by Laura Knight-Jadczyk
Following the previous post, I am going to
include here a little table that lists the dates of the various cosmic
catastrophes on Earth based on the four main sources discussed. There are other
scientists who research and write on this topic that I discuss elsewhere, but I’m
trying very hard (it’s difficult) to keep this review as condensed as possible.
Below the table is a short list of comet
sightings mostly from the Chinese records.
These sightings could, possibly, be associated with a destructive event
somewhere on the planet. This list is derived from Yeomans, Donald K. (1991). Comets: A Chronological History of
Observation, Science, Myth, and Folklore, Wiley Science Edition.
Clube & Napier |
Firestone et al |
Mike Baillie |
Claude Schaeffer |
Orbit calculations and theory, utilizes evidence from many fields |
Archaeology & supernova theory and evidence |
Tree Rings evidence, utilizes evidence from other fields |
Archaeology estimates based on evidence |
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26000 BCE |
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16000 BCE |
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14000 BCE |
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11000 BCE |
11000 BCE |
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7000 BCE |
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3000 BCE |
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|
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2354-2345 BCE |
2300 BCE |
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1650 BCE |
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1628-1623 BCE |
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1200 BCE |
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1159-1141 BCE |
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208-204 BCE |
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1 BCE-1 CE |
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536-545 CE |
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633 BC, China, A broom star comet appeared in Auriga with its tail pointing toward Shhu State. (Ho, 4)
613 BC, Autumn, China, A broom star comet entered the constellation of the Great Bear. (Ho, 5)
532 BC, Spring, China, A new star was seen in Aquarius. (Ho, 6)
525 BC, Winter, China, A bushy star comet appeared in the winter near Antares. (Ho, 7)
516 BC, China, A broom star comet appeared. (Ho, 8)
532 BC, Spring, China: A new star was seen in Aquarius. (Ho, 6)
525 BC, Winter, China: A bushy star comet appeared in the winter near Antares. (Ho, 7)
516 BC, China: A broom star comet appeared. (Ho, 8)
500 BC, China, A broom star comet was seen. (Ho, 9)
482 BC, Winter, China, A bushy star comet appeared in the east. (Ho, 10)
481 BC, Winter, China, A bushy star comet was seen. (Ho, 11)
480 BC, Greece, At the time of the Greek battle of Salamis, Pliny noted that a comet, shaped like a horn, (ceratias type), was seen. (Barrett, 1)
470 BC, China: a broom star comet was seen. (Ho, 12)
467 BC, China, Greece: A broom star comet was seen. This event is often but incorrectly, attributed to comet Halley. This is the comet that Plutarch noted appearing prior to the falling of the meteorite at Aegospotami, Greece. (Ho, 13), (Barrett, 4)
433 BC, China: a broom star comet was observed. (Ho, 14)
426 BC, Winter, Greece: a comet appeared in the north around the time of the winter solstice. (Barrett, 4)
373-372 BC, Winter, Greece. A comet was seen in the west at the time of the great earthquake and tidal wave at Achaea, Greece. From the Greek descriptions of the comet’s motion, Pingre infers that its perihelion was located in Virgo or Libra and that its perihelion distance was quite small. Pingre considers this comet to be the one the Greek Ephorus reported to have split into two pieces. The accounts given by Aristotle and Seneca suggest the comet was seen in the winter of 373-372 BC while the account of Diodorus Siculus, an historian of the second half of the first century BC, suggests the comet was seen in the following year. (Barrett, 5)
The General Environment of Greek
Philosophy
We ended the previous post with a discussion of the works of Homer and their curious affinity to the Epic of Gilgamesh. We noted that, even though there is this connection, the world of Homer does not describe the reality of the Hittite Empire nor the other Mesopotamian empires; neither does it describe the realities of the Greek City states which emerged from the Greek Dark Age. Rather, it describes a world much like that of the Eurasian Steppes.
The Greek Dark Ages are
described as the period of Greek history from the end of the Mycenaean palatial
civilization, around 1100 BCE, to the beginning of the Archaic age, around 750
BCE. It was long thought that all contact
was lost between mainland Hellenes and foreign powers, and classical scholars
saw the development of Greek civilization as an independent, isolated phenomenon. But, as we have noted
throughout the previous text, the similarities between Greek myths and
Mesopotamian myths are manifold. Important as well was the influence of
Babylonian science on the development of Greek thought, especially mathematics.
The “Pythagorean Theorem” was known by the Babylonians a thousand years before
Pythagoras, it seems.
After the widespread upheavals and
devastation at the end of the Bronze Age, some modest urban centers appear to
have survived in pockets, notably, Cilicia and Syria. The strong traditions of
the Indo-European Hittite and Southern Babylonian Empires continued to dominate
them both. The Hittite style was most notable for its monumental sculpture and
the Hittite hieroglyphic script which continued to be used at Karatepe until
almost the end of the 8th century BC; it was used for a language of
the Hittite family called Luwian.
The cities of what we now know as southern
Syria such as Sidon, Tyre and Byblos, and a group of western Semites called Phoinikes by the Greeks, emerged more
strongly during this time and expanded their sea-trade which included Cyprus
and Crete. The driving force of this activity appears to have been the search
for metals but the side effect was the spreading of the Phoenician alphabet. It
was after the collapse and disappearance of the other writing forms that the
Greeks adopted the Phoenician script and adapted it to Greek phonetics. The
earliest evidence for this dates to the first half of the 8th
century BC. Notable also is the fact that this new Greek writing system
followed the older model of the ancient linear A and B scripts of the early
Greeks (dating back to the 11th century BCE) which wrote from left to right, or even
alternated direction from line to line, called bustrophedon (as the ox plows). This is also common in late Hittite
hieroglyphics and in some Phoenician documents, while Semitic writing in
Aramaic, Arabic and Hebrew, is persistently from right to left.
The fist examples of this new Greek script
appear in Euboea, Naxos, Pithekoussai, and Athens. Certain place names reflect
this activity, such as Soloi, which means “metal ingots”, and Chalkis which
means “bronze-home” and Tarshish which means “foundry”. A verse in the Odyssey has a fellow named Mentes
traveling from the Taphos island in the Ionian Sea, to trade a cargo of iron
for bronze.[1] One naturally wonders if the development of the Iron Age was triggered
by the easy availability of iron meteorites that may have been falling
liberally prior to this time?
So, things were stirring and it is clear
that, for some, they were stirring in the direction of more and better
munitions.
It appears that Assyria was one of the few
ancient powers that stumbled along following the collapse of the Bronze Age
civilization. Oh, certainly, it was affected and was in something of a decline
for the next 250 years or so, but somehow it seems to have managed to survive
and, in comparison to surrounding areas, it maintained its monarchy and
defended its borders successfully during those terrible times. They adopted the
policy of staying small and concentrating their energies on a well-trained and
equipped military force to defend themselves against marauders.
Assyrian efforts were also put into
revitalizing the trade routes in eastern Syria, southeastern Asia Minor,
central Mesopotamia and northwestern Iran. Meanwhile, the Phrygians of northern
Anatolia began to take over the area of their fellow Indo-European Hittites, while
Urartians (Armenians), began to emerge in the Caucasus; Cimmerians, Colchians,
and Scythians thrived around the Black Sea.
In Assyria, after the death of Ashur-Dan,
Adad Nirari II ascended the throne with imperialistic ambitions. He conquered
and deported the problematic Arameans, Neo-Hittites and Hurrians to far off
places which could have included Greece
and even Italy. His successor, Tukulti-Ninurta II (891-884 BCE) continued the expansion. Same for
Ashurnasirpal II (883-859 BCE). He
pushed the boundaries of the growing empire to the Mediterranean.
Shalmaneser III (858-823 BCE) was next and he continued the empire
building process. He had to fight the Battle of Qarqar against an alliance of
12 nations including Egypt, Israel, Hamath, Phoenicia, the Arabs, Arameans, and
neo Hittites among others (obviously, people were not happy with the
Assyrians). His armies mastered regions as distant as the Caucasus, Lake Van
and the Taurus Mountains; the Hittites of Carchemish were compelled to pay
tribute, and the kingdoms of Hamath and Aram Damascus were subdued. In 831 BCE the Georgian kingdom of Tabal submitted to him. In addition to his imperial
expansions, he consolidated Assyrian control over the regions already conquered
by his predecessors, and by the end of his 27 year reign Assyria was master of
Mesopotamia, the Levant, western Iran, Israel, Jordan and much of Asia Minor.
After the death of Shalmaneser III, the
story becomes a tedious one of greed and civil wars and rebellions of subdued
people – the same story that is told of any empire at any time. Cities and
nations that had been “pacified” erupted regularly in rebellion. Multiple heirs
fought amongst themselves for power. Skipping a few rulers (including the short
reigning Queen Semiramis), Ashur-Dan III ascended the throne in 772 BCE but
turned out to be weak and ineffectual. The result was internal rebellions and,
interestingly, an outbreak of Plague and a report of a frightening Solar
Eclipse both of which are often associated in ancient reports with cosmic disasters. (See Mike Baillie's "New Light on the Black Death," 2006) Ashur-Nirari V succeeded him in 754 BCE, at which point rebellion and
revolution had become an almost permanent feature of the empire. At this point,
in 745 BCE, the Assyrian Tiglath-Pileser III, formerly a general and a
governor, seized the Assyrian throne, killed the whole royal family, and initiated
a new period of imperial expansion. T-P III reorganized the Assyrian army into
a professional fighting force, and improved the civil administration of his
empire, creating the basic template for all future ancient empires. It was at
about this time that a report first
mentions Ionians. One of the Assyrian officers wrote a dispatch saying:
“The Ionians came. They attacked … the cities … in his ships … in the middle of
the sea.”[2] (Gaps due to fragmentary nature of the text.)
Assyria reached the height of its power in
the reign of Sargon II (722-705) and the small, previously Hittite, states of
Carchemish, Zincirli and Cilicia, became provinces of Assyria. In 708 BCE, the
kings of Cyprus and Greek cities were paying homage and tribute to Sargon. The
Assyrian empire was now stretched from the Caucasus Mountains to Arabia and
from the Caspian Sea to Cyprus.
In 705 BC, Sargon, probably in his sixties,
led the Assyrian army on a campaign against King Gurdî of Tabal in central
Anatolia. The campaign was disastrous, resulting in the defeat of the Assyrian
army and the death of Sargon, whose corpse the Anatolians carried off. Sargon's
death made the defeat significantly worse because the Assyrians believed the
gods had punished him for some major past misdeed. In Mesopotamian mythology,
the afterlife fate suffered by those who died in battle and were not buried was
terrible, being doomed to wander and suffer like beggars for eternity.
Sennacherib’s (705-681 BCE) reaction to his
father's fate was to distance himself from Sargon. He immediately abandoned Sargon's great new
capital city, Dur-Sharrukin, and moved the capital to Nineveh instead. One of
Sennacherib's first actions as king was to rebuild a temple dedicated to the
god Nergal, associated with death, disaster and war, at the city of Tarbisu. Sennacherib
was superstitious and spent a great deal of time asking his diviners what kind
of sin Sargon could have committed to suffer the fate that he had. Sennacherib spent much time and effort to rid the empire of
Sargon's imagery. Sargon is never mentioned in Sennacherib's inscriptions. Sargon II's death in the battle and the
disappearance of his body inspired rebellions across the Assyrian Empire. Sennacherib suppressed a rebellion in Tarsos
in 696 BCE and, according to Berossos, the Greeks engaged in a sea battle with
the Assyrians and were defeated at this time.
Sennacherib is most famous for the role he
plays in the Hebrew Bible which describes his campaign in Judah and regions
surrounding. The Bible says that an
angel destroyed the Assyrian army but that was apparently not true since
Hezekiah submitted to Sennacherib at the end of the campaign. Sennacherib's account of what happened at
Jerusalem begins with "As for Hezekiah ... like a caged bird I shut up in
Jerusalem his royal city. I barricaded him with outposts, and exit from the
gate of his city I made taboo for him." Thus, Jerusalem was blockaded in
some capacity, though the lack of massive military activities and appropriate
equipment meant that it was probably not a full siege. According to the Biblical narrative, a senior
Assyrian official with the title Rabshakeh stood in front of the city's walls
and demanded its surrender, threatening that the Judeans would 'eat feces and
drink urine' during the siege.The account of the blockade erected around
Jerusalem is different from the sieges described in Sennacherib's annals and
the massive reliefs in Sennacherib's palace at Nineveh, which depict the
successful siege of Lachish rather than events at Jerusalem. It seems clear, however, from available
sources, that a massive Assyrian army was encamped in the vicinity of
Jerusalem. The blockade ended without
significant fighting though what stopped Sennacherib's massive army from
overwhelming the city is uncertain. The
Bible says that an entity referred to as the destroying angel, sent by Yahweh,
annihilated Sennacherib's army, killing 185,000 Assyrian soldiers in front of
Jerusalem's gates. The ancient Greek historian Herodotus describes the
operation as an Assyrian failure due to a "multitude of field-mice"
descending upon the Assyrian camp, devouring crucial material such as quivers
and bowstrings, leaving the Assyrians unarmed and causing them to flee. Some experts think that the story of the
field mice is an allusion to some kind of plague striking the Assyrian camp. The
battle is considered unlikely to have been an outright Assyrian defeat,
especially because contemporary Babylonian chronicles, otherwise eager to
mention Assyrian failures, are silent on the matter. Otherwise, the Assyrian campaign in the
Levant was largely successful. Hezekiah
paid an even heavier tribute and Sennacherib granted substantial portions of
Judah’s land to the neighboring kingdoms of Gaza, Ashdod, and Ekron.
Essarhaddon
(681-669 BCE) got tired of the Egyptians’ continual rabble rousing so he marched
across the Sinai desert and conquered Egypt, and destroyed the Kushite empire.
He completely rebuilt Babylon and, more-or-less, via threat and intimidation,
achieved a sort of peace.
His successor, Ashurbanipal (669—629 BCE),
the “most splendid king of Ninevah”, like his fathers before him, was also called
"king of the universe" and was remembered by the Greeks as
Sardanapallos. He built vast libraries and initiated a surge in the building of
temples and palaces. In a unique autobiographical statement, Ashurbanipal
specified his youthful scholarly pursuits as having included oil divination,
mathematics, and reading and writing. According to legend, Ashurbanipal was the
only Assyrian king who learned how to read and write. “I Assurbanipal within [the palace], took care
of the wisdom of Nebo, the whole of the inscribed tablets, of all the clay
tablets, the whole of their mysteries and difficulties, I solved.”.[3] He was one of the few kings who could read the cuneiform script in both
Akkadian and Sumerian, and claimed
that he even read texts from before the great flood.
During his reign, Ashurbanipal collected
cuneiform texts from all over Mesopotamia, and especially Babylonia, to place in
the library of Nineveh. There have been over 30,000 clay tablets uncovered giving
archaeologists a wealth of Mesopotamian literary, religious and administrative material.
A large selection of “omen texts” have been excavated and deciphered. Marc Van
de Mieroop points out the Enuma Anu Enlil
was a popular text among them: “It contained omens dealing with the moon, its
visibility, eclipses, and conjunction with planets and fixed stars, the sun,
its corona, spots, and eclipses, the weather, namely lightning, thunder, and
clouds, and the planets and their visibility, appearance, and stations.”[4] Other genres found during excavations included standard lists used
by scribes and scholars, word lists, bilingual vocabularies, lists of signs and
synonyms, lists of medical diagnoses, astronomic/astrological texts. The
scribal texts proved to be very helpful in deciphering cuneiform.[5] The library was, apparently, a manifestation of the value
Ashurbanipal put on the preservation of Mesopotamian literature and culture.
The very fact that Ashurbanipal engaged in
the enormous project of building his library and furnishing it with texts that
needed reading, copying, filing, and more, suggests that a call went out for
scholars and scribes who could do this work. Aramaic “scroll scribes” were
brought in to serve under the venerable “tablet scribes. Both classes enjoyed
privileges and high rank. The administration of the Assyrian empire was run on
two languages utilizing two scripts. There must have been a growing and
spreading awareness of the literature of the past as more and more scholars and
librarians were trained throughout Ashurbanipal’s long reign. There was also,
obviously, a growing awareness of the value of reading and writing in general which must have spread everywhere.
I would like to suggest that this was more likely to have been the time when Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey were written; possibly the works of Hesiod as well. I know this is later than the “experts” say, but then, the experts don’t agree. The poems are in Homeric Greek, also known as Epic Greek, a literary language which shows a mixture of features of the Ionic and Aeolic dialects from different centuries; the predominant influence is Eastern Ionic. Scholars remain divided as to whether the two works (The Iliad and The Odyssey) are the product of a single author. It is thought that the poems were composed at some point around the late eighth or early seventh century BCE. Recall that it was during the reign of Tiglath-Pileser III (745 BCE) that we first hear of the Ionians and Homer was claimed to be a “blind bard from Ionia” which is on the coast of Anatolia/Turkey and definitely not in Greece proper, and thus likely to have come under the influence of the Assyrians. Most experts today say that the Iliad and the Odyssey were not even written by the same author though they do agree that they are each unified poems, likely each composed mostly by a single author who probably relied heavily on older oral traditions. The only problem with that is the sometimes word-for-word similarity to the Epic of Gilgamesh. Thus, I think my proposal has merit: the poems were written by someone with language skills who had, at some point in time, access to the library of Ashurbanipal who reigned 669—629 BCE. This is even more likely when we consider what happened next.
Peoples in areas out of reach of this
imperial domination were growing and thriving and getting ever more hostile
toward Assyria. When Ashurbanipal died in 629 BCE, after a reign of 38 to 42
years, civil wars erupted within Assyria amongst claimants to the throne. These
civil wars drained Assyria of its wealth and manpower. Very likely many of the
most highly trained craftsmen and scholars fled the country, taking refuge
elsewhere. At the same time, the devastated lands and lower classes could no
longer supply the agricultural and tax needs of the empire. There weren’t
enough people left to farm and provide troops. Then, the Medes, the Persians,
Babylonians, Scythians and Cimmerians, all came against Assyria over a period
of the next few years and finally it was all over by about 605 BCE..
The importance of this brief run-down of
the emergence of the Assyrians as the first empire arising after the Dark Ages
is the effect it had on Greece and Rome. This effect was that of a bridge
between the ancient Hittite and Babylonian Empires and the Greek Empire that
was soon to emerge. During the time the Assyrians were stomping around and
imperializing, there were many, many individuals and groups from the various
places that were conquered by the Assyrians that became refugees to other lands
taking their skills and culture with them. Many of them went to Greece and
other areas of the Aegean, and still others may have traveled to Italy and the
coasts of the Adriatic. Some of these, after mixing and mingling with
indigenous peoples, may have become known as the Etruscans whom Herodotus
thought came from Asia Minor. Recent DNA work on cattle linkages suggest he may
have been right.
Of course, Herodotus said that they
emigrated to Italy from Lydia about 1200 BC because of the famine that was raging at the time. My thought is that they
certainly could have arrived in Italy by stages throughout that dark period. Finally,
when the Assyrian Empire descended into civil war and began to break apart, it
is altogether likely that the scribes and craftsmen, and professionals of all
kinds, fled, so there would have been an influx of these foreigners to various
places at that time, including Greece, especially, due to its location.
The Sleeper Awakens
The earliest signs of the re-emergence of
life in Greece after the death and destruction that brought on the Dark Age, is
the presence of imported trade goods that show up in the archaeological record as
early as the 10th and 9th centuries BC. The numbers of
foreign goods from eastern sources found in Greek areas increase during the 8th
and 7th centuries. Jewelry, Cilician seals, amulets, tombs
containing grave goods in Assyrian and Egyptian styles, and more, have been
found at Olympia, Samos and Delos. Metal work was also widely traded and
Phoenician metal craters have been
found in Athens, Olympia, Delpi, the Greek colonies of southern Italy, and in
Etruria, Italy. All of the great sacred sites of Delos and Delphi and Olympia,
have revealed substantial archaeological finds of oriental objects. These
artifacts could represent more than just trade; they could represent transfer
of persons and skilled workers who made such things who had fled the rampaging
Assyrians. One thing that happens again and again when empires go metastatic
and start depriving people of their rights and seeking to control every aspect
of their lives: the best and brightest leave if they can, and those who can’t
suddenly forget what they knew because they do not wish to contribute to an
ideologically hateful regime.
Religious iconography that was once purely
Greek, changed under the Orientalizing influence. Babylonian-Hittite bronze
statuettes of the warrior god waving his weapon in his right hand (remember the
plasmoid thunderbolt) were found as early as the late Mycenaean period and
after the emergence from the silence of the Dark Age, more of them were found
and copied in the 8th century.
There seems to be no doubt that the
typically “Greek” representations of Zeus and Poseidon with their
representative thunderbolts and tridents, are based on the Hittite-Babylonian
models. The representation of the thunderbolt, in particular, is dependent on
this eastern model. The Syrian naked goddesses holding their breasts aloft as
though aiming lethal weapons, however, were rather quickly dressed and made
decent by the Greek transformations. The many masks that have been found
dedicated in Greek sanctuaries, in particular at Ortheia’s in Sparta,
apparently derive from the Humbaba/Huwawa masks.
Above all, the construction of large altars
for the sacrifice of victims, and the construction of large temples as the
homes of the gods, was an oriental influence. Prior to the 8th
century, there do not seem to have been any Greek temples to provide homes for
their gods.[6]
In ancient times, craftsmen were notable
for their mobility thanks to their needed skills. There are several accounts of
one king or another sending a message to another ruler asking for teams of
architects, builders and metal-artisans to be lent and/or sent. This is
recorded in the Bible in the story of Solomon and the King of Tyre though it is
likely that the historical event belonged to a different people since Solomon
was not historical. What is interesting is that Tyre was a Phoenician city and
they do appear to have been the acknowledged extraordinary craftsmen of their
day.
Solon, according to Plutarch, encouraged
the immigration of craftsmen to Athens and offered them benefits. In some
cities, they were offered immunity from taxes. Certain loan words relating to
building made their way from the East to Greece. The Greeks apparently learned the art of
building with blocks, bricks, lime, and plaster from the eastern craftsmen who
either relocated by choice, or fled during the many Assyrian wars. This
highlights the fact that the ability to erect the monumental buildings common
to the Mycenaeans had been lost at the onset of the Dark Age.
The word solos for metal ingots can be
traced directly to the late Hittites of Cilicia and the word cheironax meaning
“lord of hands,” is apparently transliterated from Hittite which gives some
idea of the esteem with which skilled builders and artificers were regarded.[7] The characterization of builders as “sons of craftsmen” was also a
concept that came from Anatolia and Mesopotamia. Such skills were passed down
in families though non-family apprentices were also taken on who then became
“sons of” the particular craft. Usually, the techniques and skills were kept
secret and guild-type organizations formed around such individuals.
By the 8th century BCE, there was
Akkadian cuneiform writing, Phoenician, Aramaic and Greek alphabetic scripts,
all able to produce a continuum of writings from the Euphrates to Italy. We
know it existed, so what happened to it?
It seems that, as contacts with Egypt became more frequent, the change
to cheaper and lighter papyrus was made. This may have been as early as 660 BC.
Still, cuneiform tablets are found from Syria to Cyprus and Tarsos though
Aramaic and Greek script on papyrus began to be more frequently used. And this
is the reason given for the catastrophic fact that the whole of ancient Aramaic and
Phoenician literature has been lost thanks to the fact that it was written on a
cheaper material.
The recovery of Greece was percolating
along then, and communities had developed that were ruled by an elite group of
aristocrats rather than by a single god-like king as had been the case in
earlier periods. The Greek language combined with the Phoenician alphabet spread
throughout the region and the Greeks began to colonize the Mediterranean.
Who the Greeks were, and where they came
from, is an interesting question.[8] Certainly there must have been a few survivors in the areas of
Greece itself but there was also a sudden upsurge of population and material
goods that occurred c. 950 BCE, so somebody came from somewhere at that point in
time!
The so-called “Dorian Invasion of Greece”[9] was an event also known as the "Return of the Heracleidae”. In
addition to taking over the Peloponnesus, the Dorians colonized parts of Crete.
The Greek words referring to the influx of the Dorians are katienai and katerchesthai,
literally "to descend", "come down" or "go down"
or, less commonly, "be brought down." It means a descent from north to south, uplands
to lowlands, or from earth to grave, or rushing down as a flood, or sweeping
down as a wind, or those who have returned from exile by ship. This sweeping
down upon the Peloponnesus invited the English translation "invasion"
though there is no evidence for an invasion as such. It was more likely a migration. The claim to be descendants of
Hercules sounds a lot like King Shulgi claiming descent from Gilgamesh – just a
political maneuver. Obviously, the mass
destruction that ended the Bronze Age has contributed to the idea of an “invasion”. Taking into account the events that can occur
during and following a cosmic catastrophe, many things can be explained.
It is often cited as support for the "invasion theory", that the Linear B tablets
from the Mycenaean kingdom of Pylos described the dispatch of rowers and
watchers to the coast; this can be explained by the need to watch the SKY, not the
advance of human invaders.[10] The Egyptian pharaoh was
also expecting the arrival of foes that were never identified. The invasion
theory falls flat when it is considered that there was the destruction about
1200 BCE, the whole area was then nearly deserted, and then only about 950 BCE
does there begin to be noted changes: increase in population, simple pottery
decoration, introduction of iron weapons, and changed in burial practices.[11] Michael Wood[12] suggests relying on tradition, especially that of Thucydides:
[L]et us not forget the legends, at least as models for what might have happened. They tell us of constant rivalries with the royal clans of the Heroic Age – Atreus and Thyestes, Agamemnon and Aigisthes, and so on ....
That might be a good idea since, if the
story of the Trojan war was really an account of cosmic battles, and Atreus,
Thyestes, Agamenon and Aigisthes were just new names for comets, that is, names
of real individuals who lived during those times who were conflated with the
cometary activity, it would fit exactly.
And maybe, following the destruction, there was only a gradual influx of
refugees from other places, augmented now and then with a larger influx from
areas in turmoil as later happened when Assyria fell.
When considering the early Greek
philosophers, we notice the most peculiar fact that civilization, as such,
needed to be re-created, re-thought, re-organized, which bears witness to the
incredible destruction that must have brought on the Dark Age. All the ideas
and discussions that went on amongst these groups are about creating laws,
constitutions, social norms, and so on, when those things had been completely
settled and well-known hundreds of years previously. But the Greek philosophers
talk as though human society was just arising out of the slime of the
primordial ocean and the memories of what existed and prevailed before was dim
and partial, or at least, only based on the rather primitive life described in the Odyssey and Iliad.
My pop-culture imbued offspring have read
Diogenes Laërtius’ Lives of Eminent Philosophers with a great deal of amusement, often breaking out into uproarious
laughter. They have pointed out that it’s like reading Bill and
Ted’s Excellent Adventure, and they imagine
Keanu Reaves and George Carlin speaking the lines. I’ll be quoting or
paraphrasing a bit here and there from Diogenes, but not so much on the
philosophical ideas as the scientific ones, mostly assembling the facts and
data following the ideas of Bailey, Baillie, Clube and Napier. I may also include a longer section in
respect of the Stoic philosophers, who I suspect preserved some of the ancient
knowledge of the reality of cometary bombardment and periodic destruction.
[1] Odyssey 1.184.
[2] H. W. Saggs, Iraq 25 (1963) 76-78. Burkert
(1992) p. 12.
[3] Cylinder A, Column I, Lines 31-33, in Smith, George. History of
Assurbanipal, Translated from the Cuneiform Inscriptions. London: Harrison and
Sons, 1871: pg.6
[4] Van De Mieroop, Marc (2007). A History of the Ancient Near East ca.
3000-323 BC. Oxford: Blackwell Publishing. p. 263.
[5] Roaf, M. (2004). Cultural Atlas of Mesopotamia and the Ancient Near
East. p. 191.
[6] Walter Burkert (1992) The Orientalizing Revolution: Near Eastern
Influence on Greek Culture in the Early Archaic Age; Harvard University.
[7] Burkert (1992) op. cit. p. 39.
[8] Drews, Robert (1988). The Coming of the Greeks: Indo-European
Conquests in the Aegean and the Near East. Princeton University Press.
[9] Hall, J.M. (2007). A History of the Archaic Greek World ca.
1200–479 BCE. Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishing.
[10] Drews, Robert (1993). The End of the Bronze Age: Changes in Warfare
and the Catastrophe Ca. 1200 B.C. Princeton University Press.
[11] Mallory, J.P. (1991). In
Search of the Indo-Europeans: Language, Archaeology and Myth. New York: Thames
and Hudson. Blegen, Carl (1967),
"The Mycenaean Age: The Trojan War, the Dorian Invasion and Other
Problems", Lectures in Memory of Louise Taft Semple: First Series, 1961–1965,
Princeton: Princeton University Press
[12] Wood, Michael (1987). In Search of the Trojan War. New York: New American Library.
To be continued...
A short extract from a chapter in Huffman's book: Aristotle On Pythagoras:
ReplyDelete"Aristotle reconstructs the development that led the Pythagoreans from their initial interest in the mathemata to the assumption that the elements of number, odd and even, are the elements of all things. His first move is to ascribe to the Pythagoreans a close acquaintance with numbers, which he traces back to a prolonged research into the mathemata. What he has in mind here is illustrated by Alexander’s summary of Aristotle’s monograph: in this work, Aristotle seems to have shown how the oracular sounding identity-claims like “7 is Athena” or “5 is marriage” which he ascribed to early Pythagoreanism were meant to be decoded."
A feedback just received through the blogger contact form:
ReplyDelete"Thank you for sharing. Though I read the book, reading the summary again is fascinating.
Regards, R."
From my today's mailbox - questions from a Reader
ReplyDelete"What is your opinion about exorcisms?"
"What is your opinion about life after death?"
In both cases my answer was: "Not my domain of expertise." But answering the second question I also stressed the fact that the concept of "life after death" is very wide.
And another email from the same Reader:
ReplyDelete"Do you count the interactions of non-material entities ("spirits") with people and places as phenomena requiring explanation?
Materialism overlooks whole areas of reality...."
This is rather shorter piece. Thank you
ReplyDeleteRichard Brown "30 second math"is a book about equations. Gives pretty good explanation of Pythagoras theorem along with other equations. Such as the Mobius strip. Ect...
ReplyDeleteThank you. There will be some "simple math" too - but after philosophy!
Deletethanks again that is meaningful.
Delete