by
Damien F. Mackey
“Priam's Treasure is the richest
single find in all Bronze Age Anatolia and was rumored to have been improved by
modern additions. No Mycenaean grave has one-tenth of what was in shaft grave
V. Was Schliemann's luck at Mycenae too good to be true?”
William
M. Calder, III
A colleague in
France is desperately trying to convince me that Homer and the legends of Troy
and The Iliad and The Odyssey are all truly historical
writings, people and events.
…. Seriously, if you have SO much trouble with trusting simple tradition
on simple fact (here was a war, the people involved were named so and so ...)
even when parts of it have been confirmed (Paris was also known as Alexander,
and this name for Tarwusha / Wilusha region has been confirmed by ancient
diplomacy, he could have been the diplomat of his father ... or to extreme
sceptics, the real ruler of Troy, but that I won't buy ...). If you have SO
much trouble with that, why do you trust archaeology on anything either?
After all, you were not there at most digs!
There is a dig outside ancient hills of Hissarlik, where archaeologists and military have found traces of a military encampment ... but since the tradition of this dig comes via youtube and me, trusting it would obviously be too much of a life of the eagles' young for your taste! ….
After all, you were not there at most digs!
There is a dig outside ancient hills of Hissarlik, where archaeologists and military have found traces of a military encampment ... but since the tradition of this dig comes via youtube and me, trusting it would obviously be too much of a life of the eagles' young for your taste! ….
I, for my part, am
convinced that they are entirely derivative, The Odyssey, for instance, being heavily based upon biblical
writings.
See e.g. my
articles:
Similarities to The Odyssey of the Books of Job and Tobit
and
Book of Tobit and the Greeks. Part Two: Influence from the Hebrew side
Professor William
Calder wondered in 1999 - as have many others - whether or not the so-called
Mask of Agamemnon might be a hoax (in Archaeology):
Behind the Mask of Agamemnon
|
Volume 52 Number 4,
July/August 1999
|
IS THE MASK A HOAX?
For 25 years I have
researched the life of Heinrich Schliemann. I have learned to be skeptical,
particularly of the more dramatic events in Schliemann's life: a White House
reception; his heroic acts during the burning of San Francisco; his gaining
American citizenship on July 4, 1850, in California; his portrayal of his wife,
Sophia, as an enthusiastic archaeologist; the discovery of ancient Greek
inscriptions in his backyard; the discovery of the bust of Cleopatra in a
trench in Alexandria; his unearthing of an enormous cache of gold and silver
objects at Troy, known as Priam's Treasure. Thanks to the research of
archaeologist George Korres of the University of Athens, the German art
historian Wolfgang Schindler, and historians of scholarship David A. Traill and
myself, we know that Schliemann made up these stories, once universally
accepted by uncritical biographers. These fictions cause me to wonder whether
the Mask of Agamemnon might be a further hoax. Here are nine reasons to believe
it may be:
1. Günter Kopcke of New
York University's Institute of Fine Arts has stressed that the Agamemnon mask
is stylistically different from all other Mycenaean masks. He draws attention
to its distinctive eyebrows, ears, beard, and moustache. Kopcke suggests it is
the work of an innovative and highly talented goldsmith: "Certainly
the...mask is more original and has a stronger effect [on the viewer than the
other masks]--the goldsmith...invested enthusiasm and pride in his craft."
2. Schliemann was quite
ready to have duplicates of finds made that he would pass off as genuine. He
had agreed to split his finds with the Ottomans in exchange for permission to
excavate Troy. Once he discovered the gold and silver objects he called Priam's
Treasure, however, Schliemann smuggled them to Greece. When it appeared as
though the Ottomans might claim their fair share of the treasure, he explored
the possibility of having forgeries manufactured in Paris to give to the Turks.
3. Memoirs of informed
contemporaries preserve allegations that Schliemann planted finds with the
intention of later "discovering" them. Among the skeptics were
British scholars Sir Charles Newton, Percy Gardner, and A.S. Murray, who,
discussing Schliemann's career, declared, "He who hideth can find."
Ernst Curtius, director of the excavations at Olympia and professor of ancient
history at Berlin, called him a schwindler und pfuscher (swindler and
con-man). One could go on.
4. The Mycenae
excavations took place between August 7 and December 3, 1876. The mask was
discovered on November 30, 1876. Three days later the excavations were closed.
Similarly, excavations at Troy were closed just after the discovery of Priam's
Treasure. In both cases did Schliemann simply assume that the most valuable
objects had been found, or had he only found what he had planted?
5. Excavations were
also closed on November 26 and 27 while Schliemann was away. Where was he? A
relative of his wife, Sophia, is alleged to have been an Athenian goldsmith.
Did Schliemann obtain the mask from Sophia's relative in Athens, then return to
Mycenae and bury it, to find it on the 30th?
6. Priam's Treasure is
the richest single find in all Bronze Age Anatolia and was rumored to have been
improved by modern additions. No Mycenaean grave has one-tenth of what was in
shaft grave V. Was Schliemann's luck at Mycenae too good to be true?
7. There are suspicious
details in Schliemann's publication of the mask. I quote his Mycenae: A
Narrative of Researches and Discoveries at Mycenae and Tiryns (1880):
In a perfect state of
preservation, on the other hand, is the massive golden mask of the body at the
south end of the tomb (No. 474). Its features are altogether Hellenic and I
call particular attention to the long thin nose, running in a direct line with
the forehead, which is but small. The eyes, which are shut, are large, and well
represented by the eyelids; very characteristic is also the large mouth with
its well-proportioned lips. The beard also is well represented, and
particularly the moustaches, whose extremities are turned upwards to a point,
in the form of crescents. This circumstance seems to leave no doubt that the
ancient Mycenaeans used oil or a sort of pomatum in dressing their hair. Both
masks are of repoussé work, and certainly nobody will for a moment doubt that
they were intended to represent portraits of the deceased, whose faces they
have covered for ages.... We are amazed at the skill of the ancient Mycenaean
goldsmiths, who could model the portraits of men in massive gold plate, and
consequently do as much as any modern goldsmith would be able to perform.
One searches for a
subtext. The opening reference to "a perfect state of preservation"
is intended to anticipate suspicion. The mask's long, thin Hellenic nose makes
me suspicious, as if it were created to fit the idea of Greek nobility
articulated by the influential eighteenth-century German art historian Johann
Joachim Winckelmann. Stress on the moustaches suggests that Schliemann believes
them to be the most suspicious detail. He anticipates the objection that
upturning a moustache requires pomade, which the Greeks did not possess, by
asserting, through circular argument, that because of the moustaches, Greeks
must have possessed pomade. At the end he shows his hand: "the ancient
Mycenaean goldsmiths...could...do as much as any modern goldsmith." Why
mention modern goldsmiths unless Schliemann knew that indeed a modern goldsmith
had made the mask? In the English edition there is a note after
"crescents" stating, "There is nothing new under the sun."
8. Schliemann stated
that he had excavated objects which in fact he had purchased. One example is
the so-called Cleopatra bust which he claimed to have excavated from a trench
in Alexandria in February 1888. Wolfgang Schindler, however, pointed out that
Schliemann's alleged 25- to 35-foot-deep trench would have been considerably
below Alexandria's water table; the bust was most likely purchased a year
before from an Egyptian dealer. There are also Attic inscriptions published by
Schliemann and said by him to have been excavated in his garden. George Korres
showed they were in fact bought from private collections.
9. There are obvious
motives for Schliemann to have buried and excavated a modern forgery. He wanted
to close the excavations with a bang. He also desperately needed a Herrscherbild,
a portrait of a leader. The other four masks--billiard bald or
pancake-flat--were not worthy of a great king. The authenticity of these masks
is substantiated by later, similar finds. We must recall how contemporary German
artists imagined Agamemnon. The great example is the brooding Agamemnon in a
wall painting depicting Achilles dragging the fallen Hector about Troy in the
Achilleion, a villa built on Corfu between 1890 and 1891. He has a full black
beard and moustache. The closest parallel to the moustaches on the mask are
those of Bismarck, Wilhelm I, and Wilhelm II. Prussian men of power, in
Schliemann's day and after, all boasted beards and moustaches. Clearly
Agamemnon required one. Schliemann ordered a Herrscherbild that combined
Winckelmann's Greek nose with Hohenzollern facial hair.
My evidence is
circumstantial. When considered cumulatively, however, it is enough to make me
skeptical. If the mask is genuine, Schliemann is the luckiest archaeologist
until Howard Carter. If it is a fake, he was a genius who duped the leading
archaeologists and historians in the world for more than a century. Because I
am a great admirer of Schliemann and spend a lot of time studying his life, I
hope it is a fake. It is much better to be a genius than just lucky.
William A. MacDonald
of the University of Minnesota observed that modern Schliemann research
"is a mean spirited scholarly enterprise--particularly when aimed at one
who cannot defend himself.... If deposits of genuine artifacts were salted with
fake copies, scientific tests (not unsupported insinuations) are the
constructive way to ascertain the facts."
The fact is that
David Traill has more than once sought to test the mask, and the National
Museum in Athens has consistently denied his request. This has always puzzled
me. A metallurgist could silence annoying critics. What we must have is a
public test by an independent expert not associated with the National
Museum.--WILLIAM M. CALDER, III
No comments:
Post a Comment