An Excerpt From my Forthcoming Book "The Quest for Hermes Trismegistus," published in Spring 2011 by Floris Books
Posted by Gary Lachman at 10:12, 27 Oct 2010Recently, book burning was in the air, with figures on either side of the 'clash of civilizations' eager to put the written word to the torch. Having earlier in the year finished writing a book in which the fabled Library of Alexandria plays an important role, it was an eerie feeling to recognize that throughout history, forces of stupidity and repression have frequently singled out books as an important target. In this brief excerpt we see how one collection in particular suffered repeatedly at the hands of sometimes accidental, sometimes deliberate arsonists.
The Library of Alexandria
Estimates of the number of works collected within the library of Alexandria range from 500,000, to more than a million, but as no list or catalogue of the library’s contents has ever come to light, these figures must remain possibilities. The number of scrolls, however, must have been great, as the library was founded by Ptolemy I Soter, and continued to exist in some form until the sack of Alexandria by the Arab leader Amr ibn al’Aas in 639 AD. Asked what should be done with the library, Amr ibn al’Aas is reported to have said that the books ‘either contradict the Koran, in which case they are heresy, or they agree with it, in which case they are superfluous,’ and ordered they be burned to heat the baths for his soldiers. Debate remains over the truth of this, as it does over much that is said about the library, but by this time it had been accidentally burned by Julius Caesar, when he inadvertently set fire to it while trying to prevent Ptolemy III from reaching his ships (48 BC); suffered pillage by the Emperor Aurelian (273 AD); and was destroyed by the Christian Patriarch Theophilus in 391, when the Christian Emperor Theodosius ordered the destruction of all pagan temples. On this occasion, the Serapeum, dedicated to the worship of the syncretic god Serapis, was also destroyed, as were temples to Mithras and other heathen deities.
Alexandria had been a remarkably tolerant city under Greek and pagan Roman rule, but by the time the Christians had control, this liberal attitude had vanished, and Theodosius is credited with inaugurating the practice of burning books on purpose (unlike Julius Caesar, who only did it by accident.) Not long after Theophilus started scouring Alexandria clean of heathens, the pagan philosopher Hypatia, one of the most brilliant women of the ancient world, was attacked by a mob of Christian fanatics, who skinned her alive with oyster shells and burned her remains. They were encouraged in this by Cyril, the Christian patriarch who followed Theophilus, and who was later canonized. Although the Platonic Academy would carry on for another century or so, to all intents and purposes, the pagan world ended with Hypatia’s death.
As the library housed most of the world’s great knowledge it understandably attracted the world’s thinkers and scholars. We can only surmise what other writings could be found in this lost treasure — many, no doubt, that we have never heard of — but known to have been contained in its shelves were the works of Euclid, Archimedes, and the astronomer Ptolemy, whose view of the cosmos would remain dominant until Copernicus pointed out its discrepancies in 1543. Among others whose work could be found in the library were Eratosthenes, who knew the circumference of the Earth, and Aristarchus, who argued that the planets orbit the sun, centuries before Copernicus did. The forty-two books that Clement of Alexandria attributed to Hermes Trismegistus were, he believed, available at the library. These, alas, he also believed had been destroyed by Julius Caesar’s clumsiness.
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Comments
22 December 2007
6 weeks 5 days
The people of Kemet (Egypt) had a deep sense of appreciation for knowledge and the concept of language and symbolism existed beyond just the physical libraries and/or even before books were recorded. But the Metu Neter was seen inscribed on the Temples at Giza, Cheops, and Luxor and many ancient sites in Kemet.
It was Alexander the Great in 332 B.C. who raided the libraries at Alexandria with an attempt to destroy and desecrate the Ancient knowledge that had existed long before Greece and Rome were even a thought on the stage of human civilization.
The Greeks stole most of this ancient knowledge and took it back to Greece and proclaimed it as their own. I noticed that this excerpt that you posted did not mention the name Kemet (Egypt) not even once and if I did not have a grasp of history and geography, it would have been difficult to ascertain that you were referring to Kemet (Egypt) in this piece.
The ancient coffin text and the "Egyptian book of the Dead" properly known as "The Coming Forth by Day" indicates in the ancient scrolls, that even before the language was symbolized on papyrus there was a higher system of learning being carried out in the Egyptian Mystery Schools; where the knowledge of the esoteric and occult were being spread amongst a select sector of neophytes.
The real knowledge was best manifested in the sacred temples and was inscribed on the walls of the pyramids in which these were the more sacred libraries (anthropologist and Egyptologist are still digging up earth and attempting solve this ancient puzzle and riddle).
Most Europeans who address topics dealing with Kemet (Egypt) often address these ancient originators of civilization from a Eurocentic perspective and this lead to the research being flawed.
Note: Islam and the Arabs, Romans, Phoenicians, Greeks, etc., were all invaders. Kemet had magnificent dynastic periods that predated these robber barons.
Stay Awake Until We Meet Again,
Fahim A. Knight-El
1 May 2004
1 year 21 hours
Interesting. But what if chronology isn't quite as sure as it is supposed as, for example, Fomenko quite radically suggests. Perhaps Hermes Trismegistus refers to a Roman triumvirate? And quite when that triumvirate existed in time is open to debate. Perhaps, the likes of Copernicus could be identified by another name?
One must care about the truth to seek it, and not care about the truth to find it.
Jameske