphered.
The
first
items to be mentioned in
(bells)
lists
were chiing
and ting (bowls). Bells were often hung at the entrances of banqueting halls and later in ancestral temples, where their clangorous voices could summon the shades to funeral
banquets.
One very famous example of the tijig type of three-legged vessel from the Chou dynasty (1122-256 b.c.) and now stands in the Chiao-Shan Temple on the Yangtze. Its interior bears an
dates
lip to base,
of
CHINA
ing
is
199
an extract:
I
"I,
Wu
my
grateful
Heaven,
presI
my
late
deserving father.
May
be
rewarded with
long
life
of
many
days, and
may my
it
sons and
this vessel
and hold
in
thousand years."
From
B.C.
moon, Chinese
and that
councillor of
from 812
a
and
its
inscription
privy
The inscriptions of the Shang dynasty (1766-1123 B.C.) are composed in an archaic pictographic script and usually mention the name of the dead man to whom the piece was dedicated. No engraved examples are known to have originated in the still earlier Hsia dynasty (2205-1767 B.C.). By contrast, the interior of one
sacrificial
b.c.)
bears
more
Bronze
sacrificial
used in the
ritual
winejars,
wine
with
lids,
wine
vessels
and large
flat
The
metaphor
They
appear cumber-
some at times, for they changed little in thousands of years, yet in some strange and mysterious manner they convey their great age
and hallowed
significance.
The
light
phenomena. The
latter
themes shed
beings
on the
earliest
Human
are rarely depicted, but the surfaces of the vessels bear allusive
representations of
hills,
The
latter
presuppose an almost inconceivable degree of imagination and surpass anything of their kind in the West. Fantastic monsters like
200
by the Chinese mind were never imagined, let by any other people on earth. Foremost among these mythical beasts is T'ao-t'ieh. The two Chinese characters composing the name stress only one attribute
those conjured up
alone portrayed,
of this mysterious creature, their literal translation being "the Voracious One." T'ao-t'ieh was either a deity or the embodiment of various characteristics belonging to what was probably the
mask of T'ao-t'ieh appears on so must have been associated with an important god of some kind. The design and juxtaposition of various masks of this type and of other animals or beings were an age-old Chinese
supreme
deity, for the so-called
it
many
vessels that
tradition.
we
shall
medium such
vessels.
of the
first
bronze
for effigy
What we
find
worlds
With its double-looped horns, the T'ao-t'ieh resembles a ram, but a large fang often protrudes from the upper jaw of its gaping mouth, so it must be some form of predatory beast, perhaps a wolf
or tiger.
On
many
buffalo's head.
Careful scrutiny
is
essential to the
and
bells.
Probably the most eminent authority on early Chinese is Professor Carl Hentze, a distinguished
member
of
Ghent
University,
who
masks have crescent-shaped horns, and the earliest examples incorporate half-moons. The upper pair of crescents grew into horns, while the lower pair became the lower jaw of the mask. During the early bronze period, however, most of the masks displayed four distinct crescents. Hentze and Japanese scholars before him have interpreted these crescents as a cult symbol of the moon. Night and the moon go together, and owls are creatures of the night, hence the stylized coalescence of owl and t'ao-t'ieh.
The
mask
is
CHINA
201
though its significance remained obscure until 1937, when Hentze proved that it, too, corresponded to an iconographic formula. He interpreted it as a grasshopper, and defined the role of this ornament between the horns of the T'ao-t'ieh as a symbol of renewal or rebirth. Fantastic as it may seem, this may point to an association with the Indus culture of Mohenjo Daro. It, too, had a deity with crescent horns, and these horns, too, were separated by an emblem. On the T'ao-t'ieh mask it is an insect, in Mohenjo Daro a plant. In both cases Hentze interprets the symbol as a renewal motif.
Hailing from the obscure past, the portrayals of the T'ao-t'ieh
masks are assumed to represent the manifestations, characteristics and functions of an age-old supreme deity. Night and darkness are symbolized by the crescent moons and the owl, light and rebirth by sun symbols and grasshoppers. Out of darkness, so we are informed by the remarkable bronzes of early China, come light and life. T'ao-t'ieh, so familiar to the Chinese four thousand years ago and so mysterious now, was a demon of darkness and a creature of the moon. It was, as Professor Hentze has so brilliantly demonstrated, a central deity during the Shang period of 1766-1123 b.c. Where did the Shang people learn the art of bronze manufacture? This question remains unanswered, despite the fact that for many centuries magnificent works of art in bronze have been unearthed
An-yang district of central Honan, where the capital of the Shang dynasty used to be. There is some evidence that the bronze culture of the West spread to China at an early date. The ancient motif of rams and the tree of life, a feature of Sumerian culture, has been rediscovered
in the
in
if
does
bronze art from that quarter. Indeed, the unique characteristics of Chinese bronzes and the extreme individuality of Shang religious culture are inconsistent with the adoption of Western elements, and the predominance of entirely uninfluenced Chinese pieces indicates that the Far East
its
underwent an artistic evolution of its very own. There are apparent similarities between ancient Chinese and Northwest American Indian art just as there are similarities between Shang iconography and some Maya and Aztec symbols. But what explanation can there be for the gap of two or three thousand
202
years separating the extremely ancient bronze art of China and the
entirety.
The most
remarkable feature of Chinese bronze culture is that, like Pallas Athene, it appears to have sprung abruptly into being four thousand
years ago and to have attained a peak of perfection without passing
through any preliminary stages. W. C. White, a Canadian authority on Shang culture who has lived in Honan for many years, states that there is absolutely no indication of the origin or even the background of this art. The bronzes are superbly cast, carefully planned with regard to strength and form, refined in their ornamentation and unsurpassed by any other bronzes in the world. know that the Shang priests frequently made human sacrifice, we guess at their cult animals and have a vague idea of their demons,
We
we
study their
fertility
contained their food and drink offerings more than three thousand
years
ago but what did they hiozvF What did they know of the whence and whither of mankind? What did they know of God,
and
why
of nature?
If the mute bronzes refuse to yield up all their remember that it is characteristic of the moon's secrets,
we must
pale crescent to
leave
much
in semidarkness.
INDIA
If
Buddha
is
only an apocryphal
if
bolic specidation,
his doctrines,
which possessed a
all his
literature in
which
it
preserved a
in his
recollection of
(Jean
Filliozat) L.
J.
Filliozat,
Ulnde
Classique, Vol.
Sariputta spoke there to the monks: "This nirvana ye monks. This nirvafia is bliss, ye friends." And when the venerable Sariptitta had thus spoken, the venerable Udayi spoke to hi?n as follows: ''''But how, iny dear Sariputta, can there be bliss
is bliss,
The venerable
in that condition
if
there
is
is
no sensation
of that
no sensation
therein."
500 B.C. a man was born whose teachings conquered the whole of the Far East and who thus gave Asia's most widely disseminated religion its name. Far fewer wars have been fought on behalf of Buddhism than of Islam and Christendom, yet those who embrace Buddha's ideas include Burmese, Siamese, Cambodians, Laotians, Tibetans, Chinese and many millions of people in Mongolia, Manchuria and Japan. Buddha never wished to be a monarch, never wished to found or rule kingdoms, yet this genius who had no taste for earthly power created a realm of the spirit in which hundreds of millions of Asiatics still live today. Buddha begged his daily food in the bazaars of central India. Today, the efRgy of the erstwhile beggar stands in gilded and exalted tranquillity in hundreds of thousands of temples. Clouds of incense wreathe his countenance, and for twenty centuries men have prayed and performed their meditations
in his presence.
ABOUT
Asia
is
Within
a period
204
of approximately
(551-479 b.c.) and Buddha, All the great sages, holy men and religious founders of the world have one thing in common: the historical facts of their existence are to some degree veiled in obscurity. This baffling halfknowledge, this distrust of reality and quest for precise details about people who were close to their god are natural and inevitable, for their existence has been overwhelmed and obscured by their teachings. Nothing is left of the great saints and sages except their spirit. Details of their private life must remain lost to history because it is a cipher, merely an earthly accessory of immortal thoughts. Sanctification, deification and apotheosis need no bioof Zarathustra
(circa
B.C.),
Confucius
graphical details.
Thus we have very little precise information about Buddha's life. His followers saw in him such an intelligence and supernatural moral force that he became in their eyes the divine embodiment
of everything spiritual and a symbol of liberation from a world of
suffering and confusion.
life in
They
him
his
one of the saviors of mankind. Only two hundred years after Buddha's death, reports of the man and his wisdom had penetrated to every corner of India. The nucleus
legends, recognizing
born of
faithfully passed on with a zeal His truths conquered the whole of the East, but ideas of him were so glamorized by bold flights of fancy,
religious sincerity.
words was
by
all
details of
the real
We
and hostile, ascended and returned to earth, was revered by beasts, worshiped by human beings and urged by the gods to share his wisdom with them. The gods themselves became his most ardent adherents and kings humbled themselves before him and offered him their treasures. And all this was accomplished by the spiritual and moral force of a beggar, a starving ascetic! Huge libraries could be filled with the erudite works that have been written about Buddha, but no form of science or research can get to the heart of the matter. The figure of Buddha remains in some degree incomprehensible and shrouded in mystery. Actually Buddha is not a proper name but an honorific title meaning "the Enlightened One." He was the son of Suddhodana,
are told that he converted the envious
into heaven
INDIA
a prince of the Sakya clan, and his wife
205
Mahamaya reputedly
actually die in childbirth, but because she had achieved her highest
much
in
was
at
once an
historical fact
Buddha's and a
religious necessity.
was Kapilavastu in modern Nepal, 125 miles from Katmandu and 220 miles from Mount Everest. The site is marked by a pillar bearing an inscription by King Asoka. Buddha was India's greatest philosopher, but "philosopher" is a very European term, and it is perhaps better to call him India's greatest sage. Buddha embodied the spirit of Asia, the multiplicity of
place of birth
its
is
we
even
its
religious introspection.
He
once the most human figure and the most remarkable phenomenon which India has produced. No other Indian ever surpassed him in wisdom, depth of thought or spiritual radiance, yet we have no precise idea of the actual content of the historical Buddha's original doctrines. It certainly differed from the Buddhism
of today, and there are some authorities C. A. F. Rhys Davies, for example who believe that Buddha's actual teachings differed but little from the ethic of the old Indian Upanishads.
his
and Asia possessed no more than this creatively fashioned life story, she would still be immensely rich in the religious and spiritual sphere. Figures such as Zarathustra, Confucius, Buddha, Socrates and Christ are not, how-
Even
if
existed
We
a large
are told
that Buddha's
by heavenly attendants and dreamed that she saw white elephant holding a lotus blossom in its trunk. (The lotus blossom is one of Asia's most venerated symbols and is associated with birth.) The next day, sages interpreted her dream as signifying that she was destined to bear a son who would be a ruler of the universe and a servant of God. The child was duly born, not actually in Kapilavastu, the Sakya capital, but in its immediate
vicinity, just as
Mahamaya was on
her
way
2o6
At
by
families of
high rank, the newborn child received the name Siddhartha. His
"Gotra" name was Gautama. Soothsayers apparently predicted that would be a teacher of mankind. His father, King Suddhodana, was determined to isolate him from all the sorrows and afflictions of the world, and we learn that he grew up and received his education in a magnificent palace far removed from such things as death, disease, sorrow and suffering. He married a cousin of his and might well have lived happily if he had not had an inner yearning for something more. Then he saw the four signs which had figured in the soothsayers' predictions: a very old man in a pitiable condition, a sick man covered in ulcers and shivering with
the child
fever, a
dead
man
finally, a
Only
age of twenty-
decided to follow
his
family, wife and child, he set off on horseback. In his rejection of the world he abandoned his princely clothes and exchanged them for the habit of a mendicant monk.
The
future
Buddha
visited
celebrated
ascetics in his search for a solution to the questions which were troubling him, but in vain. Then he withdrew into solitude. Gautama Buddha arrived at his philosophy through meditation. When he was forty-five years old he sat down beneath a pipal tree and swore not to move from the spot until he had solved the riddle of human suffering, even if his body decayed first. For forty-nine days and nights he sat beneath the tree in motionless contemplation. By the end of that period, during which he withstood numerous temptations, he had seen the truth and understood the secret of pain and suffering. He realized why the world was unhappy and how its unhappiness could be overcome. Having become a Buddha, an "Enlightened One," he remained beneath the Tree of Wisdom or Bodhitaru for another seven weeks. It was not Siddhartha's immediate intention to communicate his experience and knowledge to the world at large, but the god Brahma came down from heaven and bade him propagate the dharma or doctrine. His disciples numbered first five and then sixty, and his name and teachings became renowned throughout the plain
INDIA
his wife, his son, large
207
his
wicked
cousin Devadatta.
Many
of his
contain virtually no reference to any miraculous deeds. For two-thirds of the year he roamed through the countryside with his disciples, teaching as he went. The remaining months he spent in one of the many groves which were bequeathed to the Buddhists by wealthy patrons. Buddha wandered through the Ganges valley for forty-five years, a beggar among beggars and the poorest of the poor, but never unhappy. Unhke Christ, Paul and Socrates, Buddha was never persecuted on account of his teachings. When he was eighty he prepared his followers for his death. Only his doctrine, the dhanna, was to survive. No new master was to step into his shoes. He probably died, like Diogenes, from a type of paratyphus contracted after eating pork. Dragging himself as far as the suburb of Kusinagara, he lay down under a tree at nightfall and died. Buddha's death occurred by Singhalese reckoning in the year 543 and according to European research in 477 b.c. His body was burned on a pyre according to
life
Indian custom.
dependently,
Buddha's doctrines and Christianity came into being quite ineven though the Christian religion and Buddhist
Gospels are doomed to failure. There are superficial similarities and very considerable divergences, but even the apparent similarities vanish under careful comparative analysis. Christianity and Buddhism are worlds apart in dogma and quite close in their morality, as Professor A. Foucher of Paris University has so clearly demonstrated. "Christian and Buddhist moral values are undoubtedly homogeneous, but their doctrinal basis and mental and spiritual atmosphere are entirely dissimilar." The contrast between Buddhism and Christianity is immediately apparent from their attitude toward the soul. According to Christian theology the soul originates with the child and thereafter retains its immortality. It has a beginning, therefore, but no end. To Indian philosophers such a notion is absurd, for in their view anything which comes into being at one point in time is susceptible
to destruction at another point in time.
They
2o8
is
rebirth. Since
immortal and travels from body to body during the process of it exists eternally it has no beginning and can have an end only in exceptional cases when meritorious behavior and
good deeds have rendered it ripe for the supreme condition, from which there is no return to earth.
nirvana,
life, the Christian can receive eternal bliss or damnation only once. "The Buddhist has traveled far, and has all eternity before him. His life is only a transient moment in the course of an eternal existence. He reaps the fruits of his previous existences and sows the seeds of his future forms of existence. For him, the death knell never heralds the advent of everlasting bliss nor signals the hour of irreparable doom. He believes that his approach to perfection is an infinitely slow process spanning thousands upon thousands of successive lifetimes, for only thus can he
eternal
attain the
we,
in
supreme reward of eternal bliss. It is a salvation which our Occidental impatience, expect to receive after a single
different
lifetime.
conceptions of this
to live. Should
he
fail
such that he
is
prepared to accept the everlasting torments of purgatory and hell. The man of the Far East already has an eternity behind him. After
so
many
existences he
is
infinitely
weary,
infinitely fatigued
by
the
short, the
ambition of the
is
West
is
never to be reborn."
One
of India never
committed
a
not really nor did he have any intention of founding a religion. His sole concern was to serve people with his teachings and help them to escape from suffering. He was not ina
word
He was
religious
founder
such,
of the gods, the soul and immortality. All these problems were disposed of
at all
by
to have been
born
however, remain merely a philosophy; it Even though their originator's only real concern had been to encourage wisdom and rectitude in human behavior, the teachings of Buddha were being variously interpreted
INDIA
209
by no
less
The two main forms of Buddhism, Mahayana and Hinayana, have divided the Buddhist world into two separate camps.
live in the spirit of
Those who
in-
clude the Chinese, the Japanese and the Lamaists of Tibet, Bhutan, Sikkim, Nepal and Mongolia. Ceylon and Indo-China follow the
Hinayana or
"little
vehicle."
Mahayana
life,
during
life
and through
Buddha or Bodhisattva. The adherents of Mahayana accept rebirth out of sympathy for the world and when it is for the salvation or happiness of the majority. The adherents of the Hinayana seek only their personal salvation. The most remarkable feature of Buddhism is that while its teachto be reborn after death as a future
ings
still
all
but disappeared
by
the much more ancient Hindu religion, and the Indian people have remained true to their traditional polytheism, their penchant
for miracles, their splendid
myths and peculiar world of magic. Nevertheless, Buddhism has adopted numerous legends and countless rituals and deities from Hinduism. The unadulterated doctrines of Siddhartha and his world of ideas have not remained entirely intact. Buddhism did not meet its end suddenly in India, it should be
added, but survived there for about a thousand years until
its
eventual extinction circa a.d. 750. In every other country in the Far East its doctrines still live on, unaffected by new masters, new
cure-all philosophies
Buddhists.
bequeathed the world a great legacy, something impermanent, perhaps, but something engendered by faith and therefore magnificent. This is the Buddhist art which has given birth to statues, portraits and rehefs of Buddha throughout Asia.
also
Buddhism has
INDIA
Buddhist
art.
THE
ancient land
its
large northern
modern
Kabul was
it
in the
bend.
Of
conquered by Alexander the Great in the years 327 and 326 b.c. Alexander led an army of 35,000 men into Gandhara from Sogdiana and Bactria, which more or less corresponded with the area of Uzbekistan (now in Soviet Russia) southeast of the Aral Sea. He was searching for the eastern and southern boundaries of the inhabited world. His army had long ago ceased to be solely Macedonian. A whole empire was on the march, an empire composed of many nations and races, Macedonians with their wives and children,
scholars, exponents of
all
and
officials,
ancillary troops,
total of
by Indian princes a
about
Alexander pushed onward into the Kabul valley, fighting off bitter by tough mountain tribes. He stormed their strongholds and battered their towns with his heavy catapult artillery until he eventually reached the banks of the Indus. The Macedonian king took strong exception to the Indian philosophers who berated, reviled and insulted the native princes who defected to him, and hanged
attacks
some of them. The Gandharan king of Takshashila (the modern town of Taxila stands about 23 miles east of the Indus) paid homage
INDIA
to the
211
by
Alexander's
army was
progressively reinforced
by renegade
eastern
Indian
are
We
bank of the Hydaspes, now the Jhelum, but that after his men had put up a desperate struggle Poros was wounded, his army annihilated and his two sons captured. When Alexander asked him how he thought he should be treated, the royal captive replied: "Like a king!" Typically, Alexander complied. Poros became Alexander's ally and his possessions were considerably augmented. It was not until the King of Magadha advanced on Alexander at the head of 600,000 infantry, war elephants and cavalry that the Macedonian army's courage wavered. For Alexander, the banks of the Hyphasis represented the end of the world and the end of his unique career of conquest. Considering the enormous distances and the alien surroundings, there was nothing surprising about the mutiny. Like Achilles, Alexander withdrew to his tent for three days and waited for the army to regain its senses, but his men were deathly tired of bold excursions to the end of the world. Alexander
told that Prince Poros lay in wait for
him on the
altars,
Only
fact
after Alexander's
sacrifice
illustrates
on one of these
a sig-
nificant
because
it
After the departure of the invading army and the great Macedonian's death, disorder broke out
among
the Greeks
behind.
his empire. An who had won an evil reputation for his intrigues on the Ganges now felt that the hour had struck for the fulfillment
caste
lower
of his
movement, Chandragupta took the field against the foreigners and in 316 B.C. won supremacy over the Punjab. Before long he controlled an area stretching from the estuary of the Indus to the Ganges delta. Seleucus Nicator, master of Babylonia and of a vast empire, gave him his daughter's hand in marriage and abandoned his designs on India. Envoys were sent by the Indians to the court of Babylon and by the Greeks to Pataliputra, now Patna. It is to one
Rawalpindi
/ p s^ \A. -p
y.
Lahore^
India
West owes
its first
detailed and eyewitness accounts of the country and people of India. Megasthenes, who was an Ionian, wrote about Indian geography,
and customs. His accounts are not extant, but such details of them as have survived in Arrian's Indica reflect the contemporary way of life in India, then known as the Kingdom of Maghada.
religion
INDIA
213
Megasthenes found the people sturdy, honest, sincere, temperate and peaceable at heart but ready to fight when provoked. Chandragupta's royal line was known as the Maurya dynasty, after his mother, Mura. His grandson Asoka, who was the most powerful ruler ancient India ever knew, controlled the greater part of the subcontinent. He aroused emotions of such love, respect
his name is still held in awe from the shores of the Black Sea to the islands of Japan and from the borders of the Polar region to the equator. Asoka was the Constantine of
India, a king
580 years
stantinus
later,
the teachings of
a.d. 337,
Gautama
just as
some
became the
Roman emperor
baptism.
Once Asoka became an adherent of Buddhism, the people of Gandhara also embraced the teachings of Buddha. Asoka's religious zeal knew no bounds. In the thirteenth year of his reign he had inscriptions of a religious nature engraved on rocks, cave walls and pillars. They are the earliest surviving Indian texts of any historical value. Asoka's ambition was to conquer the world with the Buddhist
rehgion, not
by force of
its
arms.
Indian Buddhism to
worldwide reputation
power but because of the spiritual insight which prompted him to follow Buddha. Under the Maurya dynasty ushered in by Chandragupta, Gandhara ennot by means of conquest or
only spell of autonomy. Before that time it had been Achaemenides and Greeks, and it was subsequently to be ruled by Bactrians, Saka and the notorious Kushan. The latter dominated by Gandhara from East Asia, from the Chinese province infiltrated into race of Kansu, and were a of Scythian horsemen identical with the Yueh Chi of Chinese history. The most celebrated of the Kushan rulers was a man called Kanishka, who controlled a huge empire which extended from Margiana to Khotan and from the Aral Sea to Afghanistan, and incorporated almost the whole of India. Like the great Asoka, Kanishka was also a Buddhist. He founded numerous monasteries, convened an assembly in Kashmir to reformulate the Buddhist doctrines and built some superb stupas. These buildings existed in India at a very early date and were
joyed
its
originally burial
mounds venerated by
The
214
like
The
inner shell was built of unbaked bricks and the exterior of baked
The whole edifice was capped by an umbrellalike construction of wood or stone and enclosed by a wooden fence with massive gates, which was later
bricks coated with a thick layer of lime.
superseded in some cases by a stone wall. Of all the stupas erected by King Asoka, the only one to have survived in its original form is in Nepal. The three most interesting stupas are those of Bharhut in Madhya Bharat, Sanchi in the state of Bhopal, and Amaravati at the lower end of the Kistna Valley. The largest stupas, which are to
be found in Ceylon, sometimes exceed three hundred feet in diameter. Ever since Asoka's time, the inner chamber of a stupa has been used as a repository for relics of Buddha or Buddhist saints. Chronological information has been handed down to us from this period and we can date many events with considerable accuracy. The Shaka chronology of India begins with the anointing of King Kanishka, which is traditionally supposed to have taken place on March 15, a.d. 78. This estimate is doubtful, however, and is disputed by many scholars. Estimates given by various authorities range between 57 b.c. and a.d. 278. Vincent A. Smith settled on A.D. 120 as the year of Kanishka's accession. Harald Ingholt, who
bases his calculations
A.D. 144.
it
at
As we
of vital importance
any examination of Gandhara art. Kanishka ruled the Kushan Empire for twenty-seven years. The last of his line, Vasudeva, was defeated by the Sassanian dynasty of Persia, and in a.d. 241 Ardashir's son, Shapur I, captured Gandhara.
to
The
Kushan ruling
class to
when they grew too independent for safety. The inhabitants of central Asia are by nature
wide
tracts of grassland
wanderers.
Its
and steppe and its vast, undulating hills and highlands have always been the cradle of races of herdsmen and horsemen. When the nomad left his own world and met lowland civilizations entirely alien to him, his usual reaction was to reach for
his
sword.
The whole
of
northwest India, including Gandhara, was overrun by the contemporary world's most dangerous adversaries, a branch of the
INDIA
215
"White Huns" or Hephthalites. The origins and horsemen from central Asia have never been established, but it was not until a.d. 562 that the Turks and Persians finally annihilated the mounted hordes. The White Huns wrought frightful havoc among the adherents of Buddhism and executed those who espoused its doctrines in the most inhuman fashion. We know when the art of Gandhara ended, but when did it begin and when did men first venture to portray Buddha in stone? The answer to this question owes its importance to the fact that Gandhara is the birthplace of the Buddha effigy and the birthplace
as
of
all
penetrated to Gandhara in the middle of the third from the time of Asoka onward, and the beginnings of Buddhist religious sculpture date from the period 247-232 B.C. It was evolved by Greek and Graeco-Persian sculptors working in undoubted conjunction with Indian artists. However, the earhest sculptures of Buddha himself did not come into being until much later on, under the Kushan dynasty. Some scholars believe that the first statues of Buddha were made in the time of Kanishka, the most prominent of the Kushan rulers. Extant coins dating from the Scythian king's reign show Kanishka standing before an altar on one side and Buddha on the other. These coins are thought to be the earliest portrayals of Buddha, but the likeness on the coins must have been modeled on a statue of still earlier date. At all events, we have at least an approximate idea of the date of when Buddha was first portrayed. If we are correct in thinking that King Kanishka ruled from a.d. 144 to 173, the earhest statues of Buddha must have come into being a little earlier, perhaps between a.d. 50 and 100. Gandhara submitted to a long series of alien rulers: Achaemenides,
Buddhism
century
One by one they came, genand distress in their wake, only to be eventually obliged to withdraw. The people of Gandhara, however, remained rooted in their ancient culture, in their language and their faith in the Buddhist doctrine, which welded them to one another and
Greeks, Bactrians, Saka and Kushan.
erally bringing misery
Gandhara had
its
From
Graeco-Roman
influence,
2i6
the country received an artistic impetus which ultimately gave the world the Buddha effigy. One of the most momentous events in the artistic history of the world, it was something which sprang from the religious faith of the Gandharans (and probably, too, from that of the Indians in Mathura, nearly loo miles south of Delhi), from the honest workmanship and stimulus of Western artists and, last but not least, from the considerable creative energy and artistic
About
until a
first
six
lifetime of
Buddha
century after the birth of Christ had to elapse before the portraits of Asia's greatest sage and saint came into being. No
but
his
stone
Asoka was, as we have heard, an adherent of Buddha, monuments dating from about the middle of the
third century B.C. never venture to depict the object of his veneration.
During the first period of Buddhist art, or about 250 years after Buddha's death, only symbolic references were made to the great
teacher.
by Buddha.
In
fifteen
examples of Buddhist art depict the sun but not Buddha himself.
Another symbol which occurs frequently is the lion. Buddha, the princely Sakya family, was sometimes known as Sakyasimha or "Sakya Lion," and Buddhist scriptures often refer to the simhanada or "lion's call" of Buddha. At Sanchi in the State of Bhopal stands a large and celebrated stupa erected during the second and first centuries b.c. One of the most beautiful ancient monuments in India, it was intended to
The
from Buddha's
life,
vet none of
The
gates
date
from the
On
INDIA
217
can be seen the bodhi tree beneath which Gautama received enlightenment.
himself, but
At
by
it is empty! The fact that Buddhism's sacred figure was regarded with boundless awe and humility but not portrayed makes an immediate impact on the beholder. Everywhere, in every monastery, every shrine and every stupa dating from before the beginning of our era, the figure and face of the founder of Buddhism
is
reverently omitted.
What
or,
A.D.
is
the explanation?
Why
foreign
end of the first century Why was it left to to bequeath the Buddhist world an idealized picture
is
of
of
its
founder?
as old as the idea of
The answer
God
itself.
No
representation
God
man
mankind. In
fact
himself
in the
Aurignacian culture of
the Cro-Magnids.
the
The
earliest
human
Venus
statuettes dating
from
thirty,
years ago, but these are probably only symbols of the beginning
and emblems of immortality. Divine effigies are a relatively late one might say heathen invention which first originated when the idea of the supreme being was adulterated with polytheistic elements. Brahmanism, the Indians' oldest religion, did not tolerate idols as cult objects, either, and likewise confined itself to symbols. This is the principal reason why no effigies of Buddha were made until about six hundred years after his death. There is yet another important factor. Buddha was moved by suffering, by the transience of the flesh and the unreality of existence. Seeing the grief which everything transitory brings in its wake, he realized the quantity of tears mankind has shed on its eternal journey from birth to death. He saw the thirst for life, the lust for existence and the human passions which have no right of way on the paths of suffering. And so he sought to abolish suffering by the annihilation and dulling of the lust for existence, and thus to demonstrate a way to abolish all suffering. He had tried complete mortification of the flesh on his own person in order to find release from the evils of all that is worldly, but he felt that this over-
and continuance of
life
stringent
method concealed
latent dangers.
As
218
he knew the ways of the world only too well, so he advised a middle way. The stages of the Noble Eightfold Path which he
recommended
are:
and right was a philosophy, a moral doctrine and form of guidance which Buddha did not intend as a religion because it did not demand a belief either in a supreme being or in himself. As long as the doctrine retained its original character it was not
action, right livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness
concentration. It
a religion
but a philosophical
edifice.
The
Way
which was why symbols were best suited to represent his spiritual legacy. Symbols of the Master himself were also appropriate in this context, but he would never have wished his followers to make likenesses of him calculated to foster a religious cult of personality, for he rejected anything which
were
all
itself.
It
memory by
hundred
few Gandhara
With
The
is
religious art of
by
of Buddha.
They
These stone memorials were not, however, confined to his life began to portray him sitting and standing, in relief and in the round. Still other sculptors saw him as a Bodhisattva or being who declined nirvana in order to act as a mediator on manalone. Artists
kind's behalf.
The
and the
who
excavated the
B.C.
ruins of three
century
West
He
recognized an
Gandhara art in the first and second centuries a.d. and a later school which flourished between about a.d. 350 and 500. Not only was the art of these two schools diff^erent in character, but the media used by the sculptors of the two periods also differed.
early school of
INDIA
Stone was employed in the
second.
first
219
The
artists
The
later art
covered
much wider
area stretching
from
i.e.
Pakistan, India
and Afghanistan.
The
in the finest pieces of the later school, matter has entirely given to mind.
way
Most pictures show Buddha meditating with his hands cupped one inside the other. There are also some celebrated portrayals of him teaching, hands held before his breast in meditation. The miidra or hand positions of the so-called preaching Buddha later evolved into a series of subtle and varied gestures symbolizing among many other things concentration, instruction, encouragement, invocation and fearlessness.
The
Master's
robe,
to
the
ground,
is
shoulder bare.
or even
It is
Greek robe
Roman
garment.
One
of the earliest
known
Roman emperor
when
the
period
life
the idea
deification of Oriental
and powerful that they were regarded as superior beings, the Egyptian Pharaohs, who were already gods and sons of Ammon during their sojourn on earthall these strongly influenced the ideas of the Hellenistic and Roman world. Lysander, who delivered Greece from the twenty-seven years of misery brought about by the Peloponnesian War, was officially promoted to the status of divine hero during his lifetime. Alexander the Great was recognized in Egypt as Pharaoh and greeted with the title Son of Ammon by the priests of Siva. (To the Greeks, Ammon was the equivalent of Zeus.) The Diadochi, too, disseminated the idea of apotheosis throughout Asia Minor. In the year 42 B.C., the Romans pronounced Caesar a god and invested him with the title Divus Julius, or "divine Julius." Augustus
so absolute, so wealthy
who were
220
was worshiped
god
in the East
his life
Roman
enjoyed Empire.
Under his successors there grew up an emperor cult which encouraged Caligula and Domitian to feel and act like gods. In the third century Aurelian officially decreed that he should be addressed as do?n'mus et dens, "lord and god." Virgil prophesied the birth of a divine child in his Eclogues, written between 42 and 37 b.c. Suetonius' glorification of Augustus and other Roman extravagances of this nature all spoke in similar terms: a divine child, a divine
father, a particular astrological constellation present at the time of
The British authority H. Buchthal comphenomena with Mahayana Buddhism. The life of Buddha, too, was tricked out with such a wealth of legendary and miraculous occurrences that his divine origin and divine power seemed to become ever more apparent. The resemblance to the
peace and reconciliation.
pares
many
of these
is
most
striking.
During the
later
common
more probably, were directly linked. Certainly, Buchthal has discovered some astonishing resemblances between devotional sculptures of Buddha in Lahore Museum and early Christian sarcophagi in the Louvre in Paris and the Lateran Museum in Rome. Some portrayals of Buddha are undeniably modeled on Christian art and there are parallels between Gospel stories and some events described in the Mahayana scriptures; for example, the feeding of the five thousand and Peter walking on the water. As the American scholar Alexander C. Soper wrote in "The Roman Style in Gandhara," an article published by the American Journal of Archaeology in 195 1, only one area in the Western world produced an art comparable with the ideas and methods of Gandhara sculpture during the century of its Kushan prime: the western Mediterranean and its focal point, Rome. Links between West and East are discernible even more clearly in the sculptures of Hadda. Situated in Afghanistan, five miles south of Jelalabad, Hadda was a famed place
of pilgrimage in Buddhist times. Digging there between 1923 and
1928,
INDIA
centuries a.d.
221
which can still be seen in the monasteries of Hadda, Musee Guimet in Paris, and in Peshawar Museum. They include some very fine one might almost say European heads of Buddha, the head of Silenus, and horned monsters, demons and monks which
the
are
all
closely related to
century.
Italian
art
of the eighth
and
hood with
a portrayal
reminiscent
own
The Gandhara
Hindu gods such as Indra and Brahma, but also members of the Greek pantheon, a Harpocrates, a Silenus, centaurs and satyrs. Apart from these, Gandhara produced countless portrayals of patrons and benefactors, monks and ascetics, wrestlers and warriors, elephants
and architectonic accessories. were the foreign artists that gave the Indians their idealized vision of Buddha? What masters taught in Gandhara and probably Mathura as well? Who succeeded in giving visual expression to a figure who had become the supreme ideal of millions? What men were influential enough to set the pattern upon which gifted Indian artists based the growing splendor of their statues, reliefs and paintingssacred works of art before which all the peoples of Asia were one day destined to bow down in devotion? Although we shall never know their names, the genius of Alexander the Great, the spirit of Hellenism, the art of Greece and,
lions, fire altars
and
Who
last
but not
least,
for centuries.
preserved in
the artistry of Rome all made themselves felt here That was how the picture of Gautama was first stone and how all Asia came to revere his features as
CENTRAL ASIA
One^s impression on entering a chapel for the first time is inthough one had seen a vision. For a devout Bud-
dhist, attaining this experience after a long and trying journey, it must be an experience of i?2tense exaltatiofi. Outside, one^s very eyeballs have been scorched by the glare; the colors, though ranging through many subtle gradations, are few; the golden desert, green trees, the azure of the sky, an immense inverted howl of porcelain over all. Within the shadow-filled chapel it was cool. The eye was first caught by a large statue of Buddha opposite the entry, which appeared to brood silently over little clay dishes of incense left by recent worshipers. In the quiet of this sejni-darkness, which seemed steadily to dissolve, the great figure with its maroon robes might have meditated here through uncounted ages, more than a mere statue of plaster with broken arms. As we became accustofned to the subdued light, the scenes on the walls
came
into focus.
SHiH HUANG
lived.
Ti
He
He
He
He
divided court
officials
twenty grades of seniority. He conducted major wars, extended his dominions southward as far as Canton and secured his northern frontiers against the Hsiung-nu or Huns by building the most massive fortified system of all time, linking his northern forts by means of earthen ramparts which later became the Great Wall of China. Such was the drive and energy of this absolute ruler that he
into
moving
planets.
The emperor
decreed that peasants throughout the country could have land of their own, but since the vast government building projects could be
CENTRAL ASIA
obliged to abandon their small holdings and
slave laborers, a process
223
become
little
more than
which
history of China.
mighty autocrat had given his orders and knew that fancy had been realized by the blood, sweat and tears of his subjects, he entered his litter and had himself carried through the countryside. Tax collection, government administration and
this
When
his flights of
all came under his personal supervision. Shih Huang Ti wanted to obliterate the past and create the impression that nothing had existed before him. In his anxiety to be supreme emperor of the world and founder of the Ch'in dynasty he commanded that all annals, records and books by sages of former times should be destroyed. Wood, bamboo and parchment went up in flames. All criticism of the Chinese peasants' benefactor was prohibited, and swordsmen were kept busy severing dissenters' heads from their bodies. But Shih Huang Ti reigned for only twelve years, from 221 until 209 B.C., and the Ch'in dynasty soon met its end under Shih
military matters
Huang
Ti's
successors
own
followers quarreled
among
themselves.
The
by
the famous
Han
dynasty,
was a rich, great and flourishing period during which the two most powerful empires in the world were those of Rome and China. The Han spirit left such an indelible mark on China that the Chinese still proudly call themselves Han Yen, or Men of Han. Perhaps the most important feature of the Han dynasty was the introduction of the Buddhist doctrine. The new world of ideas the divine world of the Buddhas, Bodhisattvas and ascetic monks, the religious world of the Hinayana and iVIahayana all arrived in China from India at this time. The first Indian missionaries may
which
from 206
220. It
but our information is unMing Ti, second emperor of the eastern Han, sent envoys to India in a.d. 6 1 to fetch Buddhist books and priests is likewise open to doubt. Nevertheless, the foreign religion was certainly known in China and Buddhist monks were
as early as
217
e.g.,
already living in the Kingdom of the Center during Ming Ti's reign. Before long, Buddhist pictures were imported into China along the
224
of eastern Turkestan, Buddhist monastic settlements sprang up beside the age-old caravan routes that linked western Asia
highroads
with the Far East, and here and there temples arose built of wood,
bricks and clay-
Tun-huang was China's gateway to the West. A rectangular town in an oasis in the extreme west of Kansu, it received its water from the Altyn Tagh mountains and was rich in fertile pasture and herds of cattle. Kansu is a country of mountains, arid steppes and fertile highland oases, oases spanned by the famous Silk Road which linked the Far East with the Far West. The people who lived, bartered and did business on this route became fabulously wealthy. They saw caravans come and go, sold them provisions and bought what they needed for themselves. Ten miles north of the town of Tun-huang in the extreme west of Kansu are the Caves of the Thousand Buddhas, a true wonder of the world and one which was made possible because it lay on the caravan route from India, because prosperous travelers of the
walled
Han
works of
art in
The
and
3
first artificial
84.
There
among
them the caves of Yiin Kang, the caves of Lung Men near Loyang, the caves of Lou Lan and the caves of Qyzyl, to name but a few. At Tun-huang, access to the individual caves was usually gained through a corridor leading into an entrance hall, behind which lay one or more main halls. Caves on the same level were connected by a form of balcony so that the visitor could pass from one shrine to the next, and the walls of the caves were covered with beautiful
paintings.
The
be applied.
None
is to say, painted directly on top of damp and freshly applied plaster without supplementary binding agents.
Chou Dynasty wine jug or hu, just over 18 inches high. The ornamentation [73] consists of intertwined dragons. inscription inside reads: 1 o be preserved forever
An
[74]
Two
known
as chio.
These works of
cups of the Chou Dynasty, of the type art also bear T'ao-t'ieh masks.
9.4 inches
bronze stove from the Chou Dynasty (1122-256 b.c), only 5.7 inches high, wide and 18.1 inches long. A shallow vessel stands on each of the two circular apertures in its top. On the left is a vent to carry away smoke. Numerous ancient clay ovens have been found, but this is perhaps the earliest known bronze stove.
[75I
[76]
is
This fragment of
a particularly valuable
dog-headed demon was found at Hadda in Afghanistan. It example of Late Gandhara sculpture and forms part of the collection in the Musee Guimet, Paris
a
[77] Hadda, on the northwest Indian border near the Khyber Pass, was a famous center for late Gandhara sculpture. The sculptors there perfected the Graeco-RomanIndian style in the 5th century a.d. Here a demon in a fur coat is depicted. One of the most interesting pieces from the Hadda excavations, it is now in Musee Guimet, Paris.
the
of Buddha, as conceived by Graeco-Roman artists in Gandhara during a.d., was later "Indianized" by native sculptors, but the Gandhara style is evident in portrayals of Buddha throughout Asia and even in the far south. This splended stone head comes from Borobudur in Java and now reposes in the Musee Guimet, Paris. The ruins of the Buddhist temple at Borobudur date from the 7th and 8th centuries and are the world's finest example of Buddhist architecture.
[78]
ist
The head
century
[79]
This bust with flowers clearly reveals the links between the Buddhist art of Hadda.
Roman
sculpture and
Mural painting of Paradise from Tun-huang, showing Amitabha enthroned on a between Avalokitesvara and iMahasthame. To left and right are smaller Bodhisattvas, and in the background a row of pupils. Extreme bottom left, a woman kneeling on a mat in reverential devotion. The painting dates from circa a.d. 800.
|8o]
lotus blossom
[8i] Scene from the life of Buddha. Prince Gautama, on horseback, encounters the three evils of earthly life: old age, disease and death. He is riding away from his father's palace, having renounced royal life. Beneath sits the Sakyamuni addressing three
monks who
kneel
in
an
attitude
of
respectful
">
i
'^
attention.
very small section (the lower left-hand cor[82] ner) of one of the finest paintings from Tun-huang. Not painted on silk like the other pictures, it is a piece of embroidery of the T'ang period, the golden age of Chinese culture. Sir Aurel Stein estimated that this remarkably fine piece of needlework dated from about a.d. 800. Stitched in red, brown and dull green, it depicts a group of pious women kneeling on mats. child can be seen sitting beside the woman in the background, and the standing figure on the extreme left is a female attendant.
^:
. '
^T
of Sinkiang, Sir of Miran. The ruins lie southwest of the Lop Nor, between thirty and sixty miles from the Ansi-Khotan road, in a flat region of a desert that stretches away in all directions as far as the eve can see. This beautifully modeled head, which was found in an excavated temple there, is probably a Bodhisattva. Parts of the face still bear traces of the original paint. Note the remarkably detailed treatment of eyes and hair.
[83]
in
Deep
Aurel
Stein's expedition
site
[84]
miles
ancient burial places of Astana were dug up at Kara-Khoja, nearly twenty oasis of Turfan. This clay figure was a funeral offering. The horse is painted light and dark brown and the saddle is red, yellow and green. [85] Cave 58 of the Tun-huang sanctuaries contained this remarkably fine altar depicting youths in prayer and good and evil spirits watching a sleeping Buddha.
The
from the
[86]
jects
Bodhisattva
eerily
from
procave
j-'i-.
Mr;
wall in the light of torches, and hundreds of other sacred figures gaze from the adjoining wall. The sculptures in the Tunhuang caves owe their existence to artists
and
crafts-
men whose
influence trav-
h\
[87]
Tun-huang
grottoes hewn into the rock. The Buddhist wall and sculptures paintings
found
among
ures
in
men
these into for research sacred places on the Silk Road were Albert Griin-
of
France.
CENTRAL ASIA
(The
Italian expression a fresco here
225
means "onto the fresh.") In this were blended with an adhesive binding medium and
The extreme
many of these splendid murals is also attributable to other factors. The oasis dwellers and their priests were anxious to ensure that the
so
stream of pious pilgrims never ran dry, so they carefully protected their religious art and restored any pictures which faded with the
were dynasty Mongolian Yiian carried out at Tun-huang under the ( 1 278-1 368). By no means all the walls were painted over, however. The Mongols forbade the Chinese to learn the Mongol tongue or marry Mongol women, persecuted Chinese who owned weapons and horses, strangled China's trade and economy, abolished law and order and issued so much paper money that galloping inflation ensued, but they did not lay hands on the miraculous pictures of Tun-huang. Instead, they left them in the care of priests and even
passage of time or
fell
artistic value.
Nature
populated
tion,
itself
can act
as a preservative.
the murals of
there,
own day. It is abnormally dry and the narrowness of the apertures leading into the interior
Tun-huang
until
our
from the
direct sunlight.
Many
effects of weather,
and
still
by
cleared
in
Gray,
who
Tun-huang
May
1957 and submitted the caves to further exhaustive scrutiny, relates that thousands of pilgrims from all over the world had scratched
their
in
many
languages,
among them
Chinese,
The
(385-550) and painting ceased in the (560-1127). Five hundred years of superlative artistry, the chief legacy of Chinese painting as a whole,
time of the northern Sung
Wei
gaze
down
at us
from the
walls of Tun-huang.
226
The
explored
by
Sir
Aurel
was born in Budapest in 1862 and died at Kabul in the year 1943. While visiting the Tarim Basin in Sinkiang Province in 1900-01, he explored the city of Khotan on the Silk Road and unearthed the remains of a civilization that had once thrived there at 4,600 feet above sea level. Having examined a number of other important sites on the edge of the great desert, he reached China's western frontier and eventually came to Tun-huang in the Chinese province of Kansu. Stein's expedition left Kashmir in April 1906. He did not reach Tun-huang until
British archaeologist
and
traveler. Stein
March
It
1907.
were hundreds of sacred grottoes in the vicinity of the oasis, and Stein was greatly intrigued by stories of the Caves of the Thousand Buddhas. On arriving in Tun-huang, he learned from a Mohammedan merchant that the many hundreds of shafts which honeycombed the cliffs north of the oasis contained
that there
was known
yet another hidden treasure. In one of the larger caves the Taoist
monk on duty there had discovered great quantities of manuscripts. The monk had been trying to restore the shrine to its former
splendor, a laborious task since sand had drifted in and the entrance
had been blocked by fallen fragments of rock from the ceiling. When the sand and rubble was removed a fissure became visible in the painted inner wall leading from the antechamber to the temple. Soon an opening was found which gave onto a side chamber hollowed out of the rock behind the stucco wall, and this chamber was filled from floor to roof with rolls of manuscript. Stein found that access to the hoard had been cut off by a wooden door, and by the time he returned a month later the monks had gone to the lengths of erecting a stone wall in front of it. Patiently, Stein persuaded the priest first to show him a few of the manuscripts and then to hand over the remainder. Having cautiously unrolled one of the bundles of manuscript, the British archaeologist found that it contained paintings on silk, most of them in a fragmentary condition. It seemed, he said later, as though they had been hurriedly concealed during a sudden alarmperhaps a raid
by plundering Tatars
or Tibetans.
The
manuscripts
and pictures had certainly been deposited there shortly after the close of the tenth century a.d. A year later the French scholar Paul Pelliot arrived in Tun-huang,
CENTRAL ASIA
227
inspected the caves and took the rest of the pictures and a considerable number of manuscripts away with him. Tlius part of this cache, whose value is incalculable, is now in the Bibliotheque Nationale and the Louvre at Paris, and part in the British Museum in London. In London each bundle was carefully opened. The brittle, dusty silk had sometimes crumbled into hundreds of pieces, each of which
had to be cleaned and reconstructed, an incredibly laborious and time-consuming job. The colors had lost some of their depth and luster, the silk had taken on a greenish tinge and many figures were discernible only in outline or had completely disappeared, yet no restoration work of any kind was undertaken. Votum was the Latin term for a sacred vow or votive offering, and a votive picture is a gift presented in token of gratitude and
some of the votive paintings of Tunhuang turned out to be six or seven feet high. The portraits of their donors which can often be seen at the foot of these works enable one to date them with some accuracy because their style of dress
respect. After reconstruction,
One
when
own
This takes us back to China's golden age of art, a period when Chinese culture attained a zenith, the time of the poets Li Po and Tu Fu, the golden age of Chinese sculpture and a period of painting that was destined to remain
chronology, becomes
unrivaled.
to be similar
Before the art of Tun-huang was discovered, little was known about Buddhist painting in Europe, which was familiar only with the famous Indian wall paintings of Ajanta and the Buddhist pictures by great Japanese masters in the Horyuji Temple at Nara. The
Tun-huang pictures included some in Indian and Nepalese style, others which betrayed Tibetan influence, others painted in typically Chinese style and still others in which Indian, Chinese and Tibetan elements were all represented simultaneously. It was common knowledge that Buddhism had come to China from India, but until these astonishing discoveries were made nothing had been known of the intermediate stages by way of which
Buddhist art journeyed eastward through Turkestan and Asia.
28
During
desert
which had been and engulfed by the drifting sands of the Takla Makan. He discovered a quantity of letters and documents engraved in archaic Indian script on sealed and corded wooden tablets. The seals were of Greek design and carried representations of Athena, Heracles and other deities. On his second expedition, Stein discovered Buddhist sanctuaries with mural paintings in late Graeco-Roman style dating from the fourth century a.d. at Miran, a ruined site near Lop Nor. These evidences of Western influence in the middle of the Asian desert constituted a major find. Hellenistic influence had not been the sole formative element, however. The culture of the flourishing oases that extended through the desert to the west of China found an inexhaustible source of inspiration in Buddhism and Indian art. Persian influence is also manifest, and some of the manuscripts at
the remains of a settlement
town of Khotan
abandoned
in the third
century
a.d.
The
art of
Turkestan
interesting because
it
represents a point
of contact between the great religions of East and West. There was an amazing wealth of religious ideas both in Europe and Asia in the first century of our era. Never before or since has mankind wrestled so earnestly with the problems of salvation and immortality. While Christianity and Mithraism were competing for supremacy in the Roman Empire, Buddhism was making its way eastward. The new doctrine from India had now assumed the shape of Mahayana Buddhism, which sought salvation not merely for the individual but for the whole world. That is why pride of place among the paintings of Tun-huang went to the Bodhisattvas, who had earned the right to become Buddhas but waived it for suffering humanity's sake. Aiahayana Buddhism was thus a late development of the original creed. Foremost among the Bodhisattvas was Avalokitesvara, known to the Chinese as Kuan-yin and to the Japanese as
Kwannon. Curiously enough, Mahayana Buddhism's principal recipdevotion were portrayed in male as well as female guise. Apart from Bodhisattvas, the paintings of Tun-huang depict jatakas or scenes from the life of Buddha and visions of the "Western Paradise." The latter, which are distinguished for their amazingly
ients of
intricate style
CENTRAL ASIA
229
and other flowers, and heavenly beings singing and dancing. Manichaeism was a gnostic religion founded in eastern Turkestan in the third century a.d. by a Persian named Mani. Born in the year
215 at Ctesiphon in Babylonia, then a Persian province, Mani preached in Persia and undertook long missionary journeys to
Turkestan and
India.
He was
by
two
pieces,
and publicly exposed in the capital of the Juna genuine Persian, but his religion was a blend of Christian, Buddhist and Persian ideas compounded with ancient Babylonian concepts and elements of gnosticism. Manichaeans could profess membership of any religious sect they wished, according to whether they lived under Christian or Buddhist rule. The basis of Mani's doctrine was a contest between good and evil, light and darkness. His inference was that light generally loses the battle and that darkness interspersed with a few patches of light in keeping with the way of the world and its inhabitants emerges victorious. At the oasis of Turfan in East Turkestan, Manichaeans, Buddhists and Christians lived together in amity. Mankind owes Sir Aurel Stein a debt of gratitude for saving the silk paintings of Tun-huang, for the examples that he and Pelliot brought back to Europe are all that remain of an art that has been lost on the lonely roads of central Asia, stolen by marauders or scattered to the winds.
Mani was
CENTRAL ASIA
THE
The
silk
SILK
ROAD
those of India, Persia and the Ro?nan East ran through the countryside to north and south, and the cities were everywhere inhabited
why
by busy inerchants from all the lands of the East. This explains our second Turfan-Kara Khoja expedition brought back to
Berlin a total of seventeen different languages in twe7ity-four dif-
IT WAS the longest road in the world, an artery of communication between two vast empires, between people of many tongues, between the Mediterranean and the Pacific Ocean. It was a dream, a fairy tale, mankind's boldest venture. It went back to extremely ancient times but was destined to mold the future of the Asian continent. It carried tidings of alien worlds and some of the most sumptuous merchandise on earth, truly royal treasures endowed
with the everlasting allure of the unattainable. The Silk Road, which ran from Sian, capital of the province of Shensi in northwest China, to Palmyra and Antioch, measures about
crow flies. But the road is not a straight line. It surmounts the highest mountains in the world and weaves its endless way between East and West for more than 6,000 miles a quarter of
4,700 miles as the
was perhaps the most important channel of it made possible some of the major economic, cultural and religious contacts and upheavals of mankind. The men who lived at one end of the world route had no idea where the goods in which they traded had come from. In Sian and Loyang, Kalgan and Peking, merchants all competed for the rare merchandise which the Phoenicians, Greeks and Romans had to offer, and at the many staging posts on the route middlemen coma trade route,
it
As
communication
in history, for
puted the proceeds of international trade in the coins of many Medes and Syrians.
kinds of
as
was the lifeblood of these interminable trade routes. Several silk and an advanced weaving technique existed in China early as the Shang period. Finds made in graves dating from be230
CENTRAL ASIA
231
tween 1766 and 1123 b.c the period of the Shang dynastyshow that the Chinese used to write on ivory and bronze, that they obtained oracles from the fissures created in bone and tortoiseshell by the application of heat, that they were beginning to express themselves on shavings of bamboo and, above all, that they bred silkworms on mulberry trees.
Horses, glass vessels, precious stones, diamonds, ivory, tortoiseshell,
Kingdom
in
wool and linen all reached the of the Center by way of the most arduous thoroughfare the world. Silk traveled westward along the same interminably
asbestos and fine garments of
winding road, across grassland, sandy wastes and desolate mountains, until it reached the Roman Empire.
In the year a.d. 120 some
Roman
Loyang, accompanied on the last stage of their journey by a delegation from the countries on China's southern border. The magicians announced that they came from Ta Ch'ien, the region of the
Western
more
dust-stained travelers
from
Ta
their king. The king was no less a person than Marcus Aurelius, the Roman Emperor. There are some indications that the Chinese in their turn had reached the Roman Empire as early as the lifetime of
Christ.
Threads of
silk are
was prohibited to many classes, and at certain periods even merchants were forbidden to deal in it. Certain patterns and colors, too, were regulated by law because they were an indication of official rank. Width, length and quality were all laid down by imperial decree. Silk was often used in the course of
of China. Its use
as a medium of payment, and one of the country's main forms of taxation was collected in bales of that material. The collapse of Chinese silk manufacture and the invention of artificial silk are partially to blame for the economic exigencies of modern China. The quantity of silk paid in indemnities by China in the course of her history is almost incredible. When the "Golden Tatars" were expanding their Chin Kingdom to the south and had reached Kaifeng, capital of the Sung emperors, they demanded not only five million ounces of gold, five hundred million ounces of silver and countless head of cattle and horses, but also a consignment of five million bales of silk. China accepted these conditions. On Jan-
Chinese history
The
uary
1127,
Silk
Road
and however, the Chin Tatars occupied Kaifeng occupied ever who painter greatest the carried Emperor Hui Tsung, North. He was accoma throne, off with them into the inhospitable with pale oval princesses and princes panied by senior officials and undertake the to forced were whom faces and delicate hands, all of bitter wmter in Manchuria of wastes endless march into the remote
9,
weather.
manufacture remamed For many centuries the technique of silk fashion pirates and spies, silk a well-guarded secret. There were area even Mediterranean the experimental laboratories throughout centuries for was materials, in pre-Christian times. Silk, the queen of
CENTRAL ASIA
India,
233
all
The
to
vanity. Bales of
Road survived every kind of human endeavor, greed and raw and woven silk swayed westward on camelback
tailors in silk, to
Italians.
be processed in Syria. In later times the Arabs became expert be succeeded during their great Renaissance by the
at
patricians
silks
and
their
elegant
preened themselves in the mirrors which were another Chinese invention. Silk (sericum) and silk cloth (serica)
were
in
some mysteri-
ous
far to the east, but the ladies of Rome had no idea of that remote and highly civilized people's identity. The Macedonian merchant Maes Titanus must have had a commercial agent in the Far East. At any rate, he received an extremely accurate report of the eastern area of the Indian Ocean and the seas bordering the Pacific from a certain Marinos of Tyre. In the year a.d. 125, the geographer Claudius Ptolemaeus incorporated this report in his map of the world. It mentions a mysterious harbor called Cattigara, but we shall never know where it lay or whether it corresponded to Nanking, Canton, Singapore or as Albert Herrmann suggested Ha Tinh in north Vietnam.
silk
was extraordinarily
Aurelian (215-275), a pound of silk was worth a pound of gold. This in itself accounted for silk's extremely fine
island of Cos in the Sporades group exported not only wine excellent in splendid amphorae and the fine salves known as aiiiaracimnn and melinwn but also silken robes celebrated for their lightness and transparency, the Coae testes of Pliny. These garments clearly revealed the contours of the body beneath and were consequently much favored by rich and famous courtesans. The Louvre in Paris displays a statue of Aphrodite dressed in a Coan robe, probably a classical copy of the celebrated "Aphrodite in the Garden" by the Greek sculptor Alcamenes, a pupil of Phidias. The clothing, coverlets, cushions and curtains of the wealthy were
all
The
made
wore
234
Asia
silken robes, but the fact that, despite a standing prohibition, vain
also swathed themselves in silk was frowned upon. Emperor Elagabalus made a practice of bedding all the guests
summer fetes on silken cushions. Caravan after caravan, long files of tortured beasts and toiling men, filled with a strange yearning for the unknown, journeyed Road in each direction of the compass yet another epoch-making Chinese device. Amber from the Baltic, Tyrian purple, incense, spices and gold were carried to the Far East. Caravans of this sort took four or five months to fight their way through the Tarim Basin. Death by thirst lurked in the sandy wastes and brackish marshes. In the high passes of the Pamirs the air was so thin that
along the Silk
CENTRAL ASIA
men fought
for breath as they pressed onward.
a universal loadstone.
235
However, silk was was the pride and joy of all Europe. Silk rustled and gleamed from Persia to Constantinople, from Athens to Rome and Cadiz on the Atlantic coast of Spain, though thousands of priceless bales tumbled into the drifting sands to form the funerary offering of caravans annihilated by thirst. East Turkestan, a huge depression filled with drifting dunes, consists partly of comfortless desert, large tracts of which are impassable
To
possess
it
knows
is
grows dark. The sun shines blood-red through a curtain of Then the dust becomes so thick that even the sun is extinguished. The buran howls across the plain, unleashed with a fury
that forces every caravan to halt
and seek
shelter
Huge
by
the storm to
whirling funnels.
The
The
many
sky a demoniacal sound, even if one does not equate it with the scream of the ghostly eagle which figures in Chinese legends.
No
in
who
even refugees from the Japanese and Communist reigns of terror during and since the last World War, all met their end in the buran.
Needless to say, everyone knows the
rules.
have to
lie
down and
merciless. It
them
man and
wildly into the desert to die on trackless dunes. Many have been found as mummified cadavers, but, as Le Coq always said, a sandstorm generally likes to bury its victims. East Turks, Dolans, West Mongols, Kalmucks and Kirghizes are
hospitable, likable, greathearted people, the sort of people that only
nomadic
life
Moham-
medans known
in
as
Tungans. Nature
is
harsher and
life
cheaper than
many
236
wandering nomads. Adolph von Schlagintweit met his end in this way at Kashgar in 1857. The Scotsman Dalgleish's thirst for knowledge was rewarded with death. Hayward of England and Dutreuil of France were also murdered, and in very recent times there have been numerous men who bade farewell to civilization in Kalgan or Paotou and set off westward, never to return. The Silk Road was not merely a track. The little-known epic of the imperial highway, as the Chinese called this international thoroughfare, was a tale of lonely hostelries built of unhewn stone and clay, inns erected out of camel dung, small forts garrisoned to protect passing traffic, marching troops, mounted messengers, courageous pilgrims. Consignments of water for convoys travehng through the most arid stretches of desert, interpreters, customs posts and tollgatesall these belonged to the saga of the Road. Oxcarts trundled painfully through the sand. Traffic on the road included donkeys, horses, camels, dispatch riders and mounted couriers. Mile after mile, day after day, month after month, year after year, they passed by at a pace and in an age far removed from the split-second timing of our own. The Silk Road was so long that people at one end of the world scarcely knew what the places at the other end looked like. Who can say whether the words of Paul and Barnabas did not travel from Antioch to China along this road in the early centuries of our era? The noble ruins of Palmyra, the Aramaic Tadmor and royal seat of Queen Zenobia, who for a brief time ruled a world empire, still reveal traces of Far Eastern influence. Farther on, the road led from Ctesiphon, chief residence first of the Parthian kings and then of the Sassanides, to Ecbatana, now called Hamadan. This was the capital of Media, with a fortified citadel dominating the whole city and pillared palaces with roofs of cedar and cypress wood on a hill below it. The Achaemenides and Parthians who made it their summer residence were so rich that they faced the woodwork of their buildings with gold and silver foil. Rhages, the Elamite town mentioned in the
Book
it
of Tobias,
is
now
south of Teheran,
one can well understand why the Parthian kings chose to spend the months of March, April and May there. Passing through Bactra, caravans stopped to do business in gold, for gold from Bactra was as much in demand in antiquity as silk from China. Eventually, they
CENTRAL ASIA
feet
237
watered by the Red River, or Qyzyl Su. From there it was only a few days' journey across the 13,000-foot Terek Pass to the legendary town of Ferghana. If plenty of snow had accumulated in the mountains during winter, the thaw provided sufficient water for irrigation purposes. On the other hand, a cold summer high up in the Pamirs sometimes delayed the thaw, and the blazing summer heat down in Kashgar brought
above sea
level in a loess oasis
great hardships in
its train.
Vast clouds of sand come racing westward from the wastes of Takla Makan, obscuring the Kashgar oasis under a vast curtain of dust for more than two hundred days in every year. Pan Chao, the famous Chinese warrior of the first century a.d., lies buried in a temple there. In the second century a.d. wine passed through the oasis on its way to China. And it was via Kashgar that Buddhism reached the Far East. The bearers of the new world religion, the Yue Chi, also introduced China to the peach and pear. Genghis Khan, conqueror of Asia, must have visited Kashgar in the year 12 19, and in 1275 Marco Polo gazed in wonder at the fertility and bustUng commercial activity of the oasis. Earthquakes usually occur in maritime regions, but reports of earthquakes here in the heart of Asia during historical times have been handed down by word of mouth from generation to generation. Passing Khotan, 4,600 feet above sea level in the Tarim Basin, the caravans journey on to Tun-huang, the oasis famous for its cave temples. A northern route leads through Turfan, where numerous ruined sites have been excavated fifty feet below sea level in the Uigurian district. Digging in Chinese Turkestan between 1905 and 1907, Albert Griinwedel, the celebrated German Indologist, brought to light archaeological treasures which included Buddhist cave temples and
sculptures.
Among
his
and obviously very costly silken garments and silk-faced hats. Silk was once an outward and visible sign of rank and splendor in the monasteries of central Asia, more than fifteen hundred miles from
Pekingr.
At Turfan, Griinwedel
Quarasahr there was the additional annoyance of mosquitoes; and in Qyzyl there were storms and earthquakes. None of the mural
238
paintings in the cave temples had survived intact, sculpted figures had been destroyed and inscriptions scratched out. With endless patience, he removed many of the splendid old paintings from the walls, listed the separate fragments, packed them up and sent them off by caravan. Tracings and drawings had to be made so that the pictures could be reassembled later. In winter severe cold froze India ink to the brush, even when mixed with alcohol. Work was made doubly laborious by flying sand, which got into brushes and pens, decomposed ink and ruined paints. "Even when one had succeeded in mixing the main color a cloud of sand could fly in and
change everything." Goatherds had been using the cave temples as overnight shelters for centuries, and their campfires had blackened the walls. Other caves were blocked by drifting sand and had to be cleared one by one. No one who saw the splendid pictures in, say, the Museum of Ethnology at Berlin would guess how much physical hardship and privation they had caused in far-off Turkestan, but no one, equally, would fail to realize that the oases along the Silk Road represent an impressive and awe-inspiring composite of
the great civilizations of Asia.
Berlin's
to central Asia.
March
produced forty-six
each weigh-
A second expedition under Albert von from September 1904 until December 1905 and carried out research at the oasis of Turfan and in the Momul district. The material results were very substantial. A hundred and three cases each weighing between 200 and 350 pounds were sent back to Germany by slow and devious caravan routes. The third expedition of 1905-07 was conducted jointly by Griinwedel and Le Coq and worked in the oases of Kutsha, Karashahr, Turfan and Komul. A hundred and twenty-eight cases weighing between 150 and 175 pounds were removed. The fourth and final expedition, which took place between January 191 3 and the end of February 19 14, was again led by Le Coq and produced 160 cases also weighing between
sculptures and other objects.
Le Coq
lasted
stolen,
pieces
CENTRAL ASIA
239
in their original abode.) The plaster walls with their Buddhist murals were regarded as an abomination by Mohammedans, and whenever a Moslem saw one of these pictures he did his best to obliterate Buddha's features. Apart from that, the powdered loess that had piled up in the ruins over the centuries and now covered the smashed and trampled statues was a valuable manure, so the oasis dwellers made a practice of digging it up and carrying it away. Griinwedel complained bitterly about the Turks, who smashed heads of Buddha, dug out the eyes with pickaxes and demolished or defaced frescoes. "The peasants carry off the frescoes as manure, knock down walls so that they can drive carts in and out more easily and comb the ruins for firewood, scraps of leather, jewelry and valuables. At Idikuchari, incidentally, the latter seem to have been pretty well exhausted. The unfortunate thing is that one cannot stop them from doing it, for the area is too large and accessible from every direction, and control is impossible. The arrival of a European sets them all scurrying off to find something they can sell. They go on grubbing about for some time after the European leaves, but treasure hunting on a grand scale eventually ceases and the peasants once more set about their demolition work for utilitarian purposes." We have already mentioned the successes of the French scholar Paul Pelhot and the explorations undertaken on behalf of the Indian Government by the British geographer and philologist Sir Aurel Stein. Professor Albert von Le Coq, a director of the State Museum of Ethnology in Berlin, wrote in 1926: "Since the exploration of the ruins of Nineveh by Sir Austen Layard, no other enterprise has been carried out whose results are comparable in importance with these expeditions to central Asia." In fact, they revealed something quite new. Instead of a "Turkish" country, as the name Turkestan implies, explorers discovered that the Silk Road was occupied until the middle of the eighth century by people of Indo-European origin such as Iranians, Indians and even Europeans. Of the numerous manuscripts found along the route some were in unfamiliar tongues and had to be deciphered, translated and scientifically evaluated by experts in London, Paris and Berlin. Authorities on Indo-European and Turkish had to study and decipher no less than seventeen differ-
Many
new and
Buddhism. Quantities of
liturgical
works composed
240
Many
other
manu-
were written
Turfan
in the
language
of Sogdiana.
Finally, in a waterless area near the
oasis the
German
which had hitherto been regarded as permanently lost. The texts, which were beautifully handwritten on excellent paper in inks of various colors, gave some entirely new details of this unique religion. Also found were sheets from books which had belonged to the Manichaean religious community. Composed in Middle Persian and other Indian dialects, though mainly in the script of Sogdiana, and adorned with miniatures of startling beauty, they were subsequently translated by Professor F. W. K. Miiller of Germany. The principal importance of these Manichaean texts lies in the fact that almost all other examples of Manichaean literature fell prey to Christian hatred
or
Mohammedan
religious zeal.
capital of the Chinese province of
single track.
by way
of
Swedish explorer Sven Hedin declared, a world of unforgettable experiences behind him. The imperial highway, as the Chinese used to call the Silk Road, cut a gigantic cross section through the ancient world. It ran from the seething plains of China, through the oases of the edge of the Gobi desert, through the barren wastes between Tun-huang and Lou Lan still the desolate habitat of the wild camel and through the fairy-tale cities of the Medes until it came, finally, to the metropolitan cities of the ancient civilizations of Babylon and Tyre. The Silk Road has yielded up one secret after another. On March 28, 1900, Sven Hedin found the ruined city of Lou Lan in the vicinity of the former bed of Lake Lop Nor. A year later, there came to light in a house built of mud bricks a heap of rubble containing rags, sheep's bones, the remains of fish and, among these, a few hundred sheets of manuscript and 42 wooden sticks, all covered with Chinese characters. Sven Hedin's rubbish dump was a veritable treasure trove. The fragmentary manuscripts, some of which actually mentioned the name Lou Lan, had been left behind by a Chinese garrison stationed there between a.d. 265 and 313. The results of research into Lou Lan by Hedin and his
CENTRAL ASIA
successors dead.
241
were not published until 1920, by which time Hedin was However, he had already recognized the value of these finds. "The documentary fragments would set the seal on my painstaking investigations. They would tell when the lake the Lop Nor existed, what people lived there, what parts of central Asia they were in contact with and what name their country bore. A country which had been, as it were, swallowed up by the earth's surface, a people "whose history long ago passed into oblivion and whose destiny no chronicles relate all these things would see the light of day. I was confronted with a past which I was to bring to life
once more." The carved woodwork of Lou Lan betrayed Hellenistic and Gandharan influence and so testified to indirect links with west and south. The paper documents, which had crumbled into small pieces, displayed wonderfully clear and legible Chinese characters when reassembled. While digging in the cemetery at Lou Lan, Aurel Stein unearthed human bodies whose clothing and facial expression had survived intact. The ruins of a Buddhist temple yielded some small but superb wood carvings, figures, ornaments, models of a stupa, spoons and a child's mattock. Other discoveries included coins pierced with rectangular holes, a red ring stone portraying Hermes, the remains of a woolen carpet with a marvelously lifelike head of Buddha, and pieces of finely patterned silk. Aurel Stein's excavation of another burial place at Astana, nearly twenty miles southwest of the Turfan oasis, brought to light sculptures of the eighth century which are among the finest extant pieces dating from China's greatest artistic period, the T'ang dynasty. These funerary gifts comprised small human figures, camels, brightly painted horses, demons' heads, horsemen in gay clothing and splendid figurative paintings on silk. Throughout the length of the Silk Road, hundreds of textual fragments were unearthed dealing with the Prajnaparamita, or Mahayana philosophy of the period. There were also tenth-century Tibetan texts on military subjects, medical treatises, commercial records and a surprising number of texts on horse doctoring. In the golden days of the Silk Road, the only things that traveled along it from one side of the world to the other were luxuries. Jade, for instance, was not originally discovered in China but reached the Far East by way of the Silk Road. Spiritual treasures such as
24J
along
another.
consumer goods
age which has forgotten the true meaning of luxury. In Asia, wealth
had an almost magical significance. The worked, Silk Road lived, and made its influence felt. As they passed great thoughts of mankind changed their complexion along it, the Buddha acquired the almond-shaped eyes of China. and the Indian Pilgrims reinterpreted the sacred texts and Christian ideas were introduced into Buddhism by travelers from Europe. And all the time the natural magic of the widest and most desolate landscape in the world played its part. Today the Silk Road has reached its nadir. Its pulsing life is and objects of
real value
stilled,
its
poverty and universal mistrust are doing their from the face of the earth. And yet, stubbornly impervious to change, it still winds its serpentine way through the heart of Asia. Wars were always continuous in the countries and empires through which the Silk Road passed, but they did not prevent peaceful traffic in things of material and spiritual value from flowing along it without interruption from East to West and from West to East. Has the sound of caravan bells been silenced forever? Personally, I shall never forget the images conjured up by memories of my
frontiers, appalling
best to
wipe
it
men on
foot or in
the fur-clad
Mongol horsemen,
on
PERSIA
made
is
often placed
O.
of the Oxiis,
London, 1926
THE world
has produced large nations and empires which have bequeathed us very few relics of their material culture. In some cases they have been engulfed by sand, in others the civilizations involved are so hard to define that we are frequently ignorant of
to them,
and
in
still
others luxury
and objects of
rivers
submerged by
soil.
and
lakes.
The
things
by
those
which
About
life
still
cant light on the intimate secrets of tribes whose religions and daily
present numerous problems. Archaeological research has
itself until
not concerned
which were once owned by tribes whose domain extended from the Middle East, through the whole of Asia, to the borders of China, and which were carried by them on their interminable wanderings. Some of them remain unidentified and many more have been scattered to the four winds. The equestrian civilizations of the Middle East, southern Russia and central Asia were for
times of solid gold,
a long time the neglected children of art-historical research, yet
art are among the rarest, most fascinating comprehended examples of early craftsmanship. Since the "Treasure of the Oxus" was found in the former Persian satrapy of Bactria and since it probably dates from the fifth and fourth centuries B.C., a glance at the Achaemenian era of Persian history would not be inappropriate.
their utensils
and works of
and
least easily
243
244
The
were
a period of great
migrations. The West and East "Indo-European" speaking tribes dispersed the people of the pre-classical civilizations. Indo-European
tribes
Italians,
The
combined with
is
Repeated attempts have been made to determine the site of the They may have come from the great
from the wide plains of southern Russia, Baltic. Old legends tell of a land called Aryanem-Vaejo and of interminable migrations by nomadic tribes into Persia and India by way of Bokhara and Samarkand. The Persian empire, one of the great political edifices in world history, was built upon the ruins of the supremacy of the Indosteppes of central Asia, or
Iranian people
whom we
call
now
the oasis
most prominent of the A4edian kings. Not a single written sentence, not a stone memorial or work of art supplies us with information about the ancient Medes, but we know that in company with their Persian cousins they
of
seat of Cyaxares,
Persian Gulf.
occupied the southwestern portion of modern Iran north of the The Persians' capital was Susa and their royal house
named
after
Achaemenes,
who
ruled
The
owed
its
year 585 b.c. the Median king Astyages succeeded to the throne of his father Cyaxares. Because interpreters of dreams predicted at
Ecbatana that the child of his daughter Mandane would one day rule the whole of A4edia, Astyages devised what he believed to be an extremely cunning plan. Unfortunately, overingenious plans of this sort usually go awry. Astyages was determined at all costs to keep a future ruler of the world under his thumb. Any Mede of noble birth was a potential usurper, so instead of giving his daughter
PERSIA
to a
245
Mede, who might prove dangerous, Astyages decide to offer Mandane's hand to a prince from a vassal state, reflecting that he would be able to get rid of the potentially dangerous offspring of such a marriage without undue difficulty.
The
the Persians,
who were
When Mandane
pre-
the
named Cyrus, Astyages bade his child without delay. The commands
though not necessarily to the letter. Harpagus carried off young Cyrus to the highlands, but instead of killing him he handed him over to a cowherd. We shall not relate in detail how the whole of Media fell into the hands of the boy who was brought up in the wind-swept highlands by a herdsman, or how the Median empire became a Persian empire. Suffice it to say that Cyrus was a prince of the Achaemenian clan and that the world supremacy of that great and renowned dynasty began with him. Susa now became the Persian capital, but Cyrus built a second and equally important stronghold at Parsagarda, or "Camp of the Persians." This fortress, which was known to the Greeks as Pasargadae, is the site of Cyrus' tomb. The great king conquered first Ecbatana, then the whole of Media, then Lydia and its famous capital Sardis, and finally Caria, Lycia and Ionia. Cyrus' principal foes were the courageous Saka tribes or Scythians, a mysterious and still
largely unidentified people of
whom we
shall
Aiargiana and Sogdiana became Persian provinces. In the year 539 B.C. Cyrus marched into Babylon, acclaimed by the whole of the
East,
largest political
structure in
pre-Roman
in battle.
antiquity.
Cyrus died
down
this
pressure from Scythian tribes, the had moved westward and was pouring from the steppes of southern Russia. It was while combating
that the great
Under
menace
B.C.
Achaemenid
fell in battle in
the
summer
of 530
who was
defeated by the
spirit
Greeks
at
Marathon
in
490
b.c.
of classical
This frieze from a corridor in the Hall of Xerxes at Persepolis shows Syrians, Bactrians and Scythians presenting gifts to the Great King. The royal seat of Persepolis lies northeast of Shiraz in Persia.
PERSIA
antiquity,
247
we
only
know
He
founded the
Greece which he hoped would wipe out the Persian defeat Marathon. In 520 b.c. he had a record of his achievements carved into the rock face at Behistun, high above the road and thus beyond
also
an eternal resting place in the steep rock face at Nakshi-Rustam, not far from Persepolis, where the burial chambers of Darius the Great and his successors can still be seen to this day. Darius' successor, Xerxes, was the Ahasuerus of the Book of Esther in the Old Testament, the king who ruled at Susa and made Queen Esther his consort. Xerxes was defeated by the Greeks at
Salamis and Plataea, and his armies were finally crushed on the
Mycale Peninsula. As a result, Persia was banished to Asia for all time and never became a European power. Under Xerxes' successors, internal feuds and dissensions reduced the immense Persian empire to political impotence and laid it low in a welter of blood and misery. Seen from the West, Alexander's victories over the Persians were a gigantic spectacle, but in reality they were only the final demolition of what had already collapsed. The southern shores of the Aral Sea are broken by the estuary of the Amu Darya, which rises in the southern Pamirs, threads its way through the mountainous country south of Bokhara and debouches into the Turanian plain, where it becomes a river of steppe and desert. For some hundreds of miles it forms the frontier between Afghanistan and southern Russia and divides Turkmenistan from
Uzbekistan.
The
river's
sites
of
Amu
it is
Darya
is
identical
its
with
history,
obvious that
waters
Modern
research has
along a
Caspian.
Oxus flowed from the Aral Sea, watercourse now completely choked with silt, into the
in
One evening
Burton,
May
named
F. C.
who
248
from Kabul, the capital of Afghanistan, was sitting in his police Tezin Valley. It was nine o'clock, and Captain Burton was just resigning himself to a night as uneventful as all the other lonely nights when a Moslem burst into his camp and raised the
station in the
alarm.
Apparently, three Mohammedan merchants from Bokhara had been traveling along the road from Kabul to Peshawar. They were in high spirits and, suspecting no danger, had unwisely left their caravans and ridden on ahead. The three worthy Moslems plied
their caravans as far as Amritsar.
between Khiva, Samarkand and India, sometimes taking Their intention had been, as usual, to buy up large quantities of tea, silk and other goods in northwest India and dispose of them in the bazaars along the route between Afghanistan and southern Russia. On this occasion, however, they had taken no money with them on their journey to Peshawar, for the very good reason that Abd-er-Rahman, later Amir of Afghanistheir trade
tan,
Kunduz
money needed to maintain army. Instead of money, therefore, the three Moslems had been
who
hills.
Kothal, the brigands and their prisoners made for the Karkatcha Range, where they halted in some lonely caves to examine their
booty
of the
at leisure
and divide
it.
into Captain Burton's camp was one Mohammedans' retainers, who had escaped from his guards. Taking only two soldiers with him, Burton at once set off in the darkness. When, toward midnight, he came upon the bandits and took them by surprise, he found they had quarreled among themselves and four of them lay wounded on the ground. The merchants
sat
Burton negotiated with the bandits and persuaded them to hand loot, but he had scarcely left when he was warned that they were planning to ambush him and recover it. Hearing this, he lay low and did not return to his little police station until six o'clock the following morning. He then sent someone to inform the bandits that he would muster a force and go after
over the major part of their
PERSIA
249
if they did not surrender the rest of their spoils, and was rewarded by the return of a further batch. Having recovered threequarters of their property, the merchants continued their journey to Peshawar. The three Moslems told Burton that they had acquired most of the contents of their leather wallets at Kabadian. Kabadian or Kahndian may have been one of the ancient townships which were buried by the Oxus. It appeared that the local inhabitants used to go digging for hidden treasure and that they sometimes found gold and valuables in the ruins of the vanished town, but the exact site of Kabadian could not be ehcited. It may conceivably have been the place known as Kuad, a small town situated not on the Oxus but on its tributary the Kafirnigan. Be that as it may, the Mohammedan merchants had certainly invested in some buried treasure and taken it to India with them as a medium of payment instead of money. The total value of the original treasure was 80,000 rupees, an enormous sum of money in 1880, of which 52,000 rupees were recovered when the remaining pieces were sold in Rawalpindi. We lose sight of the Oxus hoard for a time, but it eventually came into the hands of General Sir Alexander Cunningham, whose collections were later acquired by Sir Augustus Wollaston Franks. Today, its adventurous career at an end, the treasure reposes in the
them
British
Museum.
traders of northwest India
The
of this
who
specialized in antiquities
type sometimes
that
bracelets,
commissioned reproductions of ancient bowls, cylinders and animal figures in gold because
they
knew
interested in them.
managed
and it at once became apparent how much finer the authentic pieces were than the imitations. For all their skill, the goldsmiths of Rawalpindi had been unequal to the task of imitating silver and bronze antiques in gold with sufficient perfection to disguise the fraud. It should, however, be mentioned that the hoard did include some
magnificent originals in gold.
Among other items in the Treasure of the Oxus were 1,500 coins from the Persian satrapies, tetradrachmas from Athens, pieces from Acanthus and Macedon, about two hundred gold pieces bearing the name of Alexander the Great and coins struck by Seleucus Nicator,
250
Antiochus I, II and III, Diodotus and Euthydemus. These coins ranged in period between the fifth and second centuries B.C., but since it was not known if they were originally found with the other articles and were unearthed at the same spot and in the same layer,
they were no help in determining the date of the entire hoard. Comparative research has indicated that the Treasure of the Oxus
belongs to the Achaemenian period in Persian history, that
that
it
is
to say,
dates
from the
when
Xerxes
the Persian
I
Darius
I,
and
their
There
is
still
no clue
as to
who
General Cunningham suggested that 2,000 years ago the valuables had belonged to an old Bactrian family and that they were hastily
buried
by
he
member
of that family
when
Bactria
was threatened
but
this
by
As
secret,
may
was destined never to be. If the coins actually formed part of the hoard, the last owner must have been alive in 209 e.g., for the most recent coins date from the reign of Euthydemus.
We
among
family
know
at Susa, Persepolis
valuable
contents,
and Pasargadae, together with their immensely and that these treasures were later dispersed
Bactrian
have acquired a valuable nest egg of this sort. The Treasure of the Oxus contains many objects which are related to early Scythian finds made in western Siberia, so the ScythoSiberian
may
works of
art in the
a link
between
the goldsmith's art of Persia under the Achaemenides and the arts
and
crafts of
western Siberia.
in the
Among
these are gold bowls and jugs, cult statuettes of gold and silver,
the figures of bearded men wearing cloaks, crowns and earrings, and others depicting a Median invention: the first long trousers in world history! The religion to which most of these articles were dedicated was
PERSIA
251
founded by Zarathustra, who lived circa 600 B.C. Zarathustra, known Greeks as Zoroaster and to the Persians as Zardusht, was probably born in Bactria, that is to say in the eastern region of Persia where the Treasure of the Oxus was discovered. Latest research puts the year of Zarathustra's birth at 630 b.c. His disciples incorporated doctrines and commandments in the "sacred book" which came to be called the Zend-Avesta, meaning roughly "Interpretation and Texts." The original work was unfortunately burned when Alexander the Great destroyed the palace at Persepolis, and only one volume and a few fragments are still extant. However, the surviving gathas of the Avesta preserve the hymns and meditations of the prophet in their original purity. The deeper we probe, the more clearly Zarathustra emerges as one of the greatest preachers of divine truth and religious perception. Zarathustra believed implicitly in a single supreme god. It is true that the old gods of the Indo-Europeans were also invisible and that the Indo-Europeans of ancient India probably made no images in human or animal shape, but when Zarathustra started to teach he railed against the fact that men were worshiping not only large numbers of gods but animals as well. His wrath did not confine itself to these
to the
who
con-
and half the daily life of Media from their religious center at Raga, not far from modern Teheran. Zarathustra alone was responsible for introducing the Persians to
He
it. For was divided into two hostile camps ruled by two hostile, elemental beings, Ahura-Mazda the good spmt and Ahriman the spirit of evil, forces that have been competing for mastery of the world since all eternity. Ahriman, the Indo-European Devil, was endowed with creative power, which showed that Zarathustra was well aware of the perilous ambiguity and diversity of evil and of the highly active and sometimes, even, creative nature of the powers of darkness. Man is, however, free to support the side of his choice, and it was in order to help him and set him on the right path that AhuraMazda made his teachings known through Zarathustra. Three days after his death a man comes before the supreme tribunal, which condemns the evil and godless to perpetual torment and grants im-
252
funda-
it
that
mankind
be redeemed.
The
some two
I.
But,
proclaimed the Zoroastrian faith as the national religion of Persia, the common people still clung to their ancient beliefs and the Magi stubbornly resisted extinction.
Persia's art
was
fructified partly
by Zoroastrianism and
partly
by
and the Greeks. The British curator O. M. Dalton, who wrote an important work on the Treasure of the Oxus, pointed out that Persian art served no apprenticeship but sprang abruptly into being when the Achaemenides seized power. Nevertheless, it cannot be denied that the architects and sculptors of Naksh-i-Rustam, Persepolis and Susa and the artists of this often savage world of horsemen also achieved something imperishable on a smaller scale; nor can it be asserted that their art, sometimes strangely close to us and animated by the perpetual inspiration of
a great religion,
is
doomed
to oblivion.
EURASIA
THE SCYTHIANS
It
is
last
more
home
in
it
than European.
"taking
occupy
else in
into account
all
first
Though
admire nothing
none who attacks them escapes, and if they do not wish to be found no one can lay hands on them." Herodotus had with his own eyes seen the Scythian homeland, which lay by the Black Sea in what is now the Ukraine. The famous pre-Christian traveler and "father of history," who was born in 485 B.C., had visited the ancient Greek colony of Olbia, now the town of Nikolaev in the Black Sea estuary of the river Bug, and had even traveled up the Borysthenes. The Borysthenes of antiquity was the Dnieper of modern times, and ran through the heart of the Scythian domain. Seldom has an eyewitness explored and described anything of comparable importance, for the Scythians were a mysterious people who first emerged as a recognizable force in world history about 700 B.C. and made their final exit about 200 b.c. What sort of people the Scythians were, where they came from and what relationship they bore to other races are all questions that still remain in doubt. The Scythians had no writing of their own and left behind no written documents of any kind. It is seldom
realized
how
oblivion and to
what extent
their real
importance
is
overshadowed by
much smaller races with a more substantial literature to bequeath. By about a.d. 400 the life, deeds and renown of the Scythians had
faded so completely that they became
lost to
contemporary view
and lay
Not
the
dawned on
us that
way
of
life
more
walked the
253
254
The
due partly to
the fact that the ancient term "Scythian" was not a racial designa-
no purely ethnological meaning. Herodotus saw the There is, however, a second early source of information about the Scythians. This was no less a person than Hippocrates of Cos, a contemporary of Socrates and the most celebrated of all Greek physicians, who was more interested in the Scythians' geographical location and the way in which they were affected by their natural environment. The Greeks called the Scythians Scythae, a name first mentioned by the poet Hesiod in the eighth century b.c. The Scythians' own name for themselves was Scoloti, and the Persians referred to them as Sacae. The origin of the name is unknown, but it may have been derived from the Indo-European word sequ, meaning "pursue." Again, the Greeks' Scythae may have been a modification of the Hebrew name Ashkenaz. Genesis: x, 3, tells us that Ashkenaz was a grandson of Noah, and according to Jeremiah the people that bore this name lived somewhere in the region of Armenia. The difficulty of interpreting even the Scythians' name and the manifold problems raised by it are illustrated by the fact that the Jews of later times used Ashkenaz as a name for what is today Germany. The Scythians were at once many nations and one nation, visible and invisible. They appeared, only to vanish once more. All references to them sound typically Asiatic, but the writers of classical antiquity used the term Scythian to cover all the barbarian inhabitants of what is now Russia, and in the fifth century b.c. it was employed as a generic term for the peoples of European Russia. When Alexander the Great brought back news of similar tribes in Asia the term was extended to Asiatic tribes as well. It is clear from a sentence in his Histories (IV, Ixxxi) that Herodotus distinguished between genuine Scythians and the various Scythian tribes: "I found it impossible to determine the Scythians' numbers. I was given
tion and had
Scythians
very diverse estimates of the size of their population, being told sometimes that it was very large and then again that there were very few genuine Scythians." One approach to the problem may be to concentrate on Hippocrates' description of what the Scythians looked hke. In his work on Airs, Waters and Places he reported that they were plump and fleshy, sluggish and flabby, with fat bellies and no visible joints.
EURASIA
The Greek
as babies
255
their habit of not walking if they could ride. They had a reddish complexion "because of the great cold in their country" and their obesity rendered them unprolific. This description does not match the very precise details given by Herodotus. Why could no one attack these fat men unscathed? Besides, Herodotus paints the Scythians as tent-dwelling nomads and mounted archers. If they really were the most skillful horsemen in ancient history, as many accounts would have us believe, they could hardly have been plump and flabby. Hippocrates ascribes their physical condition to their uniform way of life. The men always traveled on horseback, the women in carts. The country was perpetually cold and misty. The Scythians' reddish or reddish-brown complexion might well have applied to the Tatars. We know, for instance, that Kublai Khan, who ruled the Mongol empire in 1260, had a red and white complexion. Marco Polo tells us that Genghis Khan, who brought the whole of central Asia from China to the Oxus under Mongol domination, was a source of surprise to himself because he was brown-complexioned whereas most members of his family had reddish hair and blue eyes. The Mongol prince Batu, who subjugated Russia and devastated Poland, Silesia and Hungary between 1235 and 1246, was said to have had a reddish face. The Flemish Franciscan traveler de Ruysbroeck, who undertook a mission to the Mongol emperor's court at Karakorum between 1253 and 1255 at the behest of Pope Innocent IV and Louis IX of France, mentioned the reddish complexion of Batu Khan in his report, which was written in Latin. It is probable, however, that the vital sentence should be translated as follows: "His face was entirely covered with red patches." I myself have seen Tatars in the Volga estuary whose complexion appeared gray or olive-green, though it should be remembered that complexion and pigmentation can change in the course of centuries and that continuous interbreeding must have taken place in the past seven hundred years. Hippocrates tells us that Scythians were very easygoing, and once more attributes this to the time they spent on horseback. His remarks are limited to the ruling class, however, for the lower orders were evidently not so devoid of temperament. In his Natural
and to
among
256
The
Black Sea
Russia. He tells us that each man had a woman of his own but shared her with his fellow tribesmen. This was a practice among the Massagetae, however, not the Scythians, Marco Polo reports
who were
and thought it thoroughly repredo not know whether the Scythians were monogamous or polygamous. In most Scythian graves the women who were obliged to keep men company in death were buried in the same pit, but some distance apart. The only instances where women who had shared death with their menfolk were buried in the same coffin are the Scythian graves of Pazyryk, east of the upper reaches of the Ob. Tamara Talbot Rice takes this as an indication that wives and not concubines were involved. Although women occupied a very subordinate position among the Scythians, the killing of women after their husbands' death should be regarded not
infidelity as a vice
garded marital
hensible
(I,
xlvii).
We
as a
as a signal
honor.
Among
EURASIA
Nandi,
it
257
man who
Herodotus describes a similar used to hang their quivers up outside their covered wagons when they wanted to spend an undisturbed siesta with
Massagetae,
who
another
woman.
that,
it
For
place
all
among the Scythians. The polygamous Asiatic tribes who keep their womenfolk in subjection insist that they remain in purdah with the other women and make themselves available to their own
husbands and no one
else.
have been reported between the ancient Scythians and the Russians, probably because the Russians adopted a numsimilarities
Many
ber of cultural assets from the Tatars and because intermarriage between Tatars and Russians went on for centuries. The apparent resemblance between Russians and Scythians probably depends, therefore, on Tatar intermediaries. The Russians borrowed a great deal from the nomadic tribes of their vast territories, notably via the Cossacks. The latter, in particular, borrowed extensively from their traditional foes in matters of horsemanship and dress. Many
Russian expressions for articles of clothing are of Tatar origin.
When
Herodotus records that the Argippaei, who wore Scythian clothing, had flat noses and large chins (IV, xxiii), he corroborates information about central Asia given
by
who
say
much
Many
of the Crimean
and a tendency toward plumpness. Like the Tatars, the nomadic Scythians never planted crops, tilled the soil or built houses, but carried their dwellings with them on horse-drawn carts. These abodes were rectangular constructions like large boxes, woven out of osiers and covered with black felt rubbed with tallow or sheep's milk as a protection against rain. Marco Polo reports the same thing of the Tatars and supplies the additional information that they lived exclusively on meat and milk and never stayed long in any one place because they were always on the move in search of fresh pasturage. Linguistic research has done little to solve the problem of the Scythians' origin. Many authorities assume that they were of Mongol extraction, others that they were of Iranian or generally IndoTatars, too, are squat
faces, small eyes
258
European
Moscow
in 1887, Professor
V. T. Miller
by the Uralo-Altaic tongues. Professor T. I. Mishenko, the Russian translator of Herodotus, espoused a similar theory, and the British scholar Ellis H. Minns, who wrote an extremely useful work on the Scythians and Greeks in 191 3, also recognized the presence in Scythic of Iranian elements and Mongol
strongly influenced
influence.
Since
we
and western Siberia have yielded human remains which indubitably belonged to Scythians. Were the skulls all wide or all narrow, anthropologists would be able to form conclusions about their racial identity, but we are unfortunately confronted by yet another riddle. For instance, five skulls dating from the fourth century B.C. were found in the famous grave at Chertomlyk in the valley of the Dnieper. Describing the find, K. E. von Baer stated that two were wide, two narrow, and one average. It is well known that at every stage in history there have been nations whose ruling class belonged to one racial type while the lower orders belonged to another, but
in this case archaeologists
were unable
to
tell
servants.
After years
of research,
Russian
some of the skeletal remains found in Scythian graves revealed Mongol characteristics while others were purely European. It is now generally accepted that the Scythians were of Iranian stock and, as such, belonged to the Indo-European race. It is also clear that they all spoke the same
authority Prince Bobrinskoy wrote that
language, probably an Iranian dialect.
Even though
there
is
no more
scientifically reliable
method of
still
When
men
like
Sumarokov and many others followed his example by uncovering more and more of these mysterious burial mounds of 2,500 years ago, the outlines of
Clarke, Pallas, Dubois de Montpereux,
EURASIA
Russia,
259
One
was made
in the
year 1865 by Wilhelm Radloff at Katanda in the southern Altai, where the largest grave of all was found in an enormous cemetery.
Born at Berlin in 1837, Radloff was a student of Turkology and had been traveling in Russia since 1858 in his capacity as Inspector of Tatar Schools, His discoveries made it clear that Scythian graves were also be to found in the southern Altai, over 1,600 miles from the sites on the Dnieper, Don and Kuban. Radloff had chanced upon
some graves
that
were
so well protected
by
and clothing had remained well preserved for more than 2,000 years. Radloff gazed in wonder at the funerary gifts, the fine pieces of bronze, the strangely garbed bodies and the colorful Scythian way of life to which they had belonged, once consigned to oblivion but now recalled from the dead. Sadly enough, when the ice melted and nature's most efficient preservative flowed away, part of the find disintegrated before it could be saved. Finally, in the Pazyryk Valley in the Altai, the Russian archaeologist S. I. Rudenko came upon about forty graves which had also been so well protected by the layers of ice which clothe the soil of Siberia that the art, life and history of the people of the Eurasian steppes appeared in an entirely new light. The Scythian race has been resurrected from the many burial mounds that have, been laid bare. Let us watch their mounted archers ride by once more, enter the presence of their kings and tribal chieftains, peer into the graves where they were buried with horses and huge retinues, examine their superbly ornamented goldsmith's work, learn to know their gods, beasts and sacrifices, hear of the dangerous life their soothsayers led so long ago.
EURASIA
deal with
their
bodies as follows. Leaning three poles together, they pull sheets of felt over them, tie them up tightly and throw red-hot stones into
a tub within the poles and sheets.
Now hemp
grows
in
their
country.
The Scythians
the felt sheets and scatter the seeds on the glowing stones, thus producing smoke and diffusing steam better than in any Hellenic steam-bath. And the Scythians roar with pleasure in their sweat-
house.
Herodotus, IV,
Ixxiii
and Ixxv
ABOUT
as
200
B.C.
by
a strange people
known
the Cimmerians,
who were
by
described
by
the
earliest
Greek wrapped
darkness and mist." We do not know the true identity of Homer's "ne'er sunlit neighbors of Okeanos close to the entrance of Hades." At all events, they were not a Scythian people, nor under any circumstances should they be confused with the Cimbri of Germany. In about 1000 b.c. the historical Cimmerians lived around the Strait of Kerch, known in the ancient world as the Cimmerian Bosporus. Because Europe and Asia are always treated as two distinct entities by Western historians, the long but coherent chain of events that stretches from the Pacific and across the whole of Asia and Europe does not enter into our calculations. One event
has always given rise to the next, a reciprocal action not confined
to the Balkans
also
Rome.
Enough
has been
dug up
in recent years
Yenisey, the Urals and the Ordos desert to justify the compiling
of a general history of Eurasia. History must continually be rewritten because the present explains and reveals so
the past. Sometimes an interval of
much about
many hundreds
of years has to
The
caused
Europe
mutual impingement have promoted a new attitude toward history. What happened in China did, in fact, have very
by
their
260
EURASIA
considerable effects on central Europe. This
action
is
261
One
Roman Empire, the eruption of Germanic western Europe, the migration of Slavic tribes into central and southern Europe, the Renaissance, the revival of western Europe's interest in classical antiquity and, finally, the voyages that
The
decline of the
tribes into
all
these gigantic
Montgomery McGovern so rightly pointed out in 1939. Emperor Hsiian Wang, who ruled China between 827 and 781 B.C., in this sense "made" European history. During the time of the Chou dynasty to which he belonged, the north and northwest of China was invaded by the seminomadic Hsiung-nu. The Chinese emperor marched against the invading Hsiung-nu, defeated them in the region of the modern provinces of Shansi and northern Shensi, and pursued his dangerous adversaries into the mountains from which they had been making their mounted forays into the fertile plains
ogist
of China.
By withdrawing
grations
to
more westerly grazing lands the Hsiung-nu nomads and so sparked off a series of micentral Asia until they impinged
Massagetae,
who
Aral Sea. In their quest for fresh grazing land for their horses,
these powerful nomads,
who
the
old
men
the Scythians.
east
The
Scythians,
who may
originally have
roamed
The
tribes of the
endless Asiatic steppes may also have been set in motion in this way, as Ellsworth Huntington and Tamara Talbot Rice suggest, due to a sfreat drought about 800 B.C. In the ensuing O wars between the Cimmerians and the Scythians the latter proved victorious.
DO
The
way
their hordes
at lightning speed.
The
Russia and settled there between 722 and 705 b.c, partly as
nomads
and partly as sedentary communities. This was when the true history of the Scythians began.
They
e*rtH UlowTXbemttte
ini
abo\*'TrencK.Horsti
6eflionc>f
tlilsLvel___
Barrow
Tntnch.
sir
The Russian archaeologist Weselowski dug up an extremely interesting burial mound at Kostromskaya in the Kuban region. This diagrammatic illustration of it shows how a kurgan was arranged. In the lowest chamber lay the dead chieftain, and above him were buried the thirteen or more people who accompanied him into death. Around the rectangle of the actual grave were found the skeletons of twenty-two horses. The famous golden stag on the iron shield was also discovered in this grave.
EURASIA
must have been genuinely dangerous opponents
b.c.
263
in war, because in they succeeded in repelling an invasion by the Persian king Darius and in 325 b.c. they annihilated an expeditionary force under the command of Alexander's general Zopyrion. They
were not driven out of the Balkans and the eastern Europe by the up-and-coming Celts until after 300
eventually crushed in southern Russia
their
half of central
b.c, but
were
by
once tough and battle-hardened way of life had been vitiated superabundance of slaves, spoils and riches. Their downfall may, on the other hand, have been due to their womenfolk, who were completely subordinate to their husbands.
by
During the long treks on which thousands of slave girls accompanied the Scythian columns, the Scythians were obviously unable
to treat their own wives any differently from their concubines. Thus, both wives and slave girls rode in carts the whole time, with
the result that in the long run their health suffered in the
way
mentioned by Hippocrates.
The
people
who
had womenfolk of quite another caliber. Sarmatian women took part in war, rode about freely and won such a reputation for strength and independence that they supphed a basis and pattern for the
Amazon
pression
stories of antiquity.
were warlike
women whose name was derived from the Greek ex"breastless," because, if we are to believe Hippocrates,
they amputated their right breast to help them string bows more easily. This derivation is probably erroneous, and it is more likely
that the
name is related to jnaza, which is the Circassian expression "moon" and would denote an association with a moon cult. The Scythians called the Sarmatian Amazons "Oiorpata," from oior (man) and pata (kill). Amazons are said to have lived on the
for
eastern and southern shores of the Black Sea and in the Caucasus,
now
the port of
Trabzon
in north-
When referring to Scythians, the Greeks always meant nomads. According to Herodotus there were also "agricultural Scythians," "royal Scythians" and "plow Scythians" in the Ukraine, but these were probably tribes who merely plundered the earlier residents of the black-earth district and disposed of their surplus production of grain to the Greeks on the Black Sea coast, bartering it for
264
and metalwork of Greek manufacture. Herodotus himself nomads and mounted archers, the Scythians generally supported themselves bv cattle breeding rather than agriculture and that they owned horse-drawn dwellings rather than towns and fortresses. Their homeland, a vast area of plains, was rich in grass and well irrigated by the many wide rivers that flowed through it. The Scythians had inexhaustible reserves of pasturage for their cattle, although, as the knowledgeable Herodotus added darkly, grass was a sovereign cause of galls. We learn of gods with strange names, of the supreme god Pappaeus and his consort Apia, of their son Oetosyrus, of a Scythian Aphrodite named Artimpasa and a Scythian Neptune called Thamiasadas. The Scythians had no idols, altars or temples, and Herodotus stated that the only altars and efRgies they had ever possessed were dedicated to one particular god who was the
vessels
tells
equivalent of Ares.
The
tugged
his
man
in charge
fell
over.
Then,
calling
upon
neck and garroted it by inserting a stick in the noose and twisting it to form a tourniquet. The meat was cooked on the spot. Since the nomadic Scythians inhabited plains which were "dreadfully deficient in wood," they
god, he threw
noose around
its
are
reported to
Having
and removed the bones, they boiled the meat in a caldron if they owned one apparently using the bones as fuel for their fire. If they had no caldron they threw all the meat into the animal's stomach, added water, and lit a fire of
skinned the
sacrificial beast
bones beneath
tolerably well.
it.
bones
Thus
the
ox has to cook
itself,
does every
sacrifice
sacrificial beast."
among
the Scythians,
who
first
cuts
from
meat and
pitched
entrails to the
accompaniment of
special rites.
camp they
to
built a shrine to
wood heaped up
form
a tall
tower.
At
its
EURASIA
265
they sacrificed horses and other grazing animals. They did not stop there, however. Of all the prisoners taken during the Scythians' never-ending wars, one in every hundred was sacrijficed. Pouring wine on their heads, the Scythians slaughtered them over a vessel
and poured the blood on the sword. Then they cut off their victims' right arms and hurled them into the air, leaving them to lie where they fell. Herodotus stresses that pigs were never sacrificed and that the Scythians neither kept them nor ate their meat. The Scythians' warlike customs tended to be extremely gruesome. When a Scythian had killed a man he drank his blood and brought his enemy's head to the king; only then could he share in the
spoils of
his
war.
The
victor
hung
his
Herodotus puts
it.
The The
made
Many
no doubt that they used to cover their deadliest enemies' skulls with leather or, if they were wealthy enough, gold leaf, and use them as drinking vessels. Family disputes were apparently settled in just as gruesome a manner. When the king had delivered judgment on the case, the victor treated the skulls of his kinsmen "according to ancient custom." Then, inviting guests to join him, he placed the "drinking vessels" before them and related how he had got even with his kinsmen for insulting him. "And that is what they call heroic
virtue," adds Herodotus.
Once
Any
Scythian
it,
who
had
slain at least
drink from
watch.
Not to own a scalp was a mark of disgrace, but those who had scalped a large number of enemies were always poured two
cups of wine.
The
whether
osiers, lay them on the ground and jumble them together. Then, picking up each twig in turn, they interpreted its meaning and returned it to the
functions.
They
266
pile.
When
voyants or enares. The latter expression was the Greek equivalent of an unknown Scythic word meaning men whose virility was on
the wane. These effeminate individuals used to forecast the future
The
wise
men
community, especially if the king fell sick, for on such occasions the most eminent of them were summoned to give their advice. They announced that such and such a Scythian had committed perjury before the king's hearth, and gave the guilty party's name. Important oaths were always taken standing before the royal hearth. Even though the Scythians were a nomadic people, the picture of their kings seated on the throne before the circular fireplace is strangely reminiscent of the Mycenaean culture and of Nestor in his palace at Pylos. A man who had been charged with perjury was seized and
dragged before the assembly.
signs
The soothsayers
then explained
how the
When
prisoner
between them.
The man
sages. If the
was called in. Unlike modern courts, the Scythians did not rely on the judgment of one or two experts alone. If the majority found the accused not guilty the first three soothsayers were themselves executed in a far from pleasant manner. Bound hand and foot and gagged, they were placed in carts loaded with brushwood and harnessed to oxen. The brushwood was set on fire, the oxen galloped off, and the carts raced
innocent, a succession of soothsayers
eerily across the plain like
huge
flaring torches.
"Many oxen
are
burned with the soothsayers," Herodotus remarks cheerfully, "but many of them escape with a singeing when the shaft burns through."
When
EURASIA
demned
a
267
man
to death
all
the male
members of
women
being exempt.
Since Herodotus personally visited the Borysthenes and traveled through the countryside around the Dnieper where the Scythians used to live, his account of the burial of Scythian kings is worthy of credence. An enormous rectangular pit was dug, and the king's corpse was embalmed by removing his entrails and stuffing him with shredded spices, frankincense, celery and dill. The Scythians cut off a piece of their ear as a small token of loyalty, shaved their skull, slashed their arms, scratched their brow and nose and drove an arrow through their left hand. Thus prepared, they transported their dead king on a cart to a neighboring clan and demanded the same visible manifestations of loyalty. When
were forthcoming, the horrid procession moved on to the next tribe, and so on until all the dead king's subjects had demonstrated their fidelity to him in this simple but heartfelt manner. On reaching the burial place, the mourners placed the corpse on a mat and stuck spears into the ground on either side. Poles were laid across these and covered with wickerwork. At least one of the king's wives was strangled as a funerary offering, as were his cupbearer, cook, stable master, body servant and herald. A suitably impressive number of horses was also placed in the king's grave. All these sacrifices were "buried in the ample space remaining in the grave," together with votive offerings and gold bowls. Then, when the tomb was ready to be closed, everyone joined in building a mound above it, competing with one another in their efforts to make it as tall and massive as possible. Even that did not end the respects paid to the dead king. After a year had elapsed the rest of his most favored young retainers had the great honor and good fortune to be strangled and so follow their former master into death. These privileged persons were not, however, allowed to exceed fifty in number. Fifty of the finest horses were eviscerated, cleaned, stuffed with chaff and sewn
these
The dead
were suspended on poles complete with bridle, bit and reins. Each of the fifty slaughtered youths was placed upon a horse and the gruesome cortege took up its station around the tumulus. Only
then did the Scythians leave their king in peace, consoling themselves
268
Anyone who
fabricated
Greek
historian's descriptions of a
by a fertile imagination can be disabused by archaeology. The Scythian graves of Russia and the finds made in those amazing cemeteries have confirmed much of what Herodotus wrote.
EURASIA
KINGS, CONCUBINES
AND HORSES
The account of Scythian fimerals given by Herodotus agrees so well with the archaeological data, as siiirrmarized in the survey of
the prijicipal Scythian
of iijformation
may be used
tombs of South Russia, that the two sources to supple?nent one another.
Ellis H. Minns, Scythians and Greeks, p. 87, Cambridge, 191
DESCRIBING the funcrals of Turko-Tatar chieftains in the year 1300, Marco Polo said that they were carried to a mountain and
there buried. "Listen to this strange story," wrote the Venetian
explorer.
"When
its
burial
they
kill all
the people
who
when
his
world
hereafter. I tell you this as a true fact: that when Alangu Khan died more than twenty thousand people who chanced to meet his funeral procession were slain." At the death of Genghis Khan, twoscore pretty girls had to accompany the emperor into his tomb. In 1260, after visiting the court of the Mongol prince at Karakorum, Wilhelm de Ruysbroeck reported: "They erect a large burial mound over
their
dead and on
its
it
drinking cup in
freshly
hand and
a
dug grave of
tall
man with a toward the east. I saw the prince for whom they had hung sixteen
face
horsehides on
They
had
also placed
a Christian."
The Arab
who
who had
fallen in battle.
weapons and all as were four female slaves and six of his favorite mamelukes bearing a number of drinking vessels. They were entombed, and the earth was
on
handsome couch
silver
gold and
269
270
heaped above them to form a tall mound. Then four horses were hung on the mound in precisely the manner described by Herodotus i,8oo years earlier. The kinsmen of the khan were likewise killed and buried with their gold and silver vessels. Three horsehides were hung on the doors of ten of his relatives' tombs and one each on the remainder. This happened in the Chinese
slaughtered and
province of Shensi.
An
inscription
found
at
It
is
i,
732,
is
extremely informative.
Turkish language and was composed by Jolygh Tigin as a memorial to Bilga or Pitkia, Khan of the Turks. The inscription runs:
My
me
father, the
thirty-sLxth
On
decreed
month came to
hundred men. They brought a huge quantity of They brought musk for the funeral and sandalwood. All these mourners had cut off their hair and clipped their ears. They gave up their best horses, their black sables and blue squirrels without number.
head of
five
silver.
We
also
know
that the
Huns
dead
man
as
among the Turkish tribes The practice of sacrifunerary gifts is recorded among the
completely Magyarized during
who became
were
dead by the Yakuts, the Voguls, the Ostyaks and the Chuvashes. Among the Kirghizes a horse is dedicated to the dead man at his funeral but not sacrificed until the first anniversary of his death.
It is also known that the Chinese give their dead a horse of wood, cardboard or paper which is carried in the funeral procession and burned at the burial. Archaeological finds, too, have supplied astonishing confirmation
of
years or so, the Russians have taken the lead in unearthing kurgans,
a
Tatar expression for a burial mound which has been adopted into the Russian language. The Scythian kurgan graves cover a huge
EURASIA
area.
271
Tombs
Kuban
district,
the Urals, the Don, the Dnieper, the Bug, Rumania, Hungary,
Range and Minuon the river Yenisey in West Siberia. All these Scythian graves came into being between the sixth and third centuries B.C. The contents of such a tomb were published in 19 12 and 19 13 by the Russian archaeologist N. J. Weselowski, who excavated the Solocha kurgan in the valley of the Dnieper. In an undisturbed side grave there, he found the Scythian prince, his head pointing eastward, complete with all his weapons and finery. At his feet lay an iron dagger with a bone handle, together with three hundred pieces of sheet gold beaten into different shapes and bearing punched
Bulgaria, Vettersfelde in Brandenburg, the Altai
sinsk,
The grave also yielded a gold neckband, five gold and an eighteen-inch iron sword with a gold-plated hilt and scabbard. To the right of the dead man's head lay a coat of iron mail. His helmet and a golden comb illustrating Scythians in battle had fallen off during his stay in the tomb. The comb is one of the finest pieces of antique goldsmith's work to have been found
decoration.
bracelets
in south Russia.
There were
it
also a
second sword,
vessel plated
with gold, a
bow and
by
prince as a servant. He, too, was equipped for the next world with a
short sword, iron mail, three spears and
iron spear points and bronze arrowheads
shafts having
completely disintegrated.
some arrows. Only the were found, the wooden Close by was a burial cham-
made
in
the
by the late Professor M. Rostovzev of Yale Minns in the year 1913following headings: the
after the
in 193
and by
Ellis
H.
Kuban group,
the
Taman
group, and the kurgans of the Kiev area, Poltava, the Don. the
Central Asia
EURASIA
273
Volga and the Urals. Hundreds if not thousands of such kurgans have been unearthed. From these graves have emerged a people who can properly be described as Scythians, together with a culture whose Scythian elements can easily be distinguished from the Persian, Greek, Mesopotamian and other influences which are also in evidence. A great and unique cultural domain extending to the borders of China has been discovered, and Eurasia's diverse but individual style of animal portrayal has become an accepted feature of cultural history.
The
sites
on the globe. Even Mycenae, "rich in was surpassed by the Scythians. Gold could only have been amassed in such quantities by regular and systematic prospecting and mining. In fact, the principal sources of the precious metal were the Urals and the Altai.
that of almost
anywhere
else
gold," as
Homer
described
it,
We
shall
never
undiscovered treasures
lie
beneath the Siberian steppes and the black earth of the Ukraine.
by
The Hermitage
at
Leningrad
enough
in themselves.
The custom
shaped tomb of
extinct.
wood
or stone was
devised
by
the Scythians
remained incomprehensible. It is "modern," so so so "impressionistic," that it defies any form of classification. Taking its themes almost invariably from life, it shows us complete animals, separate limbs, animals' heads, animals' feet, stylized animal figures with subtle modifications, gaping jaws, a kneeling stag, horses, mythical beasts, animals fightingall depicted with a wealth of ornamentation. It is a very expressive art, yet there is always an element of naivete in it. Wherever we look, we are confronted by the ornamental contortions and convolutions of animals in gold, silver, bronze, iron, wood and even
a long time Scythian art
so
rich,
personal,
stone.
Kuban
area,
D. Schulz
by
thieves a
but
still
He wore
274
bronze helmet adorned with a gold band and a diadem of rosettes, flowers and hawks. The grave contained a large number of other
valuable finds.
In 1904 Schulz opened up another mound in which a man and woman were buried together. Both had been interred with a
and
silver,
other works of
art.
In two other kurgans the Russian archaeologist Weselowski found the bones of human beings and horses, and in one west wall the skeletons of ten more horses. In another spot in the same grave twelve horses' skeletons were unearthed complete with harness. The harness of one of these beasts was decorated in solid gold and comprised a headpiece, cheekpieces, gold-plated girths and a whip with a handle wound around with spiral strips of the same metal. 1898 saw the exploration of a cemetery in the Kuban group of kurgans near the Ulskiy Aul. One of the kurgans there was fifty feet high. It is uncertain whether the horses were slaughtered or buried alive,
The complexity
of the
wooden
plex rituals.
total
was accompanied by equally comof more than 360 horses was found in this
kurgan.
An amazingly wide range of harness was found in the Kuban group of kurgans. Ironwork trappings ended in massive birds' and
griffins' heads,
hares, a
and other ornamentation included lions, rams, stags, mountain antelope and a female elk. Bronze bridlepieces
figures,
collars
adorned with
buried
bells
Archaeologists
have
and fragments of iron that belonged to the original hearses. In one grave in the Yelizavetovskaya and Marinskaya Stanziya group
of kurgans a corridor which must once have been revetted with
contain
two
hearses,
each harnessed to
six
The
front of the
was of wood, and the horses were including iron bridles and copper trappings.
walls
more than
fifty feet
long contained a
EURASIA
group of
five
275
pendants. These
women were facing eastward, but two more were found facing to the west. Although no human sacrifice on the scale of the graves of Ur has been discovered, almost all Scythian chieftains were accompanied into death by their wives, slave women
or concubines.
Probably the richest grave of all is situated at Chertomlyk in the Dnieper area, where the ground told a dramatic story. Having dug a shaft into the interior of the huge and complex kurgan, thieves had piled their loot in the corners of one of its burial chambers, ready for removal, when the roof collapsed at the point where the shaft entered the chamber. One of the grave robbers was trapped and entombed, surrounded by priceless treasures, in the grave where archaeologists eventually found him. It is fortunate that this tomb was never stripped completely, for it contained the finest known examples of Scythian art, among them the remains of spears, iron knives, traces of a carpet, gold plates
and gold bands once used to adorn clothing. The garments had been hung on iron hooks set into the roof and walls of the tomb so that
the dead could
don them
this
in the
world
hereafter.
Although the
silver,
were
still
there.
The
finely
spiral
people in
bracelets
skull
and
On
either side of
one woman's
were
found heavy
shaped
and on her head twenty-nine gold plates twenty rosettes and seven buds. The head and upper part of the body had been draped in a purple veil decorated with fifty-seven rectangular pieces of gold on which could be seen the figures of a seated woman with a mirror and a male Scythian standing before her. Lavishly buried queens were also discovered in the graves of Kul Oba in the Crimea and of Karagodinashk, south of the Kuban estuary. Lying near one of the Chertomlyk ladies was a bronze mirror with an ivory handle on which traces of a blue material could be discerned. Beside her lay a man with
like flowers,
hilt,
and not
the left hand.) This warrior had probably been buried with his
in the
world to come.
276
chamber yielded the famous Chertomlyk vase, a first rank, even when compared with the finest vessels produced by any other civilization. Professor Adolf Furtwangler, the archaeologist from Freiburg, attributed it to the end of the fifth century, but it is probably of more recent date. The vase is 27V2 inches high. Beneath its neck is an interesting frieze depicting a young filly being broken in. The reins and the men's lassos were made of silver wire which originally protruded from the relief but had
masterpiece of the
fallen off in the course of centuries, leaving
The same
visible in
The
two
different breeds,
and the Scythian horsebreakers are modeled with such masterly technique that every article of their clothing can be clearly discerned.
made
found four miles west of Kerch at Kul Oba, was Its wide band of relief depicts, among other things, a Scythian dentist at work and a man removing the bandages from an obviously broken leg. Here, too,
Another
vase,
the Scythian
mode
of dress
is
discernible in detail.
The most
the Ulagan,
recent finds
sources of the
Ob
the Altai Range, from the and from the Pazyryk kurgans in the valley of
is
come from
which
Some
of the
kurgans unearthed there between 1927 and 1949 were as much as 200 feet in diameter, and were built of rocks and boulders, some of
which weighed two or three tons. Franz Hancar, who has studied the Russian discoveries made there, tells of enormous shafts, of buried horses, of a huge larchwood sarcophagus sixteen feet long
and three
feet high,
damaged skin which bore artistic and clearly visible designs tattooed on their arms, legs, backs and chests. The frozen ground had preserved wood, leather, felt, furs, silk and even human bodies in a remarkably good condition, though whether the lords of Pazyryk were genuine Scythians or belonged to a related tribe is not entirely
clear.
In 1959 I. M. Zamatorin attempted to date the Pazyryk kurgans by comparing the annual rings in pieces of wood found in the various burial chambers, but came to no definite conclusion. On the other hand, the finds made in some of the Pazyryk tombs made it possible to verify certain passages in Herodotus whose accuracy
had previously been in doubt because his reports had not hitherto been confirmed by archaeology. Rarely has archaeology supplied
EURASIA
so detailed an attestation of the truth
277
and
reliability of a 2,400-year-
old account.
way of life just as Herodotus described it. After lying buried for 1,700 years, a civilization has re-emerged which may well lead us back to the earliest roots of the Slavic race.
ous, barbarous but artistic
ARABIA
We find it significant that at the very end of the account in Kings 9 of Solomon's manifold building activities throughout
is
Falestine, there
at Ezio?i-geber, which, manned by Ophir for gold. For some reason or other, the author of this account failed to viention that Solomon exported copper and iron ingots arid finished products on these ships in exchange for the gold and other products obtainable in Ophir, and also failed to mention that shortly before, or shortly after, or at the same time as the ships were being constructed, the port-city and industrial town of Ezion-geber I was being built.
him
Phoenician
sailors, sailed to
Tell
el-Kheleifeh,
Bulletin
of
the
HISTORIANS
historical
hundred or two hundred years hence will underwe do the mysterious interrelationship of all
is
constantly disclosing
new
David,
who
was renowned
as a singer, psalmist
and musician,
also
Ark
of the Covenant in
He was
politician
it
modeled the internal organization of his realm on that of Egypt. After winning a succession of victories, David found himself king
of Jerusalem, king of the lands of Israel and Judah, king of
ruler of the provinces of
Ammon,
Edom
and lord of
the vassal
forceful personality
worthy
David
successor to a genius
failed,
this respect
just as
Augustus was to do
when
he abandoned the
Roman Empire
Absolom,
who
ARABIA
tried,
279
even during
The
army
and withdraw to Mahanaim in the east of Jordan. Somewhere there, "in the wood of Ephraim," the decisive battle took place, and Absolom was defeated and killed while escaping. Adonia was now David's eldest son, but a clique of hostile courtiers succeeded in alienating the elderly king from his new heir. Foremost among the women in David's life was the celebrated Bathsheba, whose beauty so captivated him that he took her for himself and arranged that her husband, Uriah the Hittite, should be killed. As the mother of Solomon, Bathsheba began to play an important part in court intrigues. Working in concert with the court prophet, Nathan, she managed to persuade David to make her son heir to the throne. Solomon was, in fact, publicly proclaimed king at Jerusalem. Like David, Solomon was one of the most interesting figures in world history, though his genius lay perhaps more in the intellectual and creative sphere than in the realm of statesmanship. He retained the respect of his subjects but did not augment it, perhaps because he was not fond of war. No one could have hoped to surpass David, and Solomon's reign heralded the eventual downfall of the empire built by his father. Nevertheless, Bathsheba and the palace intrigues did give mankind the Wise King, the king of the Proverbs and the author of the Song of Solomon. Oriental tradition saw in Solomon the ideal picture of a wise and powerful ruler whose very name, Shelemoh, meant "man of peace" in Hebrew. King Solomon extended his frontier defenses, maintained farranging diplomatic relations, tried to guarantee the continued existence of his empire
by shrewd
princess
harem included many foreign women, who was probably the daughter of one of the Pharaohs of the 21st Dynasty. All this entailed heavy expenditure which could not be met from the scanty natural resources of his own dominions. That was the sole reason why such an uncanny judge of human nature, such a connoisseur of human weakness, such a seeker after wisdom, should have gone to such lengths in his quest for wealth. His bold and profitable business ventures did, in fact, amass him incalculable riches.
splendor. His
pomp and
The
Kings:
way
of of
life is
described in
which
tells
how
the
Queen
Sheba journeyed to
28o
wisdom and
spices. In
of
whom
vast treasures
and
his
gold?
Two
ix-x
passages in the
II
light
on
this. I
Kings:
and
used
Phoenician
sailors
Red
trip
The round
he maintained friendly relations as his father David had done before him. The only difference between the two accounts is that in I Kings Hiram only supplied Solomon with sailors whereas in II Chronicles he dispatched the whole
fleet
by Hiram,
whom
on
its
voyage to Ophir.
The expedition's point of departure is clearly stated in the Bible. The voyage began "in Ezion-geber, which is beside Elath, on the shore of the Red Sea, in the land of Edom." Ezion-geber was a
seaport at the erstwhile northern end of the Gulf of Aqaba,
now
sea.
Are
We
to that question a
ARABIA
School of Oriental Research
281
Between the months of March and May, 1938, the American at Jerusalem began to excavate Tell el-Kheleifeh. The reports of this undertaking which the leader of the party, Nelson Glueck, was soon able to publish exceeded everyone's wildest imaginings. The Americans proved virtually beyond question that they had discovered the Ezion-geber of the Bible. The ruins of a whole town were brought to light from beneath the desert sand. King Solomon's harbor had been found. The shore had always been flat and sandy, but the small barks of 3,000 years ago required such a coastline because they were drawn up onto the beach. The Americans made a further discovery: a whole system of smelting furnaces. Occupying the most important quarter of the town, the skillfully constructed smelting
works revealed how high a standard Solomon's architects and technicians had attained. Taking advantage of the winds that blow incessantly from the direction of the gulf, the builders had erected their furnaces so that the air passed through vents and fanned the flames to produce great heat. In the course of time, structural alterations were carried out. The air channels were sealed and hand bellows installed in their place. Copper fumes and intense heat had turned the furnace walls green, and the stone had become so hard that even after thirty centuries and the effects of excavation many of the walls still stood intact. The furnaces were fed with charcoal obtained from the palm forests in the neighborhood. Three years of digging made it increasingly clear to the Americans that only slaves could have worked in this fiery hell. The smoke and dangerous vapors combined with the local climate would have
precluded anyone's spending a substantial length of time in the
vicinity of the furnaces
flies
voluntarily.
Slaves
like
As an illustration of the local conditions, Nelson Glueck reported that by the end of the third year the members of his party
there.
had reached the limit of their physical endurance. On one occasion such severe sandstorms raged over Tell el-Kheleifeh that for ten solid days visibility never exceeded thirty yards. The rooms on the northern side of the site, which had taken three years to clear, were once more choked with sand. Officers of the guard and merchants presumably lived some distance from the furnaces and smelting works, while the slaves
282
who had
inside
stoutly built brick wall between three and four feet thick,
where
they were kept under surveillance by relays of guards and soldiers. Because of the risk of an insurrection in the heart of the inferno and also because of possible outside attack, Ezion-geber had been trans-
formed into
This function
a far less
a strong
fortress
the land and sea routes between Arabia, Sinai and Greater Palestine.
is
fulfilled
important place.
and processed, and that it was a thriving center of metalwork. Ships, too, were built at Ezion-geber and dispatched to
to be smelted
all
parts of the
known
Egypt, Judah and Arabia. The town's most active period was the tenth century b.c, which included the reign of Solomon (965-926).
Having worked
as far as
for years
on
with
Glueck
he knew, there was only one man with the energy, wealth and farsightedness to plan and carry out the construction of an industrial center like Ezion-geber, which in its' first and greatest period was a highly complex and specialized installation. That man was King Solomon. He alone of his contemporaries would have had the ability, vision and drive to build such an important industrial town and seaport so far from Jerusalem. At Ezion-geber, Solomon was able to smelt, refine and process the ore which he obtained from his large copper and iron mines in the Arabah Valley. He exported finished products by sea and land and bartered them for the spices, ivory, precious woods and gold of Arabia and Africa. As Glueck pointed out, the wise ruler of Israel was a copper baron, a shipping magnate, a merchant prince and a great architect all in one. Yet he was at once the bane and blessing of his country, for with the growth of his might and wealth he developed an autocratic attitude and ruthlessly rode roughshod over his people's democratic traditions. Solomon's great network of enterprises stretched from the Phoenician ports of Spain to Arabia, Syria and the east coast of Africa, but the town of Ezion-geber was one of the greatest of all
his
achievements.
We
know
ARABIA
283
The
many
been devoted to the subject. The legendary region or city has been sought and found in the imagination on all five continents. Augustus Keane suggested in The Gold of Ophir, a book published in London in 1901, that Ophir was situated in the Arabian district of Dofar. R. F. Burton assumed that Ophir was identical with the Land of Midian on the Gulf of Aqaba, though if it was so close at hand one wonders why there should have been any need for a fleet. In 1 844 Christian Lassen wrote in Germany that Ophir was to be found in the Indus area because a tribe called the Abhira lived there. Ophir has also been identified with Africa, but this must be
literature has
a fallacy
generations, and a
huge
because Africa
first
got
R.
its
name
in
Roman
times
from the
"gold of
Afri, a
North African
in
tribe.
II
Mewes
found
first
Peru because
Parvaim."
The Jewish
century a.d. that Ophir lay somewhere in India, while Alexander von Humboldt regards Ophir as a general geographical term, not
a particular place or region.
Jules
Oppert, espoused a
Because the Old Testament informs us that ships came back from Ophir laden with gold, silver, ivory, apes and peacocks, people have tried to identify its location from these animate and inanimate articles of merchandise. Richard Hennig points out that the Hebrew word for apes, kophim, was borrowed from the Sanskrit kapi and that peacocks, too, could only have been of Indian origin. On the other hand, the Hebrew word thukkiyim was interpreted as parrots or guinea fowl by the French scholar Quatremere and by Karl Mauch as ostriches. The Coptic name for India, Sophir, is another etymological pointer in the direction of India.
activity
east
284
the Genoese explorer. In approaching this problem we should reflect that gold is produced in only two areas in the western half of the Indian Ocean: India, and the country behind Mozambique, i.e. Southern Rhodesia. India has gold mines at Mysore, Madras and Hyderabad, but in India Solomon would have had to fight for his gold because no native prince would have surrendered it without a struggle. Besides, Richard Hennig has rightly pointed out that throughout history India has always used much more gold than she could produce herself hence her traditional nickname "the Grave of Gold." We are left with the hinterland of the Sofala Coast in southeast Africa. There in Southern Rhodesia, west of Mozambique and more than six hundred miles from the sea, lie the richest goldfields in the southern half of Africa. The theory that Ophir should be sought in south Africa was first broached by Karl Mauch and Karl Peters. There is no need to assume that the Israelites maintained mines of their own so far from home or that the Phoenicians ever penetrated into the richest gold areas. The natives would undoubtedly have transported sufficient gold from the interior to the coast if it had been worth their while. This does not, however, explain how Solomon came into possession of the gold. Professor
tained gold
Hennig believed that the Israelites obfrom the southeast regions of Africa not by trade or
from
by war
and piracy.
He
infiltration into
why
members
them on
on
their
their expeditions.
The
successfully
own. Thus,
Israelites.
in order to
carry out their projected raids, they sought help from a battleseasoned and militarily powerful race like the
This theory seems artificial. In the first place, one cannot assume that King Solomon only undertook one gold expedition to Ophir. The Bible implies that several voyages were made and that each of them lasted three years. One raid every three years? History provides scarcely any instance where a distant people was attacked on such a long-term basis, and the hypothetical raids undertaken
ARABIA
285
in collaboration
with the Phoenicians would certainly not have gone according to plan each time. Hennig's assertion that the Phoenicians were inefficient soldiers and never represented a political force is Hanflatly contradicted by the historical fact of the Punic Wars,
nibal's
and the defense of Carthage. The Semitic Carthaginians defended their metropolis with a bravery unsurpassed know that the Phoenicians were any race before or since.
heroic
feats
by
We
not only
first-rate
men, but
286
No, the collaboration between Hiram of Tyre and Solomon was founded on something other than war and piracy. The Phoenicians were experienced navigators, they possessed the best ships in the contemporary world, and they invariably knew the best routes through little-known waters, navigational secrets which they guarded jealously. Their contribution to the great enterprise was experience of the sea, ships and crews. King Solomon provided something quite different; namely, trade goods. Since the American excavations have shown us that Ezion-geber boasted what were probably the largest smelting works in the ancient world and since King Solomon had built up a thriving metalwork industry there, he had something to export. Ships set sail from Ezion-geber laden with iron and, perhaps, copper, and on reaching Ophir exchanged these much-prized commodities for gold, slaves, apes, ivory, peacocks and
other rare merchandise.
We
are indebted to
this solution in
SOUTHERN RHODESIA
IN
The
distinguish
it
QUEST OF OPHIR
Zimbabwe,
as
it
is
sometimes called to
from any
They
are not
so extensive as those north of Inyanga, nor so beautiful as those of the Insiza district, but it is mideniable that they have a massive
grandeur
all
their
distinct,
though connected,
the
''Valley
groups of buildings,
the
''Elliptical
Te?nple,"
WE NOW
come
to one of the
and the German geologist Karl Mauch have all ascribed the goldfields of Ophir to this area and assumed that the source of Solomon's gold was Mashonaland in Southern Rhodesia. The theory of a "Southern Rhodesian Ophir" has not yet been proved, but it is noteworthy that the Arab traveler Ibn Batuta, who was born at Tangier in 1304, referred to the country behind the Sofala Coast under the name Youfi. Professor Richard Hennig, a German who devoted a lifetime to the study of geography and natural science, pointed out that Youfi sounds very much like Ophir. The passage of Ibn Batuta runs: "From Youfi they bring gold dust
to Sofala."
The
ruins of
in
the year 1868. Being a hunter, Renders did not attach any great
importance to
find,
and
at
it
On
the
September
ruins
5,
187
the
German
geologist Karl
Mauch examined
came
and when,
up
that
Zimbabwe was
the original
site
of
King Solomon's Mines, Mashonaland and Matabeleland became the scene of a sort of gold rush. People began to mine gold from places which had been worked in ancient times and where relics of smelting equipment still survived. It was thought that a "Phoenician gold287
Zimbabwe
mining town" had been found in the Zimbabwe ruins, and goldhungry adventurers rifled and destroyed many of the precious old ruins and mining installations. Zimbabwe is a Bantu name, probably compounded of zimba ("houses") and mabgi ("stones"). By about the turn of the century, Zimbabwe had become well known through the work of the English traveler and archaeologist J. T. Bent, but the theory that its ruins were the remains of an ancient Phoenician colony or that they had been erected in pre-Christian times by members of an advanced Mediterranean civilization was not exactly beneficial to renewed archaeological attempts to determine their true origin and
i]
Buddhist
altar in Cave iiia at Tun-huang, excavated by Paul Pelliot, celebrated French archaeologist and authority on central Asia.
the
evolved
mouth
of
from
the
beak
the
without beast mythical touching his lips. Presentday Georgians have inherited
this
custom
from
[90]
This
solid
gold jug,
which formed part of the Hoard, Oxus so-called dates from the 5th century
B.C.
and
It
is
is
high.
the
that
great metallic
to
once extended
from
of
Persia
golden armband from the hoard bed of the river Oxus. The winged monsters betray Assyrian and Babylonian influence, but in this particular form are genuinely Persian. The beauty of this piece of jewelry and the uncommonly delicate workmanship suggest that it was once worn by a woman of the royal household.
[91]
found
in the dried-up
[92] This racing chariot drawn by a team of four horses is one of the finest pieces in the Oxus Hoard. Made of solid gold, it reproduces details of harness, wheels and even the clothing of the drivers. Vehicles like this were used
the
This bronze stag (6'/: inches high) is a typical example of the kurgan art of [93 Minusinsk, which is situated in the forest-steppe region in the upper reaches of the Yenisey. The beast is standing on a bell-shaped rattle with a ring on which cords could be hung.
1
[94] Scythian art traveled as far east as Mongolia. This piece of woven carpet, which had remained miraculously preserved, was found in the grave of a Mongol prince at Noin Ula in Mongolia and dates from the ist centurv a.d. The portrayal of the griffin attacking the elk is a fine example of later Siberian-Scythian art.
[95] This wooden coffin was dug up at Basadur, Siberia, in 1950, complete with its original occupant. The manner in which the tiger was carved into the wood, as well
as the
presence in the grave of eighteen horses and other finds, indicate that the
dead
man was
!^^^^^m
^^~^^^^''
,
[96 and 97] This vase of silver-bearing gold ore is 5.5 inches high and reposes in the Hermitage Museum at Leningrad. It was found in Kul Oba. The frieze depicts a Scythian "dentist" at work on a tooth and treatment being administered to a man with a broken leg. It is noticeable that the Scythians resembled early Russians both in physiognomy and dress.
[98I A monolith on the "acropohs" of Zimbabwe. These unhewn stone buildings were probably erected during the Middle Ages by an as yet unidentified African people, perhaps a Bantu tribe. [99] The "acropolis" was approached by a steep and narrow flight of steps running between towering crags. The unknown designers of this fortress built their citadel
soapstone bird discovered R. N. Hall on become the naJuly 27, 1903. It tional emblem of Southern Rhodesia. This supreme example of Zimbabwe art is now in Bulawayo Museum, Southern Rhodesia.
[loo]
in
the
[loi]
The
so-called "acropolis" of
is
Zimbabwe
the
was
west
SOUTHERN RHODESIA
289
precise date. The British archaeologist R. N. Hall defended the Phoenician theory with sound and detailed scientific arguments. He had personally carried out diggings in Zimbabwe and several other
Southern Rhodesia with good results. It is still hard cogency and descriptive power of the works which he published in 1902 and 1907, but when the Egyptologist David
ruined
sites in
to resist the
ruins
of
Southern Rhodesia to
new
odds with
all
Zimbabwe was purely African in origin and had been supposed hitherto. It came into being toward the close of the Middle Ages and continued to flourish until about the fifteenth century. Having examined seven sites, Maclver reported he had nowhere found any object dating from earlier than the fourteenth or fifteenth century a.d. He was equally unable to discover any non-African features in the architecture of Zimbabwe or any trace of European or Oriental style. The famous
In Maclver's opinion,
built far later than
"Elliptical Building," the "Acropolis," the
fications, cult sites
and living quarters indeed, the whole metropolis were completely African in character. Unfortunately, there are no inscriptions of any kind at Zimbabwe, whose master builders were evidently unfamiliar with the art of writing. In addition, however, to articles of African make, Maclver found works of art and utensils which had been imported from India and the Far East. In fact, it was because these articles were embedded in layers of rubble and their date of manufacture was known from other sources that Maclver was able to attribute the building of the entire city to the
medieval centuries.
If
Zimbabwe
in
it
every
belonged to a pre-Christian Mediterranean culture. In the year 1929 the British archaeologist Dr. Gertrude CatonThompson carried out further excavations at Zimbabwe and other ruined sites. She confirmed Maclver's findings and established even more precise dates for the miraculous buildings of Southern
Rhodesia.
No
rivers
to
than five hundred ruined sites lie scattered between the Zambezi and Limpopo. It is both interesting and important note that in general these buildings were not situated in the
less
290
Caton-Thompson inferred from this were not associated with the exploitation of mineral deposits. In her opinion, the massive ruins were not mining towns but relics of urban development carried out by the advanced Bantu
direct vicinity of goldfields.
that they
seems to be
strong
possibility that
Zimbabwe itself was an important distribution center on what else could the power and wealth of this
who
Abyssinia, that
had been
in existence for
already a powerful
"It
is
a land that
quote his actual words: produces gold in quantity and other marvels as
in his day.
kingdom
To
tribes
may
be regarded
as the direct
babwe. The numerous necklaces of Indian and Malayan manufacture found there enabled the fantastic buildings to be dated with
and
may
towns flourished between the eighth and tenth centuries even have done so since the beginning of the Middle
is
Ages.
The
ing
district
lies
The diggings undertaken by Hall, Randall-Maclver and CatonThompson have not yielded a very rich harvest from the quantitative aspect,
axes,
phalli, bone tubes and jugs for water or beer. The celebrated surmounted by a soapstone bird are of particular interest,
and a likeness of the bird has since become the national emblem of Southern Rhodesia.
This British archaeologist's ground plan of Zimbabwe shows {top right) an elliptical building presumed to be a temple and {top left) the acropolis hill surmounted by its citadel.
292
shrouded in mystery. Even the purpose of the is unknown, though many scholars regard is as a temple. The monoliths in this co-called Temple of Zimbabwe, which are about thirteen feet high and taper roughly to a point, were probably connected with the phallus cult which is still such
large "elliptical building"
a feature of the area.
It
is
The
of
Zimbabwe
did not
from one source but was the outcome of many varied influences. G. A. Wainwright thinks that a people from southern
originate
before
a.d.
it
megaliths of the
Zimbabwe
The
Bantu population. Since the phallus cult happens to play an important role in southern Abyssinia and the abundance of phallus finds in Southern Rhodesia indicates that the phallus cult was equally important in the Zimbabwe culture, we cannot overlook this
obvious
link.
When
the
first
Europeans made
their
way
into
the southern
in a living
found themselves
museum representing many different cultural epochs. Post-StoneAge cultures are, as we know, divided into the Bronze Age and Iron Age. The bushmen were still living in the Stone Age. The Hottentots
were already using bronze and copper but were unfamiliar with iron. The Bantu of the east coast, on the other hand, manufactured implements out of iron and had already entered the Iron Age. Indeed, iron was already known in Southern Rhodesia before the buildings of the Zimbabwe culture came into being. We are thus confronted by a unique cultural transition from stone to iron. Africa south of the Sahara was isolated from the ancient world during the fourth, third and second millennia b.c. Only this can
explain
why many tribes in the southern part of Africa never passed through a Bronze Age. In Rhodesia the Iron Age followed directly on the heels of the Stone Age without, as in North Africa and almost everywhere else in the ancient world, going through the intermediate phases of development known as the Copper and Bronze
Ages.
as
early
as
the tenth
SOUTHERN RHODESIA
century, but
it
293
by what
routes?
in so far as
also yielded
articles of bronze.
Why
Why
are
there
no
These questions
purely African
have not
stress the
when
first
now being brought to G. Mathew, for instance, has cited archaeological evidence indicating that there were very ancient pre-Islamic links between southern Arabia and the east coast of South Africa. It is not beyond the bounds of possibility that the people of Sheba landed there and penetrated into Southern Rhodesia, which transports the theory of a sea route from Tell el-Kheleifeh (formerly Ezion-geber) through the Red Sea, via the land of Sheba and down to the Sofala coast, from the realm of legend to that of reality. Roger Summers, a distinguished student of South African archaeology and culture,
Mediterranean world and South Africa are
light.
coming
to
here and there which link Africa with the fringe of the
ancient world.
definite
Research into the Zimbabwe culture has not yet produced a answer to the Ophir enigma, but everything indicates that,
crews, King Solomon's ships did, in fact,
manned by Phoenician
fleet
came back from Ophir laden know, too, from the American excavations of Ezion-geber at Tell el-Kheleifeh, that King Solomon refined iron and copper in the smelting furnaces unearthed there, commodities which possessed great value as trade goods throughout the contemporary world and
particularly in the southern half of Africa.
NIGERIA
many
leading authorities on the cidture of Yoruba and Benin have solved of the secrets of those unusual civilizations by hard vcork
and exhaustive digging. The finest pieces from Benin novo repose in the Museu?n of Ethnology, Berlin, in the British Museum, and
at
Lagos.
ON THE west
in
where
its
waist
is
pinched
African country of some forty million inhabitants. Among them are the Ibo, the Hausa, the Fulbe and the Yoruba, each numbering about four millions.
tribes
by
many
Nigeria is not known to the world for its political history or economic resources, yet its culture is far more interesting to the modern world than that of many other far more important nations. The city
prominent place
in the history
of art ever since 1897, when the British opened up the kingdom of the same name in the marshes of the Niger delta by force of arms,
and especially since the ethnologist and explorer Leo Frobenius virtually revolutionized our knowledge of the Negro civilizations in 191 1. Benin is not only a city but a region that includes the lands west of the Niger delta and around the Benin River, a country inhabited
by Negroes
of Sudanese stock
who founded
Africa.
Great Benin, a
once powerful and greatly feared kingdom and one of the most
culturally advanced districts in
West
thought that
in
The Benin
coast
was
first
explored
by
by
lost sight
Between the time of its discovery Europe almost of the Negro kingdom, and for four centuries no precise
emerged. In 1897, however, an event The British Act294
NIGERIA
ing Consul-General for the Niger Coast Protectorate,
set
J.
295
R. Phillips,
was being held in honor of the reigning king's late father. was murdered in the bush before he could enter the city. The British immediately dispatched a punitive force, and the already tottering monarchy was completely destroyed. With that, Europe gained its first glimpse of the cultural history and the bloodthirsty but far from primitive religious practices of the mysterious kingdom of Benin. The British caused a sensation by bringing back
sacrifice,
Phillips
bronzes of such
sible for
artistic
The
other African
of
among the sculptures produced by endowed with a Western sense form they appeared more intelligible and less alien than the Negro
Negro
races.
To
those
Dark Continent.
group of Sudanese stock
cities
We
who
now know
live
of
more than
100,000 in-
European colonizers arrived on the scene, and that they were not only skilled hoe-farmers and breeders of small livestock but also traders on an extensive scale. Their highly developed handicrafts, cotton weaving, dyeing, pottery, and bronzeand brass-founding techniques spread beyond the borders of their
habitants before the
own
territory.
still
exist in
the
country of the kingdom of Benin, and Benin not only owed its existence to Yoruba colonists but inherited from them rudiments of its remarkable art.
Africa was for thousands of years the principal center of the
and the Yoruba colonies of which Benin was one were founded due to the desire to establish loading points for human merchandise. Between the years i486 and 1641, it is recorded that 1,389,000 slaves were exported from Angola alone. On the average, Brazil received shipments of 10,000 slaves each year from 1580 to 1680. Between 1783 and 1793, no less than 900 trips were made from
slave trade,
296
Liverpool
pounds
more
only
exportation.
Yoruba art was Ile-Ife, rehgious capital, culand seat of the spiritual head of all the Yoruba. Ile-Ife, which lies about fifty miles from Ibadan in Nigeria, means "land of the origin" and has a present population of 50,000. The only surviving works of art of the "Ife period" are made either of stone, quartz, granite, bronze or baked clay, because wood carvings have fallen prey to the climate in the course of centuries. Yoruba sculptures found during the past twenty years occupy a unique position in the art of Africa as a whole. In 1938 and 1939 some splendid works of art were unearthed in the palace precincts of the Oni of Ife, most of them sculptures in brass. Brass varies from red to pale gold in color according to the proportion of copper employed. In this case the alloy was 20 percent zinc. So amazingly hfelike in every detail is one bronze male figure from Tada on the Niger and so subtle and expressive are the Negroid faces of the Ife finds that experts are
chief center of
tural center
The
Foreign
artists
may
reminis-
hard whether the Graeco-Christian art of late antiquity or the art of the Middle Ages played any part there. Eckart von Sydow, an outstanding student of primitive art, and especially of African sculpture, believes that Benin's works of art were in some way influenced during the Middle Ages by the traffic that passed along the long caravan routes running through the Sudan from north to south and from east to west. From the purely technical aspect, the brassworks of ancient Benin will stand comparison with the finest European examples, for the works of art in bronze and brass that came from the hands of these native artists were nothing short of masterpieces. Yet the inexplicable, incomprehensible problem of interrelationship remains. None of the numerous metal plaques or other surviving works in bronze came from the hand of a European artist. They are all completely African in style and composition, even though they
cent of the angelic communities of early Christianity, but
to say
it is
NIGERIA
far surpass
all
297
art.
This opinion
was shared by the distinguished German ethnologist Felix von Luschan and by Professor Josef Marquart of Berlin, whose comprehensive work on the Benin collections was published at Leyden in 19 3. The art as a whole is characterized by the unusual proportions
1
nomy, the partial neglect of hands and feet, the painstaking emphasis on details of jewelry, clothing and weapons and, last but not least, the
predilection for full-face portrayals.
It
is
very
difficult to
its
inhabitants had
no form
all
all
to
by
whose
some of which depict Europeans and weapons belong to the years between 1530
attempts at interpretation.
figures are hollow.
They
fragile
The
natives have
purpose, but at one time they were affixed to the posts that supported
the roof of the royal palace, as the nail holes in
though
this
why
such
infinite pains
their manufacture,
they have preserved the rich and varied life of manner that they compensate
records.
We
have been
left a description
of Benin
by
its
Dutchman who
seventeenth century.
He
swept clean by slaves. Inside the royal palace were rectangular courtyards surrounded by galleries. The king kept horses in well-appointed stables, and the warriors and nobility were devoted to him.
and slave women. One often sees the oil. This is said to be for the king's wives. The king has many wives and holds two processions
The
many
slaves
slave
women
298
on each of which occasions he parades his power and wealth and accompanied by all his wives more than six hundred in number. The noblemen also have numerous wives, some of them eighty and others ninety or more. No man of rank is so poor as to own less than ten or twelve wives. Thus, more women are to be found here than men.
a year,
finery,
According to native tradition, King Overami Eduboa, who was deposed by the British in 1897, "^^^ the twenty-second member of his line. The tenth king, whose name was Esige Osawe, prided himself on having been born a "white man." Before he died he sent
emissaries across the "great water" to the land of the whites, bearing
and an invitation to the whites to visit him in Africa, but in settled in Gwatto and carried on trade there. Apparently, they were accompanied by a man called Ahammangiwa or Mohammangiwa ( "Elephant- A4ohammed"). This A-Ioslem was a brass founder, perhaps a member of the Hausa tribe. He traveled to Benin and brought the artists there fresh inspiration with his portrayals of Europeans and new styles of ornamentation. He stayed with the king for a long time and had "many wives but no children." The king apprenticed numerous young men to him. "We can still produce metalwork," the Benin people said later, "but we cannot make it as he made it because he and all his pupils are dead." Professor Josef Marquart of Berlin, who tried to solve the riddle of Benin's artistic origins, thought that the story of Ahammangiwa could have stemmed from an obscure recollection of the first attempts at conversion by the Portuguese, and that the "many wives" may have been nuns belonging to a mission led by Ahammangiwa himself. There is in existence a fine ivory cup made by an ivory
gifts
vain.
They
to the presence of a
West
Africa
as early as this.
The
cup, together
carved
reliefs, is
now
in the
We
any
Museum of Ethnology in Holland. do not know if the plaques and their figurative
reliefs
derived
from European brass-founding technique, but we do know that Mohammangiwa was alive during the reign of the oba (king) named Esige Osawe; that is to say, at the time when the Portuguese navigator Joao Afonso de Aveiro first discovered Benin. It is hard to ascertain whether the Yoruba art of Ife, which represented the cultural progenitor of Benin, was very much more
inspiration
NIGERIA
299
ancient than the art of Benin itself. Sculpture and foundry technique probably reached their prime at Ife between the twelfth and four-
teenth centuries.
Under
the
last
autonomous
ruler of Benin,
Oba
which was
why
the British
were surprised
bronzes nailed up in huts. After the conquest of 1897, when the king was deposed and Benin City went up in flames, talented native artists
began to ply their craft once more. Their artistic impulses and on today, although their art itself has dechned under the impact of industrialization.
abilities live
The
British scholar
Nok
culture,
which produced
Nigerian
in 1954.
and the
art of later
tribes. In
cotta head
dug up
it
dates
from modeled
mouth
and Benin. The Nok culture has not yet been dated precisely, but it probably flourished in the first century B.C. Fagg
from
Ife
points out that the sculpture's hair resembles the hair styles affected
miles
modern Kachichiri and Numana tribes who live about thirty from Nok, so the first beginnings of Benin art may well be rooted far more deeply in the past than we have hitherto supposed.
by
the
What lay behind the expressive busts of queens, the figures, heads and countless other objects? The chief impetus and source of Benin's art was the ancestor cult. That was the soil in which the bronze art of Benin thrived and the foundation on which its royal families built their religion. Altars to fathers and forefathers, groups of kings and their retinues, groups dominated by queen mothers, bronze heads, cockerels, carved elephants' tusks all these belonged to the ancestor
cult.
For
as in
all that,
many
The
relationship
between living and dead was intended to bring practical advantages. The head of the family shook rattles, pounded the floor, rang bells and called loudly upon the spirits of his ancestors, who entered the central head on the altar and gave ear to the family's prayers. During prayer, pieces of cola nut were crumbled. Taking these in his mouth,
300
the priest
rattles,
thereby giving
The main
sacrificial beast
which was dedicated to the soul of the king of Benin during his lifewas heralded by a sword ritual performed by headmen. After a cockerel, a goat and a cow had been slaughtered, food was placed before the rattles and the altar, and the proceedings were consummated by a feast in which the whole family shared. With the advent of Western civilization the old spirit of Negro
time. Sacrifice
art declined, the tribes' links
tribal traditions
fell
asunder, ancient
waned and
The missing element in these been neatly defined by William B. Fagg, says that a comparison between the traditional art of a tribe and the art produced for tourists discloses something much more important than mere external changes in form. To him, the missing element is the vital force that once provided tribal life with its basis of existence and philosophical world of ideas.
for the benefit of foreign collectors.
new who
arts
and
crafts has
That
this vital
it
breathed
life
into inanimate
bronze and gave birth to sculpture of such unique beauty and astounding naturalism was due alone to the spirit and faith of the
people of Benin.
NEW GUINEA
whose
?nagnifice?ice
is
and art, are regrettably on the verge of extinction, hi an outwardly almost imtoiiched-seeining country the natives' anciejit and traditional way of life has largely disappeared or is rapidly disintegrating. All these changes are attributable to contact with modern civilization. Confronted by the superiority manifest in it, the 77atives lost their inward and often their outward stability as well. That is why their cultures are
in particular to their religio?i
.
. .
dying.
Alfred Buhler,
Sepik, p. 23,
is
Ocean
the
It is
most recently formed portion of the globe, and its birth pangs and the concomitant appearance and disappearance, advance and withdrawal of its islands and shores are far from complete. Between Hawaii and New Zealand, New Guinea and Easter Island, thirty thousand islets project from the gleaming, glittering waters of the
South
Seas.
The
our ken.
Wave
after
on
home
there.
The
is
very
common
raw
materials,
three areas
the Maoris of
Polynesia
is
New
a
Greek word formation meaning "place of many triangle bounded by Hawaii, New Zealand and Easter Island could contain whole continents Australia four times over, the United States and Canada three times over yet the
islands."
The enormous
302
The Polynesians have preserved a remembrance of their eastward migrations from Hawaiki, the legendary land of their forefathers. Samoa and Tonga were their first main settlements, and they
reached the Society Islands about the eighth century
then populated the eastern Pacific
as far as
a.d.
From
their
Easter Island.
The
first
Polynesians sailed off into the Pacific at about the time of Christ's
birth or three or four centuries earlier.
According to the
100 and 200.
latest radio-
carbon
tests,
turies of
our
perhaps between
a.d.
Where
come from?
We do not know exactly, but we must assume that they came from Indonesia. While the Polynesian language is more closely related to Malay, it shows evidence of the influence of the Indonesian tongue. Since Sanskrit arrived in Indonesia from India circa a.d. 350 and since the Polynesian languages contain no Sanskrit, the Polynesians must have left their Indonesian home sometime before a.d. 350. However, their main migrations took place in the eleventh,
twelfth and thirteenth centuries
a.d..
New
about 1350. These voyages across the world's largest sheet of water in frail outriggers and catamarans with triangular woven sails were among history's
the Society and
islands
by migrants from
Cook
is
Bold hypotheses and venturesome theories exercising the fascinamodern humanity that they do, people have been asserting for decades that the Polynesians came from South America. This pet fable has not yet gained favor with most scientists, however,
tion over
from
Asia.
An
eastern origin,
on the
his
South
Seas,
view.
NEW GUINEA
most of them minute, and
170,000.
is
305
inhabited
by
a total population of
composed mainly of calcareous coral and the great majority are atolls. Only 97,000 Micronesians still live in the Alarianas, the Palau Islands, the Carolines, the Marshall Group, Nauru and the Gilbert Islands. These Alicronesians with their peculiar Old Mongol admixture are doomed, like so many primitive peoples, to become extinct without ever having been adequately studied. We have only to remember the Tasmanians, the Fuegian
islands are
The
The name
Melanesia
is
compounded of
the
belongs to Australia and used in very ancient times, before the inter-
sea, to
New
Solomon
Caledonia.
Anyone familiar with the islands of the Pacific and their inhabitants knows that the Polynesians are distinguished by their tall and sturdy build, their pale brown complexion and the long, smooth black hair which they share with their Japanese cousins and the Chinese. The
Polynesians do not have naturally curly hair, and this immediately
sets
them apart from the crinkly-headed Melanesians. The Microand dark-skinned people,
as
many
Melanesians, some of
whom
are
The Solomon
is
why
it is
New
what
tall,
cultural
in the world.
New
fascinating place, and the district around the river Sepik has
are probably the finest riddle of
Guinea is a produced
The
are
New
population.
There
are
pygmoid
people, there
and
who
304
ing tribes of the interior. The people are largely Negroid, darkskinned and curly-headed, but there are also some tribes in New Guinea who appear to be related to the Mongoloid races. Linguisti-
belong to the Papuan group. These dark-skinned but heterogeneous tribes speak an extraordinary number of languages. The central mountain range forming the island's backbone is about 1,250 miles long and includes peaks of up to 16,000 feet, some of which carry glaciers despite their proximity to the equator. The whole island is segmented by a maze of mountain ranges and isolated mountainous features, which is why its inhabitants, separated as they are by huge forests, rivers and
escarpments, have retained their confusion of languages.
It is
the
same with their culture. When white men first landed on New Guinea the natives had no metal of any kind. This situation persists
NEW GUINEA
in
305
many
some of the
inhabitants of
New
Age. Culturally, on the other hand, they are amazingly advanced, as we at once realize if only we succeed in divesting ourselves of the standards accepted in Europe and the West. This is, of course, exin fact, living in the Stone
Guinea are
ceedingly
difficult.
We
Yet
of morality that
we
the ne plus
Guinea and other Melanesian islands it was the focal point of magical rites, possessed the most exalted spiritual significance, and was, viewed in terms of the Melanesian world, a symptom of advanced culture.
ultra of savagery.
New
The
moun-
volume is infinitely greater because of the torrential tropical downpours that feed it. The gateway to the island's interior, it weaves its serpentine way through the northern plains to the sea in a series of wide curves and
tain chain. It
about
as
long
as
its
intricate convolutions.
When
the
German astronomer
his
Carl Schrader
him with
He was
Hamburg South
Even
at the artistic
sense of the "savages" of the Sepik. Their superb clay vessels, beauti-
and magnificent domestic architecture all aroused great New Guinea was and still is an explorer's nightmare. This is due to the very nature of the country, to its swamps and tropical rain forests, to its warm and humid climate, to the difficulty of obtaining food supplies in the interior, to the natives' determination to persevere in their own way of life rather than adopt that of the West (a resistance which has been slow to yield), and to a thousand other obstacles which have for decades worn down the morale, endurance and physique of so many scientists and their companions. To see the splendid utensils and cult objects of the Sepik culture
ful carvings
admiration. But
in a museum is to recognize the strength of the spiritual impetus that engendered them. This spiritual force stemmed from the idea that the world of the
3o6
exercises a
more
decisive influence
existence.
Like almost
New
Guinea are unable to account for occurrences such as natural disasters, sickness, death or bad harvests in scientific terms. Instead, they
seek the cause of these events in the supernatural, thus securing a
means of intervening
in nature, of
warding
off mischief
and
disaster
To
the
New
is
animate.
There
no
thing,
no
living creature,
which
is
not instinct
with soul or
that animals,
vital force.
This belief
word for "soul," implies human beings, plants and lifeless objects are all inwith a power that must be contacted and utilized, never
It is a
offended or provoked.
it
senses
natural
phenomena.
human
beingrs.
"When
man
dies, this
awe but
is
filled
all
that
man owns
or makes owes
its
all
creator's
In order to gain the favor of the dead, the living must provide their
souls
dead
man
of
course, his
is
own
exhumed
Nowhere
in the entire
is
this
skillfully
One more
were the
cult
and human hair most important events in the ceremonies which he attended and
NEW GUINEA
the battles he fought, the face
is
307
it
painted exactly as
is
was on those
complete.
Ancestral skulls are arranged on finely carved and decorated boards and placed in the large "spirit houses" where tribesmen meet
to conduct memorial ceremonies for their ancestors. If the skulls of
is
taken
by wooden
figures
is
a head.
Hence
the
New
villages, a practice
name
as well,
essential to
know
the
name
A name obtained in this way can be given endowing it with the positive spiritual strength of its original owner. That is why head-hunters try to trick their victim into revealing his name before killing him. Paul Wirz, who collected some very interesting material during
power inherent
in
it.
to a child, thereby
his
New
Guinea,
hunter.
"In the middle of the night we surrounded the settlement which we had reconnoitered the previous day and challenged the sleeping inhabitants to fight. Five of them fell into our hands. I killed this one," said the man, proffering an armbone with flesh still adhering to it. "Rawi was his name. He was still a young man. My brother Monai held him fast while I asked what his name was. He screamed as though spitted, but it did him no good. I cut off his head with my bamboo knife. The man poked his tongue out like this," continued the narrator with a dreadful grimace, and then hurried off to his hut. After a while
its
long, plaited
my
feet.
no name
yet, as long as
"You can have it for your child, if it has you give me two axes, ten knives and ten packets
at
Take note of his name," he screeched That was what the man was called."
of tobacco.
human being
are de-
term
3o8
among
Solomon
Islanders,
but
it is
power inherent in animals, human beings and material objects can be exploited by certain behavior. The more important a man is, the more vital force or mana he contains. In the view of many tribes in the Melanesian area, mana can be obtained by eating human flesh. And since the flesh of a chieftain possesses more spiritual energy than that of a common mortal, people
the Pacific area that the magical
scarcely ever
the contrary,
On
at its strongest
is of a peculiarly high standard. In Polynesia, as in Melanesia, both men and women were numbered among its victims, and in the former area the victims might include members of a man's own tribe and family. The chieftain was the first and sometimes the only person to partake of human flesh. Prisoners were occasionally fattened before being devoured.
culture
ceremonyany one of these things could occasion the eating of human flesh. Tischner says that the old Viti Islanders of the Fiji group were reputed to be the most inveterate cannibals in the South Seas. While some of their chiefs abhorred the practice, many prominent headmen disposed of a large number of victims in their time. The hero Ra Unreundre, for instance, was supposed to have devoured nine hundred men, and in Viti there were even special forks and plates for use at cannibalistic
ing of a boat, the termination of a war, an initiation
repasts.
at
Berlin
natives'
way
of
life
should be based on
it.
how
own
conception of
New
badly off for meat, he pointed out, and has no large mammals apart from pigs and dogs. "Imagine, therefore, that someone
Guinea
who, in the eyes of the islanders, is from an animal. Seen in this light, it seems almost natural to devour one's enemy, for human beings are not vegetarians and need meat to eat. This is how cannibalism should be regarded though not, of course, condoned." Behrmann's theory that human
NEW
beings were killed in
GUINEA
309
New Guinea for lack of meat does not, however, accord with the general view. The motives underlying cannibalism seem in every case to be of a religious rather than carnivorous nature, as can be inferred from the fact that at one feast in New Guinea, cannibalism prevailed even though between four and five hundred pigs were slaughtered for the occasion. Thus we discover in the interior of New Guinea a secluded culture characterized by head-hunting and cannibalism, by the most beautiful masks in the South Seas, by colorful and skillfully composed
articles of adornment and by carvings and paintings unexcelled in any other part of the Pacific. Spirit-crocodiles, tapering masks, figureheads for the prows of dugout canoes, amazingly impressive spirit
The
island's
by
the painting
on
skulls,
One
all
reason
why
these
that
mentation serve to frame and stress them. Even the tall gable of the house becomes transformed into a face. In the assembly hall within lives the tambaran or spirit. It is his eyes that peer watchfully
roof, protecting
seems possible, even probable, that there are hnks between the
T'ao-t'ieh of the
of
Shang people of ancient China and the eye motif their T'ao-t'ieh masks were used in ancestor-worship rituals. Perhaps the T'ao-t'ieh of China evolved from some ancient skull cult (compare the skulls found at Chou-k'ou-tien near Peking), just as the eye motif of New Guinea is associated with the painting of ancestral skulls. No Western exponent of abstract art can compete with the color
The
formed
a vast
3IO
miraculous works of
art.
The
Maprik
of
Washkuk and
New
Guinea,
New
more staunchly than other primitive peoples, cultural infiltration by the West spelled the downfall of their religious centers and forced the mana. which they had transformed into reality to give way before the ruthless god known as Western technique. All art springs from religion. In New Guinea, art was never more
than a handmaiden of spiritual ideas and a purveyor of spiritual
strength. Here, even
more
we
can see
as
how
as
genuine art
how,
soon
modern
mind, the soul and spiritual energy, the people that built
doomed
to extinction.
GUATEMALA
MEN OF MAIZE
The purpose
said, is to set
Lawrence Housman
back the frontier of darkness. With so many frontiers of darkness, even in the study of vian, why choose Maya civilization? To that, I think, the answer mtist be that Maya civilization not only produced geniuses, but produced them in an atmosphere which to us seems incredible. One can never assume the obvious when dealing with the Maya, who excelled in the iinpractical but
failed in the practical.
J. E.
S.
Maya
THE
among
by
the Phoenicians.
The
Atlantic.
The
Melanesians, too,
made some
notable journeys
by
sea.
We
below the equator, sailed from west New Guinea to Ternate in the Moluccas, a distance of five hundred miles. The inhabitants of New Guinea
instance, that the natives of iVIanokwari, just
know, for
used to navigate their largest river, the Sepik, in dugouts more than
ninety feet long, but they also
made
The
and
months on
too
much
for a boat
on the
lashings,
it was deliberately swamped to ease the and the crew had to survive in the angry sea.
The
visible in
any direction
made
journeys of up to 5,000 nautical miles roughly the distance between Tahiti and Hawaii. They had a wide knowledge of reefs, shallows, currents, swells and winds, and their knowledge of astronomy was so highly developed that they could calculate how far currents had carried them off course. The Marshall Islanders were probably the
first
to
312
"clumsy, slow
The
Chatham
Islands in the
South Pacific
probably reached New Zealand on rafts. It should be noted that these Moriori only had rafts constructed of bundles of New Zealand
flax
held together
is
by
a boxlike
wooden
frame. Although
New
Zea-
only 250 miles from the Chatham group, it was quite an achievement to cover the distance in such frail craft. On the other hand, the Polynesians' catamarans or double canoes were often 90 to 120 feet long and could carry two or three hundred men. The
land
haes,
migrations undertaken
course.
by
American tribe ever migrated into the Pacific. The tribes of South America certainly possessed rafts with sails and centerboards, but these were used exclusively for coastal work. Alexander von Humboldt saw vessels of this type on the Ecuadorian coast. They were rafts constructed of balsa, the lightest wood in the world, and were equipped with primitive sails and bamboo huts. It was Adalbert von Chamisso, once a page to the Queen of Prussia
and later an author and scientist, who first theorized that the languages of the Micronesians and Polynesians were related to the Malay languages (as opposed to the American). Chamisso, who sailed around the world in the Russian brig Rurig between 1 8 1 5 and 1 8 and made a special study of the languages of Malaya and the South
1
No
twenty-two grammatical systems in the Philippines Recent comparisons between the sculptures of Tiahuanaco on the southern shores of Lake Titicaca in Bolivia and the stone figures on Easter Island will not withstand serious scientific scrutiny. There are huge monoliths in both places which resemble each other
Pacific, identified
alone.
is
about
all.
The
Polynesian dialect
An Easter Islander can communicate quite adequately with a Maori from New Zealand or a Polynesian from Mangareva, but the language and culture of the American Indians are entirely ahen to him, Hans Plischke wrote in 1957, "The origin of Polynesian
Americas.
culture
is
to
be found only
America."
GUATEMALA
313
Caucasian in type.
Ice
Age
Mongol race but were Europeofollowed at about the close of the by the Lagoa Santa race, first identified by the Danish
They were
archaeologist Lund.
Mongol migrations
b.c.
much
tribes
later,
Even
so,
the
Mongoloid
have come by way of Siberia, and may, even at that date, have been capable of traversing the Pacific. These Mongol
not
all
may
Mongol blood
perceptible
314
in so
classified in the
Mongol
race, for
America remained pure-blooded descendants Mongol in them only goes back four thousand years. Migrations by tribes from Asia occurred and continued to occur in remote periods of prehistory. As research progresses, so the date of man's first arrival in America retreats step by step into the past, so that we can now assume with some confidence that man first set foot on American soil at least 100,000 years ago, as I tried to demonstrate in my book Ma?i, God and Magic. There is evidence, albeit it is controversial and by no means widely accepted, of contact between China and Central America during the period circa 2000 b.c.-a.d. iooo. Certain symbols on bronze cult vessels of the Shang dynasty of the second millennium b.c. are reminiscent of the religious symbolism of pre-Columbian Central America. There are similar echoes in painted Peruvian pottery and cloth designs. The Viennese scholar Robert Heine-Geldern has for years been trying to unearth pre-Christian associations between China and Central America, and cites the step pyramid, the parasol as a mark of rank, the significance of the figure 4 and many other things as evidence. Nevertheless, when the Spaniards arrived in America its inhabitants were ignorant of the wheel, the plow, any form of
early inhabitants of
The
of the Old
World
and
exist, it is
assets.
in
The
America because
retorts
inhabitants
owned no
The
from Yucatan in whose iconographic resemblance is astounding. The numerous features common to the world of religious ideas on both sides of the Pacific,
the other hand, Disselhoff does mention a relief
a similar
On
Mexico and
in southern India
GUATEMALA
in the Asiatic
315
and the ancient American civilizations, can hardly be mere accident. The Mayas' Adam was "made of maize," a grain which they regarded as a gift of the gods and held in religious awe. We do not know for certain if maize and gourds originated in the Peruvian
highlands or in the Mayas' homeland, although
it is
attested in Central
America some eight hundred years before it is in Peru, but maize, beans and gourds were staple items of nourishment in Central America and were grown there by its culturally advanced peoples. During his Tamaulipas expedition, R. S. MacNeish discovered Mexican maize 4,500 years old in the La Perra Cave. Sylvanus G. Morley of the Carnegie Foundation stated that years of intimate contact with the modern Mayas had convinced him that even today 75 percent of their thoughts revolved around the subject of maize.
The
too,
English
word
is
was developed in the advanced civilizations of Central America. America has fifty species of agave, the plant from which most of
the Mexicans' national drinks are manufactured,
intoxicating pulque,
e.g.
their highly
fermented in gourds. The agave was widely used by the Mayas, who were the first people to manufacture sisal from it. The Mayas were probably also the discoverers of
which
is
cocoa.
the iMayan
it is
true,
Cocoa beans were used throughout Central America as money, and J. E. S. Thompson hit upon the interesting notion that it was
the Mayas' habit of using large quantities of beans as a
medium
of
exchange which accustomed them to thinking in huge numbers. Of all the peoples in the world, the Mayas probably evolved the most remarkable civilization, much of which seems baffling, contradictory and inexplicable, and almost all of which strikes one as alien. The Mayas produced geniuses whose names we shall never know but whose astute brains exploited intelligence, energy and
physical
exertion in
the service
of
extraordinary
projects.
Yet
obvious and essential things, things which people in every other part
of the world discovered at an early date, remained a closed book to
them.
They They
by
them.
3i6
which
enormous expenditure of
effort but
had no
bearing on daily
They could
were
incapable of weighing a
few pounds of
The Mayan area is divided into three zones. The northern zone embraces the Yucatan Peninsula, the major part of Campeche and the district of Quintana Roo. The heart of the central zone is the Peten district of Guatemala and includes adjoining areas of Mexico and British Honduras. The southern zone comprises the Guatemalan highlands and parts of El Salvador. It is strange, as is almost everything in the Mayas' vanished way of life, that it was the central zone which evolved the most advanced civilization. The lowlands are swathed in vast tropical forests containing giant trees which reach a height of over 150 feet, towering
mahogany
trees,
God
trees
(once sacred to
which
the
during the rainy season supplies the thick milky juice that forms
the basis of chewing gum.
The hundreds
of chicleros
who roam
tropical forests collecting chicle sap have very often been responsible
sites.
Today, the
lost in the
Department,
It
a small
zone that the oldest and most important Mayan Uaxactun, Copan, Palenque and Piedras Negras once flourished. Many other former towns could be listed, and
was
in the central
as Tikal,
cities
such
still
others
a forest
which
twines
ing
its
open ground and erodes the stones of former cities, hidthem forever from view. Mayan civilization and the Mayas' way of life depended principally on agriculture. When they needed land they burned down a patch of forest, harvested two or three crops and abandoned their fields as soon as they became unproductive, leaving the forest to
riot across
reclaim
it
once more.
It
is
incomprehensible that
Mayan
culture
its
zenith in an area
which
is
wood and
stone,
soil. The Mayas' sole implements were made of and their only additional aid was fire. Year after
GUATEMALA
yet
it
317
was here that they built their cities, evolved their complex and wrested their food from the reluctant soil. In his Study of History, Arnold Toynbee claims to supply an explanation of their behavior by suggesting that the conditions under which the most advanced cultures evolve must be neither too difficult nor too favorable. This explanation does not tell us much, for the highest cultures generally grew up in fertile river valleys, i.e. under extremely
religious cults
if
development,
civilization
Thompson demurs
all.
that living
it is
scarcely
conceivable that
Mayan
evolved there at
much
sugar cane and beans flourish there today, just as the main crops of
the
Mayan
The
area also yielded obsidian for stone knives and spear points, and
toward the close of the Mayan period gold was washed from the rivers. Above all, the northwest highlands of Guatemala formed the great hunting grounds where the Mayas trapped quetzals, the trogons from whose long tail feathers and red or yellow belly
feathers they
made
their
The
quetzal ultimately
became the
emblem
of Guatemala.
Despite the wealth of the Mayas' southern territories, the highland never gave birth to such remarkable cultural achievements as
the central lowlands.
On
were
far inferior in
so,
Why
this
a prejudicial effect,
we do
not a single
pillar
Mayan
culture.
as
can be regarded
depicting
priest-princes,
scenes
portraying
whole groups of
The
Mayas attempted
them, so the
by
painting
steles
3i8
normally carved in
and the
pillars
vary between
six
and
One
two
stele in
feet high.
Quirigua, dating from the year a.d. 73 i, is over thirtyOne hundred and three steles have been counted at
steles
rains
may
when Mayan
was
at its zenith,
Mayas' domain. Steles were probably dedicated at fixed intervals, and the stele cult must have enjoyed great significance in a culture which combined astronomy with religion in such a unique manner.
The Mayan
however,
peasants
is
cities
who
streets.
Mayan cities were temples with one could have lived in these stone buildings. They had no doors, no windows, no smoke vents, and they were damp and ill-lit. The only light came from narrow doorways, so the priests must have performed their rites either in semidarkness or complete gloom. Unlike those of Egypt, Mayan pyramids were not burial places but cult buildings. The traces of burial which have been found beneath the floors of many of them are probably the remains of human
At
the summit of the pyramids in
No
The very
fact that
to the
grave
had been found inside the Temple of Inscriptions at Palenque in Chiapas State, Mexico. A hidden flight of stairs led down through the floor of the temple, which stood on the upper platform of the pyramid, into the heart of the substructure. Archaeologists cleared first forty-six steps, then two horizontal air shafts which emerged into the open air, and finally a second flight of thirteen steps. These led into a tunnel whose builders had rendered it impassable with clay and stones. Alberto Ruz, an archaeologist employed by Mexico's National Institute of Anthropology and History, uncovered eight further steps during the 1952 digging season and came upon a passage whose central section had been blocked by a thick wall. Near the end of the vault Ruz found a stone kist containing sacrificial offer-
GUATEMALA
ings such as pottery, shells
319
and jade
a
pearls.
At about
the middle of
the pyramid's foundations lay another stone kist together with the
skeletons of five
woman. These
six
people were
killed so that
probably members of
another stone
walls
slab,
a prince's retinue
who had
been
Ruz found
reliefs
the underworld.
The
with
700,
superbly ornamented
weighing
five tons.
Hieroglyphs on
the sarcophagus revealed that the burial had taken place about a.d.
and inside lay the skeleton of a Mayan prince, richly adorned with jade and other jewelry. One pear-shaped pearl was almost one and a quarter inches long!
the pyramid had not yet surrendered its secret. Noguera wrote: "Perhaps the foundation on which the relief-covered slab rests will prove to be a large stone kist in which a person of superior rank lies buried." The Mexican scholar was right. For the first time, archaeologists discovered a Central American pyramid which had also served as a royal tomb. However, there is no doubt that the burial chamber was built
In 1953,
when
Professor E.
even
that
this
Mayan pyramids
remarkable discovery has done nothing to shake the theory are temples rather than tombs.
GUATEMALA
CITIES IN
was
THE JUNGLE
The Maya monuments are the Sphinxes of America. While I in Copdn I was irresistibly drawn each day to these great
which
exercise an almost hypnotic effect. Contejnplat-
sculptures,
E.
P. DiESELDORFF,
of the
Maya
Peoples, Vol.
p.
i,
Berlin, 193
THE Mayas,
by
ess
among
the broadest-
They augment
their bullet-headedness
which the inhabitants of ancient Teotihuacan also regarded as enhancing physical beauty and effected by fitting a wooden frame around the heads of young children. The Mayas' descendants in Yucatan and Guatemala resemble portrayals of the ancient Mayas
so strongly that
appearance.
in the
we can form a good idea of their ancestors' original They were generally shorter than Europeans and broader shoulders and chest. They had longer arms and smaller hands
and
Their teeth must always have been good, but they filed The modern Mayas also have good teeth. Morley mentions that 50 percent of them remain completely free of dental decay until the age of twenty, whereas in the United States
feet.
all
90 percent of
fourteen.
characteristics
race.
of this
from dark brown to black, hooked noses are the main copper-colored and far from unattractive
retain the so-called
In addition, the
Mayas
Mongol
to
patch, a dis-
common
all
Mongoloid
It is
much
all one-year-old Japanese children have a on the sacrum which completely disappears bv the time they reach ten. A similar sacral patch is found among Malays, Eskimos and most American Indians. On the average, Mayan girls marry at sixteen and young men at twenty-one. Diego de Landa (1524-1579), the celebrated church-
Ninety-nine percent of
distinct blue patch
320
[i02]
particularly fine example of Benin art, this bronze depicts a native perhaps The plaque is now in the Museum of Ethnology, Berlin.
[103] One of the famous bronze plaques of Benin. The inhabitants of Nigeria have long since forgotten what their original significance was let alone whom or what they portray. There is a possibility that they were used in religious ceremonies.
[104] This wooden figure from Cokwe in Angola shows how African artists used to modify the proportions of limbs to lend emphasis to weapons and head ornaments. In this particular case it is evident that the artist wished to stress the frontal view of
his subject.
[105] The people of Benin used to wear hunting masks while stalking game. This wood and leather mask comes from Loko,
Nigeria.
[106] The Hausa are a race of mixed Arab and Negro blood million live in northern numbering about 4 million, of which 3
'Z:
[loyl Wooden drum from Calabar, a provincial town situated on the estuary of the Cross River in southern Nigeria. It is a particularly fine example of the Benin wood-carver"s art.
,///,'
[io8] A mask from Balumbo in. Gabon. Like Nigeria, the coast of Gabon lies on the Gulf of Guinea. African artists no longer produce masks as handsome and impressive as this.
[109!
In
order to
preserve
relative's life-force
after death,
the natives of
his
New
Guinea cut
head off and coat it with a layer of clay which they model so as to re-create the dead man's facial expression. The head is then painted in the style traditionally adopted by ancestors for cult purposes of war, and the eye sockets are inlaid with cowrie shells.
city of Chichen-Itza
a
was founded
a
in the sixth
can see
step-pyramid capped by
a.d.
Here one
[ml The ruins of this once mighty temple are to be found This so-called "nunnery," dating from the tenth century a.d., from a pyramid.
at
is
Uxmal
in
Yucatan.
here photograplied
112]
This sculpture of
at the
pyramid
ar
god's feet
[113]
sacrificial
Mayan
shows
altar at
Copan. The
of
sitting
relief
group
priests,
identifiable
by
their headdress.
[114]
stele.
A handsome stele at Copan. Round altars are to be seen on each side of the Copan, the "Athens of the New World," was the center of Mayan astronomy.
[115I
The "Temple
is
the jungle
temple
of the Giant Jaguar" at Tikal, Guatemala, was discovered in the University of Pennsylvania. This one of the finest examples of Mayan architecture; the interior has to a large extent been restored.
GUATEMALA
man whose
at the age of
321
1560,
girls
is
a veritable
treasury of ancient
Mayan
used to marry
twenty but
now
Yucatan a few years after the Spanish conquest. We owe much of our information about the Mayas to the fact that he was subsequently brought to trial in Spain for having exceeded his authority in the New World and defended himself against the allegation by writing
an apologia while in prison.
Human
tion of
beings are complex creatures. Even the sketchiest descripthem must include a long list of items. The Mayas are strong
family men.
They
and retentive memory are such that one can properly describe them
as intelhgent. Several authorities
who
The Mayas
certainly
were
but their character exhibits a marked streak of fatalism, probably inherited from remote epochs when, in order to provide
human beings had their hearts torn out or were drownedmen, women and children alike in sacred pools, or, later still, were crucified. The Mayas are a thrifty but remarkably honest people. There are no thieves in a land where doors and windows are unknown. Like all American Indian tribes, they have a regrettable tendency toward
the gods with sacrifice,
drunkenness, but their womenfolk keep their houses extremely tidy, they are generous and hospitable, and murderers and beggars do not exist. One conspicuous trait is their extraordinary personal cleanliness.
Landa,
Like the Japanese, they bathe each night and morning. who is painted sometimes as a saint and sometimes
declared that the
as a
women
of
Yucatan were generally better-looking than the women of Spain. They were not white but had a yellowish-brown complexion occasioned by exposure to the sun and their habit of bathing frequently in the open air. Their breasts were bare and their bodies tattooed above the waistline with finer and more elegant designs than those of their menfolk. They perfumed and anointed themselves with red resin and wore their hair long or built it into elaborate coiffures.
322
wore three or four spiky plaits like small horns, a style which Landa found extremely charming. Women usually dressed in the manta, a sacklike garment open at each side. Landa noted with resignation that they were good-natured and proud and rightly so, "for before they became acquainted with our nation, a circumstance bewailed by their old men, they were wondrously chaste." Captain Alonso Lopez de Avila, he wrote, once captured a Mayan girl of great beauty and charm, but his blandishments were in vain. The young woman had sworn to be faithful to her husband
and preferred to die rather than
torn to pieces
yield, so the Spaniards
had her
turned
by
dogs.
Mayan
girls
They always
on men, even when they were offering them something to drink. Encountering a man on a path, they stepped aside to let him pass. Their ambition was to have many children, to which end they prayed fervently to the gods and made sacrifice. Landa described the women as sensible, courteous, very friendly to those that understood them, and extraordinarily generous. They were pious, too, and sacrificed cloth, food and drink in token of their devotion
their backs
to the gods.
The
They
life
also
it
knew
had
more firmly than many other races." was destined to another and better
once
left
the body.
Mayas reached their new home sometime between 2000 and 1000 B.C. J. E. Thompson thinks that they wrested supremacy from the indigenous inhabitants of the area and so constituted a superior caste. After about five hundred years new tribes arrived who were numerically stronger than the existing inhabitants. They probably came from Asia, bringing with them a knowledge of pottery, spinning and weaving, and probably a vague knowledge of agriculture as well, although they did not introduce any seeds from
ancestors of the the old continent.
Christ's birth,
The
The last migrants, who arrived at about the time of may have transmitted certain religious ideas from their
e.g.
Asiatic
home,
Mayan
history
is
GUATEMALA
(circa
32 j
500 b.c.-a.d.
its
reached
325), the classical period (325-800) which zenith between 625 and 800, and the period of decline
finally a period
(800-925). After that came the Mexican conquests of 975-1200 and during which Mayan culture enjoyed a brief renais-
sance.
Important inventions are attributed to the peoples of Central America. Although it is not always known precisely which American
tribe first
implemented this or that new idea, many inventions undoubtedly stem from the Mayas, as, for instance, the manufacture of rubber, rubber balls, rubber soles for sandals, impregnated rainproof capes, "Maya blue" (extracted from the mineral clay known as beidellite), indigo, a purple obtained from shellfish, a type of mechanical artillery catapult and "live wasps' nests" for use as ammunition against the enemy. The Mayas also cultivated a very large number of wild plants and were accomplished naturalists. They were excellent road builders, too, even though the Incas surpassed them in that respect. For example, one of their roads ran for over sixty miles from the town of Coba in Quintana Roo to Yaxuna, a few miles from Chichen Itza. The road, which is about thirty feet wide, was enclosed on either side by primitive stone walls and had a well-laid
it ran along a raised embankwas supported by a platform. One very interesting discovery made on the Coba-Yaxuna road was a limestone roller about fifteen feet wide and five tons in weight. The roller, which had broken into two pieces, must have required a team of fifteen men to propel it. We even know that the road was built from east to west, i.e. from Coba to Yaxuna. Mayan roads, which were mainly designed to carry processions, must have made enormous demands on a people who had no carts or beasts of burden.
They also presupposed considerable engineering skill. Mayan engineers managed to cut their way through the
destination
is
How
the
dense rain
unsolved mystery.
Mayas probably excelled all other ancient American civilizations, Aztec and Inca included. Copan in Honduras was the Mayas' main scientific center. This was where their finest astronomers worked and probably where the 200-day calendar was first introduced. It was also the place where a temple was dedicated to the planet Venus, where the dates of solar eclipses were calculated,
Architecturally, the
324
Mayan
was found,
boasted
a
series
of approximately
one thousand
World," as Copan has justly numerous pyramids, terraces, temples, altars and steles, a large open square and a court for the ball games which the Mayas regarded as a form of religious ceremony. The ball-game court at Copan, with its crenellations, stone parrots and sunbirds, was one of the handsomest in the whole Mayan
hieroglyphs.
The "Athens
of the
New
been
called,
so-called
acropolis,
area.
Chichen Itza, a sort of Mecca, first reached its prime under the Mexican rulers of the eleventh, twelfth and thirteenth centuries. The pyramid temples there "were resplendent with pillars portraying the famous feathered serpents of Central America. There, as at Piedras Negras, a finely appointed steam bath was discovered. Chichen Itza had seven ball-game courts. The natural rubber ball had to pass through one or other of the stone rings set into the walls of the court, the main difficulty being that the critical stroke could not be delivered except with the elbow, wrist or hip. The trick came off so seldom that legend has it that when it did, all the spectators had to hand over their clothes and jewelry to the winner.
To
left
evade
attempt hurriedly
by
who
ran
after
them to exact payment. Thrones were found in the great colonnades of Chichen
Itza.
These colonnades enclosed the so-called "courtyard of a thousand pillars," a huge open plaza which may have been the ancient city's market place. The large circular building known as the Observatory
or,
because of
its
is
over
fifty feet
and towers above two massive rectangular terraces. The numerous sacrificial oflFerings found in the sacred springs of Chichen Itza included jewelry, jade, incense, and the remains of about fifty victims of drowning, eight of them women. The cities of Palenque, Yaxchilan and Piedras Negras likewise represent a peak of achitecture unequaled elsewhere in ancient America. As Morley rightly says, the stucco works of Palenque are unsurpassed by any other examples in the Mayan area. The limestone reliefs there are so finely carved and so wonderfully composed that they merit comparison with the finest reliefs of ancient Egypt. The splendid terraces and pyramids, the temples, stairways,
his^h
GUATEMALA
corridors, subterranean galleries
ability,
325
and
altars,
glimpse
it
1553. Frans Blom, the Danish archaeologist, wrote in 1923 that "one's first visit to Palenque is immeasurably impressive, and when one has spent a while there
The
reliefs
renowned for
of outstanding beauty.
The
among America's
pre-Columbian works of art. At Piedras Negras the Mayas observed and celebrated the end of their hotims or i, 800-day periods with particular reverence. Each of the twenty-two hotun periods between a.d. 608 and 810 was solemnly commemorated by the erection of a monument adorned with pictures in reUef, and all twenty-two of these have survived. Mayan astronomy was not only a science but also a means of
influencing the
priests
future.
Inconceivable
as
it
may
sound,
Mayan
The
astronomers
Copan
with the
The Mayas invented and used the nought two hundred years before any nation in Europe. Instead of arranging their numbers with the smallest units on the right, they inscribed them vertically. They had calculated the
mythical beginning of their calendar to be 3 113 e.g., but their chronological system did not come into use until the fourth or third century b.c.
It is
expounded by Sylvanus G.
study of the Mayas.
he mastered
fire,
Morley,
his
his life to a
On
man
then he
finally
mastered
fire
and learned
how
it is
to
They
had,
true, domesticated
326
knew how to keep bees, but apart from the dog they possessed not a single domestic, farm or draft animal of any kind. They owned no metal implements and the principle of the wheel was unknown to them. Of the five obstacles, therefore, they had surmounted only two, whereas the Egyptians, Chaldeans,
the wild turkey and
all
five prerequisites of
draw
back into the history of mankind, to the neolithic age in which the Mayas, with their stone tools, really lived. Comparing the Mayas' many achievements with the prehistoric civilizations of the Old World, we can say without hesitation that no Stone-Age people attained such cultural heights as the ancient Mayas of Central America.
the appropriate conclusions
far
we must go
GUATEMALA
TIKAL,
Day
after
THE ENIGMA
the bared temples and
day
we work among
tuTinels,
monu-
and pits through floors and stairways, recording in notebooks and on film the often perplexing intricacies of construction, de?nolition, and rebuilding. The tens of thousands of potsherds and other objects recovered each season beco7ne laboratory objects, to be catalogued and studied. All of
ments, extending trenches,
this
work
lectively
William
THE
British expert J. E. S.
Thompson estimates that in a.d. 800 Mayan area was between two and three many extinct or slowly dying primitive
the descendants of the Mayas still survive in considerable numbers and are in no danger of dying out. Fifty years ago Karl Sapper put the Mayan-speaking population at about 1,250,000. In all, fifteen Mayan languages and dialects are still in use, and two more became defunct a relatively short time ago. These
all
is
American peoples, only the Mayas devised a form of it. Their hieroglyphs can be seen on steles, on altars, on the walls of ball-game courts, on steps, on wall facings, on posts of wood and stone, on door frames. They are scratched on stucco and jade jewelry, painted on vessels and inscribed in books. There are two types, one head-shaped and the other symbolic. Most Mayan glyphs are still undeciphered because no "Rosetta stone" has been found in the Mayan area and obviously no Mayan text exists beside a parallel translation in another language. Yet we know the Mayas' hieroglyphic script was used to record the passage of time, list the names and attributes of reigning gods and note down the findings and observations of priest-astronomers.
Of
all
327
328
The Mayas left behind whole books, the "paper" for which was provided by a species of wild fig whose fiber was steeped in rubber and coated with a layer of chalk. The Mayas' volumes were folding
books rather
like early
many
Mayan
rtiost
texts
religious fanaticism of
principally to astro-
CHICCHAN
Mayan
hieroglyphs symbolizing twenty days. It is noticeable that some days were expressed by symbols of similar shape.
GUATEMALA
nomical notes; the Codex Madrid,
priestly prophecies;
a
329
associated
with individual dates of the calendar. The books contain colored pictures of gods and mythical occurrences, series of numerals, and hieroglyphs, all executed with a very fine brush. About a third of the hieroglyphs can now be read. Everything so far deciphered relates to the calendar, the cardinal points of the
compass, astronomical events, deities and religious
all
rites.
Fortunately,
is
The study
of
Mayan glyphs
far
from
meanings.
profile,
is
The Mayan
Mayan
months are just as unusual. A figure seen in profile with its knees drawn up presumably denotes a dead body. The symbols expressing the nominal forms of gods are normally human heads. Other hieroglyphs take the form of hands, snails, birds' heads, lizards and sacrificial offerings of many kinds. It was a very considerable task
to decipher these enigmatic symbols,
it
and the
deserve the
highest praise.
They
include
Germans Paul
Schellhas,
Thomas Barthel and Giinter Zimmermann, the Americans J. T. Goodman, C. P. Bowditch and Cyrus Thomas, and in very recent years Morley and the British scholars Spinden and Thompson. Altogether they have succeeded in deciphering a third of the hieroglyphs
at
Morley's five-volume
work on
first
the in-
scriptions of Peten
a scientific
achievement of the
order.
Mayan culture? For a long time, the oldest datable object bearing Mayan hieroglyphs was the famous Passion Plate, a piece of jade measuring 21.59 by 7.62
is
What
When
deciphered,
its
date proved to be
monuments
Mayan
Morley came
all
to the
made
and
is
the largest of
the Mayas'
Another date
identified
by Morley came
to light
on
May
5,
19 16,
330
on
known
sites.)
to archaeologists as 9.
steles
is
Uaxactun, which
north of Tikal, was founded by people from that great cultural center, and must, therefore, have existed at least since the year
A.D. 328.
all
Mayan
by
archaeologists
from the
KAYAB
UAYEB
Mayan
hieroglyphs for months. The year was divided into the nineteen periods whose names are given here.
GUATEMALA
University of Pennsylvania.
It is
331
now
Mayan
As
all
largest
Mayan
city.
It also
boasted the
tallest
are over 125 feet high and the largest reaches a height of 230
Their massive proportions are emphasized by their slim lines and steeply sloping sides. Two large step pyramids of this type rise on either side of the rectangular ceremonial courtyard, their numerous terraces crowned by temples with very thick walls. These sacred shrines contain the gloomy cult chambers typical of the whole Mayan area, as well as some walled-up platforms which may have been altars used by Mayan priests. The priests performed their duties garbed in great splendor. Their jade jewelry, the quetzal feathers in their headdresses, the comings and goings through doorless entrances surmounted by superbly carved wooden lintels, the clouds of incense and the atmosphere of intense religious fervor all this must have made a
feet.
on the terraces of the pyramid itself. It should be remembered that festivals were preceded by long periods of fasting. Priests, novices and perhaps officials, too, gathered in the twilight of the narrow stone chambers to fast in preparation for the feast day. Water was brought to them by servants, and perhaps also by their wives and mothers, none of whom was permitted to enter the temple itself. They merely put down the priests' scanty rations and withdrew, leaving the inmates to watch and wait in solitude. The Mayas' religious life was compounded of endless hours and days of fasting, of sacred fires, of blood drawn from tongue and ears, of sacrifice and the burning of copal incense. They were
Mayan
the history
All material
Anyone who
stands at dusk
among
On
buildings
ascertained.
Were
they palaces?
Were
they monasteries?
Were
332
streets,
and innumerable
has already
steles.
Under
the leadership of
Edwin M.
Shook,
who
dug
and Mayapan, excavations sponsored jointly by the University of Pennsylvania and the Guatemalan Government have been revealing the Mayas' most important city in ever greater detail. In 1959 William R. Coe, one of the outstanding authorities on the Mayas, declared that Tikal was a unique manifestation of Mayan culture, a summit of achievement unequaled elsewhere in the New World. Largely cut off by the hot and steamy rain forest, Tikal constituted a vast study in human development. Some might yearn to reach Mars and discover what has evolved outside the earth, Coe wrote, but he and his colleagues preferred to remain in Tikal and discover how and why the American Indians had met the challenge of their environment, how they built their tall temples, how they managed to think in terms of five million Mayan years, how they survived for perhaps two thousand years and then fell silent, leaving behind the tangible legacy of sculptures, hieroglyphs, potsherds and building layers which are
now
1958,
When
chamber,
bore traces of red paint, the whole building was christened the Temple of the Red Stele. A fine example of early
the stele
still
classical
Mayan
at
architecture,
it
destroyed
which
priests
had apparently
gods with
sacrificial offerings,
altar.
it
How
long
we do
The
was eventually
was
and the finely chiseled, red-painted portrayals of marine sacrifices and pieces of coral and stone were destroyed. In the floor of the chambers the Americans found circular cavities filled with huge
quantities of sponges, coral, seaweed, fishbones
GUATEMALA
objects of marine origin, together with
333
some
of obsidian.
It is
Many
of the finds
of the sea should have been sacrificed at all, for sacrificial offerings of this type have been found nowhere else in the Mayan area.
Probably the most important discovery of all was made by the University of Pennsylvania archaeologists in 1959. Just over two hundred yards from the great plaza of Tikal there was found a
broken
stele
earliest datable
Mayan monu-
ment
Satterthwaite,
29, as July 6, 292. our earliest authenticated date, Mayan culture naturally goes back much farther into the past, and there we are groping in the dark.
date of this
Although
this
end.
Why
mous demands on
been abandoned.^
when and why Mayan culture met made such enorMayas' material and human resources have
is
What
Mayas have
storm had broken over their heads? tried to fathom whv they
dis-
appeared so suddenly
was long thought that the Mayas relinquished and migrated, some to Yucatan in the north and some to the Guatemalan highlands in the south, but
an abrupt
halt.
It
this
classical
period
all
three
zones flourished
the
other.
Many
Mayan
cities.
eventually proved too much of a drain on the population's energy. Their method of burning down patches of forest, cultivating the soil for a year or two and then giving up their fields and moving
to a neighboring area to begin
all
as
hookworm have
been held
re-
abandonment of the Mayan cities, but marsh fever and jungle fever, a virus disease, seem to have been bequeathed to the New World by the Spaniards and probably did not exist
sponsible for the
334
Everything would be explained if the Mayas had abandoned and if their culture had declined by easy stages. know, however, that many Mayan cities were abandoned virtually overnight. The city of Uaxactun, for instance, was abruptly depopulated before many of its buildings could be completed.
their holy places gradually
We
Copan ceased
silent in 830,
in 869.
to erect hieroglyphic
monuments
life
in a.d. 800.
At
fell
and the last steles were erected at Tikal and Seibal Uaxactun, Xultun, Xamantun and Chichen Itza flourished only until 889. Probably the last date recorded by the Mayas is on a
stele
found
at
San Lorenzo
a.d. 928.
in the vicinity of
La Muneca.
It
corre-
away
them silent and deserted, but we know that many of them showed renewed signs of life in the sixteenth century and thnt the Copan area became quite densely populated. People were
of a
bell,
leaving
still
fewer of them than eight hundred years predechned so abruptly that even war cannot be held responsible for it. Furthermore, except in Tikal, v<;ry few traces of wanton destruction have been found. Thompson thinks that the Mayan territories fell prey not to foreign domination but to something far more dangerous; namely, foreign ideas. It is possible that there were widespread insurrections by the peasants against the priestly caste. For once the religious faith of the Mayan people waned, their culture, like every culture
quistadors,
though
far
viously.
The
rain-forest civilization
its faith, was doomed to perish. Without faith the would have been reluctant to contribute their labor or make material sacrifices. Egypt and the Renaissance bear testimony that the largest and most sublime works of man were the fruit not of
that forfeits
peasants
coercion but religious faith. The priestly ruling class may have been massacred or hounded from one city to the next, leaving peasant
steles
and shamans to take its place. Building, the erection of and architecture in general came to a standstill, and the tropical forest crept into courtyards, up steps, across terraces and onto the
cliieftains
roofs of buildings.
by
GUATEMALA
would seem
occurred
at a
335
as
it
of debility.
when Mayan culture showed few if any signs The German Americanist Franz Termer has, however,
period
is
at least
worthy of
consideration.
The
is
many mysteries surrounding this mysterious people. Yet wherever we probe the civilization of the rain forest we find ourselves confronted by unanswered questions. We do not know what secrets lie hidden behind the Mayan inscriptions that have not yet been deciphered; we have little inkling of the Mayas' political system; we are ignorant of whether the rain-forest region was welded into a unified kingdom or consisted of city-states; we have only a minimum of information on the Mayas' daily life, despite the magnificent work done by Thompson, Morley, Shook and so many others; we cannot plumb the basic concepts of the Mayan religion; we know virtually nothing of the Aiayas' origins or ultimate destiny; and we can find nothing truly comparable with their
standing of the
language.
CONCLUSION
17)
It is very doubtful whether mail's artistic capabilities are actually any higher today than they were in late prehistoric times, though the nimiber of motifs, techniques, and media available to him
now
is,
William Foxwell
Albright,
From
the Stone
Age
WHAT
of
It is
all civilizations,
mean?
is
some mysterious and unfathomable way to flare up once more. Nothing in the world vanishes forever. The downfall of a civilization is not a natural phenomenon. No form of life ever dies without the
acquiescence of
All theories
a voluntarily
which
"wave"
is
down
molded bv the ideas, decisions and actions of living men, by their works and achievements both past and present. The existence of human freedom is one of the most difficult things in the world to
understand. All great civilizations have spiritually enriched one
isolated
it
the
more
it
of
CONCLUSION
the
337
it
doom
ideals.
of a civilization.
It will
abandons
its
faith
and
is
comes the "corruption" of the earth, and then a vast inundation that wipes out men and the works of their hands. Something must have happened to the faith of the antediluvian inhabitants of the world, because for some reason they abandoned their god or gods. It is no accident that natural catastrophe as a consequence of the abandonment of exalted ideals is a theme common to the traditions of many different races. The legend of the Great Flood recurs in Babylonia, Assyria and Syria, in Egypt and Greece, in Australia and China, in the South Pacific and among the tribes all over America. The story of the Flood has itself been seized upon as evidence that cultural assets are interchangeable and that ideas which originate in one place are borrowed by others and disseminated throughout the world. If the cataclysm has any basis in fact as we must infer from the frequency and precision with which details recur in
different descriptions of it the ubiquitous nature of the tradition
must be
attributable to
its
basic truth.
To
the
realization of the
fundamental truth embodied in it. when reviewing various civilizations, foreign invasion can often be equated with the overwhelming of a weaker
As we have by
seen
faith
a stronger.
So
it
was with
Jericho,
whose
Biblical walls
collapsed between 1375 and 1300 B.C., a city built 8,000 years before the birth of Christ at a time when man was ignorant of pottery, the
earliest fortress
ever to be unearthed.
The
greatest art
the supernatural
sensitive person
and its between the nararal and perhaps the ultimate realization reached by any
a marriage
who
by
art.
All that
is
by
the
strongest of
by
his far
338
the things of the spirit and thus for eternal Hfe. A. V. Kidder, an
with
justification that at
every stage in
history the
human race has sacrificed almost everything for the sake of culture. Wherever human strength has proved unequal to the task in hand it has been supplemented by faith, religion and ideals of the most exalted kind. One can feel this almost tangibly in the hallowed precincts of Nara in Japan, in the Chinese rock temples of Lung Men, Yiin Kang and Tun-huang, in the caves of Lu Lan and Qyzil,
on the
it
"spirit
its
One can
sense
reliefs at Borobudur in Java, in the sphinxes and roval tombs of Egypt and the pyramids of the Mayas. It is not mere chance that the period at which Greece attained its greatest prime, 470-400 b.c, coincided with the lifetime of Socrates, spiritual father of Western
philosophy
civilizations also provide us with instances where the motivating force behind achievements of great magnitude has been man's quest for something beyond the
less
The
What,
for example,
at
This immense subterranean vault bears witness to a faith that literally moved mountains in its endeavor to realize the highest of human ideals. Aveburv, Stonehengre and the other vast buildings of the megalithic period were also holy places. Even the riddle of the menhirs must be solved in religious terms because
Saflieni in Aialta?
Hal
The
statuettes
commissioned by the citizens of Mari, who lived on the middle reaches of the Euphrates in 3000 b.c, also served as a link with the gods, as, hands folded in prayer, they watched and waited for tokens of divine favor. The unique figurines produced by the bronze culture of Sardinia between 2,500 and 3,000 years ago were also born of religious faith and destined for the service of the gods, as were the bronze figures of the Benin culture, whose purpose was
God and ancestral spirits. Only the fervent Gandharans and the Indians of Mathura, w^ho collaborated with Flellenistic sculptors, could have bequeathed the effigy of Buddha to central Asia and the whole of the Far East.
to grace altars and serve
belief of the
CONCLUSION
The
Silk
339
Road, that gigantic cross section of all the religions of its existence in no small measure to the missionary spirit, for its endless expanse was worn by the sandals and caravans of .Manichaeans, Buddhists, Mohammedans and Christians. The bell tolls for an advanced civilization as soon as images are removed from altars and works of art find their way into museums and the drawing rooms of worthy but unbelieving citizens. Such is
Asia,
owed
all
something inexphcable about products of human handiwork in which the author of the original motivating force is no
There
is
is
why we
not
we do
know why
of China sprang into being about 4,000 years ago and immediately
its
origins
have no idea what the people of the megalithic civilizations of western Europe actually looked like; or how long
the
We
Mayas took
hieroglyphs; or
why
who were
was the
Delphic Omphalos; or
or exactly
why
caldrons of
Dodone
fell
silent;
where on the
who
how
the
of the Shang
originated; or
what the marks on the rocks of Las Palmas and Hierro in the Canary Islands mean; or who inhabited the islands before the Guanches arrived. Races die out, towns and villages lie buried, and many written traditions elude interpretation. All that remain are stones and layers of rubble, ruined buildings, myths and legends. Yet the times that produced them were not necessarily poor and devoid of culture.
Where
throws a period into sharp relief, but the study of less well-known and intelligible civilizations is of particular importance because it sheds light on obscure intermediate periods which are just as much a part of us and our past and have
information
is
plentiful
it
we
are.
340
because
a feeling that
all
and that
we
should like
down
an
unknown
quantity in our-
itself so
imperfectly to accurate
into the future.
it
Equally,
it
is
because
and
all
all
human
spirit that
they
fail
so dismally. Despite
our research and accumulated knowledge, the past has become a bloodless thing. Not to re-examine it continually is to lose sight of the glowing embers of former civilizations and thus fall like scorched moths from an ever-burning flame that escapes our comprehension.
But forebodings about the future are born of fear, and this fear from the seldom-voiced but dawning realization that purely material progress, in so far as it bears no relation to life as a whole and ceases to serve any ends but those of destruction, lies like a deathtrap in the path of all living civilizations. It is because our era
springs
senses this that there
is
so
so
much
pessimism, so
of time.
control of nature
concerned,
man
presses
forward indefatigably and without pause, yet his character, morals and intelligence show no perceptible signs of improvement. Belief in intellectual progress and the idea of spiritual evolution are merely naive offspring of the technical and scientific marvels of our age. Outward progress is counterbalanced by a lack of inward development, for the spritual life of modern man, his relationship to his fellows and the spiritual and moral qualities of the individual are all in a process of retrogression. Our age is epitomized not by atomic
science but
that
by the fact that religious values are losing their force, modern man is afilicted by a strange sense of guilt, and that the spiritual basis essential to works of art simply does not exist.
Gone
of hospitality practiced
by
all
CONCLUSION
341
and by the advanced civilizations of the past; silent are the voices that once saluted the passing stranger; forgotten is the obligation to help those in need, shelter travelers and show magnanimity to the
vanquished.
The
and
a belief in resurrection
recall.
judgment according to material and fleshly standards as a thing of the past, and thought that henceforth the victory of man's spiritual side was assured. Addressed to the Corinthians from Macedonia, the most personal of all his letters included the words: "Behold, all things are become new."
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Hamburg
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SOURCES OF ILLUSTRATIONS
SOURCES OF ILLUSTRATIONS
2
3
Male head from Jericho. Photo: Garstang Skull sculpture from Jericho. Photo: Kathleen Kenyon
Building in Jericho. Photo: Kathleen
4
5
Human
The
skulls, Jericho.
Photo: British
Kenyon Museum
Kenyon
Musee du Louvre
Copper
statuette, Ugarit.
The harbor
10
9 Bronze statuette of the god Baal, Ugarit. Photo: Musee du Louvre Clay tablet from the central archives of Ugarit. Photo: Service des Antiquites, Paris
11 12 13
Clay
vessels, Ugarit.
14
15
16
17
18
Fragment from an ivory plaque. Photo: Service des Antiquites, Paris Phoenician man, terra-cotta figurine from Byblos. Photo: Maurice Dunand Neck of a Phoenician vase, Byblos. Photo: Maurice Dunand Punic gravestone. Photo: Rauchwetter Statue of a Carthaginian noblewoman. Photo: Rauchwetter Ceramic head from Carthage. Photo: Rauchwetter Three heads sculptured in glass, Carthage. Photo: Rauchwetter
19
20
21
The Hypogeum, Malta. Photo: Luigi Ugolini The "Sleeping Woman of Malta." Photo: Luigi
Terra-cotta head, Malta. Photo: Luigi Ugolini
Ugolini
22 Excavations at
Hal Tarxien. Photo: Luigi Ugolini temple at Hal Tarxien. Sketch: Luigi Ugolini
Remains of megalithic graves in Portugal. Photo: Archives "Tholos da Fariosa," Portugal. Photo: Archives 26 Stonehenge. Photo: Camera Press, London
24
25 27 Passage grave,
28
Mission Archeologique de
29
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
Mari Clay bathtubs, Mari. Photo: Mission Archeologique de Mari The interior of a nuraghe, Sardinia. Photo: Christian Zervos A typical nuraghe, Sardinia. Photo: Enit, Roma Ruins of houses of the Barumini fortress. Photo: Enit, Roma Weeping goddess, Sardinia. Photo: Christian Zervos Bronze statuette of an archer. Photo: Christian Zervos Priestess of the nuraghe culture. Photo: Christian Zervos Nuraghe bronze sculpture. Photo: Christian Zervos Gold death mask, Aiycenae. Photo: Professor Hirmer Gold mask from Shaft Grave IV, Mycenae. Photo: Professor Hirmer Gold rhyton in the shape of a lion's head, Mycenae. Photo: Professor
Hirmer
42
Head
Hirmer
359
36o
SOURCES OF ILLUSTRATIONS
43 Spouted jug and cup, Phaistos. Photo: Professor Hirmer 44 Cretan bronze statuette of a man praying. Photo: Professor Hirmer 45 Bull vaulting, fresco at Knossos. Photo: Professor Hirmer
46 Temple grave
47 48
at
Throne room
in the palace of
stadium at Delphi. Photo: Bildarchiv Foto A4arburg 49 Temple of Apollo at Delphi. Photo: Professor Hirmer 50 Dancing girls. Caryatids, Delphi. Photo: Bildarchiv Foto Marburg 51 Figure of an Amazon on the Athenian Treasury, Delphi. Photo: Bildarchiv
The
Foto Marburg on the Siphnian Treasury, Delphi. Photo: Professor Hirmer 53 Seal from Dodona. Photo: Professor Dakaris 54 Stone mattocks from Dodona. Photo: Dr. Ivar Lissner 55 Minyan bowl from Dodona. Photo: Dr. Ivar Lissner
52 Frieze
56 Phoenician sculpture, Cadiz. Photo: Paul Swiridoff 57 Figure of a woman, Atlantic Coast. Photo: Paul Swiridoff
58
Roman
59 Sarcophagus, Cadiz. Photo: Paul Swiridoff 60 Lid of the sarcophagus. Photo: Paul Swiridoff
61
in
at Cadiz.
64 Children's drinking vessel in the shape of a cockerel, Cadiz. Photo: Paul Swiridoff
65 Jewelry, Cadiz. Photo: Paul Swiridoff
(36
"The Lady
of Elche." Photo:
Museo
del
Prado
67 68
The
69
Guanche girl. Photo: Rauchwetter Model of a Guanche building, Canaria Museum, Las Palmas
72
73
74
75
76
77
78 79 80
81
82 83
Shang Dynasty bowl Chou Dynasty wine jug Sacrificial wine cups of the Chou Dynasty Bronze stove from the Chou Dynasty Fragment of a dog-headed demon, Hadda. Photo: Musee Guimet, Paris Demon in fur coat, Hadda. Photo: Musee Guimet, Paris Head of Buddha, Borobudur. Photo: Musee Guimet, Paris Bust with flowers, Hadda. Photo: Sir Aurel Stein Mural painting of Paradise from Tun-huang. Photo: Sir Aurel Stein Scene from the life of Buddha, Tun-huang. Photo: Sir Aurel Stein Embroidery, Tun-huang. Photo: Sir Aurel Stein Bodhisattva, Miran. Photo: Sir Aurel Stein, hmermost Asia
84 Clay figure of a horse, Astana. Photo: Sir Aurel Stein, Imierinost Asia 85 Altar with sleeping Buddha, Tun-huang. Photo: Mission Pellot 86 Bodhisattva on a cave wall, Tun-huang. Photo: Mission Pellot
SOURCES OF ILLUSTRATIONS
87 Scenic setting of the
361
Tun-huang
90
91
89 Silver rhyton. Photo: British Museum Gold jug from the Oxus Hoard. Photo: British
Museum
Golden armband from the Oxus Hoard. Photo: British Museum 92 Racing chariot, Oxus Hoard. Photo: British Museum 93 Bronze stag typical of Kurgan art. Photo: from Alfred Salmony, SinoSiberian Art 94 Carpet from Noin Ula. Photo: Hermitage, Leningrad
95
Wooden
coffin
found
at Basadur.
96 Scythian vase from Kul Oba. Photo: Hermitage, Leningrad, and Ellis H. iVIinns, Scythians and Greeks
97 Relief
on the
vase. Photo:
Ellis
H. Minns,
Zimbabwe
art.
Photo: Patellani
102
Bronze
relief of the
Benin
art,
Volkerkundemuseum,
Berlin. Photo:
Paul
Swiridoff
103
104
Wooden
Bronze plaque of Benin, Volkerkundemuseum, Berlin. Photo: Paul Swiridoff figure from Cokwe, Volkerkundemuseum, Berlin. Photo: Paul
Swiridoff
105
Volkerkundemuseum,
107
Calabar,
Volkerkundemuseum,
Berlin.
Photo:
Paul
108
New
at
no Mayan
111
Deutsche Presse Agentur Miinchcn Uxmal, Yucatan. Photo: Deutsche Presse Agentur
112 Sculpture of a
113 Sacrificial
114
115
God, Copan. Photo: Deutsche Presse Agentur Miinchen altar, Copan. Photo: Deutsche Presse Agentur Miinchen Stele at Copan. Photo: Deutsche Presse Agentur Miinchen The "Temple of the Giant Jaguar" at Tikal. Photo: University of Penn-
Mayan
sylvania
INDEX
INDEX
Aaron, 44
Adbastartos, 48 Abimilki, King, of Tyre, 32
Astyages, 244
Atlantis, 11, 156-64, 165-72, 294
Attila,
153,
219-20,
233_ Aurelian,
Aeschylus, 143
Aesop, 134
Agamemnon,
102, 112
Avebury, 71-72, 74
Aveiro, Joao Alfonse de, 298 Avienus, Rufus Festus, 164,
177 Avila, Alonso
168,
Lopez
de, 322
210-11,
215,
219, 247,
249,
250, 254
Bagneux, 68
Baillv, Jean Sylvain, 159 Bantu, 292
Bar, F.
C,
160
Barnabas, 236
Barthel,
33
Thomas, 329
160
Barthoux, 220
Bartoli,
III,
250
Bathsheba, 279
185
294-300
T., 288
Arnobius, 183
Arrian, 47
365
Berytos, 45, 49
366
INDEX
Carnac, 66, 68, 75 Carthage, 25-26, 52-57, 174 Cassius, Dio, 177
Beth-shemesh, 28
Bias of Priene, 121
Caton-Thompson, Gertrude,
290 Central Asia, 222-29, 230-42 Cerda, Louis de la, 185
289,
Carl
W.,
102,
106,
108,
109, 117
Bosch-Gimpera,
P.,
180
Chaerephon, 138 Chamberlain, Houston S., 244 Chamisso, Adalbert von, 312 Chandragupta, 211
Charaxos, 134
Gordon
V.,
61^
Chilon, 121
China, 194-202
Buddha, 34, 122, 203-09, 216; image of, 217-21 Buddhism, 208-09, 213-214, 215-21,
223-24, 227, 228, 237, 239, 242
Biihler, Alfred, 301
Ch'in dynasty, 223 Chinese dynasties, 197 Chou dynasty, 197, 198, 199, 261
Cleobulus of Lindus, 121 Codrington, 307 Coe, William R., Colophon, 124
327, 332
Cadmus, King,
Caligula, Emperor, 220 Cambyses, 245 Campanella, Thomas, 159 Canaan and the Canaanites,
Cook, Captain James, 312 Copan, 323-24, 334 "Cosmic mountain," 95 Courby, F., 126, 129
Crantor, 159
Crete, 102-10, 111-19, 122
22, 23,
50
Cunningham,
250 Cyaxares, 244
Sir
Alexander,
249,
Canary
Islands, 182-93
Cyprus,
Cyrus
II,
250
INDEX
Cyrus the Persian,
Cythera, 50
137, 245
367
Esau, 22
Esther, Queen, 247 Etruscans, 109, 162, 163, 164
Euthydemus, 250 Evangelides, Professor, 144 Evans, Sir Arthur, 75, 103, 105, 106,
108, 144,
Darius
I,
161
David, King,
278-79
Exodus, the, 44
Ezekiel, 49, 164 Ezion-geber, 280, 281-82, 286, 293
Davidson,
Basil,
296
Dead
Sea,
16
Delphic oracle,
11,
Demon,
150
Devoir, Commandant, 66
Manoel
de, 175
Dhorme, 36
Dido, 53 Didorus, 56
Dieseldorff, E. P., 320
203
Augustus WoUaston,
Dodona,
143-48
Hans
Gadeiros, 161
Ebu Fathymah,
Edrisi, 185
185
Genghis Kahn,
Gigantia, 61, 63
Egypt,
22, 31
Godard, 220
368
INDEX
J.
Goodman,
T., 329
Gordon, C. H. 22 Goshen, 22 Gozo, 63 Gray, Basil, 225 Great Wall of China, 222
Greece, 102-10, 111-19, 120-25, ^^^~
32, 133-38, 139-48, 149-55
Herrmann, Albert,
160, 233
Holland, Leicester
B.,
131
106,
Homer,
42, 99,
102,
103,
iii,
126,
130, 135
Hagiar Kim,
261
174,
Hammurabi,
30,
87
Hypogeum,
Hysiae, 124
62-63
Han
dynasty, 223
26, 53
Hannibal,
Hanno, 190
Harran, 22
Hawkins, Sir John, 187 Hay ward, 236 Hazor, 28 Hedin, Sven, 240-41 Heeren, A. H., 287 Heine-Geldern, Robert, 314 Hennig, Richard, 162, 174,
284, 285, 287
296
Irkutsk, 19
Iron Age, 15
Isaac, 15, 22
Ishtar, 80-81
Israelites, 22-23, 39' 44'
Henry
III,
of Castile, 186
Hentze, Carl, 200, 201 Heracles Melkert, 48 Herodotus, 34-35, 48, 124,
5^
129, 130,
Jacob,
15,
22
Jehovah, 23
INDEX
Jerez, 172
369
Jericho, 15-24, 30
43
Jerusalem, 16
Jesus the Christ, 25, 49, 205, 208
Jordan,
15, 20, 23
Layard, Sir Austen, 239 Lebanon, 43-51 Le Coq, Albert von, 230, 235, 238,
239 Lejeune, Chantraine, 109 Le Plongeon, Augustus, 160
Jordania,
15-24
Joseph, 22
Le Rouzie, Zacharie,
Lespugue, 19 Letourneau, 79
66, 76, 79
Kamak,
31
Linear A., 105-10, in Linear B., 105-10, 112, 117, 123 Li Po, 227
Livius, Titus, 52
Kastri, 135
Kenyon, Kathleen,
Kerlescan, 68
Kermario, 68 Kern, Maximilian, 203 Kidder, A. V., 338 Kirchmaier, Georg Caspar, 159 Kirchner, Horst, 74
Kirsten, Ernst, 143
Lou Lan, 240-41 Lucan, 128 Lugo, Alfonso Fernandez de, 187 Lund, 313 Luschan, Felix von, 297
Lii Ta-lin, 196
Knossos,
112,
1
103,
1
106,
108,
109,
10,
14,
16,
117
Mackenzie, 108 MacNeish, R. S., 315 Madeira, 156 Magalhaes, Fernao de, 312 Magna Mater, 98-101
Mahamaya,
La Coste-Messeliere, Pierre
122, 126
Princess, 205
de,
20,
Malia, 103
Malta,
19, 50,
58-64
Maluquer, J., 178 Manchu Dynasty, 26 Mangu Khan, 269 Mani, 229
370
INDEX
Miiller, F.
W.
K., 240
Mycenae,
Marinates, 104
A4arquart, Josef, 297, 298 Marshall, Sir John, 210, 218
Massilia (Marseilles), 156, 164
Mycenaean Age,
111-19
Mathew, G., 293 Mauch, Karl, 283, 284, 287 Maurya dynasty, 213
Mayas, 315-19, 320-26, 327-35
McGovern, Montgomery,
261
Nelson, Admiral Horatio, 187 Neoptolemus, King, 139 Nero, Emperor, 136
Nestor, 102, 106, 112 New Guinea, 301-10
Mees, J., 174 Megaliths and monoliths, 63-64, 6575, 76-79, 292, 312
New
Zealand, 312
Megasthenes, 212-13
Niebuhr, 168
Nigeria, 294-300 Nilsson, Martin P.,
137. 124, 125,
131,
145
Menec, 68
Meriggi,
P.,
109
22, 30, 31
Mesopotamia,
Nineveh, 35 Noguera, E., 319 Nougayrol, 39 Numantia, 162, 171 Nuraghians, 90-94, 99-101
Mewes,
R., 283
V. T., 258
el
Omphalos,
Ophir,
126, 131
Miner
Beida, 32
Ming
Oppe, A.
129
Minns,
I.,
258
Mohammed,
Mongols, 225, 255, 258, 313-14 Montet, 46 Morbihan, 76, 77 Morley, Sylvanus G., 315, 320,
325. 329' 335 Morris, Robert, 145
Palenque, 324-25
Palestine, 22-23
324,
Pallas, 258
Moses,
22, 44,
46
INDEX
Parrot, Andre, 30, 80, 82, 84
Patara, 124
371
Poseidon, 168
Posidonius, 156, 159, 162-63 Ptolemaeus, Claudius, 233
59, 236,
340
Punic Wars,
Peking man, 30
Pelliot, Paul, 226, 229,
Python,
122, 126
Persepolis, 247
Persia, 243-52
Quatremere,
287
139,
140,
Etienne
Marc,
283,
Phaistos, 103
Philip of
143
Macedon,
141,
Phoenicians, 25-26, 35, 46, 47, 48, 49, 50, 60, 174, 176, 284, 285, 286
Picard, Charles, 126
Rahab, 23
156,
160,
161;
40
Rehm,
Professor, 169
114
Renders,
Adam,
287
F.,
205
Tamara Talbot,
256, 261
Plutarch,
126,
128,
130,
132,
133,
Podolyn, Johan, 173, 175 Poech, 305 Poidebard, A., 43, 47 Pokorny, Julius, 177 Polo, Marco, 237, 255, 256, 257, 269 Polynesia and the Polynesians, 30102, 311-12
Rudbek, Olf, 159 Rudenko, S. I., 259 Ruysbroeck, Wilhelm Ruz, Alberto, 318-19
159
372
INDEX
Sicily,
Samothrace, 140
Sapper, Karl, 327
Sappho,
34
Sarepta, 45 Sardi, 11
Sardinia,
Sardis,
89-94,
95-^01
Silva,
137
I,
Sargon
30 Sarmatians, 263
Satterthwaite, Linton, 333 Saul, King, 28
Solomon, King,
278-86, 293
11,
Saumur, 70 Schachermeyr, F,, 109, no, 112 Schaeffer, Claude F. A., 25, 28, 29,
32, 35 Schellhas, Paul, 329
Soper, Alexander
C, 220
Schiller,
Friedrich,
10
Schlagintweit,
Schliemann,
113, 161
241
Eduard, 329
261
Semites, 85
Sumarokov, 258
Sumerians,
30, 35, 85
96
Sertorius, 156
Sha'ar ha Golan,
201, 231
68, 76, 77
INDEX
T'ang dynasty, 241 Tank, ^6
T'ao-t'ieh,
373
mask
of,
Taramelli, 96
Tarragona, 162
Tarshish, 50, 164 Tartessus, 162, 163,
173-81
164,
Ugolini, Luigi, 62
Tarxien, 61, 62
Uz, 45
Telemachus, 112
Tell Es-Sultan, 16
Tell Hariri, 30, 80-88
Vasudeva, 214
Ventris, Michael, 109, 117
"Venus"
ViroUeaud, Charles,
36, 39, 41
112, 113
Pharaoh,
Wei
31, 42,
dynasty, 225
262, 271, 274
49
Timaeus, 52
Tiryns, 107, 114 Tischner, Herbert, 302, 308, 312 Titanus, Maes, 233
Torrecillas,
179, 180
Concepcion Blanco
Josef,
191
de,
Wu
Toynbee, Arnold, 317 Treweek, A. P., 109 Troy, 103 Tyre, 11, 25, 45, 47, 48-49
Tyrrhenis, 89, 163-64 Tu Fu, 227
Xenophon,
132
of,
224-
197
374
INDEX
Zeus, 140, 141-43, 146-48, 150, 152,
I.
Zama, ^6
Zamatorin,
61
58,
59,
Zenobia, Queen,
236
Date
Due
Due
Returned
Due
COLLEGE LIBRARY
Returned
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