Brief Outline of the
Black Athena Project by the author,
Prof.
Martin Bernal
"In my three volumes with the title Black Athena, I argue that the
Ancient Egyptian civilization can usefully be seen as African. I also maintain
Ancient Egypt and
Semitic speaking
South West Asia played fundamental roles in the formation of
Ancient Greece. I do not claim the
Ancient Greeks were
Black or that the
Ancient Egyptians all looked like stereotypical
West Africans.
Greeks of the
Classical and
Hellenistic periods 500-50
BCE believed that their religion had come from
Egypt that there had also been profound
Egyptian influences on the formation of their philosophy and mathematics. Similarly they maintained that
Phoenicians from what is now
Lebanon and
Northern Israel/
Palestine had introduced cultural artifacts notably the alphabet.
I have called such beliefs, the "
Ancient Model" of
Greek origins. This Ancient Model was generally accepted until the beginning of the
19th century CE (
AD). It then began to fall into disrepute and by the
1840s, it was replaced by what I have called the "
Aryan Model." According to this, the Greek stories of their origins were mistaken and
Greek culture was "in fact" a mixture of the soft but civilized natives of the
Aegean basin and the dynamic Northerners who had conquered them. This mixture was seen as having created the perfect balance of
Greek civilization.
In
Volume I of Black Athena I argued that the destruction of the Ancient Model was not the result of any new discoveries.
Rather, it came from various ideological forces, one of which was the racism which made it intolerable that
Greece, now seen as the pure cradle of
Europe should have received its higher culture from Africans and "Semites."
The rise of the "Aryan Model" (which should be distinguished from the fall of the Ancient one) came partly for these reasons but also because, by the 1840s, it was generally recognized that the
Greek language was closely related to Sanskrit and
Latin. Furthermore, it was plausibly supposed that the Indo-European linguistic family to which they all belonged, had originated somewhere to the north of Greece. Therefore, the founders of the modern discipline of classics envisaged the
Northern invaders as Indo-European speakers or "Aryans. Thus, although there were no Greek traditions of an invasion from the north and there was no archaeological evidence to suggest it, the case for such a conquest could be made on linguistic grounds alone. It was admitted that there were many Non-Indo-European features in Greek, but these were attributed to the language of the conquered early inhabitants or "Pre-Hellenes."
I do not advocate a return to the Ancient Model but to a Revised Ancient Model. This accepts the work by
18th and 19th century linguists who demonstrated that Greek is fundamentally an
Indo-European language and hence that this indicates a substantial cultural influence possibly migration from the north at a very early period. However, I see no reason why this should conflict with the Greek traditions of settlements from the
South and
East during the
2nd millennium, which together with subsequent contacts introduced the
Egyptian religion, the
Phoenician alphabet etc. While both sides agree that the Greek language is a mixture, supporters of the Aryan Model see it as one made up of Indo-European and the unknown language (or languages) of the Pre-Hellenes. As I shall make clear in volume
III, I see Greek as an admixture of
Ancient Egyptian and
West Semitic, both of which belong to the the
Afroasiatic language family, onto an Indo-European base."
Rutgers University Press
http://rutgerspress.rutgers.edu/product/Black-Athena,2846
.aspx
- published: 24 Mar 2016
- views: 9