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Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Review of Time and Prophecy - Hezekiah - part 4 - Sargon is Sennacherib


Greetings all,

I have mentioned several times now, that there is evidence that Sargon and Sennacherib are indeed the same person. I do not claim that their reigns overlapped each other, but I believe that Sargon (the Assyrian name) came to be called Sennacherib (the Babylonian name) much as Tiglathpileser (Assyrian) came to be called PUL by the Babylonians. I have given evidence from the Eponym and Assyrian King lists; and I have given evidence from scripture. But there is more.
This part is just a few snippets from from Damien Mackey’s internet article called ‘Sargon is Sennacherib’. IT is a fairly long article, but I wanted you all to see at least a couple of his major points. The rest of this section is all from his article:
What had struck me, however, was that Sargon's 12th and 15th year campaigns were worded very similarly to Sennacherib's first two campaigns.
Sargon: "In my twelfth year of reign, Marduk-apal-iddina [Merodach-baladan] and Shuturnahundu, the Elamite ... I ... smote with the sword, and conquered ..."
Sennacherib: "In my first campaign I accomplished the defeat of Merodach-baladan ... together with the army of Elam, his ally ....".
And:
Sargon: "Talta, king of the Ellipi ... reached the appointed limit of life ... Ispabara [his son] ... fled into ... the fortress of Marubishti, ... that fortress they overwhelmed as with a net. ... people ... I brought up."
Sennacherib: "... I turned and took the road to the land of the Ellipi. ... Ispabara, their king, ... fled .... The cities of Marubishti and Akkuddu, ... I destroyed .... Peoples of the lands my hands had conquered I settled therein". Added to this was the possibility that they had built their respective 'Palace Without Rival' close in time, because the accounts of each were worded almost identically [2]. Eric Aitchison alerted me to the incredible similarity in language between these two accounts: Sargon: "Palaces of ivory, maple, boxwood, musukkani-wood (mulberry?), cedar, cypress, juniper, pine and pistachio, the "Palace without Rival"2a), for my royal abode .... with great beams of cedar I roofed them. Door-leaves of cypress and maple I bound with ... shining bronze and set them up in their gates. A portico, patterned after a Hittite (Syrian) palace, which in the tongue of Amurru they call a bit-hilanni, I built before their gates. Eight lions, in pairs, weighing 4610 talents, of shining bronze, fashioned according to the workmanship of Ninagal, and of dazzling brightness; four cedar columns, exceedingly high, each 1 GAR in thickness ... I placed on top of the lion-colossi, I set them up as posts to support their doors. Mountain-sheep (as) mighty protecting deities, I cunningly constructed out of great blocks of mountain stone, and, setting them toward the four winds ... I adorned their entrances. Great slabs of limestone, - the (enemy) towns which my hands had captured I sculptured thereon and I had them set up around their (interior) walls; I made them objects of astonishment". Sennacherib: "Thereon I had them build a palace of ivory, maple, boxwood, mulberry (musukannu), cedar, cypress ... pistachio, the "Palace without a Rival"2a), for my royal abode. Beams of ceda .... Great door-leaves of cypress, whose odour ... I bound with shining copper and set them up in their doors. A portico, patterned after a Hittite (Syrian) palace, which they call in the Amorite tongue a bit-hilani, I constructed inside them (the doors) .... Eight lions, open at the knee, advancing, constructed out of 11,400 talents of shining bronze, of the workmanship of the god Nin-a-gal, and full of splendour ... two great cedar pillars, (which) I placed upon the lions (colossi), I set up as posts to support their doors. Four mountain sheep, as protecting deities ... of great blocks of mountain stone ... I fashioned cunningly, and setting them towards the four winds (directions), I adorned their entrances. Great slabs of limestone, the enemy tribes, whom my hands had conquered, dragged through them (the doors), and I set them up around the walls, - I made them objects of astonishment".
……
Conventional Theory's Strengths
(i) Primary
I can find only two examples of a primary nature for the conventional view.
By far the strongest support for convention in my opinion is Esarhaddon's above-quoted statement from what is called Prism S - and it appears in the same form in several other documents as well - that he was 'son of Sennacherib and (grand)son of Sargon'. Prism A in the British Museum is somewhat similar, though much more heavily bracketted [6]:
[Esarhaddon, the great king, the mighty king, king of the universe, king of Assyria, viceroy of Babylon, king] of [Sumer] and Akkad, [son of Sennacherib, the great king, the mighty king], king of Assyria, [(grand)son of Sargon, the great king, the mighty king], king of Assyria ....
The first document, Prism S, would be enough to stop me dead in my tracks, were it not for other evidences in support of my proposed merger.
The other, quasi-primary evidence is in regard to Sennacherib's accession. One reads in history books of supposed documentary evidence telling that Sargon was killed and that Sennacherib sat on the throne. Carl Olaf Jonsson gives it, bracketed again, as follows [7]:
For the eponym Nashur(a)-bel (705 BC) one of the Eponym Chronicles (Cb6) adds the note that the king (= Sargon) was killed, and that Sennacherib, on Ab 12, took his seat on the throne.
What one notices in all of the above cases of what I have deemed to be primary evidence is that bracketting is always involved. Prism S, the most formidable testimony, has the word "(grand)son" in brackets. In Prism A, the entire titulary has been square bracketed, which would indicate that Assyriologists have added what they presume to have been in the original text, now missing. And, regarding Sennacherib's accession, Jonsson qualifies the un-named predecessor king with the bracketted "(= Sargon)".
It was customary for the Assyrian kings to record their titulary back through father and grandfather. There are two notable exceptions in neo-Assyrian history: interestingly, Sargon and Sennacherib, who record neither father nor grandfather. John Russell's explanation for this omission is as follows [8]:
In nearly every other Assyrian royal titulary, the name of the king was followed by a brief genealogy of the form "son of PN1, who was son of PN2," stressing the legitimacy of the king.
As Tadmor has observed, such a statement never appears in the titulary of Sennacherib. This omission is surprising since Sennacherib was unquestionably [sic] the legitimate heir of Sargon II. Tadmor suggests that Sennacherib omitted his father's name either because of disapproval of Sargon's policies or because of the shameful manner of Sargon's death ....
This may be, but it is important to note that Sargon also omitted the genealogy from his own titulary, presumably because, contrary to this name (Sargon is the biblical form of Šarru-kên: "the king is legitimate"), he was evidently not truly the legitimate ruler. Perhaps Sennacherib wished to avoid drawing attention to a flawed genealogy: the only way Sennacherib could credibly have used the standard genealogical formulation would have been with a statement such as "Sennacherib, son of Sargon, who was not the son of Shalmaneser", or "who was son of a nobody", and this is clearly worse than nothing at all.
That there was some unusual situation here cannot be doubted. And the bracketing that we find in Esarhaddon's titulary may be a further reflection of it. By contrast, Esarhaddon's son, Ashurbanipal, required no such bracketing when he declared: I am Assurbanipal ... offspring of the loins of Esarhaddon ...; grandson of Sennacherib ..." [9].

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Professor Robert Temple Could Not Be More Right About 'the Vicious Academic World'


Taken from Robert Temple’s Egyptian Dawn. Exposing the Real Truth Behind Ancient Egypt (Century 2010).

Pp. 399-400:

"[On the Atlantic Culture] …. Countless authors, ancient and modern, have commented upon the Atlantic cultures, but these remarks have rarely been given proper attention Perhaps the reason for this is that there is no academic disci¬pline or academic department concerned with 'Atlantic culture'. As soon as the archaeologists of one region of the world begin to discuss it, they feel uncomfortable, because they are 'straying beyond their boundaries'. There is nothing that makes an academic more nervous than that, because it opens him up to criticism by his colleagues. The academic world is a vicious world, where no mercy is ever shown, and where the slightest slip from 'consensus behaviour' can endanger an academic's entire career. It is only people like myself, who do not depend upon the favour and approval of peers for a livelihood, who can say what they like and stray over as many boundaries as they please. With every passing year, the competition for jobs within the academic community becomes more intense, the level of fear rises and the timidity of discourse increases. One of these days, the academic world will just seize up like a sea of ice, with no movement at all, and all opinions will remain perfectly rigid. Then everybody will be safe. …".

Pp. 430:

"…. Alessandra Nibbi's ideas are so extraordinarily interesting and rele¬vant that at one point I considered attempting an extended survey of them here, and compiling a comprehensive bibliography for her as I have done for Patrick O'Mara (whom she frequently published in her journal). If it were not for the activities of a few polite and genteel 'trouble-makers' like Nibbi and O'Mara, Egyptology would become totally petrified and incapable of ever generating a new insight. Thus, people like Nibbi and O'Mara should be encouraged enthusiastically, because they poke the corpses of the 'walking dead', the orthodox scholars who never deviate by a hair's-breadth from consensus opinions, and make them awaken from their sleepwalking and stir slightly. However, I have had to abandon my noble idea of surveying Nibbi's ideas, however important they are in terms of what I have been discussing, because the task would be too vast, and this book would never end. I shall content myself therefore with quoting only one of her many, many articles, which appeared in her own journal in 1995, as her comments are so shocking in the light of what we have been considering: ... we are given [in a book she has just quoted] a resume from the Egyptological textbooks on the 'Libvans' without considering the fact that there is a great deal of uncertainty and assumption in piecing together the Egyptological material, and no clarity at all concerning the geographical background of these people, which cannot have been the desert.... We must accept the Roman use of this term which applied to all the area immedi¬ately to the west of the Nile . . . Thus the term westerner is more appropriate than Libyan for the people we are discussing. . . More recent studies of 'Libyan' people have been reluctant to separate them from the area that is Libya today and rarely attempt to identify them from any evidence. We even find references to 'ethnically Libyan pharaohs', whatever that may imply: At the seminar which formed the basis of Anthony Leahy's Libya and Egypt c. 1300)-750 B.C. (1990), no attempt was made to define 'Libyan'. Scholars depended considerably on Leahy's earlier article on the Libyan period in Egypt which attempts to identity the foreign ‘Libyan' Dynasty in Egypt as rule by men of 'Libyan extraction', even though 'the retention of their ethnic identity is obscured by the evidence’. …".

Thursday, August 25, 2011

"Those holding to the old orthodoxy of Egyptian History will soon vanish ..."




Rasputin said...
 
To Damien:
Your thesis on the Revised History of Hezekiah was brilliantly argued and should have resulted in a PHD so that your gift in complicated historical revisionism could have been more further developed. In this thesis, you covered an incredible amount of data but unfortunately one examiner has prevented you from achieving your full academic potential. The university will be poorer for not having awarded you a well deserved PHD for I surmise that you would have made hundreds of other connections in ancient history that would have shed more light in a field that is strewn with a great deal of confusion. Those holding to the old orthodoxy of Egyptian History will soon vanish and out of the mists will arise a new historical chronology that will again dramatically shorten the length of Egyptian chronology. I think the works of Velikovsky, Courville and Mackey and others will eventually unseat the modern Pharisees and Sadduccees who hold sway over the old orthodoxy which is dying as the revisionists get their ideas out in the internet. I hope that you are actively engaged in further research and I suspect you realize that the Hebrew Chronology which influenced three of the major religions in history is more critical than the Egyptian documents that are carved in stone as almost nothing in the Egyptian Chronology matches that of the Hebrews. Keep up the great research.
August 16, 2011 3:04 PM
Damien Mackey's response:
Great post, Rasputin. I am sure that your prophetic words will one day become a reality:
"Those holding to the old orthodoxy of Egyptian History will soon vanish and out of the mists will arise a new historical chronology that will again dramatically shorten the length of Egyptian chronology".
For much more of this kind of thinking, going way beyond Egypt, see "Other AMAIC sites" as listed in right hand column at: http://amaic1.blog.com/
August 25, 2011 5:36 PM
My thesis, A Revised History of the Era of King Hezekiah of Judah and its Background can be accessed at the University of Sydney site: http://hdl.handle.net/2123/5973
My earlier MA thesis, The Sothic Star Theory of the Egyptian Calendar can be accessed at the University of Sydney site: http://hdl.handle.net/2123/1632
A Revised History of the Era of King Hezekiah of Judah and its Background was passed for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy (a doctorate award) by 2 of the 3 examiners.
The essential parts of their lengthy comments were:
Examiner 1
Overall, this is a most impressive piece of work. Employing a true multidisciplinary approach, Mr. Mackey has amassed abundant evidence from the fields of history, art history, archaeology, geography, topography, biblical studies, and linguistics to support his chronological thesis. At times, his dissertation reads like a page­-turning detective story.
Having said all that, this work should be regarded as primarily seminal in nature; it certainly cannot be construed as the final word on a subject that has confounded and occupied innumerable scholars over the past one hundred years. Yet, Mr. Mackey is to be applauded for a truly Herculean synthesizing effort that should keep a host of special­ists busy for years to come - assuming their willingness to analyze, dissect, and evaluate his doctoral thesis fairly and objectively.
…. Mr Mackey’s historical and chronological construct is a solid endeavor and challenge that unquestionably needs to be taken seriously. One can only hope that this will be the case.
The sheer range and scope alone of Mackey's dissertation, right­ or wrong, is sufficiently worthy of scholarly attention and discussion. I unhesitatingly recommend that the doctoral candidate - Damien Mackey - be awarded the degree of Doctor of Philosophy ….
Examiner 2
This two-volume revised thesis is a considerable improvement on the 2005 submission.
Much effort has been expended in this reworking to produce a substantially more sustainable piece of work.
Mackay [sic] states in the Preface that his thesis is an "in-depth chronological analysis and realignment of the era of Hezekiah and its background with a special focus upon trying to determine, in a revised context, who were the Judaean king's major contemporaries and what were their origins". To do so, he has based his arguments on the chronological revisions of the Sothic calender [sic] thus following the footsteps of Velikovsky and Courville. However, he has not been reticent to apply his critical ability, assessing and (where necessary) re-adjusting their datum.
To fulfill its stated brief in the Introduction, the thesis' subject-matter covered an enormous expanse from Egypt to Mesopotamia. Here Mackay has evaluated the arguments of so-called conventional scholars soundly. I see a major advance in the application of his critical abilities, over and above the previous attempt. Whilst his conclusions are sometimes tentative - and could not be otherwise - he has fulfilled the scholar's brief by showing his capacity to sift evidence carefully, as well as consulting mainstream opinion. I particularly appreciated his usage of archaeological data to support his arguments.
The study of the Book of Judith [Volume Two of thesis], in particular, showed promise. I appreciated the discussion of the book's placement (or non-placement) in the Jewish versus the Catholic canon. The accompanying commentary also was a good piece of work. I would recommend that, with judicious editing and some reworking, this part of the thesis be suitable for publication. Re the argument of historicity v. 'pious fiction', it might be worthwhile to consider the questions of 'intent and audience'.
The thesis still does show a tendency "to tie up loose ends", but the application was much more restrained and the accompanying argument highlighted the complexity of the problems that Mackay was attempting to unravel. These were generally worked convincingly within the framework of the thesis.
… In conclusion, the thesis fulfills the stated criteria necessary to achieve the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. It makes an original contribution to knowledge, shows copious evidence of independent critical ability on the part of Mackey, as well as having discovered new facts. ….
Yet Examiner 3 could apparently find virtually nothing worthwhile (“only one minor strength”) in this 500+ pages (two-volume) effort:
….
This thesis sought to present 'a more acceptable alternative' to the conventional dating system for the era of Hezekiah. The thesis, however, fell far short of achieving its aim. There was a failure to assess both primary and secondary sources in a rigorous, critical and objective way. This meant that the conclusions reached were not merely non-conventional (this in itself should not disqualify anyone from an award), but extremely tenuous and very far-fetched. As such, the thesis failed to achieve its aim.
….
The thesis suffered from the same flaws as Velikovsky's approach, which exerted considerable influence over the argument, including lending it a starting point. In particular, the whole notion of 'alter egos' was simply not justified and, in fact, beggars the imagination. There was no attempt to explain why so many singular persons (many of them monarchs) could each possess so many distinctly different personas. I suspect the reason is because the entire notion of 'alter egos' has no real basis in history and, therefore, cannot be adequately explained. If there was a real notion of 'alter egos' in history, then it is odd that there has been no real overt reference in historical sources to explain it. …. The whole 'alter-ego' system overlooked all the cultural and religious distinctions apparent in the Ancient Near East, and defied credibility. Under the conventional system, these difficulties are easily overcome by the sensible and credible proposition that each name represents a distinct person. Indeed, the conventional system is also able to take in all the sources, including the ones ignored in this thesis. Therefore, the thesis did not give 'a more acceptable alternative' to the conventional dating system.
….
There was one minor strength in the thesis, though with some reservation:
1. The suggestion that the reigns of some of the Ramessides may have been concurrent was plausible, even though it ultimately cannot be confirmed. The chronological links made with other points of Ancient Near Eastern history on the basis of this surmise, however, appeared premature, speculative, and tenuous. Furthermore, this minor strength in no way provides an opening to salvage the thesis.
In light of this analysis, I cannot in good conscience recommend that the degree of PhD be awarded. The thesis was unfortunately ill-conceived and ultimately fatally flawed in its methods and conclusions.
Examiner 4
Though the Faculty of Arts apparently told my supervisor (Professor Rifaat Ebied) that the doctorate would be awarded, the university’s highest committee (Post-Graduate Matters Committee) then stepped in to say that a 4th examiner would be required.
This final arbitrator/examiner, completely ignoring the favourable Examiner’s 1 and 2, based his/her (I think) decision entirely on the unfavourable Examiner 3:
The thesis does not meet the necessary standards of an academic research. The methodology utilized is flawed through and through, the information dated and irrelevant to current research. The author is not aware of up-to-date bibliography and has ignored major basic studies in the field. His treatment of ancient texts - both biblical and non-biblical - is literal and naïve. He does not utilize tools such as dictionaries, nor does he show proficiency in basic biblical analysis. The thesis does not regard or address questions of possible sources, genres, accepted basic conceptions regarding the authors or ideological biases of the texts, or variants in different versions. His arguments are irrational and the conclusions he has reached are unsubstantiated and fanciful.
I fully agree with the detailed comments of the third examiner who has laid out the main weaknesses of the thesis, and they should be consulted for more detail on my position.

Damien F. Mackey's Defence of Post-Graduate Thesis Against 3rd Examiner's Criticisms

Appendix: Exposing the Inadequacies of the 3rd Examiner’s Points in the Context of my Proposed ‘More Acceptable Alternative’ Model The 3rd examiner, unlike the Assessor, does make some points that are specifically relevant to the thesis, though he/she, just like the Assessor, never exhibits having come to terms at all with the overall complexity of the thesis, as had the 1st and 2nd examiners. Many of the 3rd examiner’s key points of criticism ignore some of the most fundamental aspects of my PhD thesis. Nor is there the least admittance by either the 3rd or the 4th examiner that the conventional system has its serious flaws. The chronologico-historical and art-historical anomalies that have been addressed in this thesis - and that are acknowledged by many competent scholars from different fields (see e.g. p. 18 of my thesis) - are genuine problems. This will become further evident from the following pages. The 3rd examiner’s 15 paragraphs can be broken down basically into alleged “weaknesses” relating to: (i) methodology, four paragraphs (1-4); (ii) primary and secondary sources, three paragraphs (5-6, 12); (iii) ‘alter egos’, vague similarities or similar equations for place names, five paragraphs (7-11, also 5 again); (iv) ‘dark age’, one paragraph (13); and (v) footnotes/aesthetics, two paragraphs (14-15). Then there follows that ‘favourable’ final paragraph (1) pointing to “one minor strength”: “The suggestion that the reigns of some of the Ramessides may have been concurrent was plausible …”. My comment: As if any work that may throw light on the important Ramesside era could be regarded as “minor”! [Moreover, a revision of the history of the Ramessides in relation to king Hezekiah constituted a major part of my thesis, namely Volume One, Part III (pp. 188-372)]. The 1st examiner seems to have appreciated this, when commenting: “pp. 339-340 – admirable attempt to recast the latter part of the 20th Dynasty [Ramesside] which has always appeared as a somewhat gray area” Let us consider the 3rd examiner’s five areas of criticism in turn. (i) Methodology (paragraphs 1-4) Regarding methodology, a major criticism offered by the 3rd examiner was that “tentative” points “were used as significant foundations for further conclusions”. The 2nd examiner had also used the word “tentative”, but with some proper understanding. Thus: “Whilst [Mackey’s] conclusions are somewhat tentative – and could not be otherwise – he has fulfilled the scholar’s brief …”. This 2nd examiner had, like the 1st examiner, fully appreciated that a completely new model of history must be of a tentative nature. The 3rd examiner though gives the impression that the whole thesis was basically a castle built in the air. “The vast majority of the argument was premised on a series of unproved ‘if’ statements”. “… numerous tentative points were effectively treated as … pivotal …”. My comment: My entire thesis was in fact built upon the most solid of foundations, even if the superstructure atop this may be subject to some future alteration. As I have been at pains to demonstrate, my PhD thesis was built upon: 1. A successful MA thesis that showed the inadequacies of the conventional chronological scheme, and with an examiner pointing to the opportunity now for an ‘alternative’ model to be undertaken. [My Abstract justifies my blazing of this new trail based on comments made by an examiner of my 1993 MA. Then, on p. 8, I argue my new thesis as being a logical development of my MA. This is repeated on p. 10 of Chapter 1. To reinforce all of this, I give a summary of my MA, beginning on p. 11. Pp. 16-21 make clear how much chronology and archaeology currently hang on Sothic dating. I summarise my efforts on this in my Conclusion, pp. 103-106]. Moreover: 2. My thesis was built upon a credible archaeological/stratigraphical foundation, as the 2nd examiner also happily noted: “I particularly appreciated [Mackey’s] usage of archaeological data to support his argument”. The 3rd examiner seems to have completely overlooked the solid foundations of this extensive work. Next: 3. As the thesis progressed into (as it must) the “alternative” model realm, my higher level foundation (for the background to king Hezekiah’s era) - still anchored though securely on 1. and 2. - became the now quite vast body of revisionist publications, based initially on the research of Drs. I. Velikovsky and D. Courville. As the 2nd examiner could clearly see: “[Mackey] has based his arguments on the chronological revisions of the Sothic calender [sic] thus following the footsteps of Velikovsky and Courville”. But not in a slavish fashion: “However, he has not been reticent to apply his critical ability, assessing and (where necessary) re-adjusting their datum”. Continuing on now right into the era of king Hezekiah of Judah, my foundations (still dependent on 1-3) were: 4. Five interlocking biblical (cf. 2 Kings 18:10)/neo-Assyrian correspondences, coinciding with the Fall of Samaria (c. 722/21 BC), namely: (a) Fall of Samaria; (b) beginning of Sargon II of Assyria’s rule; (c) sixth year of Hezekiah of Judah; (d) ninth year of Hoshea of Israel; (e) year one of Merodach-baladan II as king of Babylon, according to Sargon’s testimony: “In my twelfth year of reign, (Merodach-baladan) .... For 12 years, against the will (heart) of the gods, he held sway over Babylon ...”. [I discussed points (a)-(e) in detail in Chapter 1, pp. 21-28, returning to this in similar detail in Chapter 5, pp. 125-129, and then fully supplementing it in Chapter 12, pp. 349-350, and finally summarising it all on p. 372, Summary of Volume One]. Thus, I set out a clear foundational progression (1-4), whilst the ‘alter ego’ methodology was firmly established at the outset of my PhD thesis as being a key method to be used therein. [See also Chapter 3, pp. 52-53, for the beginning of my explanation of my ‘multi-identifications’ methodology, based on a very solid Velikovskian connection; this then being taken further in Chapter 4, pp. 111-115. (See also pp. 7-8 below of this Appendix)]. Yet, typically, the 3rd examiner will write: “… the whole notion of ‘alter egos’ was simply not justified …”. Other criticisms of a methodological nature made by the 3rd examiner were: “The argument itself did not flow. It often changed subject suddenly …”. But no examples/references are given. By contrast, the 2nd examiner – once again appreciating the difficulty of the task, and the context – wrote that “the accompanying argument highlighted the complexity of the problems that [Mackey] was attempting to unravel. These were generally worked convincingly within the framework of the thesis”. 3rd examiner again: “The thesis did not engage adequately with more conventional scholars which was necessary in order to achieve the stated goal of providing ‘a more acceptable alternative’ to their widely accepted theories.” But, according to the 2nd examiner, I have indeed in my wide-ranging thesis “evaluated the arguments of so-called conventional scholars soundly”. Moreover: “[Mackey] has fulfilled the scholar’s brief by showing his capacity to sift evidence carefully, as well as consulting mainstream opinion”. [On p. 5 of my Introduction I told of my indebtedness to conventional scholars/archaeologists of the past. In Chapter 11, p. 276, I praised “Bierbrier’s painstaking and laudable attempts to establish a clear chronological framework for Egyptian officials and workmen for the most difficult phase” of the Third Intermediate Period [TIP]. Moreover, I make it quite clear, in my treatment of the Ramessides and the difficult TIP that I did not intend to be “dogmatic”, but “tentative”, and that “I would be highly presumptuous” were I to presume that I could fully master the situation, Chapter 11, p. 258. See also Volume Two, p. 106]. 3rd examiner again: “Problems with conventional dating were exaggerated and often not considered in full, especially in terms of the solutions proposed by scholars advocating more conventional dating (e.g., Thiele). This also revealed a failure to deal with the purpose and literary-theological devices inherent in biblical chronologies”. My comments: For one of my key historical re-identifications, concerning Esarhaddon in relation to the neo-Assyrian succession, in Chapter 6, I actually gave detailed points, headed, “Conventional Theory’s Strengths” (pp. 135-142) as to why - although I was going to propose reasons for considering a departure from the conventional view - I nevertheless appreciated why the conventional view had a firm claim to being right. I revisited this in summary fashion also on pp. 150-151. And I returned to this point again in my final thesis Conclusion at the end of Volume Two (pp. 104-105). Moreover, I actually discussed Edwin Thiele at great length, first introducing him into the discussion on pp. 14-15 of Chapter 1, then considering him in more detail on pp. 22-27; an analysis that I continued in Chapter 5, pp. 125-129, and also in Chapter 12, p. 349. Though critical of the fact that Thiele had, following a faulty neo-Assyrian chronology, completely eradicated those five interlocking biblical/neo-Assyrian and Babylonian correspondences [(a)-(e) in point 4. on pp. 2-3 above], I did however (on pp. 126-129) consider the merits of Thiele’s overall system, acknowledging the problems that he faced. Indeed I recognised the validity of Thiele’s points in regard to the difficulties of a chronological correspondence between kings Hoshea and Hezekiah. And I coupled this with Assyriologist H. Tadmor’s related arguments, as noted by Thiele (Chapter 1, p. 22; Chapter 5, pp. 127-128; and Chapter 12, p. 354). At the same time I pointed to the inadequacies of Velikovsky’s revision, p. 25, his “sometimes … embarrassing gaffes”, indicating also that I would significantly modify his reconstruction of the el-Amarna period in Chapter 3, Chapter 4, Chapter 9 and Chapter 10. Thiele’s chronological problems with king Hezekiah though turn out to be artificial. Thiele is the one with the faulty methodology. Thanks to Thiele, Hezekiah has now become one of most vexed problems in biblical history, pp. 126, 129. Thiele, despite his “good intentions” (p. 129), ended up doing exactly what he intended not to do, when he had endeavoured to establish “a sound chronology for Old Testament times”, fitting it “into the events of the Near Eastern world” (p. 126). Consider what Thiele has now lost for us, pp. 23-24; also pp. 125-129. The 3rd examiner does not once allude to the fact that Thiele has completely eradicated an ancient multi-syncretism (a)-(e); one that the facts of modern archaeology have actually begun to support and further augment. I say (p. 128) that I shall attempt to enlarge this (a)-(e) correspondence even further by including, in Chapter 12, the Egyptian (f) and Ethiopian (g) contemporaries of the Fall of Samaria (a). Re biblical genre and purpose, I had definitely considered these throughout my thesis: e.g. Chapter 2, p. 33, where I had argued that the Bible was “didactic, not political science”; and p. 54 my explanation of el-Amarna’s geopolitical situation in relation to the Old Testament; and p. 55, on biblical perspective; and also pp. 72-73 on the Bible’s non-sophisticated attitude to geography. Then in Volume Two (pp. 89-91), I engaged in an in-depth textual analysis of the Isaian Denkschrift. (See also p. 6 of this Appendix). In conclusion, the 3rd examiner has completely failed to appreciate and understand the firm foundations upon which this thesis was built. This is in contrast to the 1st and 2nd examiners, who did not consider that my methodology was shallow. On the contrary, according to the 1st examiner: Mr. Mackey is very good at weighing alternatives … I … do not feel that he is “forcing a square peg into a roundhole”. His overall analyses and discussions are in depth and quite plausible. …. He has taken on a vast amount of material … and has dealt with it in considerable depth. If specialists and scholars with an open mind will approach his work dispassionately, [Mackey] has left a great deal to be studied and reconsidered. This is a seminal work – as it should be – and a door opened wide for further exploration. Whilst the 2nd examiner, impressed by my use of the archaeological data, also believes: … [Mackey] has evaluated the arguments of so-called conventional scholars soundly. … the thesis … makes an original contribution to knowledge, shows copious evidence of independent critical ability on the part of Mackey, as well as having discovered new facts. (ii) Primary and secondary sources (paragraphs 5-6, 12) 3rd examiner: “There was a failure to incorporate some key primary sources into the evidence, most notably the Babylonian Chronicles, the Assyrian King List, and Esarhaddon’s Vassal Treaty with Baal of Tyre”. By contrast, the 2nd examiner thought, regarding my “Bibliography. This was satisfactory – a testament to [Mackey’s] copious reading – and no changes are required”. And (3rd examiner): “The primary sources which featured in the thesis were never appraised or weighed in terms of genre, accuracy, reliability, purpose, and bias …. This was acutely apparent in the use of Assyrian annals, the canonical biblical literature, and the deutero-canonical books of Judith and Tobit”. My comment: I frequently in fact made use of the Babylonian Chronicles (e.g. Chapter 3, p. 78, Chapter 6, pp. 136-137, 147, 169), though being careful to note that this document is in fact a late source. I did indeed use the Assyrian King List (e.g. p. 131), but most notably in my discussion of “The Assuruballit Problem” [TAP], an Excursus dedicated to this very issue (pp. 230-253). I also used, extensively, the Taylor Prism, e.g. Chapter 6 (pp. 151-165); the Eponym Chronicle (pp. 144-145); the Assyrian Chronicle (e.g. p. 148); the Limmu Lists (p. 132); the ND4301 and ND4305 Nimrud fragments published by Wiseman (pp. 347-349). Moreover, the 3rd examiner here actually refers to my “use of Assyrian annals”. I also made extensive use of H. Tadmor and D. Luckenbill (Sargon II’s Khorsabad texts), with reference to the primary sources, especially throughout Chapter 6. In fact I went even deeper than merely using primary sources and had, following Tadmor, serious cause to criticize (in relation to the document that Tadmor called “Eponym Cb6”) the fact that Assyriologists, Winckler and Delitzsch, had presumed to add the name “Sargon” where it may not originally have been, pp. 137-138. Further to what I have already said above re my attention to genre, and to biblical perspective, much of my Chapter 1, in Volume Two (e.g., pp. 17-37), involved a discussion of the debate regarding the genre of the apocryphal Book of Judith, which I headed “A History and Critical Evaluation of [the Book of Judith]. A. Versions, Genre …”. See also my Chapter 3 (pp. 74-75) regarding how history has viewed this, and how history’s view of it has changed according to the different fashions or moral values of different epochs. In this I was notably successful, according to the 2nd examiner who wrote: The study of the Book of Judith, in particular, showed promise. I appreciated the discussion of the book’s placement (or non-placement) in the Jewish versus the Catholic canon. The accompanying commentary also was a good piece of work. I would recommend that, with judicious editing and some reworking, this part of the thesis be suitable for publication. Re the argument of history v. ‘pious fiction’, it might be worthwhile to consider the questions of ‘intent’ and ‘audience’. A significant amount of my Volume Two thus constituted a discussion of the textual nature of the Book of Judith, in which I concluded - following some millennia and a half of Judaeo-Christian tradition, I might add - that the book was in fact an ancient account of an actual history, and not just some sort of ‘pious parable/fiction’ (genre). My primary contribution was to show that this history was situated entirely within the era of Hezekiah. (iii) “‘alter egos’,” “equations of a similar nature for geographic place names”, and “vague similarities” or (paragraphs 7-11, also 5); Firstly ‘alter egos’ According to the 3rd examiner (a part of this we have already read): “The thesis suffered from the same flaws as Velikovsky’s approach, which exerted considerable influence over the argument, including lending it a starting point. In particular, the whole notion of ‘alter egos’ was simply not justified, and, in fact, beggars the imagination”. And: “… there was a distinct failure to look thoroughly at the linguistic problems associated with the various equations of names being proposed by the ‘alter-ego’ model. This led to some rather fanciful and improbable equations which are simply not credible linguistically, let alone historically …”. And: “… the thesis criticizes other scholars for failing to explain name correspondences (e.g., So = Saïs, p. 189) when it fails to do this many times over. This unfortunately reveals a scholarly double standard”. My comments: If one has, as I have, embarked upon a revision of ancient history based upon the view that Egyptian history has been grossly over-extended, thereby affecting the chronologies of the nations tied to it, then one has to determine upon a methodology that is appropriate towards rectifying this situation. This must of necessity involve a shortening of chronology. But it must not go against the evidence. As the 2nd examiner has noted, my approach was archaeologically-based, hence a sound foundation underpinned it all. This is in contrast, I believe, to the latter part of Velikovsky’s revision, where - in order to merge the entire neo-Hittite empire with the Babylonian (Nebuchednezzar II’s), and make the 19th Egyptian dynasty (that is concurrent with the Hittites) the same as the 26th Egyptian dynasty, concurrent with the Babylonian empire - Velikovsky had ruptured the true and well-established archaeological sequence which indicates that the 19th dynasty must follow on directly from the 18th. This bold plan of Velikovsky’s, to accommodate his chronological shrinkage, would have been wonderful had it been workable. But it was in fact doomed to failure right from the start because it went ruthlessly against the established archaeological evidence. Now the method of ‘alter egos’, and the merging of certain dynasties, is the one that revisionist scholars have tended to adopt to support the necessary chronological shrinkage. It makes good sense (where it does not violate the established evidence). And some very striking correspondences have already been made. I have built upon what I consider to have been the best of these, and have also significantly added to them, according to the 2nd examiner’s recognising that I have “discovered new facts”. In other words, the model that I have proposed seems to be fruitful and productive, not barren. But does not the 3rd examiner completely miss the point again by asserting, without qualification, that my equations are “simply not credible … historically …”, given that what I have produced is in fact quite a new model of history; one that according to both the 1st and 2nd examiners was convincing according to its context (e.g., 2nd examiner: “… problems [were] generally worked convincingly within the framework of the thesis”)? Some of my linguistic equations might indeed be controversial, with even the 2nd examiner saying, “occasionally I felt he rather stretched linguistic arguments”. I could have though, for instance, in my proposed equation of Jonah with Nahum (partly based on Tobit 14:4, versions of which variously give ‘Jonah’ and ‘Nahum’) ‘stretched’ the NAH element in both names (Jo-NAH-um) as part of my evidence for identifying Jonah with Nahum. However, I resisted this temptation, due to the fact that, as I would write (Volume Two p. 94), there is “only a superficial similarity between the names”, with ‘Jonah’ containing the letter h (Hebrew he), whilst ‘Nahum’ contains the letter ch (Hebrew het). Now, regarding name linguistics, the 1st examiner thought at least: On pp. 60ff., I found this to be a valiant effort to identify the EA correspondents and I especially like the linguistic equation of Abdi-ashirta with Dushratta [i.e., through Ab-DU-aSHRATTA, p. 67]. It is quite wrong for the 3rd examiner to claim that “there was a distinct failure to look thoroughly at the linguistic problems associated with the various equations of names being proposed by the ‘alter-ego’ model”. I especially justified my ‘alter ego’ connection for kings with the ADP (see Acronyms) or ‘Addu-principle’ (Chapter 3, pp. 68-71), according to which a king might use a different theophoric (‘god’ name) in a different region (e.g. Baal in Phoenicia; Hadad in Syria; Ashur in Assyria). This e.g. accounted for why the one king might have had dissimilar names. Another factor I suggested was the well-attested religious syncretism at the time (p. 91), with the likelihood of a Yahweh and a Baal name being used together. With ADP, el-Amarna names (presumably C14th BC) now appear abundantly in C9th texts (p. 71). Also: [On pp. 68 I gave an explanation of possible Semitic use of Indo European names. Also on p. 174 I made it clear that, whilst certain equations may connect the same name, my identification was not based on name similarity alone; though it is nice when that happens. On pp. 208-209 I applied the ADP to Tushratta]. There were many further arguments in favour of my ‘alter ego’ comparisons, e.g: [P. 65 Boutflower has shown the name Tabeel to have been comparable with Tab rimmon. P. 146, Tiglath-pileser III was also ‘Pul[u]’, both in history and the Bible. We know that Assyrians took different names as rulers of Babylon, p. 184. P. 179-180 my folding of the Middle Bronze I & II Ages also involved name folding. P. 138, explanation of Sargon II’s name as a throne name; Sennacherib, as a personal name. P. 139, Tobit clearly says who Sennacherib’s father was, “Shalmaneser”, not Sargon (p. 184, the name Sargon, meaning “true King”, is suspicious – he may well have been a usurper). P. 147 Tiglath-pileser is a throne name, not a personal name. P. 169 Esarhaddon was known to have had two different names. The biblical Hadoram is also Joram, p. 69, and the name Adda-danu = Balu shipti, p. 70]. In light of all this, one has to wonder if the 3rd examiner has properly read the thesis! And to make me question this even further there is the 3rd examiner’s mistaken comment re “So = Saïs, p. 189”; this being, incidentally, the only occasion in all of sixteen paragraphs where the 3rd examiner cites a specific page (let alone Chapter, or Volume) of my thesis. By the time we have come to this p. 189 (re “So = Saïs …”), I had already given pages (see above) of linguistic arguments and principles in support of my thesis, and these would continue on, including into Volume Two, Part II (pp. 37-46) and in the Excursus, pp. 87-102. So I cannot justifiably be flatly accused of ‘failing to explain name correspondences’. My particular criticism of the So = Saïs equation was that “So” was a biblical king of Egypt, whereas Saïs is well known to have been a city in the W. Egyptian Delta. However unconvincing scholars may find some of my own equations, be they of people or places, at least I cannot be accused of ever having attempted to force an identification of one designated as a person with a known place (city), as some conventional historians have proposed in the case of So = Saïs. That strange ‘osmosis’ (a person becoming a place) is the point of my argument here. As I claim, my ‘alternative’ historical model is not a barren one. At least the 2nd examiner, as we read, did not think so (“new facts”). Nor did the 1st examiner, who liked e.g. the following comparisons: p. 82 - good attempt to identify the enigmatic Kassites (who remain a real problem). pp. 88ff. – excellent point regarding use of Hebrew in [el-Amarna] correspondence. pp. 90ff. – a provocative and detailed discussion of the [el-Amarna] correspondence in order to identify the correspondents. pp. 133ff. –The Sargon II-Sennacherib equation is provocative, comprehensive and near compelling. It stands as a major challenge to traditional specialists in Mesopotamian history and archaeology. p. 180 – a tantalizing comparison between 12th and 8th century BC individuals. pp. 180ff. – good discussion of Kassite/Assyro-Babylonian similarities. pp. 300ff. – very good discussion of the meaning of the Israel Stele. pp. 316ff. – good attempt to unravel the relationship between the 21st and 22nd [Egyptian] dynasties; pp. 322-327 – drives home the point about objects identified as “heirlooms” owing to a misplaced chronology. This same 1st examiner, too, had fully appreciated the degree of difficulty involved with certain aspects of my thesis, particularly in relation to Egypt’s most troublesome Third Intermediate Period, or TIP [i.e., Dynasties 21-26]: pp. 358ff. – an interesting attempt to sort out “who was who” in the 21st & 22nd Dynasties. This seems to be one of the most confusing periods in Ancient Egyptian history (pace Kitchen) and may never be straightened out. Mackey is to be commended for his effort. [Indeed, the great Egyptologist Sir Alan Gardiner had despaired of this historical period’s ever being properly resolved. See quote on p. 338 of thesis]. My thesis in fact, as I made clear (Chapter 3, p. 51), would tackle head on the three most vexed problems for the Velikovskian based revision (none of which is problem free in the conventional system), namely: ‘The Assuruballit Problem’ [henceforth TAP]; where to locate Ramses II (in the new scheme); and the resolution of the complex TIP. And, whilst I thought ultimately (thesis Conclusion, pp. 103-106) that I had managed to propose a positive solution to (i) and (ii), I did not claim to have done more than to provide “at least the outline of a solution - rather than a comprehensive revision - for (iii)”. Generally, as I have said, my ‘alternative’ historical model can be fruitful, having the potential to solve some glaring, unresolved problems that have persisted in - even bedevilled - the conventional system. Some of these, which are a bit technical in full detail, I shall now illustrate in brief: One of the most glaring problems is the lack of archaeology for a supposed 400 years of Kassite history (see section ‘dark age’ for more detail on this), completely resolved in my chronological shrinkage and identification of the Kassites with Assyro-Babylonian kings. See also the 1st examiner’s favourable comments above on my treatment of the Kassites. The conventional system cannot explain why, whereas Assuruballit of Assyria’s father - as given in the el-Amarna letters - was called Assur-nadin-ahe, his father is named in the Assyrian King List as Eriba-Adad, not Assur-nadin-ahe. Yet so much is based on this supposed connection, as we read in Centuries of Darkness: “Thus the much vaunted synchronism between Akhenaten and Assuruballit I, the main linch-pin between Egyptian and Assyrian Late Bronze Age chronologies, is flawed and must be treated with caution” (cited on p. 231 of thesis). My multi-identification of Tushratta enabled for me to explain how this Mitannian king had been in a position to send the statue of Ishtar of Nineveh (Assyria) to pharaoh Amenhotep III in Egypt, in the hope of curing the latter’s illness. For Tushratta was also, according to my reconstruction, Ashurnasirpal II of Assyria, pp. 73, 76-81. [See also p. 80, art evidence for Ashurnasirpal II as a contemporary of Egypt’s Late Kingdom]. *** My equation, Tushratta = Abdi-ashirta (the 2nd examiner, as we saw, liked the linguistic connection here), serves to answer my persistent question (e.g. pp. 65-67, 73) as to why two contemporary kings, Tushratta and Abdi-ashirta, ruling the same regions, and with the same ambitions and aspirations (e.g. to consolidate rule over Mitanni), never clashed, nor do their names ever appear together in the el-Amarna correspondence. The mention in 2 Chronicles 21:16-17 of “the Arabians, who were near the Cushites [Ethiopians]”, who sacked king Jehoram’s palace in Jerusalem has bewildered biblical scholars (see my discussion in Chapter 4, pp. 112-114). E.g: “This curious verse can hardly signify that the Arabians took and plundered Jerusalem” (quote on p. 114). But it is perfectly explainable in a revised context. In fact we often meet with cases in which the conventional scenario leads to such statements of bewilderment or astonishment, e.g: p. 73, where Campbell had sought for “... a way to explain a Mitannian raid into upper Syria sometime during the final years of Amenophis [Amenhotep] III, carried out by Tušratta [Tushratta] while he was maintaining loyal friendship with Egypt”. But Campbell finally had to admit to having “no satisfactory explanation”. [See also Roux, p. 14 below, on Kassite archaeology]. The fairly recently published Tang-i Var inscription (see Chapter 6, p. 144, Chapter 12, pp. 350-351, 364) has thrown into complete and unexpected confusion the conventional syncretisms between Sargon II of Assyria and the 25th Ethiopian dynasty; a problem that does not exist in my renovation of neo-Assyrian history and the TIP. And, with Sargon II to be merged with Sennacherib, as I have argued, then Thiele’s problems with harmonizing the reign of king Hezekiah of Judah against the neo-Assyrian rule are no longer relevant. As the 1st examiner notes, this (Sargon II = Sennacherib) was “provocative, comprehensive and near compelling”. [For more on this, see p. 13 below of this Appendix)]. Art-historical problems of similarities between C12th BC (‘Middle’ Assyro-Babylonian) and C8th BC (‘Neo’ Assyro-Babylonian) art (pp. 80-81, also pp. 250-251) do not exist in my model, which provides a chronological folding of the ‘Middle’ and ‘Neo’ eras. [See also p. 250, for art of Horemheb, Egypt’s Late Kingdom, like that found in neo-Assyria; p. 251, for art depicting the ‘Sea Peoples’, again Late Kingdom, like that of Shalmaneser III of a supposedly later period]. Secondly, “equations of a similar nature for geographic place names” There were actually rather few such geographical “equations” proposed in the thesis, and the 3rd examiner mentions only two of these, namely: “… Lachish = Ashdod; Rages = Damascus”. Regarding the first, Lachish = Ashdod, I noted Chapter 6 (p. 154) that Sargon II had, in his Annals, actually referred simultaneously to two Ashdods: “Ashdod, Gimtu [Gath?], Ashdudimmu [Ashdod-by-the-Sea], I besieged and captured”. The conventional historians do not explain why. My thesis does. They are two separate locations, with ‘Ashdod-by-the-Sea’ being the conventional Ashdod; whereas ‘Ashdod’, unqualified, is Lachish. This identification solves a host of problems, including why Sargon II, who actually took the fort of Azekah in Judah (pp. 158-159) would have studiously ignored Azekah’s neighbour fort (p. 140), the mighty Lachish. Sargon II claims to have subdued Judah (as noted on p. 154). For other resolutions, and arguments in favour of this equation, Ashdod = Lachish, see pp. 151, 160-162. As regards the equation Rages = Damascus, the 3rd examiner has made the comment: “… simply contradictory … Rages, situated in a mountainous terrain, was equated with Damascus which was correctly noted as being located in a plain …”. Now this, the only occasion when the 3rd examiner has credited me with being ‘correct’, in fact mis-states what I had actually written. I discussed all this in Volume Two, Chapter 2, pp. 38-40, where I had specifically claimed that “Rages”, a city in the mountains, must be the city of Damascus that dominated the province of Batanaea” (p. 39). Damascus, almost 700 m above sea level, is actually situated on a plateau. Secondly, I gave there very specific geographical details in order to identify this “Rages” in relation to “Ecbatana” (Tobit 5:6), which I had in turn identified (following the Heb. Londinii, or HL, fragment version of Tobit) with “Bathania”, or Bashan (possibly Herodotus’ Syrian Ecbatana as opposed to the better known Median Ecbatana). According to Tobit, “Rages is situated in the mountains, two days’ walk from Ecbatana which is in the plain”. Now Damascus is precisely two days’ walk from Bashan in the Hauran plain, as according to Jâkût el-Hamawi who says of Batanaea’s most central town of Nawâ …: “Between Nawa and Damascus is two days’ journey” (as quoted on p. 39). What further consolidates the fact that Tobit’s ‘Ecbatana’ was in a westerly direction, rather than an easterly one, is that his son Tobias, leaving Nineveh, arrived at the Tigris river in the evening; an impossibility were he heading for Median Ecbatana in the east. And, according to the Vulgate version of Tobit, Charan, that is, Haran, is situated “in the halfway” between Nineveh and Ecbatana. The traveller is clearly journeying towards the west. Whilst Bible scholars today tend to dismiss the whole geography of the Book of Tobit as nonsensical, a simple adjustment based on a genuine version (Heb. Londinii), makes perfect - even very precise (“two days walk”) - sense of it. Thirdly, “vague similarities” 3rd examiner: “Vague similarities were used as a means of drawing identical equations. Thus, for example, the use of kohl was found to be a similarity between Jezebel (conventionally dated to 9th century BC) and Nefertiti (conventionally dated to 14th century BC), which was subsequently used to suggest that they were probably the same person. This appeared to make the evidence fit the desired outcome”. My comment: I hardly hung my reconstruction on this small point of the kohl. As part of my primary foundations, 1-3, I had re-located the el-Amarna period (Nefertiti’s age) from the C14th BC to the C9th BC. The 1st examiner, according to whom: “pp. 210-222 – While the equation of Nefertiti with Jezebel is intriguing, I don’t buy it”, had conceded that: “It is a better argument for their contemporaneity rather than identity”. Note here that the 1st examiner was fully aware that my reconstruction of Nefertiti far exceeds (“pp. 210-222”) the mere mention of “kohl” (p. 221). “Kohl” is an element that the seemingly “eye witness” (P. Ellis quote, p. 221) account of Jezebel’s death has included, and it is certainly a notable feature of Nefertiti’s cosmetic make-up. But I intended it merely as just one small piece in a large jigsaw puzzle, or possible Identikit. Now this is a typical ploy of the 3rd examiner, to minimize the evidence I used for a particular reconstruction. Indeed the very same procedure can be found in the following two instances of criticism: (3rd examiner): “Thus, for example, to propose that two Assyrian monarchs, Sargon II and Sennacherib … were not only one and the same person, but also identical with the Babylonian monarch Nebuchadnezzar I, is a simply stunning claim. One needs far more than chronological concurrence (which itself was not convincingly argued for) to make this claim, yet no further convincing grounds were given”. My comments: Apart from the fact that I had previously addressed the ‘dark age’ problem in ‘Middle Assyrian’ history Chapter 6, pp. 130-131, then applying this to Babylonia, Chapter 7, pp. 174-176, I had then begun to bridge the gap between ‘Middle’ and ‘Neo’ Assyrian history. I did this particularly by synchronizing the circumstances of Tukulti-Ninurta I and III, and then making a detailed comparison between Tiglath-pileser I and III, Chapter 7, pp. 181-184, accompanied also by comparisons between the Babylonian Merodach-baladan I and II (whose building works even archaeologists cannot clearly distinguish, p. 179). I also showed that a succession of supposedly C12th BC Elamite kings (known as the ‘Shutrukids’), encountered by Nebuchednezzar I, had virtually the same names as a succession of Elamite kings encountered by Sennacherib. Thus (my Table 1, p. 180): Table 1: Comparison of the C12th BC (conventional) and C8th BC C12th BC · Some time before Nebuchednezzar I, there reigned in Babylon a Merodach-baladan [I]. · The Elamite kings of this era carried names such as Shutruk-Nahhunte and his son, Kudur-Nahhunte. · Nebuchednezzar I fought a hard battle with a ‘Hulteludish’ (Hultelutush-Inshushinak). C8th BC · The Babylonian ruler for king Sargon II’s first twelve years was a Merodach-baladan [II]. · SargonII/Sennacherib fought against the Elamites, Shutur-Nakhkhunte & Kutir-Nakhkhunte. · Sennacherib had trouble also with a ‘Hallushu’ (Halutush-Inshushinak). “Too spectacular I think to be mere coincidence!”, I had remarked. The 1st examiner, as we read, appreciated this. [I also gave art-historical support for this ‘folding’ of eras (p. 181). And I identified, as the same person, a legendary Vizier common to both eras (p. 185-187). On pp. 184-186, I entered into a discussion of Sennacherib as Nebuchednezzar I]. Moreover, my explanation (Sennacherib = Nebuchednezzar I, pp. 184-186) solved the conundrum for the conventional history as to why the proud Sargon II, or Sennacherib, did not - like previous Assyrian conquerors of Babylon - adopt the title: “King of Babylon”, “preferring to use the older shakkanaku (‘viceroy’)” (p. 185). “That modesty however was not an Assyrian characteristic we have already seen abundantly”, I wrote. “And so lacking in this virtue was Sargon in fact, I believe, that historians have had to create a complete Babylonian king, namely, Nebuchednezzar I, to accommodate the Assyrian’s rôle as ‘King of Babylon’.” My point here is again that this construction was built on far more than, according to the 3rd examiner, “chronological concurrence”. Moreover, I was not averse to pointing to certain defects in my own reconstruction (e.g. p. 185, a major problem). And for the actual equation, Sargon II = Sennacherib, a matter of extreme controversy, no doubt, and one therefore requiring detailed attention, I had painstakingly throughout Chapter 6 (1st examiner used the word, “comprehensive”) gone through the successive regnal year events of Sargon II, comparing these with the successive campaign records of Sennacherib, showing that they compared remarkably well: too well, indeed, I thought, to have been mere coincidence. Here is my summary and comment on this (from p. 166): A Question By Way of Summary What are the chances of two successive kings having, in such perfect chronological sequence - over a span of some two decades - the same campaigns against the same enemies? Merodach-baladan (Sargon). Merodach-baladan (Sennacherib). 2. Ellipi, Medes and Tumunu (Sargon). Ellipi, Medes and Tumunu (Sennacherib). 3. Egypt-backed Judah/Philistia (Sargon). Egypt-backed Judah/Philistia (Sennacherib) 4. Merodach-baladan and Elam (Sargon). Merodach-baladan and Elam (Sennacherib). 5. (Not fully preserved) (Sargon). (Not fully preserved) (Sennacherib). 6. Babylon, Elam and Bit-Iakin (Sargon). Babylon, Elam and Bit-Iakin (Sennacherib). 7. Elam (Sargon). Elam (Sennacherib). [End of quote]. (iv) ‘Dark Age’ (paragraph 13); At the beginning of Chapter 6, I resorted to the testimony of Assyriologists re some crucial phases of Dark Age in Assyrian history. I drew some of this information from the book, Centuries of Darkness, by Peter James and other scholars from different fields. Though James is a revisionist, this book (which has a Foreword by Professor/Lord Colin Renshaw, archaeologist) is now being quoted favourably in text books, e.g. by N. Grimal, A History of Ancient Egypt (Blackwell, 1992), p. 440. I continued this discussion of Dark Age into Chapter 7, as noted above, and also returned to it in detail when analyzing the TIP in Chapter 11 and Chapter 12. Here I would like just to take a section out of my Chapter 7, p. 175, re the Kassite archaeology, or lack thereof, to show clearly that there is something seriously wrong with the present structure: It is not I think too much to say that the Kassites are an enigma for the over-extended conventional scheme. Roux has given the standard estimate for the duration of Kassite rule of Babylonia: “… a long line of Kassite monarchs was to govern Mesopotamia or, as they called it, Kar-Duniash for no less than four hundred and thirty-eight years (1595-1157 B.C.)”. This is a substantial period of time; yet archaeology has surprisingly little to show for it. Roux again: Unfortunately, we are not much better off as regards the period of Kassite domination in Iraq … all we have at present is about two hundred royal inscriptions – most of them short and of little historical value – sixty kudurru … and approximately 12,000 tablets (letters and economic texts), less than 10 per cent of which has been published. This is very little indeed for four hundred years – the length of time separating us from Elizabeth 1. [Seton] Lloyd, in his book dedicated to the study of Mesopotamian archaeology [The Archaeology of Mesopotamia] can give only a mere 4 pages [i.e., pp. 172-175] (including pictures) to the Kassites, without even bothering to list them in the book’s Index at the back. [End of quote]. (v) footnotes/aesthetics (paragraphs 14-15) 3rd examiner: “… consistently incorrect use of such terms as ibid. and op. cit.” [para 14], and “consistently redundant use of ellipsis (…) in quotations” [para 15]. My comment: These are matters that can easily be tidied up before the thesis is bound. All three examiners had some comment to make regarding footnotes. Though I can see no other alternative than to using ellipsis - as I have continued to do in this Appendix – when employing only selected parts of a quote.

Saturday, June 18, 2011

How convincing are the arguments for a new Egyptian chronology?




Taken from: JOURNAL OF CREATION 23(1) 2009


[Comment: The AMAIC does not consider that David Rohl, whose chronology Veronica Olaussen says below "may not be completely correct", has by any means discovered the correct model for a revised history, though he has made some very significant contributions in this regard].




Viewpoint





How convincing are the arguments for a
new Egyptian chronology?




Veronica Kristine Olaussen




The Conventional Chronology (CC) links up with the Bible in the person of Pharaoh Shoshenk I, who is identified with the biblical Shishak. But David Rohl holds that the CC does not fit with other parts of the Bible. If the CC is followed, there is a huge gap, a ‘dark age’, where there should be evidence for Hebrew history. On the other hand, Egyptology professor Kenneth Kitchen, who is a firm supporter of the CC, accepts no clash. He states that ‘absence of evidence is not evidence of absence’.1
The CC is based on the king list as compiled by the Egyptian priest Manetho, and additionally what Rohl identifies as ‘four pillars’. Rohl claims that there are compelling anomalies in the CC, as well as serious weaknesses in at least three of the CC’s four pillars. However, according to Chris Bennett, these anomalies alone are no basis for a completely new chronology; to be certain about the distant past is difficult. Some of what is presented on popular television as ‘undisputed fact’ appear after all to be based on questionable assumptions. Rohl’s New Chronology may not be completely correct, but the weaknesses he documents in the CC show that the
conventional wisdom regarding the ancient Egyptian timeline merits re-examination.




....

JOURNAL OF CREATION 23(1) 2009
61

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

General Chronologico-Historical Problems and Proposed Solutions



…. As already said, my justification for pursuing new synchronisms is based upon recommendations by the examiners of my MA thesis that the conventional views may no longer be sustainable and that ‘a more acceptable alternative’ ought therefore to be sought. This means that (whilst this thesis is primarily about Hezekiah’s Judah) the very pillars of conventional Egyptian history, that affect the computation of the histories of various kingdoms, such as Hezekiah’s, need no longer to be regarded as fixed, but that it may now be necessary to seek after an ‘alternative’ set of pillars upon which to erect ‘a more acceptable’ historical edifice. And the same will apply to Mesopotamian history insofar as this affects the Era of Hezekiah [EOH] and its background. In my MA thesis I had identified the following “three basic ‘pillars’” of standard Egyptian chronology; all closely interconnected:[1]
  1. Manetho’s Dynasties;
  2. The Sothic Calendar Theory;
  3. The Era of Menophres (c. 1320 BC).
To these three I would now definitely add a fourth: namely, Shoshenq I as the biblical ‘King Shishak of Egypt’ (1 Kings 14:25). I did in fact make the latter ‘pillar’ a prominent part of a Sothic article that I wrote for the Answers in Genesis TJ.[2]
Rohl has identified what he calls “four great pillars to the chronological edifice of Egypt”, which set does not, however, include my number 3. above:[3]
The Four Great Pillars
  1. The sacking of Thebes by Ashurbanipal (664 BC).
  2. Identifying Pharaoh Shoshenq I of the so-called 22nd dynasty with the Biblical Shishak of 1 Kings 14:25-26 (925 BC). This sets the beginning of the 22nd dynasty to 945 BC.
  3. Using the Sothic dating system and the Ebers papyrus to date the accession of Ahmose to 1550 BC.
  4. The accession of Ramesses II in 1279 BC based on a lunar date.
It is from such sure signposts as these, as it is thought, that the Egyptologists are able to set securely in place their chronology of ancient Egypt.
According to the revisionists, however, the largely Sothic-based ‘pillars’ of conventional Egyptian chronology are not to be relied upon. This is because the very Sothic scheme itself is deemed to be an artificial construct. Courville, for instance, had argued in 1971, in the course of two chapters, the limitations of dating methods (e.g. Carbon-14 and Astronomical methods); his discussion including a solid critique of Sothic dating.[4] And Velikovsky, at about the same time, wrote an article on the very foundations of Egyptian chronology, in which he also discussed the Sothic problem in considerable depth.[5] Long too, a conventional scholar, wrote a critical analysis of Egypt’s Sothic Chronology, and his lengthy article was later reprinted in the revisionist journal, Kronos.[6]
The contributions to the study of Sothic theory by these three scholars I have already thoroughly discussed and referenced in my MA thesis.
Unknown to me though at the time, but well worthy of noting now, was the fact that there had also been published, in Kronos, a special supplement on Sothic dating, in which no less than nine authors had discussed the weaknesses of Sothic dating and its limitations.[7]
Let us now recapitulate on some of the most important of those Sothically-based chronological anchors – a brief summary of my MA thesis.

Anchors Away

The ‘heliacal rising’ of the Dog Star, Sirius (basically, its first visible rising shortly before sunrise), mentioned in various Egyptian documents (as peret Sopdet), would recur on the Egyptian New Year’s Day, at the same observational site, every 1460 years (365 x 4). This 1460-year span was known later in the Classical era as the ‘Great Year’. But Meyer’s belief that the ancient Egyptians had actually used this Sothic period of 1460 years as a kind of long-range calendar is pure supposition, with no evidence in support of it. In fact Meyer had to go to Classical texts to get some of his key information, to Theon, an Alexandrian astronomer of the late C4th AD, and to the C3rd AD Roman author, Censorinus.
According to Meyer’s interpretation of the Sothic data as provided by Censorinus, there had occurred a coincidence between the heliacal rising of Sirius and New Year’s Day in the 100th year before Censorinus wrote his book, De Die Natali Liber: thus in c.140 AD.[8] Meyer was therefore able to determine from there, using multiples of 1460, his Sothic series of c.140 AD; 1320 BC; 2780 BC & 4240 BC. Upon this chronological bed he eventually spread out the entire dynastic history of Egypt.
Never mind that Censorinus had not actually connected the 1460-year period with Sirius,[9] or that his evidence appeared patently to contradict that of Theon, according to whom the conclusion of a 1460-year period had occurred in the 5th year of the emperor Augustus, or 26 BC, as opposed to Censorinus’ testimony that a Great Year had commenced in c.140 AD.[10]
Most crucial to this theory was the year 1320 BC, a meeting point, supposedly, between one of Meyer’s key heliacal risings of Sothis and a presumed historical era. For Theon left a much-discussed statement that:[11] “Since Menophres and till the end of the era of Augustus, or the beginning of the era of Diocletian, there were 1605 years”. Long has done the maths for this, in a conventional context:[12]
From [Theon’s] quotation we gather that the era of Menophres (apo Menophreos) lasted from circa 1321-1316 BC to AD 285 or the duration of 1,605 years, i.e. from Emperor Diocletian back to someone or something designated “Menophreõs”.
The trouble is that Theon did not elaborate upon whether Menophres was a ‘someone’ or a ‘something’, e.g. a pharaoh or a city (as some[13] have argued), hence his depriving historians of the chance to arrive at an unequivocal identification. ‘Menophres’ though is generally presumed to have been a pharaoh; one especially of the early 19th dynasty. Most identify him with Ramses I, whose throne name was Menpehtire (hence Menophres, as it is suggested); though Menpehtire is by no means a perfect linguistic equivalent of Menophres. Ramses I’s (approximately) one-year reign is traditionally believed to have occurred during c.1321/20 BC. And most conveniently, since that pharaoh is generally considered to have been the first ruler of the 19th dynasty, this date is also thought to have marked the inauguration of a new era.
From a combination of this key date of 1320 BC and another Sothic date to be found in the medical papyrus, Ebers - a presumed heliacal rising dated to the reign of the 18th dynasty’s pharaoh Amenhotep I - the beginning of Egypt’s New Kingdom could be mathematically ascertained, retro-calculating back using estimates of reign lengths in the dynastic lists. Here is part of what I wrote on the Ebers Papyrus in my MA thesis:[14]
After Illahûn [see below], according to Hayes …, the “next astronomically determinable ‘anchor point’ in Egyptian history is the ninth year of the reign of King Amenophis [Amenhotep] I, the second ruler of the Eighteenth Dynasty”. The ‘anchor point’ in question is the Sothic date provided by the Ebers Papyrus, which Meyer accepted as belonging to the era 1550/49-1547/46 BC …. The rough parameters allowed by the two supposedly fixed Sothic points of Illahûn and Ebers have been refined by dates drawn from comparing modern retrocalculations of past lunar cycles with Egyptian records of the moon’s phases known from the reigns of some pharaohs.
The importance of the Ebers document is that it – dating as it is generally thought close to the rise of the New Kingdom era and the corresponding beginning of the Late Bronze Age – has enabled the Sothic theorists to fix with precision an important new phase in history. Meyer, working from the fixed date he had settled upon from the Ebers Papyrus, and taking Manetho’s reasonable figure of 25-26 years for the reign of Pharaoh Ahmose (Amenhotep I’s predecessor), had no trouble thereafter calculating the beginning of the New Kingdom and the simultaneous era for the expulsion of the Hyksos by Ahmose: viz at c. 1580 BC.
…. Thus Long was not exaggerating when he stated that the “New Kingdom and Late Bronze chronology are largely dependent on the Ebers Sothic date for the ninth year of Amenhotep I” ….
I went on to note, with reference to Brugsch[15] and Long[16], that:[17]
The Ebers Papyrus has … turned out to be intrinsically unreadable. Because of its illegibility, Brugsch described the document as: “Dieser Text, in hoechst fluechtigen hieratischen [i.e. ‘This text, in highly cursory hieratic’] …”. The fairly significant amount of “divisive comments and interpretations” [ref. to Long] … to which the Ebers Papyrus has given rise, seems due largely to the problematic reading of the document. Three main areas of difficulty in this regard may be isolated: viz the identification of the ruler; the regnal year; and the purport of the text.
The Shoshenq/‘Shishak’ Synchronism
Another key chronological ‘pillar’, or anchor, for Egypt’s New Kingdom - not Sothically-based, but a ‘sighter’ for the Sothic dates, as I called it in my article for the Answers in Genesis TJ[18] - is Champollion’s identification of Shoshenq (Shoshenk) I with ‘Shishak’: the pharaoh who invaded Jerusalem and pillaged the Temple of Yahweh there in the 5th year of Solomon’s son, Rehoboam (1 Kings 14:25-26 & 2 Chronicles 12:2-9).
This fateful identification, according to which Shoshenq I’s incursion into Palestine in approximately his twentieth year – as recorded on his triumph scene on the Bubasite Portal at Karnak – was the very campaign that the Bible attributes to ‘Shishak’, I described in my article for TJ as being “an unshakeable pillar of Egyptian chronology, seemingly tied to the Bible”.[19] How it has enabled conventional scholars to fix the reign of Shoshenq I in the C10th BC is well explained by Rohl:[20]
The books of Kings and Chronicles detail chronological links between the reigns of the kings of Israel and Judah during the Divided Monarchy period and these (in combination with Assyrian annals mentioning Hebrew rulers) have enabled scholars to determine, with a fair degree of accuracy, the post-Solomonic biblical chronology.
Again, as a direct result of some penetrating research undertaken by American biblical chronologist Edwin Thiele …. modern scholarship has reduced the Old Testament dates by fifty years, fixing Year 5 of Rehoboam at 925 BC. Shoshenq I’s twentieth year was thus attached to the same anchor date and his first regnal year (the founding of the 22nd Dynasty) set at 945 BC. ….
Egypt’s TIP and the early Divided Monarchy of Israel can now be firmly tied together, it is thought, by the convergence of pharaoh Shoshenq I’s Year 20 and Rehoboam’s Year 5. I intend to examine this presumed Egypto-biblical synchronism in more critical detail in Chapter 8. Here though I should like to continue on somewhat further with Rohl’s comments, especially his claim that the methodology in question is rather dubious:[21]
There is a fundamental methodological problem here. Scholars are underpinning Egyptian chronology with a biblical synchronism. They readily accept the name-equation Shoshenk = Shishak and proclaim a correspondence between the Year 20 campaign of Shoshenk I and the Shishak assault upon Jerusalem. In doing so they dismiss the obvious discrepancies of fact between the two sources. If you are going to use biblical data to establish both the chronology of Egypt and the stratigraphical framework of Levantine archaeology, you cannot then go on to arbitrarily disregard selected sections of the historical material contained in the biblical source simply because they do not fit your theory. Surely, if this were any sort of reliable historical synchronism, the facts from both sources, supposedly recording a single historical event, would agree in a substantial way. As it stands they do not agree at all. Confidence in this key synchronism and resulting chronological anchor point is misguided and dangerous.
Rohl next proceeds to show how a combination of this presumed synchronism and the well established date, as he thinks, for the sack of Thebes in 664 BC,[22] has enabled for historians to determine the length of time from the 22nd dynasty to the end of the TIP:
To demonstrate how reliant we are upon this synchronism to determine the chronological length of the Third Intermediate Period in Egypt we need only refer to a statement by one of the leading authorities on Egyptian chronology – Professor Kenneth Kitchen himself. First he establishes a date for the beginning of the 25th Dynasty working back from our safe fixed point of 664 BC (death of Taharka) using the highest regnal dates for the Kushite pharaohs. He thus arrives at a date between 716 and 712 BC for the year 1 of Shabaka, founder of the dynasty …. Kitchen then reveals the conventional chronology’s crucial reliance on the Bible to establish the TIP chronology:
Over two centuries earlier, the 21-year reign of the founder of the 22nd Dynasty, Shoshenk I can be set at ca. 945-924 B.C., thanks (i) to his synchronisms with the detailed chronology of Judah and Israel, itself linked closely to a firm Assyrian chronology …, and (ii) to the series of known regnal years of his successors, which fill up the interval 924-716/712 B.C. almost completely … [Rohl’s emphasis].
Rohl concludes:
Note that the regnal years of Shoshenk I’s successors are made to ‘fill up’ a period of time which has been entirely established in its length by the biblical synchronism between Shoshenk I (= Shishak) and Rehoboam – which in turn is dated by the biblical chronology of Edwin Thiele. No wonder Kitchen regards the link between Shoshenk and Rehoboam as ‘the essential synchronism’! …
The Illahûn Papyrus
Leaving the later Egyptian history just for the moment, let me conclude this section with mention of the key conventional Sothic anchor for the Middle Kingdom; albeit briefly, though, as a study of Egypt’s Middle Kingdom era is well beyond the scope of this thesis. The chronology of the Middle Kingdom has also been erected around a Sothic date, the Illahûn papyrus. Thus Professor Lynn E. Rose:[23] “Our only known “Sothic date” from the Middle Kingdom occurs on an El-Lahun [Illahûn] papyrus that is customarily dated to the nineteenth century B.C.E. – and usually to the reign of Sesostris III of the Twelfth Dynasty”.
In my MA thesis I dedicated chapter 5 to a discussion of the Illahûn document and the problems associated with it. Here is part of what I then wrote[24], with reference to Edgerton[25] and to Long:[26]
The earliest Sothic-dated source used by Meyer and his colleagues for establishing their mathematically precise scheme of chronology were the two papyrii fragments discovered by Ludwig Borchardt in 1899, in a precinct of the Illahûn Temple at Fayyûm. This document does not give the beginning of a Sothic cycle, but instead a calendar date, year 7 of an un-named pharaoh, for the rising of Sirius; which - when retrocalculated [with the assistance of the dynastic lists] …. - yielded the approximate figures of 1876-1872 …. This date quickly became the accepted one [as] attested by Edgerton ….
From 1899 until 1937, inclusive, all publications on the chronology of the Twelfth Dynasty seem to have accepted the view that a certain fragment of the el-Lahun [ie Illahûn] temple register foretold a heliacal rising of Sothis on the sixteenth day of the eighth month in the seventh year of Sesostris III. No king is named in the fragment.
… Long, from a chronological point of view, attributed to Borchardt’s decision concerning the Illahûn fragment … [a] … far-reaching significance. On what he called “this supposition” of Borchardt, rested – he said …: “… the chronology of the Middle Kingdom, the likewise dependent absolute dating of the Old Kingdom, and the First Intermediate”. And, regarding the dependence of the historians of the non-Egyptian nations on Borchardt’s estimate … Long further claimed that: “… the dating of the Early and the Middle Bronze Ages in Palestine, Greece and Mesopotamia are to a great degree founded on faith in the veracity and accuracy of the document …”.
From this Illahûn date, combined with estimates of reign lengths in the dynastic lists, it could be determined that the Middle Kingdom’s 12th dynasty had come to its end in c. 1786 BC. This has become a real anchor date for early Egyptian history and all that depends upon it. “Feelings that border on panic seize scholars who trust the Sothic theory when doubt is cast upon it” wrote Down, adding that:[27]
[Professor] Lynn Rose quotes Sir Alan Gardiner as saying, ‘To abandon 1786 BC as the year when Dyn XII ended would be to cast adrift from our only firm anchor, a course that would have serious consequences for the history, not of Egypt alone, but of the entire Middle East (JNES 94-4-237)’.
Egypt as the Measuring Rod
Dr. Simms’ view that the chronology of antiquity “has often been used in a circular manner ... to uphold questionable traditional interpretations of the past ...”,[28] is perfectly true I think in regard to Meyer’s Sothic theory. Unfortunately the circular merry-go-round does not stop with Egypt, because as Egyptologist Sir Flinders Petrie had correctly noted back in 1901:[29] “Egypt is the sounding line for the un-measured abyss of European history”. In other words, the artefacts of ancient Greece, Italy, France, etc., are traditionally dated according to the Sothic rule. But in order to make the shorter chronology of, say, Greece, fit the Procrustean bed of an over-extended Egyptian chronology, it has been necessary to stretch the former with the insertion of ‘Dark Ages’ of about half a millennium’s duration (c.1200-700 BC). The same is done for other nations (e.g. the Ethiopians, the Anatolians) whose archaeology is tied to that of Egypt.
Petrie had found that in Greece the Mycenaean Age pottery was always stratified together with artefacts from Egypt’s 18th-20th dynasties (Sothically dated to c.1600-1100 BC). In his view there was no alternative to following the Egyptian dates and placing Mycenaean civilization squarely in the 2nd millennium. In 1890 Petrie confidently asserted that:[30] “... the main light on the chronology of the civilizations of the Aegean comes from Egypt; and it is Egyptian sources that must be thanked by classical scholars for revealing the real standing of the antiquities of Greece”.
But many of the classicists were not ready thus to give thanks to Petrie, whose Egyptian-derived dates had, for them, produced a huge hiatus between the Mycenaean world and that of the C8th Greek city-states. Commenting on this awkward situation, Professor Greenberg has written most reasonably:[31]
Unfortunately, the Egyptian chronology is nowhere near as solid as the architectural wonders which are its hallmark. As a matter of fact, our knowledge of Egyptian events is extensively based upon the disjointed reports of Classical authors, damaged and incomplete written records, and chance records of astronomical phenomena …. Even the latter factor has been questioned ….
The above statements are not meant to be disparaging, for no one can deny the admirable work of the Egyptologists over the past century. But, a more realistic and objective view of the current historical and art historical situation must be taken. Thus Demargne’s … statement that the Mycenaean chronological problem “was solved in an article by Flinders Petrie … in the Journal of Hellenic Studies (1890), which established an absolute chronology of the Greek civilization on an Egyptian basis” is a somewhat bare one. Besides, even Petrie’s work has been superseded in the realm of Egyptian chronology ….
Previously it had been the standard practice to date the end of the Mycenaean civilization as late as 800, allowing continuity - even an overlap - with the succeeding Geometric period. The gap in time in so many nations and fields (literature, art, architecture, etc.) has completely baffled scholars. I could provide many examples of anomalies caused by this approximately 500-year hiatus as pointed out by revisionists. Here are just a few historical puzzles to which they refer, some of which I intend to tackle in the course of this thesis:
  • How is it that the Lion Gate at Mycenae, sculpturally an C8th BC monument, is dated by the bulk of the scholarly world to the C14th-C13th BC?
  • How could the vaulted tombs of Ugarit serve as models for Cypriots, Israelites, Urartians, Anatolian peoples, and Phoenician colonists, if contemporaneity is denied, and they went out of use and were thus forgotten 500-600 years earlier?
  • How could the Babylonians, the Cypriots, have left virtually no evidence of writing for about 500 years, after which they continued to use basically the same scripts?
  • How to explain the 200 plus year gap during the early TIP, with no Apis bulls apparently buried in Egypt.
  • Why do the inscriptional writings of pharaoh Hatshepsut of Egypt’s 18th dynasty (Sothically dated to the C15th) bear such a remarkable similarity to the writings attributed to David & Solomon (traditionally dated to the C10th)?
  • How to explain why the Iron Age levels of Palestine produced nothing reflecting the ‘Golden Age’ of King Solomon?
  • Why have so many perceived that the Sun Hymn written in the reign of pharaoh Akhnaton (Sothically dated to the C14th) bears such a likeness to Psalm 104 of the Hebrew Psalter, ascribed to king David?
  • How to explain the fact that the material and technological culture of the C9th BC Assyrian kings, beginning with Ashurnasirpal II, closely matches that of the 18th and 19th dynasties in Egypt? (The same goes for the C8th BC culture of the 25thEthiopian dynasty).
    • Why do bronzes made in Cyprus during the C12th BC frequently occur elsewhere in C9th or later deposits?
    • How is it that the objects of Egyptian pharaohs from the 10th-9th centuries are always found abroad in contexts hundreds of years later?
    • How to explain the complete disappearance of Nubian culture for 300 years from the Late Kingdom of Egypt to the rise of the 25th dynasty?
Throughout this thesis we shall encounter further such anomalies as well.
For the past several decades, revisionists have striven to amend the time warp, to bridge the ‘Dark Ages’ gap. Courville, for instance, had proposed this general solution to the problem by way of summary of his own revision:[32]
In the preceding chapters we have shown how numerous archaeological difficulties and historical anomalies disappear with the simple and single alteration in the dating of the end of the Early Bronze [Age]. … When the necessity of this single alteration of dates in antiquity is recognized, there begins to emerge the general outlines of a revised chronology of Egypt and of all other nations of antiquity whose chronology is tied to that of Egypt.
And Professor Greenberg has written, on the basis of his detailed art-historical study of the Lion Gate at Mycenae:[33]
If the basic premise of this paper, namely that the Lion Gate at Mycenae is sculpturally an eighth century B.C. monument, should prove to be correct and other Mycenaean problems are resolved as a result of an alteration of chronology in favor of a later dating, then the “Dark Ages” of Greece … would be instantly swept away. This would not be the first time a “Dark Age” has vanished in the light of new discoveries and willing critical reevaluation ….
More recently, James and his colleagues, “with a background of research in many different but related fields”, pooled their resources and began an in-depth investigation into the:[34]
... dilemma into which so many archaeologists have been forced, dating and re-dating artefacts backwards and forwards across the span of the Dark Age, in attempting to fit their evidence into a framework defined by Egyptian chronology. Stretching the sides of the time puzzle by raising the dates further would only make the problems more acute. The only remedy ... would seem to be to shorten the sides and compress the overall scheme.
But not only has Meyer’s ‘erste sichere Datum’ [‘first sure date’] of 4240 BC long since been abandoned in favour of the current c. 3100 BC, even his second Sothic date of 2780 is looking somewhat insecure. As O’Mara has correctly stated, this figure of 2780 has been re-worked frequently because of what he calls “numerous technical complexities, with varying results ranging from 2781 BC to 2772 BC”.[35]
Even the third famous ‘Sothic’ date, c. 1320, based on Theon,[36] is by no means rock solid, at least according to Rowton, given that as early as 1928, as he wrote:[37] “... it was obvious that Meyer had by then completely discarded the Menophres theory”, by moving the 19th dynasty forward somewhat from his original date.
It actually seems, anyway, that the Sothic dating sequence overall might need to undergo a significant overhaul, given a new scholarly view about heliacal rising observation. Rohl tells of this, with reference to Hornung[38], in Rohl’s own discussion of the Ebers Calendar, that we saw he had nominated as being one of the four key ‘pillars’ of the conventional chronology:
Now if a contemporary Egyptian text could be found with a calendar date for the heliacal rising of Sothis dated to a specific year in a pharaoh’s reign, it would be a simple matter to place that year in absolute time by a straightforward calculation using the Sothic-dating framework. That is precisely what happened in the 1870s when just such a calendar (acquired by Georg Ebers) was found at Thebes. This ‘Ebers Calendar’ was datable to the ninth year of Amenhotep I and it recorded the heliacal rising of Sothis on the ninth day of the third month of Shemu. The Sothic calculation made by the great calendrical scholar Richard Parker in 1950 established the absolute date at 1542 BC (assuming an observation point at Memphis) which gave a date of 1575 BC for the start of the New Kingdom.
The date of the heliacal rising observation has more recently been adjusted downwards by twenty-five years as a result of a scholarly consensus that the observation probably took place at Thebes (where the papyrus was found) rather than Memphis … [Rohl’s ref. to Hornung]. The difference in latitude between the two cities would require a lowering of the date because the heliacal rising of Sothis would have been one day earlier at the more southerly latitude on account of the earth’s curvature. Thus the currently accepted date for Year 9 of Amenhotep I is 1517 BC and the beginning of the 18th Dynasty set at 1550 BC with the accession of Ahmose I, Amenhotep’s father.
[End of quote]
After Meyer’s original enunciation of the Sothic theory, its chief promoter appears to have been the influential Professor Henry Breasted of the University of Chicago. The latter took the theoretically possible dates within the Sothic scheme and set them down as astronomically certain. Breasted’s A History of Egypt, which incorporated Meyer’s figure of 4240 BC for Egypt’s presumed unification under Menes, “still forms the basis for most modern historical syntheses”, according to Grimal.[39] Breasted used asterisks in his chronological table to denote those dates that he considered to be astronomically fixed. He even specified the precise day each of two events that occurred during pharaoh Thutmose III’s (18th dynasty) first Asiatic campaign: namely, his crossing of the Egyptian frontier “about the 19th of April, 1479 BC”, and his going “into camp on the plain of Megiddo on the 14th of May” of that same year.[40]
And it should be noted that things chronological have not changed much to this day, for Grimal gives that very same year of 1479 as the first year of Thutmose III’s reign. Grimal’s date, too, of 1785 BC for the close of Egypt’s 12th dynasty is completely Sothic.[41]
Revisionist scholars today seem to be returning to the views of some of the earlier Egyptologists (like Maspero, von Bissing and Jéquier) who regarded Meyer’s Sothic scheme with suspicion, if not contempt. The complex elabo-structure yields so many inaccuracies and anomalies that I felt it appropriate to summarise my MA thesis discussion on the Sothic theory with this quote from Jéquier:[42]
Perhaps we may collectively sum up the views of these non-Sothically inclined Egyptologists by quoting from the following pages of Jéquier’s ‘Histoire de la Civilization Égyptienne’ …. “The Sothic periods, far from simplifying the chronological calculations for us, have no other effect than to introduce a new element of uncertainty and perhaps a new opportunity for error”.
In a new view of things, though based on the early assessment of Jéquier and his colleagues that Meyer’s Sothic theory is unreliable, it becomes necessary to abandon those key Sothic-based dates of c. 1786 (end of 12th dynasty); c. 1580 (inauguration of the New Kingdom); c. 1542 or 1517 (Year 9 of Amenhotep I); c. 1320 (for Ramses I); and, a fortiori, 1279 BC for the accession of Ramesses II, based on a lunar date - despite Gardiner’s apprehensions about letting slip the “firm anchor”.
Revisionists, regardless of their differing views on how to achieve a new reconstruction of Egyptian history, or the degree of abridgement required, are in agreement at least that the Sothic scheme is invalid and that those seemingly artificially contrived ‘Dark Ages’ must be largely eradicated.[43] They tend to agree, too, that Egypt’s TIP (c. 1100-664 BC, conventional dates) needs to be significantly shortened - which abridgement will in turn compensate to some extent for the dramatic lowering of the New Kingdom (18th dynasty) dates, as first proposed by Velikovsky. According to James, for instance, “many [TIP] kings allowed generous reigns [by convention] are actually mere ciphers”.[44]
….

[1] The Sothic Star Theory of the Egyptian calendar, p. viii.
[2] ‘Fall of the Sothic Theory’, pp. 71-72.
[3] A Test of Time, ch. five: “The Four Great Pillars”, pp. 119-135.
[4] The Exodus Problem and its Ramifications, vol. 2, ch’s 3-4, with pp. 52-82 on Sothic dating.
[5] ‘Astronomy and Chronology’, Penseé, IV, pp. 38-49. This article, updated and slightly revised, later appeared in Velikovsky’s Peoples of the Sea, pp. 205-244.
[6] ‘A Re-examination of the Sothic Chronology of Egypt’, pp. 261-274; reprinted in Kronos II:4, pp. 89-101.
[7] ‘Special Supplement on Sothic Dating’, Kronos VI:1, pp. 51-85.
[8] Ägyptische Chronologie, p. 28.
[9] This point I discussed in my thesis, op. cit, pt. 3b, ch. 10, p. 184.
[10] Ibid, pp. 176-192.
[11] Theon of Alexandria, as cited in Velikovsky’s Peoples of the Sea, p. 229.
[12] Op. cit, p. 269.
[13] E.g. M. Rowton, ‘Mesopotamian chronology and the ‘Era of Menophres’,’ p. 109.
[14] Op. cit, ch. 6, p. 94.
[15] ‘Ein neues Sothis-Datum’, p. 108.
[16] Op. cit, p. 264.
[17] Op. cit, pp. 97-98.
[18] ‘Fall of the Sothic Theory’, p. 71.
[19] Ibid.
[20] Op cit, p. 122.
[21] Ibid, p. 127.
[22] But see my Excursus on Isaiah at the end of this thesis re this supposedly mid-C7th BC era.
[23] ‘The Astronomical Evidence for Dating the End of the Middle Kingdom of Ancient Egypt to the Early Second Millennium’, p. 237. Rose tells of a newly recognized Sothic date in his ‘The Sothic Date from the Ptolemaic Temple of Isis at Aswan’.
[24] Op. cit, pp. 78-80.
[25] ‘Chronology of the Twelfth Dynasty’, p. 307.
[26] Op. cit, p. 263.
[27] ‘University Scholar Attacks the Sothic Cycle’, p. 24.
[28] ‘Editorial’, p. 1.
[29] W. Petrie, as cited by P. James in Centuries of Darkness, p. 20.
[30] Ibid., p. 16.
[31] ‘The Lion Gate at Mycenae’ (1973), p. 27, with references to C. Aldred, The Egyptians, pp. 62-64; I. Velikovsky, Ages in Chaos I, p. 76; P. Demargne, The Birth of Greek Art, p. 8; W. Petrie, ‘Notes on the antiquities of Mykenae’, pp. 199-205.
[32] Op. cit, vol. 1, p. 100.
[33] Op. cit, p. 30.
[34] Centuries of Darkness, Preface, p. xxi.
[35] The Chronology of the Palermo and Turin Canons, p. 37.
[36] E.g. R. Lepsius, Königsbuch der Alten Ägypten, p. 123.
[37] Op. cit, p. 110, n. 1.
[38] Op. cit, pp. 130-131, with reference to E. Hornung, 1964, pp. 20-21 (relevant bibliographical details are not given however in Rohl’s Bibliography).
[39] A History of Ancient Egypt, p. 1.
[40] A History of Egypt, pp. 285, 287.
[41] Op. cit, Appendix, p. 392. D. Brewer, as late as 2005, gives Sothic-based dates for Egypt’s dynasties, e.g. 1782 for the end of the 12th dynasty. Ancient Egypt: Foundations of a Civilization, Table 1.1, pp. 9-11.
[42] Histoire de la Civilisation Égyptienne, my translation, pp. 26, 27.
[43] But revisionists disagree as to the degree of lowering required: some following Velikovsky and Courville in favouring the 500 year downward shift; others, like James and Rohl, now preferring to go about halfway between the early revision and the conventional scheme.
[44] Op. cit, p. 272.