The End of the Early Bronze Age
The Old Kingdom in Egypt, the period when the pyramids
were built, a great and splendid age, came to its end in a natural disaster.
At the conclusion of the Sixth Dynasty . . . Egypt is suddently
blotted out from our sight as if some great catastrophe had overwhelmed
it. (1) The second city of Troy came
to an end at the same time the Old Kingdom of Egypt fell; it was destroyed
in a violent paroxysm of nature. The Early Bronze Age was simultaneously
terminated in all the countries of the ancient Easta vast catastrophe
spread ruin from Troy to the Valley of the Nile. This fact has been extensively
documented by Claude F. A. Schaeffer, professor at College de France,
excavator of Ras Shamra (Ugarit).
Schaeffer observed at Ras Shamra on the Syrian coast
clear signs of great destruction that pointed to violent earthquakes and
tidal waves, and other signs of a natural disaster. Among the greatest
of these took place at the end of the Old Kingdom in Egypt. At the occasion
of his visit to Troy, then under excavation by Carl Blegen, he became
aware that Troy, too, had been repeatedly destroyed by natural catastrophes
at the same times when Ras Shamra was destroyed. The distance from the
Dardanelles near which the mound of Troy lies to Ras Shamra in Syria is
about 600 miles on a straight line. In modern annals of seismology no
earthquake is known to have occurred covering an area of such an extent.
He then compared the findings of these two places with signs of earthquakes
in numerous other localities of the ancient East. After painstaking work
he came to the conclusion that more than once in historical times the
entire region had been shaken by prodigious earthquakes. As to the destruction
that ended the Early Bronze Age, Schaeffer wrote:
There is not for us the slightest doubt that the conflagration
of Troy II corresponds to the catastrophe that made an end to the habitations
of the Early Bronze Age of Alaca Huyuk, of Alisar, of Tarsus, of Tepe
Hissar [in Asia Minor], and to the catastrophe that burned ancient Ugarit
(II) in Syria, the city of Byblos that flourished under the Old Kingdom
of Egypt, the contemporaneous cities of Palestine, and that was among
the causes that terminated the Old Kingdom of Egypt.(2)
In the same catastrophe were destroyed the civilizations
of Mesopotamia and Cyprus. What caused the disappearance of so many
cities and the upheaval of an entire civilization ?(3)
It was an all-encompassing catastrophe. Ethnic migrations were,
no doubt, the consequence of the manifestation of nature. The initial
and real causes must be looked for in some cataclysm over which man had
no control. (4) Everywhere it was
simultaneous and sudden.
The shortcoming in Schaeffers work was in not
making the logical deduction that if catastrophes of such dimensions took
place in historical times, there must be references to them in ancient
literary sources. If a cataclysm terminated the Early Bronze Age, decimated
the population, but left also survivors, then some memory of the events
must have also found its way to be preserved in writingif not by
survivors, turned to vagrancy and having to take care for the first necessities
of life, then by the descendants of the survivors.
In my scheme the end of the Early Bronze Age or Old
Kingdom in Egypt is the time of the momentous events connected with the
story of the patriarch Abraham, and described in the Book of Genesis as
the overturning of the plain.(5)
The cause of the catastrophe could not have been entirely unknown to the
ancients. We must therefore become attentive also to other traditions
connected with these events.
References
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G. A. Wainwright,
The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 16 (1930), p. 43.
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Claude F. A.
Schaeffer, Stratigraphie comparee et chronologie de lAsie
Occidentale (IIIe et IIe millennaires) (Oxford University Press,
1948), p. 225.
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R. de Vaux,
Palestine in the Early Bronze Age, The Cambridge Ancient
History, Third ed., vol. I, pt. 2 (1971), ch. xv, p. 236. [According
to J. Mellaart ("The Catastrophe at the End of the Eartly Bronze Age
2 Period, The Cambridge Ancient History third ed. [1971],
Vol. I, pt. 2, p. 406) in the period after the catastrophe the number
of settlements is reduced to a quarter of the number in the
previous period. Jacques Courtois, reporting the results of
a survey in the valley of the Orontes, writes of the extreme
density of habitation of the plain in the Bronze Age, and particularly
in the Early Bronze Age. (Syria, 50 [1973], p. 99). In
eastern Arabia a sharp downturn in settlements and activity
becomes apparent after ca. 2000 B.C. (Michael Rice, The
States of Archaeology in Eastern Arabia and the Persian Gulf,
Asian Affairs, 64 [1977], p. 143). According to Kathleen Kenyon,
The final end of the Early Bronze Age civilization came with
catastrophic completeness . . . Jericho . . . was probably completely
destroyed. . . . Every town in Palestine that has so far been investigated
shows the same break. . . . All traces of the Early Bronze Age civilization
disappeared. (Archaeology in the Holy Land [London, 1960],
p. 134). According to Ernest Wright, one of the most striking
facts about the Early Bronze civilization is its destruction, one
so violent that scarcely a vestige of it survived. We do not know
when the event took place; we only know that there is not an Early
Bronze Age city excavated or explored in all Palestine which does
not have a gap in its occupation between Early Bronze Age III and
the Middle Bronze Age. To date this gap, we know that it must be approximately
contemporary with a similar period in Egypt called the First
Intermediate Period between dynasties VI and XI (ca. 22nd and
21st centuries B.C.). ("The Archaeology of Palestine in
The Bible and the Ancient Near East, Essays in Honor of William
Foxwell Albright [1961], p. 103).
The destruction can be traced
also in Greece. The destruction of the Early Helladic II town
at Lerna in the eastern Peloponnese is an example of the
widespread and violent destruction that occurred ca. 2300 B.C. in
the Aegean and East Mediterranean (Marija Gimbutas, The
Destruction of the Aegean and East Mediterranean Urban Civilization
around 2300 B.C., Bronze Age Migrations in the Aegean, ed.
by R. A. Crossland and Ann Birchall [London, 1973], pp. 129f.) For
Lerna, see also J. Caskey, The Early Helladic Period in the
Argolid, Hesperia 29 (1960), pp. 289-290. The burning
of the House of Tiles . . . was the end of an era at Lerna.
The settlement came to a violent end. Not only Lerna,
but also the tiled buildings at Tiryns and Asine were destroyed
by fire.
It is quite probable that
the end of the Third Dynasty of Ur occurred at the same time. Thorkild
Jacobsen wonders about the reasons for the dire catastrophes
that befell the city of Ur in the reign of Ibbi-Suen, the sudden collapse
of its great empire, and the later utter destruction of the city itself
at the hands of barbarian invaders. . . . How an empire like that
of the Third Dynasty of Ur . . . could so quickly collapse is really
quite puzzling. ("The Reign of Ibbi-Suen, The Journal
of Cuneiform Studies 7 (1953), p. 36. Although Jacobsen refers
to the text known as Lamentation over the Destruction of Ur,
he does not treat it seriously. Yet this poem provides specific information
about the causes of the disaster. It speaks of a storms
cyclone-like destruction (99), of a storm that annihilates
the land (178), in front of the storm fires burned; the
people groan (188). It tells of the sun being obscured: In
the land the bright sun rose not, like the evening star it shone
(191). It describes earthquakes that shook the land: the destructive
storm makes the land tremble and quake (199). In all the
streets, where they were wont to promenade, dead bodies were lying
about (217). Mothers and fathers who did not leave their
houses were overcome by fire; the young lying on their mothers
laps like fish were carried off by the waters (228-229). The
city, prostrated by the storm which overwhelmed the living creatures
of heaven and earth, fell prey to hostile tribes and was looted.
See S. N. Kramer, Lamentation over the Destruction of Ur,
Ancient Near Eastern Texts Relating to the Old Testament (Princeton,
1950). Another lament, Oh, Angry Sea, transl. by R. Kutscher
(Yale University Press, 1975), tells of the destruction of Ur, Larsa,
Nippur, Sippar, Babylon and Isin by inundations sent by Enlil. I consider
Enlil to be Jupiter.].
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Schaeffer,
Stratigraphie comparee, p. 537. In Alaca Huyuk there are unequivocal
signs that an earthquake was responsible for the destruction (pp.
296f.). Cf. B. Bell, The Dark Ages in Ancient History,
American Journal of Archaeology 75 (1971).
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[The
archaeological evidence uncovered in recent years strongly supports
the conclusion that the cities of the plain flourished during the
Early Bronze Age and that their destruction took place at the end
of this period, more specifically at the end of EB III. See H. Shanks,
Have Sodom and Gomorrah Been Found? Biblical Archaeology
Review VI:5 (Sept./Oct. 1980), p. 28. Cf. D. Cardona, JupiterGod
of Abraham (Part III), KRONOS Vol. VIII.1 (1982), pp.
69ff.]
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