Friday
March 19, 2004: I
would like to draw the reader's attention back to a comment quoted in
a previous chapter:
Quite apart
from the difficulty of fitting most places described in the Iliad and
the Odyssey into the physical reality of the lands surrounding the Aegean
Sea, there is also a problem with the spiritual content of Homer's works.
Plato had doubts as to their Greek origin and the great philosopher
was by no means an admirer of this imaginative poet whose gods, with
their jealousies and vengeances, behaved like spoilt children. Plato
was particularly worried about the corrupting influence of Homer's poems
on the minds of Greek youth, above all because of their "lack of
respect" for the gods. He suggested that certain passages of the
Iliad and Odyssey should be corrected or even expurgated and if he had
been the dictator of his "ideal state," he would have had
them burned, thus breaking the chain of transmission of these unique
and extremely ancient poems. [Wilkens]
I
think that there is an additional explanation for why Plato was so antagonistic
to the tales of Homer: Plato's own story of Atlantis was the story of
the original exemplar of the Trojan War and he knew that many of the features
of the original war were being distorted by Homer and attributed to a
much later war, on a different scale, with certain elements added that
would create misunderstanding in the minds of readers.
The idea
of a ten year war - with massive losses on both sides - being fought over
a woman exercised me for quite some time especially while I was reading
Herodotus' account of Helen. His observations are so pithy and his style
of writing is so entertaining that I would like to share it with the reader:
Those of
the Persians who have knowledge of history declare that the Phenicians
first began the quarrel. These, they say, came from that which is called
the Erythraian Sea to this of ours; and having settled in the land where
they continue even now to dwell, set themselves forthwith to make long
voyages by sea.
And conveying
merchandise of Egypt and of Assyria they arrived at other places and
also at Argos.
Now Argos
was at that time in all points the first of the States within that land
which is now called Hellas.
The Phenicians
arrived then at this land of Argos, and began to dispose of their ship's
cargo: and on the fifth or sixth day after they had arrived, when their
goods had been almost all sold, there came down to the sea a great company
of women, and among them the daughter of the king; and her name, as
the Hellenes also agree, was Io the daughter of Inachos.
These standing
near to the stern of the ship were buying of the wares such as pleased
them most, when of a sudden the Phenicians, passing the word from one
to another, made a rush upon them; and the greater part of the women
escaped by flight, but Io and certain others were carried off.
So they
put them on board their ship, and forthwith departed, sailing away to
Egypt.
In this
manner the Persians report that Io came to Egypt, not agreeing therein
with the Hellenes, and this they say was the first beginning of wrongs.
Then after
this, they say, certain Hellenes (but the name of the people they are
not able to report) put in to the city of Tyre in Phenicia and carried
off the king's daughter Europa;--these would doubtless be Cretans;--and
so they were quits for the former injury.
After
this however the Hellenes, they say, were the authors of the second
wrong; for they sailed in to Asia of Colchis and to the river Phasis
with a ship of war, and from thence, after they had done the other business
for which they came, they carried off the king's daughter Medea.
And the
king of Colchis sent a herald to the land of Hellas and demanded satisfaction
for the rape and to have his daughter back.
But they
answered that, as the Barbarians had given them no satisfaction for
the rape of Io the Argive, so neither would they give satisfaction to
the Barbarians for this.
In the
next generation after this, they say, Alexander the son of Priam, having
heard of these things, desired to get a wife for himself by violence
from Hellas, being fully assured that he would not be compelled to give
any satisfaction for this wrong, inasmuch as the Hellenes gave none
for theirs.
So he carried
off Helen, and the Hellenes resolved to send messengers first and to
demand her back with satisfaction for the rape; and when they put forth
this demand, the others alleged to them the rape of Medea, saying that
the Hellenes were now desiring satisfaction to be given to them by others,
though they had given none themselves nor had surrendered the person
when demand was made.
Up to
this point, they say, nothing more happened than the carrying away of
women on both sides; but after this the Hellenes were very greatly to
blame; for they set the first example of war, making an expedition into
Asia before the Barbarians made any into Europe.
Now they
say that in their judgment, though it is an act of wrong to carry away
women by force, it is a folly to set one's heart on taking vengeance
for their rape, and the wise course is to pay no regard when they have
been carried away; for it is evident that they would never be carried
away if they were not themselves willing to go. And the Persians say
that they, namely the people of Asia, when their women were carried
away by force, had made it a matter of no account, but the Hellenes
on account of a woman of Lacedemon gathered together a great armament,
and then came to Asia and destroyed the dominion of Priam; and that
from this time forward they had always considered the Hellenic race
to be their enemy: for Asia and the Barbarian races which dwell there
the Persians claim as belonging to them; but Europe and the Hellenic
race they consider to be parted off from them.
The Persians
for their part say that things happened thus; and they conclude that
the beginning of their quarrel with the Hellenes was on account of the
taking of Ilion: but as regards Io the Phenicians do not agree with
the Persians in telling the tale thus; for they deny that they carried
her off to Egypt by violent means, and they say on the other hand that
when they were in Argos she was intimate with the master of their ship,
and perceiving that she was with child, she was ashamed to confess it
to her parents, and therefore sailed away with the Phenicians of her
own will, for fear of being found out.
These are
the tales told by the Persians and the Phenicians severally: and concerning
these things I am not going to say that they happened thus or thus,
but when I have pointed to the man who first within my own knowledge
began to commit wrong against the Hellenes, I shall go forward further
with the story, giving an account of the cities of men, small as well
as great: for those which in old times were great have for the most
part become small, while those that were in my own time great used in
former times to be small: so then, since I know that human prosperity
never continues steadfast, I shall make mention of both indifferently.
[...]
And the
priests [of Egypt] told me, when I inquired, that the things concerning
Helen happened thus:--Alexander having carried off Helen was sailing
away from Sparta to his own land, and when he had come to the Egean
Sea contrary winds drove him from his course to the Sea of Egypt; and
after that, since the blasts did not cease to blow, he came to Egypt
itself, and in Egypt to that which is now named the Canobic mouth of
the Nile and to Taricheiai.
Now there
was upon the shore, as still there is now, a temple of Heracles, in
which if any man's slave take refuge and have the sacred marks set upon
him, giving himself over to the god, it is not lawful to lay hands upon
him; and this custom has continued still unchanged from the beginning
down to my own time.
Accordingly
the attendants of Alexander, having heard of the custom which existed
about the temple, ran away from him, and sitting down as suppliants
of the god, accused Alexander, because they desired to do him hurt,
telling the whole tale how things were about Helen and about the wrong
done to Menelaos; and this accusation they made not only to the priests
but also to the warden of this river-mouth, whose name was Thonis.
Thonis
then having heard their tale sent forthwith a message to Proteus at
Memphis, which said as follows: "There hath come a stranger, a Teucrian
by race, who hath done in Hellas an unholy deed; for he hath deceived
the wife of his own host, and is come hither bringing with him this
woman herself and very much wealth, having been carried out of his way
by winds to thy land. Shall we then allow him to sail out unharmed,
or shall we first take away from him that which he brought with him?"
In reply
to this Proteus sent back a messenger who said thus: "Seize this man,
whosoever he may be, who has done impiety to his own host, and bring
him away into my presence, that I may know what he will find to say."
Hearing
this, Thonis seized Alexander and detained his ships, and after that
he brought the man himself up to Memphis and with him Helen and the
wealth he had, and also in addition to them the suppliants. So when
all had been conveyed up thither, Proteus began to ask Alexander who
he was and from whence he was voyaging; and he both recounted to him
his descent and told him the name of his native land, and moreover related
of his voyage, from whence he was sailing.
After this
Proteus asked him whence he had taken Helen; and when Alexander went
astray in his account and did not speak the truth, those who had become
suppliants convicted him of falsehood, relating in full the whole tale
of the wrong done.
At length
Proteus declared to them this sentence, saying, "Were it not that I
count it a matter of great moment not to slay any of those strangers
who being driven from their course by winds have come to my land hitherto,
I should have taken vengeance on thee on behalf of the man of Hellas,
seeing that thou, most base of men, having received from him hospitality,
didst work against him a most impious deed. For thou didst go in to
the wife of thine own host; and even this was not enough for thee, but
thou didst stir her up with desire and hast gone away with her like
a thief.
Moreover
not even this by itself was enough for thee, but thou art come hither
with plunder taken from the house of thy host. Now therefore depart,
seeing that I have counted it of great moment not to be a slayer of
strangers. This woman indeed and the wealth which thou hast I will not
allow thee to carry away, but I shall keep them safe for the Hellene
who was thy host, until he come himself and desire to carry them off
to his home; to thyself however and thy fellow-voyagers I proclaim that
ye depart from your anchoring within three days and go from my land
to some other; and if not, that ye will be dealt with as enemies."
This the
priests said was the manner of Helen's coming to Proteus; and I suppose
that Homer also had heard this story, but since it was not so suitable
to the composition of his poem as the other which he followed, he dismissed
it finally, making it clear at the same time that he was acquainted
with that story also: and according to the manner in which he described
the wanderings of Alexander in the Iliad (nor did he elsewhere retract
that which he had said) it is clear that when he brought Helen he was
carried out of his course, wandering to various lands, and that he came
among other places to Sidon in Phenicia. Of this the poet has made mention
in the "prowess of Diomede," and the verses run this:
"There
she had robes many-coloured, the works of women of Sidon, Those whom
her son himself the god-like of form Alexander Carried from Sidon, what
time the broad sea-path he sailed over Bringing back Helene home, of
a noble father begotten."
And in
the Odyssey also he has made mention of it in these verses:
"Such
had the daughter of Zeus, such drugs of exquisite cunning, Good, which
to her the wife of Thon, Polydamna, had given, Dwelling in Egypt, the
land where the bountiful meadow produces Drugs more than all lands else,
many good being mixed, many evil."
And thus
too Menelaos says to Telemachos:
"Still
the gods stayed me in Egypt, to come back hither desiring, Stayed me
from voyaging home, since sacrifice was due I performed not."
In these
lines he makes it clear that he knew of the wandering of Alexander to
Egypt, for Syria borders upon Egypt and the Phenicians, of whom is Sidon,
dwell in Syria.
By these
lines and by this passage it is also most clearly shown that the "Cyprian
Epic" was not written by Homer but by some other man: for in this it
is said that on the third day after leaving Sparta Alexander came to
Ilion bringing with him Helen, having had a "gently-blowing wind and
a smooth sea," whereas in the Iliad it says that he wandered from his
course when he brought her.
Let us
now leave Homer and the "Cyprian" Epic; but this I will say, namely
that I asked the priests whether it is but an idle tale which the Hellenes
tell of that which they say happened about Ilion; and they answered
me thus, saying that they had their knowledge by inquiries from Menelaos
himself.
After the
rape of Helen there came indeed, they said, to the Teucrian land a large
army of Hellenes to help Menelaos; and when the army had come out of
the ships to land and had pitched its camp there, they sent messengers
to Ilion, with whom went also Menelaos himself; and when these entered
within the wall they demanded back Helen and the wealth which Alexander
had stolen from Menelaos and had taken away; and moreover they demanded
satisfaction for the wrongs done: and the Teucrians told the same tale
then and afterwards, both with oath and without oath, namely that in
deed and in truth they had not Helen nor the wealth for which demand
was made, but that both were in Egypt; and that they could not justly
be compelled to give satisfaction for that which Proteus the king of
Egypt had.
The Hellenes
however thought that they were being mocked by them and besieged the
city, until at last they took it; and when they had taken the wall and
did not find Helen, but heard the same tale as before, then they believed
the former tale and sent Menelaos himself to Proteus.
And Menelaos
having come to Egypt and having sailed up to Memphis, told the truth
of these matters, and not only found great entertainment, but also received
Helen unhurt, and all his own wealth besides.
Then however,
after he had been thus dealt with, Menelaos showed himself ungrateful
to the Egyptians; for when he set forth to sail away, contrary winds
detained him, and as this condition of things lasted long, he devised
an impious deed; for he took two children of natives and made sacrifice
of them. After this, when it was known that he had done so, he became
abhorred, and being pursued he escaped and got away in his ships to
Libya; but whither he went besides after this, the Egyptians were not
able to tell. Of these things they said that they found out part by
inquiries, and the rest, namely that which happened in their own land,
they related from sure and certain knowledge.
Thus the
priests of the Egyptians told me; and I myself also agree with the story
which was told of Helen, adding this consideration, namely that if Helen
had been in Ilion she would have been given up to the Hellenes,
whether Alexander consented or no; for Priam assuredly was not so mad,
nor yet the others of his house, that they were desirous to run risk
of ruin for themselves and their children and their city, in order that
Alexander might have Helen as his wife: and even supposing that during
the first part of the time they had been so inclined, yet when many
others of the Trojans besides were losing their lives as often as they
fought with the Hellenes, and of the sons of Priam himself always two
or three or even more were slain when a battle took place (if one may
trust at all to the Epic poets),-- when, I say, things were coming thus
to pass, I consider that even if Priam himself had had Helen as his
wife, he would have given her back to the Achaians, if at least by so
doing he might be freed from the evils which oppressed him. [...]
In truth
however they lacked the power to give Helen back; and the Hellenes did
not believe them, though they spoke the truth... [Herodotus, The
Histories, selected excerpts]
We will come
back to this story later because even though it seems confused and improbable,
it holds the key to our problem. One thing that ought to be clear is that
I don't think that it was a woman they were fighting over; no indeed,
it was the "treasure." What was that treasure? Well, let me
suggest that the main thing we notice about this story is that it sounds
a bit like George Bush demanding Iraq's Weapons of Mass Destruction. Just
such a situation as we see developing in our own time between the United
States and the rest of the world may have developed between Atlantis and
Europe and Asia around 12,000 years ago, and then again later, between
the Trojans and Achaeans in Europe. This might give us a clue as to what
sort of "treasure" the Trojan War was really being fought over.
Tracking
this problem has led me down many interesting pathways and the most useful
clues have come from the alchemist Fulcanelli.
One his oft-reiterated themes is that the “ancient Greeks” — not the Egyptians —
were the source of the Hermetic science and all esoteric knowledge. However,
in a particular passage, he seems to contradict himself in the following
remarks:
Atlantis.
Did this mysterious island, of which Plato left the enigmatic description,
ever exist? A question difficult to solve, give the weakness of the
means which science possesses to penetrate the secret of the abysses.
Nevertheless, some observations seem to support the partisans of the
existence of Atlantis. […]
Faith
in the truthfulness of Plato's works results in believing the reality
of the periodical upheavals of which the Mosaic Flood , we said
it, remains the written symbol and the sacred prototype. To those who
negate what the priests of Egypt entrusted to Solon, we would only ask
to explain to us what Aristotle's master wanted to reveal by this fiction
of a sinister nature. For we indeed believe that beyond doubt, Plato
became the propagator of very ancient truths, and that consequently
his books contain a set, a body of hidden knowledge. His Geometric
Number, and Cave have their signification; why should the myth of Atlantis
not have its own?
Atlantis
must have undergone the same fate as the others, and the catastrophe,
which submerged it, falls obviously into the same cause as that which
buried, forty-eight centuries later, under a profound sheet of water,
Egypt, the Sahara, and the countries of Northern Africa. But more favored
than the land of the Atlantean, Egypt gained from a raising of the bottom
of the ocean and came back to the light of day, after a certain time
of immersion. For Algeria and Tunisia with their dry "chotts" covered
with a thick layer of salt, the Sahara and Egypt with their soils constituted
for a large part of sea sand show that the waters invaded and covered
vast expanses of the African continent. The columns of the Pharaohs'
temples bear on them undeniable traces of immersion; in the hypostyle
chambers, the slabs, still extant, which form the ceilings have been
raised and moved by the oscillating motion of the waves; the disappearance
of the outer coating of the pyramids and in general that of the stone
joins (the Colosses of Memnon who used to sing) the evident traces of
corrosion by water that can be noticed on the sphinx of Giza, as well
as on many other works of Egyptian statuary have no other origin. [Fulcanelli,
Dwellings of the Philosophers, pp. 511-512.]
Notice that
he said: "To those who negate what the priests of Egypt entrusted
to Solon, we would only ask to explain to us what Aristotle's master wanted
to reveal by this fiction of a sinister nature." Fulcanelli then
goes on a long series of remarks that actually DO negate what the priests
of Egypt told Solon, namely, that Egypt had never been inundated. Now,
why did Fulcanelli first say to "have faith in the truthfulness of
Plato's words," and then turn around and negate them?
Another item
of curiosity here is his remark about the "Mosaic Flood." Everybody
knows that Noah was associated with the Flood and Moses was associated
with the Exodus. Certainly, there was a sort of "flood" in the
story of Moses where the Red Sea drowned the Pharaoh, but that story doesn't
seem to have much to do with a real Flood; or does it?
Timaeus and
Critias, written by Plato some time around 360 BC are the only
existing ancient written records which specifically refer to Atlantis.
The dialogues are conversations between Socrates, Hermocrates, Timaeus,
and Critias. Apparently in response to a prior talk by Socrates about
ideal societies, Timaeus and Critias agree to entertain Socrates with
a tale that is “not a fiction but a true story.”
The story
is about the conflict between the ancient Athenians and the Atlanteans 9000
years before Plato’s time. Knowledge of the ancient times was apparently
forgotten by the Athenians of Plato’s day, and the form the story of Atlantis
took in Plato’s account was that Egyptian priests conveyed it to
Solon. Solon passed the tale to Dropides, the great-grandfather of Critias.
Critias learned of it from his grandfather also named Critias, son of
Dropides.
Let’s take
a careful look at the main section of the story, omitting the introduction
that describes Solon going to Egypt and chatting up the priests.
Thereupon
one of the priests, who was of a very great age, said: O Solon, Solon,
you Hellenes are never anything but children, and there is not an old
man among you. Solon in return asked him what he meant. I mean to say,
he replied, that in mind you are all young; there is no old opinion
handed down among you by ancient tradition, nor any science, which is
hoary with age. And I will tell you why.
There have
been, and will be again, many destructions of mankind arising out of
many causes; the greatest have been brought about by the agencies of
fire and water, and other lesser ones by innumerable other causes. There
is a story, which even you have preserved, that once upon a time Phaeton,
the son of Helios, having yoked the steeds in his father’s chariot,
because he was not able to drive them in the path of his father, burnt
up all that was upon the earth, and was himself destroyed by a thunderbolt.
Now this has the form of a myth, but really signifies a declination
of the bodies moving in the heavens around the earth, and a great
conflagration of things upon the earth, which recurs after long intervals;
at such times those who live upon the mountains and in dry and lofty
places are more liable to destruction than those who dwell by rivers
or on the seashore. And from this calamity the Nile, who is our never-failing
saviour, delivers and preserves us.
When, on
the other hand, the gods purge the earth with a deluge of water, the
survivors in your country are herdsmen and shepherds who dwell on the
mountains, but those who, like you, live in cities are carried by the
rivers into the sea. Whereas in this land, neither then nor at any
other time, does the water come down from above on the fields, having
always a tendency to come up from below; for which reason the traditions
preserved here are the most ancient.
The fact
is, that wherever the extremity of winter frost or of summer does not
prevent, mankind exist, sometimes in greater, sometimes in lesser numbers.
And whatever happened either in your country or in ours, or in any other
region of which we are informed - if there were any actions noble or
great or in any other way remarkable, they have all been written down
by us of old, and are preserved in our temples.
We want to
here make note of the fact that present day evidence suggests that Egypt
has been inundated and that it also experienced a rainy climate
as evidenced by the water erosion on the sphinx. Fulcanelli even commented
upon the inundation of Egypt. And so we see that Fulcanelli has given
us a hint, a clue. This leads us to question whether or not this story
actually came from the mouth of an Egyptian priest in terms of Egypt as
we now know it. If so, such a priest would have known of the period of
heavy rain and shallow seas in Egypt, by which the Sphinx and other monuments
were eroded, and which deposited a layer of salt on the interior of the
pyramids and other structures that Fulcanelli mentioned. And so we suggest,
to reconcile this difficulty, not that the story is false — because Fulcanelli has
told us to “have faith in the account of Plato” — but rather that this
was a deliberate exoteric “blind.”
Whereas
just when you and other nations are beginning to be provided with letters
and the other requisites of civilized life, after the usual interval,
the stream from heaven, like a pestilence, comes pouring down, and leaves
only those of you who are destitute of letters and education; and so
you have to begin all over again like children, and know nothing of
what happened in ancient times, either among us or among yourselves.
As for those genealogies of yours which you just now recounted to us,
Solon, they are no better than the tales of children.
In the
first place you remember a single deluge only, but there were many previous
ones; in the next place, you do not know that there formerly dwelt in
your land the fairest and noblest race of men which ever lived, and
that you and your whole city are descended from a small seed or remnant
of them which survived. And this was unknown to you, because, for many
generations, the survivors of that destruction died, leaving no written
word. For there was a time, Solon, before the great deluge of all, when
the city which now is Athens was first in war and in every way the best
governed of all cities, is said to have performed the noblest deeds
and to have had the fairest constitution of any of which tradition tells,
under the face of heaven.
Again, let’s
interrupt the dialogue to point out that it is hardly likely that a priest
of the Egypt we know would have declared the Athenians to be “the fairest
and noblest race of men,” nor that they “performed the noblest deeds”
and had the “fairest constitution … under the face of heaven!” Another
clue that the speaker is giving us that it is NOT Egypt as we know Egypt
that is the source of this information.
Solon marveled
at his words, and earnestly requested the priests to inform him exactly
and in order about these former citizens. You are welcome to hear about
them, Solon, said the priest, both for your own sake and for that of
your city, and above all, for the sake of the goddess who is the common
patron and parent and educator of both our cities. She founded your
city a thousand years before ours, receiving from the Earth and Hephaestus the
seed of your race, and afterwards she founded ours, of which the constitution
is recorded in our sacred registers to be eight thousand years old.
Yet again,
the Egyptian priest is giving greater antiquity to the Greeks than
to the Egyptians! Another clue for the reader to understand that this
is not an Egyptian story of Egypt as we now know it!
As touching
your citizens of nine thousand years ago, I will briefly inform you
of their laws and of their most famous action; the exact particulars
of the whole we will hereafter go through at our leisure in the sacred
registers themselves. If you compare these very laws with ours you will
find that many of ours are the counterpart of yours as they were in
the olden time.
Here, of
course, we come to the idea that there was an ancient connection and communication
between the "real Egyptians” and the "real Athenians."
Georges Gurdjieff once remarked that Christianity was taken from Egypt,
a statement that might suggest that he agreed with the Pan-Egyptian school.
But no: Christianity, he hastened to explain, was not taken from the
Egypt of history, but from a “far older Egypt” which is unrecorded."
In the
first place, there is the caste of priests, which is separated from
all the others; next, there are the artificers, who ply their several
crafts by themselves and do not intermix; and also there is the class
of shepherds and of hunters, as well as that of husbandmen; and you
will observe, too, that the warriors in Egypt are distinct from all
the other classes, and are commanded by the law to devote themselves
solely to military pursuits; moreover, the weapons which they carry
are shields and spears, a style of equipment which the goddess taught
of Asiatics first to us, as in your part of the world first to you.
The remark
that the right function of society was “first taught to the Asiatics”
is most interesting. The reference to “Asiatics” in this context from
an historical “Egyptian Priest” is extremely questionable because, in
the many Egyptian inscriptions unearthed by archaeology, the Asiatics
are always referred to as “Vile.” It is true that in historical times
the Egyptians borrowed their military equipment and war strategies from
the Asiatics, but that was a much later development than the above story
would suggest. The issue of who the “vile Asiatics” were is an ongoing
debate, but it seems to devolve on such as the Hittites, Hyksos, and other
Indo-European tribes that came down from the Steppes in various waves.
Then as
to wisdom, do you observe how our law from the very first made a study
of the whole order of things, extending even to prophecy and medicine
which gives health, out of these divine elements deriving what was needful
for human life, and adding every sort of knowledge which was akin to
them. All this order and arrangement the goddess first imparted to you
when establishing your city; and she chose the spot of earth in which
you were born, because she saw that the happy temperament of
the seasons in that land would produce the wisest of men. Wherefore
the goddess, who was a lover both of war and of wisdom, selected
and first of all settled that spot which was the most likely to produce
men likest herself. And there you dwelt, having such laws as these
and still better ones, and excelled all mankind in all virtue, as became
the children and disciples of the gods.
Again and
again, this very strange “Egyptian” priest is saying things that completely
contradict the more "historical" Egyptian view that they are
the most “ancient and noble race.” In the above remarks, he has said that
the goddess imparted to the Greeks first all of the laws of health
and those things needed to preserve and prolong life. The Greeks are pronounced
to have been the “wisest of men,” and those “most like the goddess” herself.
And again “excelled all mankind in all virtue,” which is not very likely
to have been said by an Egyptian priest from the Egypt we know.
Here comes
the story of the war, so pay close attention:
Many great
and wonderful deeds are recorded of your state in our histories. But
one of them exceeds all the rest in greatness and valour. For these
histories tell of a mighty power which unprovoked made an expedition
against the whole of Europe and Asia, and to which your city put an
end.
This power
came forth out of the Atlantic Ocean, for in those days the Atlantic
was navigable; and there was an island situated in front of the straits
which are by you called the Pillars of Heracles; the island was larger
than Libya and Asia put together, and was the way to other islands,
and from these you might pass to the whole of the opposite continent
which surrounded the true ocean; for this sea which is within the Straits
of Heracles is only a harbour, having a narrow entrance, but that other
is a real sea, and the surrounding land may be most truly called a boundless
continent.
Now in
this island of Atlantis there was a great and wonderful empire, which
had rule over the whole island and several others, and over parts of
the continent, and, furthermore, the men of Atlantis had subjected the
parts of Libya within the columns of Heracles as far as Egypt, and of
Europe as far as Tyrrhenia.
This vast
power, gathered into one, endeavoured to subdue at a blow our country
and yours and the whole of the region within the straits; and then,
Solon, your country shone forth, in the excellence of her virtue and
strength, among all mankind. She was pre-eminent in courage and military
skill, and was the leader of the Hellenes. And when the rest fell off
from her, being compelled to stand alone, after having undergone the
very extremity of danger, she defeated and triumphed over the invaders,
and preserved from slavery those who were not yet subjugated, and generously
liberated all the rest of us who dwell within the pillars.
Of all the
things the “Egyptian priest” has said, the above is the most astonishing
and the most telling. Again he is giving pre-eminence to the Greeks, that
they performed the most heroic deed of all times, which was to defeat
the Atlantean Empire!
This is the
point that is so often just simply overlooked by all the Egypt and Atlantis
lovers! Atlantis was the original “evil empire of the Borg!” And what
is more, in this passage, the clue is given that the ancient Egyptian
civilization — the pyramids and other monumental architecture upon which
so much of the current Egyptian craze is based, stemming from the work
of Schwaller de Lubicz, and which is declared to be the offspring of Atlantis
- the ancient Egypt that is so admired by the current day flock of
Egyptophiles - was very likely an attempt to re-construct the EVIL
EMPIRE OF ATLANTIS! In other words, the “priestly science” of the Egyptians,
referred to by Fulcanelli, not only antedated the material so diligently
studied and propagated by Schwaller and others for “clues” to alchemical
secrets and esoterica, it was very likely an Egypt that is no longer even
known as Egypt!
But afterwards
there occurred violent earthquakes and floods; and in a single day and
night of misfortune all your warlike men in a body sank into the earth,
and the island of Atlantis in like manner disappeared in the depths
of the sea. For which reason the sea in those parts is impassable and
impenetrable, because there is a shoal of mud in the way; and this was
caused by the subsidence of the island.
I have
told you briefly, Socrates, what the aged Critias heard from Solon and
related to us. And when you were speaking yesterday about your city
and citizens, the tale which I have just been repeating to you came
into my mind, and I remarked with astonishment how, by some mysterious
coincidence, you agreed in almost every particular with the narrative
of Solon; but I did not like to speak at the moment. For a long time
had elapsed, and I had forgotten too much; I thought that I must first
of all run over the narrative in my own mind, and then I would speak.
Here we find
another interesting clue. Critias has just told us that Socrates was discussing
the very things that are included in this story — that everything Socrates
had been saying the previous day “agreed in almost every particular with
the narrative of Solon.” Apparently, this story had been handed down via
another line of transmission.
And so
I readily assented to your request yesterday, considering that in all
such cases the chief difficulty is to find a tale suitable to our
purpose, and that with such a tale we should be fairly well provided.
And therefore, as Hermocrates has told you, on my way home yesterday
I at once communicated the tale to my companions as I remembered it;
and after I left them, during the night by thinking I recovered nearly
the whole it. Truly, as is often said, the lessons of our childhood
make wonderful impression on our memories; for I am not sure that I
could remember all the discourse of yesterday, but I should be much
surprised if I forgot any of these things which I have heard very long
ago. I listened at the time with childlike interest to the old man’s
narrative; he was very ready to teach me, and I asked him again and
again to repeat his words, so that like an indelible picture they were
branded into my mind.
As soon
as the day broke, I rehearsed them as he spoke them to my companions,
that they, as well as myself, might have something to say. And now,
Socrates, to make an end my preface, I am ready to tell you the whole
tale. I will give you not only the general heads, but the particulars,
as they were told to me.
The city
and citizens, which you yesterday described to us in fiction, we
will now transfer to the world of reality. It shall be the ancient
city of Athens, and we will suppose that the citizens whom you imagined,
were our veritable ancestors, of whom the priest spoke; they will perfectly
harmonise, and there will be no inconsistency in saying that the citizens
of your republic are these ancient Athenians. Let us divide the subject
among us, and all endeavour according to our ability gracefully to execute
the task which you have imposed upon us. Consider then, Socrates,
if this narrative is suited to the purpose, or whether we should seek
for some other instead. [Plato, Timaeus,
translated by B. Jowett]
And we come
to the final understanding that conveys to us the secret of the story
of Atlantis: that it did not actually come from an Egyptian priest as
we would now think of an Egyptian priest, but that this was a story that
was created to “execute the task which you [Socrates] have imposed upon
us,” which was to provide the clues that the "Egyptian priest"
was in no way related to the land we now know as Egypt.
As for Wilkens
location of Troy in England, the reader might want to recall the passages
from Diodorus Siculus quoted in a previous chapter of this pesent series.
There is something more from Diodorus regarding the Hyperboreans:
And there
is also on the island both a magnificent sacred precinct of Apollo and
a notable temple, which is adorned with many votive offerings and is
spherical in shape. Furthermore, a city is there which is sacred
to this god, and the majority of its inhabitants are players on the
cithara; and these continually play on this instrument in the temple
and sing hymns of praise to the god, glorifying his deeds…
They say
also that the moon, as viewed from this island, appears to be but a
little distance from the earth and to have upon it prominences, like
those of the earth, which are visible to the eye. The account is also
given that the god visits the island every nineteen years, the
period in which the return of the stars to the same place in the heavens
is accomplished, and for this reason the Greeks call the nineteen-year
period the “year of Meton”. At the time of this appearance of the god
he both plays on the cithara and dances continuously the night through
from the vernal equinox until the rising of the Pleiades, expressing
in this manner his delight in his successes.
And the
kings of this city and the supervisors of the sacred precinct are called
Boreades, since they are descendants of Boreas, and the succession to
these positions is always kept in their family. [ Diodorus
of Sicily, English translation by C. H. Oldfather, Loeb Classical
Library, Volumes II and III. London, William Heinemann, and Cambridge,
Mass., USA, Harvard University Press, 1935 and 1939.]
What did
it mean that every nineteen years a god “dances” from the vernal equinox until
the rising of the Pleiades? This suggests to us a very specific date
is being recorded in this myth. The heliacal rising of the Pleiades does
not happen every 19 years. So, aside from telling us about a regular event
that occurred every nineteen years, the myth has recorded something else
very significant, the date of which is internal to the myth. When did
the Pleiades rise just before the sun on the vernal equinox?
There are
many who assume that a “heliacal rising” means that a star or constellation
is in conjunction with the sun. But this is probably not correct. The
ancients were practicing observational astronomy. Otto Neugebauer, in
his many studies regarding what the ancients did or did not know about
science and mathematics, noted the following:
When we
watch the stars rise over the eastern horizon, we see them appear night
after night at the same spot on the horizon. But when we extend our
observation into the period of twilight, fewer and fewer stars will
be recognizable when they cross the horizon, and near sunrise all stars
will have faded out altogether. Let us suppose that a certain star S
was seen just rising at the beginning of dawn but vanished from sight
within a very short time because of the rapid approach of daylight.
We call this phenomenon the “heliacal rising” of S, using a term of
Greek astronomy. Let us assume that we use this phenomenon as the indication
of the end of “night” and consider S as the star of the “last hour
of night.” […]
We may
continue in the same way for several days, but during this time a definite
change takes place. […]
Obviously,
after some lapse of time, it no longer makes sense to take S as the
indicator of the last hour of night. But there are new stars that can
take the place of S. Thus year after year S may serve for some days
as the star of the last hour, to be replaced in regular order
by other stars. [Neugebauer, Otto, The Exact Sciences in Antiquity,
(New York: Dover 1969)]
In order
to observe a heliacal rising of a star or group of stars, they must rise
long enough before the sun to be “observed,” because as soon as
the sun rises, the stars can no longer be seen. The heliacal rising of
the Pleiades would have to occur at least 36 minutes before the
sun comes up, in order to be seen. So, the real question seems
to be: when did the Pleiades rise around half an hour before the sun,
at the time of the equinox? When were the Pleiades the stars of the “last
hour of the night”, and what might have been the significance of this
event?
Certain “standard”
texts, written by individuals who have not taken into account the observational
nature of a heliacal rising, have given 2300 BC as the date, because this
was when the Pleiades were conjunct the Sun on the Vernal equinox.
However, after careful calculations of our own, as well as assistance
by expert astronomers, the date of the actual heliacal rising of the Pleiades,
in the terms that Neugebauer has given us, occurred on April 16, 3100
BC.
April 16,
3100 BC where the God danced all night on the equinox until the rising
of the Pleiades:
[A] "Dark
Age", meaning a period from which little is known despite much information
before and after that period, occurred about 3100 BC to 3000 BC. For
example in Mesopotamia this period is called Jemdet Nasr.
About 3100
BC there was suddenly a change to more primitive ages compared to the
preceding Uruk period. For example the numerical token system dwindled.
In 3000
BC however there was a sudden recovery. This is called the Early
Dynasty, which can be described as the first known culture, that began
to have some kind of a centralized system. And the tokens were not only
numerated again, the basis for writing was born.
What happened
3100 BC, maybe right in 3114 BC? That's the year 0 in Mayan calendar.
There are
many stories around the world of great floods. There are two small craters
from about this time, but what seems more probable, is a huge meteorite
swarm that both caused much damage on land, brought up tsunamis and
blanketed with dust the atmosphere. It may have been a break-up of a
great comet in the inner parts of the solar system. People were panic-stricken.
The beginnings
of civilizations, however, got despite of the immediate damage, a first
great rise, after about a hundred years had gone. There was a great
boomtime that eventually led to the rise of the first great civilizations
in the beginning of the third millennium BC. The prime example is the
unification of southern and northern Egypt.
The great
mystery is how did the fusion happen? There is not any clear indication
of one part conquering the other. It seems like the northern culture
won over the southern, but that the new kings came from the south.
The artifacts hint that the first King of the unified Egypt was called
Menes and that the unification took place between 3150 and 3110 BC.
3100 BC
has been traditionally held as the watermark between the Predynastic
and Early Dynastic Period in Egypt. It took still 400 years before it
was transformed in the so called Old Kingdom in about 2700 BC. These
timestamps have oddly enough a great resemblance to the Mayan year 0.
The Mesopotamians
had the great variations in their pre-writings that finally led to the
first marks that really can be called as writing. Also the wheel was
introduced. The great city-states Ur and Uruk were built, and around
2600 BC they had began to be part of a larger political union.
Gilgamesh,
the great flood-king, lived during this period. Pre-Minoan culture
was rising in Crete. Neolithic settlements, Stonehenge, Newgrange,
Skara Brae in the Scottish Orkney island were built. The coastal menhirs
(great stones) began to be built in Brittany.
( For info
on dating Stonehenge, see my article Pincknett
and Prince and the Cassiopaeans.)
Dick Meehan
adds to this list flood marks in paleoclimatic data, methane peak in
Greenland ice and a cold time according to bristlecone pines in Britain.
Although any one of these in itself would not be of any great concern,
the timing of them in a frame of only 100 years, is the thing that makes
us suspect that something unusual was going on. And actually, the next
1000 years or so were a very restless time globally.
The aftermath
of this may have been a 2807 BC ocean impact described by Bruce Masse
in Peiser et al.: Natural Catastrophes (Oxford, 1998). If this
is the great Flood Comet, as Masse seems to indicate, this explains
why the Sumerian story of Flood, on which basis the Genesis Noachian
Flood story is built, is combined with the story of Gilgamesh. Gilgamesh
reigned in the 27th century, 300-450 years before the two great cataclysms
in late third millennium BC. Or were the comet or comets swarming and
breaking up during the whole period of 3114 BC to 2807 BC with diminishing
frequency and damage ending temporarily in a great splash in the Atlantic?
[Timo
Niroma, Helsinki, Finland]
From Rogue
Asteroids and Doomsday Comets by Duncan Steel:
The outrageous
suggestion that I am going to make is that the Taurid Complex was producing
phenomenal meteor storms between 4,500 and 5,000 years ago, accompanied
by multiple Tunguska-class atmospheric detonations, and that Stonehenge
I was designed to allow the (awestruck, terrified) culture of southern
England to make observations of the Phenomena and to perhaps predict
their recurrence.
Peter Lancaster
Brown, in his book on megalithic sites, wrote that "Eclipses, comets
and meteorites were astronomical phenomena widely observed by the ancients.
But probably only eclipses were predictable." (Steel means to imply
that Stonehenge I was needed to make observations because meteorite
falls are far more unpredictable, but and at the same time may be long-lasting
and recurring. - TN.)
Let
me suggest that survivors and descendants of the global cataclysm that
occurred at the time of the war between Atlantis and "Athens"
were reduced to little more than a Stone Age existence for a very long
time except, perhaps, for small enclaves here and there which later gave
rise to "civilizing" impulses at various locations around the
planet. And just as some of the "good guys" survived, so were
there survivors of the Evil Empire of Atlantis. Again I note the polarities
between the "circle people" and the "pyramid people".
Later,
there was again a battle, a great betrayal at the Cloisters of Ambrius
followed by another global disruption, fixing the event in the minds of
the people as being "like the destruction of Atlantis" so that
the stories were joined together.
Such events
would embrace the myths of the Daughters of Danaeus and the Sons of Aegyptus,
as well as the story of Orpheus - the "massacre at the Cloisters
of Ambrius" - a war between ancient peoples inhabiting Britain and
those inhabiting continental Europe where the place names so strongly
reflect the descriptions given by Homer as described by Wilkens. Refugees
fled to the higher lands, to Eastern Europe, to Eurasia, to Egypt and
beyond. Of course, just who is "on first" and who came from
where is extremely difficult to determine without long and careful analysis.
It is in
the most recent of these events - at the time of the fall of the Bronze
Age civilization around 1600 BC - where the final pieces of the drama
took place. This last episode is where we will finally find Helen.
In fact,
when you think about it, the stories in the Bible are remarkably similar
to the Greek myths with most of the fantastic elements removed, names
changed, and genealogies inserted to give the impression of a long history.
One could say that the "history" of the Old Testament is merely
"historicized myth." And of course, the myths that it was
historicized from may have belonged to an entirely different people.
Again we
remember that the winners (or the survivors) write the history, and we
have a very strange story to tell... about Helen and the Exodus Conspiracy:
the face that launched a Thousand Wars.
But we have
much ground to cover before we face Helen.
Continued...
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