Prehistoric London, Its Mounds and Circles $9.00
by E. O. Gordon
A thorough analysis of
prehistoric, pre-Christian, Britain. This scholarly account includes
detailed descriptions and information of an ancient land with its
strange mounds and circles that bear witness to Britain's early
culture and religion. Gordon begins with the following:
'The history of a nation is the
history of its religion, its attempts to seek after and serve its
God,' says an old writer. Of no nation or country is this more true
than of Great Britain, where from the standing stones of Stennis in
Orkney, to the Maen Ambres in Cornwall--the prehistoric remains of
open-air sanctuaries -- artificial mounds and scientifically
constructed astronomical circles, bear witness to the vigour and
vitality of a national religion, which has already passed from the
primitive into the metaphysical stage, and embodies abstract ideas,
astronomical observations and a high and pure code of morals. From
the comparative study of antiquity in Chaldea, Arabia, Persia, and
Palestine, we now know this religion to have been Druidism, one of
the oldest religions in the world, and in its Asiatic and Semitic
form of Buddhism, the religion still of one-half of mankind.
The author compares the mounds
and circles in Britain to those erected by Moses and Joshua,
pointing to their similarity and elaborates on the close connection
between the religion of ancient Israel and that of British Druidism.
This is a book that is so full of
captivating historical facts, and intriguing conjectures, that one
hardly knows where to begin to focus for such a brief account as is
possible in a summary. But the fascinating evidence revealed,
through the honest efforts of serious research, has given us a
wealth of striking characters from the race of people who have
inhabited this beautiful land from its earliest days. One especially
noteworthy proposition is the author's conviction of the kinship
between the Trojans and the British and the evidence she gives to
support her position. Gordon writes:
Within the last half-century
entirely new light has been thrown upon the prehistoric history
of London and its mounds, by Schliemann's discoveries at
Hissarlik, the ancient Troy in the north-west of Asia Minor. No
longer need the story be regarded as fabulous, that Brutus the
Trojan, the grandson of Aeneas (the hero of Virgil's great
epic), gave the name of Caer Troia, Troynovant or New Troy, to
London. In site and surroundings, as we have already stated,
there seems to be considerable resemblance between the historic
Troy on the Scamander and New Troy on the Thames. On the plains
of Troy today may be seen numerous conical mounds rising from
out of the lagoons and swamps that environed the citadel hill of
Hissarik, akin to those that dominate the marshes, round about
the Caer and Porth of London, in prehistoric times. Sayce's
researches, moreover, prove the Trojans and the Kymry to have
been of the same stock. In his preface to Schliemann's Ilios the
professor writes: 'Thanks to the discoveries in unearthing the
remains of Ilium, we know who the Trojans originally were, that
they belonged to the Aryan family; so that we, as well as the
Greeks, of the age of Agamemnon, can hail the subjects of Priam,
King of Troy, as brethren in blood and speech.'
The author spends a number of
intriguing pages, citing a preponderance of evidence, to corroborate
her conviction of a kinship between the Trojans and Britains.
Consequently, much of the book expounds on this relationship, and
supplies a great deal of fascinating detail, elaborating on the
Greek influence upon British culture and, later on, the influence of
Rome.
A variety of illustrations are
scattered throughout the book which enable the reader to better
understand how the mounds and circles appeared when they were in use
and these are supported by two excellent Appendixes by the Rev. John
Griffith dealing with archaeology and measurements.
First published in 1914 this is a
reprint of the revised, 1946 edition, paperback, 176 pages
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