National Geographic History - November-December 2016
National Geographic History - November-December 2016
National Geographic History - November-December 2016
OR VILLAIN
AQUEDUCTS
ENGINEERING
AN EMPIRE
MUSLIM
MEDICINE
MASTER HEALERS
OF THE MIDDLE AGES
SPARTAS
WARRIORS
BRED FOR BATTLE
CORRUPT
BARGAIN
ADAMS VS. JACKSON IN
THE ELECTION OF 1824
NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2016
PLUS:
A Whales Revenge:
The Grim Odyssey of the Essex
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FROM THE EDITOR
This feature is brought to you by Durban Tourism. To start planning your visit to Durban and this fascinating historical region visit
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PYRAMIDS APLENTY
There are more pyramids in modern
Sudan than in all of Egypt, thanks
to the ancient Kushite rulers who
absorbed Egyptian customs and
made them all their own.
Features Departments
4 NEWS
18 The Pyramids of Mero
Adorned with tall, slender pyramids, this rich city by the Nile was 6 PROFILES
the seat of power of Kush, an ancient kingdom and rival to Egypt. Rising from concubine
to queen, Cixi led China
into the modern age, despite
28 Spartas Military Machine cultural prejudice against women.
Drilled in the art of war from boyhood, Spartan men embraced the
fearsome warrior culture that dominated fifth-century b.c. Greece. 10 DAILY LIFE
Sacred to the Inca, coca
40 Herod the Great leaves were revered for
their power to heal ailments, dull
Reviled as a tyrant and a traitor, Herod I also oversaw an unprecedented hunger, and overcome fatigue.
period of prosperity and monument-building in Judaea.
14 MILESTONES
A sperm whale sank
50 Romes Aqueducts the Esseex in 1820,
Bringing water to a thirsty people, these engineering marvels
m strandding the surviving crew
allowed Rome to grow from republic to empire. in thee Pacific for months,
beecoming an inspiration
or Melvilles Moby-Dick.
fo
64 Muslim Medicine
The caliphs championing of science spearheaded medicaal 9 0 DISCOVERIES
breakthroughs across the Islamic world in the Middle Agees. A
Afghanistans
g
golden treasures
w
were discovered on the
76 The Election of 1824 eve of invasion, the first
Hungry for the presidency, John Quincy Adams struck a and not the lasttime
so-called Corrupt Bargain to defeat Andrew Jackson. th
hat war has threatened
hese precious relics.
th
CURE CONTAINER 14TH-CENTURY PHARMACEUTICAL JAR FROM DAMASCUS, SYRIA
NEWS
N
E
W
AREA
ENLARGED
FO NORTH
UN AMERICA
DLA
LAnse aux
ND
Meadows National
QUEBEC Historic Site
AND
St. Anthony
LA
C A N A D A
BR
Labrador Sea
A
O
D
R
Corner
Brook
Island of
Ne wf o u n d l a n d
Point Rosee
excavation site
Channel-Port St. Johns
aux Basques
0 km 50
SPACE ARCHAEOLOGY
VikingsinNorthAmerica:
ASagasNewChapter
Satellite images have led archaeologists to a new excavation site in
Canada, yielding more clues to Norse settlements in North America.
RESTLESS in their
exploration both west-
I
celandic sagas tell how the tion, proving the sagas were fellow Sarah Parcak, an expert
ward and eastward 10th-century Viking sailor not just fiction. Vikings had in detecting buried struc-
from Scandinavia, the
Leif Eriksson stumbled on indeed reached the coast of tures from satellite images,
Vikings left artifacts,
such as this 10th- a new land far to the west, America five centuries before has identified another likely
century silver coin, which he called Vinland the Columbus. Viking site on the southern-
along their trade Good. The 1960 discovery of Now those medieval sagas most tip of Newfoundland,
routes spanning east- a Viking settlement at LAnse look ready for another en- a find that could rewrite the
ern Europe and Russia.
DEA/ALBUM
aux Meadows in Newfound- dorsement, this time from story of the colonization of
land, Canada, caused a sensa- space: National Geographic North America.
4 NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2016
GO WEST,
YOUNG VIKING!
A SAGA, in a strict literary sense, is a story depicting
the past deeds of the heroes of Norway and Iceland. Of
it Vinland, an area
now identified as
Newfoundland and
the mainland coast
HEARTH AWAY FROM HOME: Sarah Parcaks team
along the Gulf of
dig at Point Rosee, Newfoundland, unearthing a
St. Lawrence.
hearth where they believe Vikings roasted iron ore
(left). Quantities of slag (above) testify to the visi- ERIK THE RED
tors ironworking activities, also detected at LAnse DANISH ILLUSTRATION
aux Meadows on the north of the island (top), the FROM THE 17TH
CENTURY
only confirmed Viking site in America to date.
In summer 2015 Parcak of a large, buried structure at The island of Newfoundland forakeycomponentoftheVi-
and her team broke ground the site of Petra in Jordan. bears traces of other cultures, kings maritime supremacy:
at Point Rosee near Channel- On turning her attention to such as those of Native Amer- the nails that held together
Port aux Basques, a wind- Newfoundland, Parcak used icans, or the Basque whalers their swiftly moving boats.
swept stretch of grassy coast remote-sensing tools to comb from Spain who sheltered The excavations undertak-
overlooking the Cabot Strait. the area for clues of buried ob- on the island from the early en at Point Rosee are just the
The dig unearthed remains of jects. Soil that contains hid- 1500s. opening phase of an ongoing
turf walls and an ironworking den structures retains mois- A point in the Vikings fa- project that Parcak hopes will
fireplace, yielding valuable ture in a different way from vor is that the two main fea- shed more light on the early
information on the Vikings undisturbed ground, and the tures, the turf structure and history of European explora-
seafaring and metalworking resulting patterning on the the hearth, are common to tion of North America. If the
techniques when on the move. vegetation alerted her to the Viking settlements. Another 1960 discovery at LAnse aux
Parcak, a professor of an- possibility of buried objects supporting piece of evidence Meadows proves that the Vi-
thropology at the University at the Point Rosee site. is the nearly 28 pounds of slag kings reached America, the
of Alabama, has successful- found nearby which suggest find at Point Rosee will help
ly used satellite images to Nailing It the hearth was used for the historians build a picture as
detect evidence of looters at Parcaks team is confident that roasting of iron ore, abun- to when, and for how long,
archaeological sites in Egypt. the remains were most likely dant in the bogs of Point Ro- they explored this coast, and
This spring, her images also left by Norsemen, but she is see. Once smelted, the iron how far their wanderings took
revealed the spectral outline notyet100percentconvinced. produced would later be used them in the New World.
B
orn in 1835, the girl who would had to be presented by her family to be
1908
Cixi poisons Guangxu,
Cixi presided over meetings from
fearing he is too weak- behind a screen, as her ministers
willed to rule. Cixi
dies a day later, having were not supposed to see her.
named Puyi as heir.
A BRONZE COIN FROM THE REIGN OF EMPER0R XIANFENG
ALBUM
6 NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2016
ONE FIERCE-
LOOKING
QUEEN
WHEN NOT WEARING her six-inch
platform shoes favored by Man-
churian women, Cixi stood about
five feet tall. But her diminutive
size did not diminish her intim-
idating appearance. Although
Cixi was not described as a great
beauty, she was blessed with a
smooth complexion, a charming
smile, and bright, expressive eyes
that could be warm and engaging
one moment, and then ice-cold
with anger the next. Her fierce
starerecalled Gen. Yuan Shikai,
the future first president of the
Republic of Chinawas legend-
ary. He said that Cixis made him
so nervous that the sweat just
poured out.
THE EMPRESS CIXI AT AROUND AGE 70 IN A 1905
PORTRAIT BY ARTIST HUBERT VOS
AKG/ALBUM
In the face of all this turmoil, Emperor launch a coup. She and Zhen were sup- Modernity and Tradition
Xianfeng died in 1861, and Cixis five- ported by two of Xianfengs brothers, Over the next five decades, Chinas fate
year-old son became the imperial heir, Prince Gongan advocate of appeasing was determined by Cixi. She managed to
dubbed Emperor Tongzhi. Before his the Westand Prince Chun, who had impose her authority in spite of the in-
death, Xianfeng had selected eight men married Yis younger sister. The two ferior position the strict court protocol
princes and ministers from his inner cir- women successfully overthrew the re- gave to women: The widowed empress
cleto form a Board of Regents and rule gents, imprisoning five of them, exe- presided over meetings from behind a
until his son came of age. cuting one, and ordering two to commit screen, as the ministers were not sup-
Cixi saw the emperors death as a suicide. The dowager empresses would posed to see her. She never entered the
necessary moment to strike a blow to rule until the child emperor came of age. foremost section of the Forbidden City,
improve China. She thought the regents They took new names: Zhen became which was reserved for the emperor. In-
had poorly advised the emperor. Cixi, Cian (kindly and serene); and Yi took stead she relied on loyal men to carry out
then known then as Concubine Yi, the name Cixi (kindly and joyous) to her decisions, such as Prince Gong, who
worked together with Zhen on a plan to mark the events. headed the Great Imperial Council. Since
she governed behind the scenes, her in order to avoid total submission to the lay near the proposed line. She did not
achievements were attributed to others, West, as well as Japan, which had become want to promote textile factories because
while her opponents cast her as a crafty, a serious threat to China. they took work away from Chinese wom-
bloodthirsty conspirator. Cixi advocated westernizationbut en. She also knew there was much oppo-
Manchu governors (who dominated not completely. For example, she took sition to reform among the people, from
the Han ethnic majority) were divided nearly 20 years to allow the complete commoners to civil servants to nobles,
between those who opposed the West- construction of a railroad because she did who detested so-called barbarian West-
erners and those who, like Cixi, wanted not want to disturb ern custo oms.
to modernize China to boost its economy ancestral tombs that Inspiiteof the criticism, Cixi man-
aged to o bring peace to the country,
put public
p finances on a sound
footiing, built a navy, and encour-
THE QUEENS MAN aged thecountry to open up to the
world.. With the help of the West-
ernerss who commanded the army,
IN IMPERIAL CHINA eunuchs were a ubiquitous presence e in
the so outhern Taiping rebels were
the Forbidden City and had been serving as guardians of the
finallly crushed.
emperors inner court for more than 2,000 years. In Cixis time,
Officially,
O Cixi had to stand
one of the most influential eunuchs at court was Li Lianyingg,
dowwn when Tongzhi came of age
who was in charge of a staff of thousands: cooks, gardenerss,
in 1873. Two years into his rule,
servants, cleaners, painters, and other eunuchs.
a bout with smallpox killed the
EUNUCHS ROBE FROM THE COURT OF CIXI yooung emperor, who left no
heeir. Some believed that
WERNER FORMAN/GTRES
8 NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2016
IN 1900, the Eight-
WORKING ON nation Alliance
THE RAILROAD fought the Boxer
Rebellion, as
depicted in this
ALTHOUGH CIXI FAVORED moder- illustration from a
nization, local opinion had to be German publication.
respected. Chinas first railroad,
built in 1876 by the British, was
dismantled after serious local pro-
tests. It took 13 years for Cixi to
change enough minds to launch
Chinas first rail line, the Beijing-
Wuhan railway. She felt it would
be a key component of our blue-
in
nt r Making China Strong.
CHINAS FIRST RAILROAD,
BUILT IN 1876 BY THE BRITISH,
RAN THE 12 MILES BETWEEN
SHANGHAI AND WUSONG.
power-hungry Cixi had poisoned her son Western. His failure to comprehend the around the dowager empress, who had
to cling to power, but no proof for murder modern world later led him to abandon published the unprecedented Decree of
exists. Dark rumors circulated around Chinas naval program, resulting in a Self-reproach, in which she blamed her-
Cixi, and not for the last time. crushing defeat to Japan in 1895, a crisis self for the devastation caused by the war.
that made Cixi the de facto ruler again. In January 1902 Cixi announced a series
The Taming of the Emperor The tension between Cixi and her ad- of reforms that shook up all aspects of
Cixi again seized the reins of government, opted son, and between reformers and Chinese life. Marriages between Han and
adopting the son of her sister and Prince traditionalists, was heightened by the Manchu partners were legalized.
Chun and naming him emperor. Cian and influence of an academic and adviser, Foot-binding, a custom long practiced on
Cixi would continue to act as regents to Kang Youwei. His reform proposals won Han girls, was banned. Freedom of the
the new emperor, Guangxuwho was over Guangxu, but Cixi mistrusted him. press was expanded. In 1906 Cixi an-
barely three years olduntil Cians sud- Kang involved the emperor in a plot to nounced that China would be trans-
den death in 1881. After that, Cixi was the assassinate her, but their plans were dis- formed into a constitutional monarchy
sole regent. She embarked on a second covered in 1898. Kang fled to Japan, and with elections.
wave of modernization, introducing elec- Guangxu was placed under house arrest, Cixi died in November 1908, only one
tricity and coal mining. She started a war leaving him as a puppet but effectively day after Guangxu, whom many believe
with France to oppose its territorial am- removing him from power. she had poisoned to ensure the weak sov-
bitions on the border between China and Cixi continued to rule China until her ereign would stay out of power. Cixi
Vietnam, which ended in a stalemate. death. She survived a number of crises, named her two-year-old great-nephew
Cixi officially ceded power to Guangxu including the Boxer Rebellion, which the heir and designated a new dowager
in 1889 when he came of age. Educated in ended in a defeat for China at the hands empress to watch over the nation she
the strictest of Confucian orthodoxy, of a foreign coalition in 1901. In the face brought into the modern age.
Guangxu was suspicious of everything of defeat, the ruling Chinese elite rallied Josep Maria Casals
Coca: A Blessing
and a Curse
South Americans have cultivated coca plants for about 8,000
years. Valuing the leaves as highly as gold, the Inca treasured
coca not only for its myriad medicinal properties, but also for
the integral part it played in their sacred rites and rituals.
A
legend from the Andes be a large part of Andean culture today.
tells the tale of Kuka, a Unprocessed leaves from the plant can
woman of such extraor- be enjoyed by chewing them or by brew-
dinary beauty that none ing them into a tea. Locals still use coca
in the entire empire could today to combat altitude sickness, and
resist her. Aware of her power, Kuka used to relieve pain and hunger. Some still
her charms to take advantage of men believe that its leaves can be read to tell
until word of her misdeeds reached the the future.
Great Incas ears. He ordered that she be Scientific studies of cocas medici-
sacrificed, cut in half, and buried. From nal properties have found that its leaves
her grave a miraculous plant sprouted. contain a powerful alkaloid that acts as a
It gave strength and vigor and alleviated stimulant. Its effects include raised heart
pain and suffering. The people called it rate, increased energy, and even suppres-
SHARING COCA in an
coca, in honor of that beautiful and ir- sion of hunger and thirst. illustration in the chronicle
resistible woman. Other benefits include muscle relax- written by Felipe Guamn
This myth acknowledges the great ation, which can help with menstrual Poma de Ayala, 1615
BRIDGEMAN/ACI
importance that coca leaves had, and cramps. This effect also helps to treat
continue to have, in the culture and altitude sickness by opening up the re-
history of the people of the Andes. De- spiratory tract and relieving the feeling
spite gaining notoriety in mod- of shortness of breath and tightness in
ern times for being the source the chest. Coca is highly useful for its preventing constipation. Coca itself is
material for the highly addictive antibacterial and analgesic properties, rich in iron, and vitamins B and C.
drug cocaine, coca continues to in addition to aiding in digestion and in Consumption of coca dates back
to the very earliest of ancient South
American societies. There is evidence
it was consumed in cultures located in
THE LEAVES SECRET modern-day Ecuador from as early as
the ninth millennium B.C. It was during
the Inca Empire, however, a little before
GROWING MORE THAN six feet tall, coca
the arrival of the Spanish, that coca at-
bushes produce white flowers, bright red
tained particular religious and socio-
berries, and thin green leaves. Scientists were
economic significance.
fascinated by the active substance in the leaves.
In 1855 German chemist Friedrich Gaedcke first
Coca Culture
isolated it; four years later, Albert Niemann did
FLORILEGIUS/ALBUM
10 NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2016
An Incas Appeal
name means he who remakes the
to a Spanish King
earth, began conquering lands sur-
A FARMER TAKES COCA LEAVES out of his chuspa (coca pouch)
rounding Cusco, the imperial capital,
located in modern-day Peru. The Inca and says to his companion, Chew this coca, sister in the
language, religion, and trade network above illustration, which appears in El Primer Nueva Cornica y
dominated the Andes. Buen Gobierno (The First New Chronicle and Good Government).
Vast amounts of coca, regarded as
The author and illustrator, Felipe writing and illustration in the
sacred by the Inca, were used in reli-
Guamn Poma de Ayala, was Nueva Cornica. Finished between
gious ceremonies. Cristbal de Molina,
documenting how coca use had 1612 and 16151,189 pages long,
a Spanish priest who lived in Cusco
become more widespread in the and with 398 drawingsthe book
around 1565 and observed Inca tradi-
Inca lower classes since the Spanish was written to show King Philip III
tions, described how the Inca burned
conquest. Born into a noble Inca of Spain the effect of colonial
leaves and blew coca fumes toward
family circa 1535, Guamn Poma Spanish rule. No one knows if the
the suntheir main deityand other
was educated in the European king saw it, but the work remains
gods, as part of a ritual to heal the sick.
tradition; he used his talents for a valuable source on Inca culture.
The plant was also revered for its divi-
natory powers, and some priests were
specialists at reading its leaves. Coca holy trances and altered states while also kept their flat shape and uniform color, a
was also buried with the dead, included disorienting the victims, making them large part of the harvest was lost during
among their grave goods to accompany easier to subdue. drying. The entire process required par-
them into the afterlife. ticular care to maintain as many leaves
Some religious rituals involved human Cultivating the Crop as possible.
sacrifice, and coca played a role as well. The Inca system for growing and har- Because of their high value, coca
Three mummies of sacrifi- vesting coca leaves involved many steps. leaves could serve both as a commod-
cial victims discovered The plants were grown in clear-cut fields ity and a currency. Public officials and
in 1999 revealed high in warm, wet regions. When ready for regional or local lords were paid for
consumption of coca harvesting, the leaves would tear when their services to the empire in precious
in the months folded. They were picked and then laid metals, fine textiles, and baskets of
preceding their out in thin layers to dry in the sun. Imper- coca leaves. The Sapa Incathe only
deaths. Consum- fectly colored leaves were rejected. Coca Inca, or the kingrewarded loyalty
ing the leaves was leaves are very fragile, and although me- with baskets of coca leaves. They were
believed to induce ticulous efforts were made to ensure they also given out to soldiers at feasts to
celebrate victories. Of all prestigious
Inca goods, coca was the most highly
As the powerful controlled production valued. Garcilaso de la Vega, who was
and distribution, access to coca was, at of Spanish-Inca parentage, wrote: [The
Inca] place it before gold and silver and
first, limited to the Inca elites. precious stones.
Because of its high value, coca was
UM
A MAN CHEWING COCA IN A PRE-COLUMBIAN FIGURE largely consumed by the imperial Inca
LB
A/A
DE
12 NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2016
Arts and Crafts
COCAS CENTRALITY TO PRE-COLUMBIAN ANDEAN SOCIETIES is revealed in their material
culture: statues and figurines; votive offerings that depict everyday coca-chewing;
and intricately decorated pouches to carry leaves.
FROM LEFT TO RIGHT: AKG/ALBUM; M. CARRIERI/ART ARCHIVE; ARCHAEOLOGICAL MUSEUM LIMA/ART ARCHIVE; M. CARRIERI/ART ARCHIVE
elites. During the last days of the Inca Spanish authorities discovered how coca Garcilaso de la Vega recorded the
Empire, a relaxation of restrictions on increased productivity, and encouraged following conversation between two
coca consumption began. Some research- the enslaved people to consume it. In Spaniards, a gentleman and a farmhand
ers argue that this change could be due to time the crop became a lucrative business near Cusco. The first asked, Why do
the fact thatunlike during the empires for Spanish landowners, who raised pro- you eat coca, like the Indians do, when
earlier stagesthe state could no longer duction to meet increased demand. The Spaniards find it so disgusting and de-
guarantee the food supply for the entire missionary Father Bernab Cobo wrote: testable? The other, who was carrying
population. Coca started to be used to It is the most profitable product in the his two-year-old daughter on his back,
dull hunger in lean times. Nevertheless, Indies [sic] and has made many Spaniards replied. In truth, sir, I detest it no less
its association with food for the elite rich. than anyone, but need forced me to im-
prevailed until the Inca Empire was con- itate the Indians and chew it. Without it
quered by the Spanish in 1532. An Acquired Taste I would not be able to bear the burden.
In the early days of the conquest, The Spaniards often mocked indigenous With it I have strength and vigor to be
Spanish chroniclers from the 16th and people for their belief in the power of able to undertake my labors.
17th centuries noted how the wealthy coca. But skepticism started to give Today coca leaves are harvested as
had a monopoly on coca. Juan de Ma- way to interest in the strange leaf. In an essential ingredient of the illegal, but
tienzo wrote that leaves were a deli- 1653 Father Cobo wrote that the Indians highly lucrative, production of cocaine.
cacy for lords and chiefs and not for the say that [coca] gives them strength, Despite the plants role in so much vio-
common people. and they feel neither thirst, hunger nor lence and political instability across the
After the conquest coca consumption tiredness. I think it is mostly supersti- Americas, its traditional use is still in-
spread among the indigenous population, tion, but one cannot deny that it gives voked by Andean societies as a symbol
as recorded by many Spanish colonists them strength and breath, as they work of their enduring culture.
who exploited the Inca as slave labor. The twice as hard with it. Ariadna Baulenas i Pubill
D
the killers, Success to sail- coast, then striking out into the Pacif- uled for two and a half years at sea. At the
ors wives, And greasy luck ic. The economic stakes were high: Each helm was Captain George Pollard, Jr., age
to whalers. So went a pop- expedition could yield hundreds of bar- 28, with first mate Owen Chase and sec-
ular toast when Nantucket, rels of precious whale oil. There was also ond mate Mathew Joy. The 18-man crew
Massachusetts, was still the center of the valuable ambergris, a substance from the included teenagers like Owen Coffin, the
whaling industry in the early 19th century. sperm whale used in making perfumes captains cousin, and Thomas Nickerson,
But times were changing: Whale pop- and medicines. Expeditions could last for a cabin boy, age 14. Seven of the sailors
ulations in the North Atlantic had de- years while being highly profitable. were African American.
clined, forcing whaling ships to head to But the story of the Essex would be dif- Later there would be talk of how
more distant waters, first plundering ferent. The 88-foot, 238-ton whaleship strange omens appeared in Nantucket
14 NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2016
MILESTONES
DEA/ALBUM
GOING TWO FOR TWO
OF THE TWO WHALING SHIPS commanded by Captain Pollardthe Essex,
THE WHALE depicted above, and the Two Brotherstwo of them sank. The Two Brothers sunk
Watercolor by Jean in 1823 after striking a reef near the Hawaiian Islands. The crew survived but
Franois Garneray,
1836. Peabody Essex
Pollards maritime career did not. In 2011 archaeologists announced they had
Museum, Salem, found the Two Brotherss anchor and artifacts, including a harpoon tip, near the
Massachusetts French Frigate Shoals in Papahanaumokuakea Marine National Monument.
BRIDGEMAN/ACI
the summer the Essex set sail. In July a Brazil. This region was largely fished out, Head On Collision
comet had crossed the skies, and a plague so they headed to the Pacific in search of On November 20, the crew sighted a huge
of locusts had destroyed the crops. The better luck. male sperm whale leading a pod. Three
local newspaper, the New Bedford Mer- In January 1820 they rounded Cape small whaling boats were launched un-
cury, recorded sightings of an extraor- Horn. For many months, toiling up the der the command of the captain and the
dinary sea animal resembling a serpent. long Chilean coastline, they sighted few ships two mates. They had soon man-
whales. When they reached the South Pa- aged to corral several of the whales when
Inauspicious Beginnings cific close to Peru, their fortunes changed: a calf smashed into Chases boat forcing
Only three days into their voyage, a vio- They were catching a sperm whale every him to return to the main ship. It was then
lent squall battered the Essex, terrifying five days, a bonanza that yielded a total of that the young cabin boy Nickerson spot-
the inexperienced crew. The ship began 450 barrels of oil. ted a looming shape underneath the bow
to creak and listed dangerously. Captain However, rough sea conditions forced of the Essex. It was a mighty sperm whale
Pollard managed to reach the island of them to head west again. On a final stop some 85 feet long, weighing as much as
Cape Verde, off the coast of West Africa, in the Galpagos, they were able to stock 80 tons.
at the end of September, where they re- up on provisions, including some giant First mate Owen Chase wrote later
paired the ship. They set sail again for the turtles for food. From there the Pacific how he saw the whale appear with ten-
South American coast Ocean stretched out, apparently infinite, fold fury and vengeance in his aspect. The
NORTH and caught their first in every direction. They were more than surf flew in all directions about him with
AMERICA
sperm whale in 1,500 miles west of Peru, about as far the continual violent thrashing of his tail.
PERU
SOUTH
the waters near from land as it is possible to be on Earth. His head about half out of the water, and
AMERICA
in that way he came upon us, and again
AT IC
CHILE OCEAN
The route of the Essex from Nantucket to the site of struck the ship . . . I could distinctly see
PA its wreck in the mid-Pacific, and the long southerly him smite his jaws together as if distract-
OCEAN
C
route along which its survivors drifted ed with rage and fury.
The huge creature smashed into the Adrift in the small boats, her crew were culated could be reached within 30 days.
Essex repeatedly, on each occasion caus- as far as they could possibly be from any But Chase, believing those islands to be
ing it to list even more. The men just had known land. They inventoried the pro- inhabited by cannibals, stubbornly op-
time to save some of the provisions and visions they had salvaged: around 300 posed this plan and, along with the inex-
regroup in three small whaling boats be- pounds of biscuits, several casks of wa- perienced Joy, persuaded Captain Pollard
fore their ship succumbed to the waves. ter, and some of the Galpagos turtles. that they must attempt the longer jour-
My God, Mr. Chase, what is the matter? Pollard, Chase, and Joy each took charge ney back to the South American coast.
Captain Pollard asked in utter shock. We of one of the small whale boats. Pollard
have been stove by a whale, came the proposed heading for one of the small Pa- Set Adrift
bitter reply. cific islands, such as Tahiti, which he cal- Pollard and Chase had saved the navi-
gation instruments from the wreckage,
and decided that Joy should simply follow
their lead. They fixed their course toward
the coast. In his diary of the voyage, dis-
RESCUED! covered in 1960, cabin boy Thomas Nick-
erson wrote how quickly they all realized,
THIS ETCHING re-creates the moment that the slender thread upon which our lives
the three Essex sailors who had stayed be- were hung.
hind on Henderson Island were rescued The officers rationed the biscuits ac-
by an Australian ship searching for them. cording to Chases calculations, allowing
Approaching the shore was difficult due to just 500 calories a day per person. But the
the reefs and the strong tide near the island. shortage of water soon became critical.
A month later, on the verge of dying of
BRIDGEMAN/ACI
16 NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2016
AHABS OBSESSION
Ahabs To rouse his men,
Captain Ahab
Inspiration orders: Drink, ye
harpooneers! drink
HERMAN MELVILLE drew on his ex- and swear . . .
Death to Moby
periences as a whaler for his 1851
Dick! Lithograph
novel Moby-Dick; or, The Whale, by James Edwin
the story of Captain Ahab and McConnell
the whaleship Pequod, doomed
by a quest for revenge on the
white whale Moby Dick. The Es-
sexs grisly fate inspired Melville,
who knew the ships first mate
personally and used his writings
as research. Later in life, Melville
recalled meeting
Captain Pollard
in Nantucket:
To the island-
ers he was a no-
bodyto me, the
most impressive
man tho whol-
ly unassuming,
even humble
that I ever en-
countered.
CULTURE-IMAGES/ALBUM BRIDGEMAN/ACI
thirst, they reached Henderson Island, boat was down to four survivors, the sit- later on Ducie Island, manned by three
a desolate coral islet that was little more uation took a desperate turn. The cap- skeletons. The three men who had stayed
than a refuge for a few seabirds. There tain was persuaded by a crew member, on Henderson Island survived and were
they found a spring that provided a trickle Charles Ramsdell, that they should each rescued in April 1821.
of brackish water. In a few days they had draw lots to decide the next to be killed Captain Pollard returned to sea at the
finished off most of the seabirds on the and eaten so that the others could live. helm of another whaler, survived anoth-
island. Three survivors chose to stay ma- The short straw was drawn by Coffin, the er shipwreck, and retired from the sea.
rooned there, but the rest saw their best captains 18-year-old cousin. The young He ended his days as a night watchman
hope in taking to the seas again. man resigned himself to his grisly fate on Nantucket Island, telling few people
Thirst and the brutal sun soon fin- and Ramsdell shot him. of the terrible events he had endured.
ished off the weakest, and their bod- Owen Chase went on to write his chill-
ies were thrown overboard. But in the The Rescue ing account of his months at sea. Chase
days that followed, hunger forced the On February 23, 1821, three months af- eventually died many years later in severe
survivors to realize that wasting a valu- ter the sperm whale sank the ship, the mental distress, obsessed with hoarding
able source of nourishment was fool- Dauphin, another Nantucket whaling food in his attic. The horrors of the Essex
ish. In the end, when the next sailor vessel, sighted a small boat filled with would live on as a source of inspiration for
succumbed, he was dismembered and sun-bleached bones with the emaciat- one of Americas greatest novels, Her-
his flesh cooked on a flat stone in the ed figures of Pollard and Ramsdell laying man Melvilles Moby-Dick, the story of a
bottom of the boat. Cannibalism would amid the carnage. One of the other boats, doomed whaling voyage that ends when
sustain these men but bring them to the carrying Chase, Lawrence, and Nicker- the ship is rammed and sunk by a massive
edge of madness. son, had been rescued some days earlier white sperm whale.
In time the three boats drifted apart in similar conditions. The third boat was
and separated. When Captain Pollards not so fortunate; it was discovered years Xabier Armendriz
THE PYRAMIDS
OF MERO
A city of goldworkers and builders, Mero
was the seat of power for the Kushite kings
and queens of Nubia (in modern-day Sudan).
After ruling as Egypts 25th dynasty, the
Nubians relocated south to Mero, where their
civilization stood strong for centuries.
NRIA CASTELLANO
R
ising high in the sky in the modern-day nation of
Sudan is a plethora of pyramids. They mark the site of
the ancient city Mero, a UNESCO World Heritage site.
The center of a powerful civilization, Mero served as
the capital city of Kush whose robust culture thrived
for centuries. Their grand architecture and works of art left a last-
ing testament to the greatness of the Nubian kings and queens.
Located in the desert sands near the Nile in Egypts 25th Dynasty
modern Sudan, the ancient culture of Nubia In the late 20th century A.D. Swiss archaeologist
played a decisive role in shaping Egypt from the Charles Bonnet spent decades excavating the
eighth century B.C., serving as that kingdoms lands surrounding the southern Nile. He found
25th dynasty in the Late Period. After the Nu- evidence of a civilization grown rich from trade
bian pharaohs lost power, they retreated south and abundant with fields and livestock, a king-
from Egypt to form the Kingdom of Kush, which dom distinct from Egypt with its own material
thrived in splendid isolation as the rest of Egypt culture and traditions. This civilization grew in
suffered through repeated invasions from As- power just as Egypts Middle Kingdom was in
syrians, Persians, and Greeks. decline around 1785 B.C. By 1500 B.C., the Nubian
Because of Meros distance, the Kushites empire roughly stretched from Wadi Halfa south
were able to retain their independence, devel- to Mero.
oping their own vibrant hybrid of Egyptian cul- Centered on its original capital at Napata, the
ture and religion until well into the fourth cen- Nubian ruling dynasty continued to flourish
tury A.D. With access to mines and minerals, the militarily and economically through the ninth
Meroites were expert goldworkers. They built century B.C. Around 730 B.C., the Nubian king,
temples, palaces, and royal baths in their capi- Piye, successfully invaded and conquered Egypt,
tal. Perhaps their grandest achievements are the extending his control to the whole Nile Valley.
more than 200 pyramids built at the necropolis Piye became the first pharaoh of Egypts 25th
at Mero, giving Sudan more pyramids than all dynasty (ca 770-656 b.c.), the so-called Black
of Egypt. Tall, slender, graceful: These monu- Pharaohs.
ments bear witness to the lasting splendor that Piye died in 715 B.C., having reigned 35 years.
was Kush. Although he had returned to Nubia after con-
quering Egypt, he wished to be buried in the
Egyptian style, a request his subjects granted.
Entombed in a pyramid, Piye was the first pha-
raoh in more than 500 years to be buried this way.
A MERO KING STANDING BEFORE THE EGYPTIAN GOD RE. ENGRAVED GOLD PLAQUE, ARCHAEOLOGICAL MUSEUM, KHARTOUM, SUDAN
WERNER FORMAN/GTRES
ROYAL REST
There are 41 tombs
in Meros north
cemetery, 38 of which
belong to monarchs
who ruled the region
between 250 b.c. and
a.d. 320.
FABIAN VON POSER/AGE FOTOSTOCK
250 B.C. 1ST CENTURY A.D. 2ND CENTURY A.D. A.D. 350
King Arakamani relocates Queen Amanirenas leads Building methods change. An invasion by the kingdom
the royal necropolis from her troops against the The Mero pyramids are of Axum brings Mero's
near Napata to Mero, which Romans. Her successor, faced with brick instead of dominance to an end. The
becomes the kingdoms Amanishakheto, is buried stone, and then a layer of city and royal necropolis are
spiritual and political capital. with costly grave goods. plaster, which is painted. eventually abandoned.
A SMALL CHAPEL TOMB
(ca 13th century b.c.) at the necropolis of
the ancient city of Deir el Medina, near
Luxor in Egypt. The pyramids of Mero
adopted a strikingly similar design.
The 25th dynasty would last for three- routes and caravan trails from the Red Sea, the
quarters of a century. Its reign ended in turmoil land around Mero was also fertile and blessed
when an Assyrian invasion of Egypt caused it with significant natural resourcesiron and
to fall from power. The victors struck the gold mines that fostered the development of a
names of the 25th dynasty from monuments metals industry, especially goldworking.
across Egypt, destroying their statues and
stelae to erase their names from history. Royal Tombs
After the defeat, the Nubians retreated The Kushites burial culture had been touched
to Napata, only to be forced farther south by a synthesis of Egyptian and African religious
at the beginning of the sixth century b.c., and cultural practices. Even after relocating
when Pharaoh Psamtek II, part of the 26th south,the Kushite kings continued to be buried
dynasty, sacked Napata. The Kushites des- in the necropolis at Nuri, near Napata, a center
ignated the city of Mero,which sat farther of the cult of the Egyptian god Amun.
south along the Nile, as the new capital. Merowouldbecomethepreferrednecropolis
This new location was carefully consid- later, around 250 B.C. There are two main burial
ered. Not only strategically positioned areas:thesouthcemeteryandthenorthernburi-
at the crossroads of inland African trade al ground. The south cemetery was the oldest.
When it reached capacity, the northern burial
GOLD RING FOUND IN A MERO TOMB. THIS EGYPTIAN- ground was begun. The northern area today
INFLUENCED PIECE DEPICTS AN UDJATEYE OF HORUSFLANKED
BY TWO COBRAS. STATE MUSEUM OF EGYPTIAN ART, MUNICH
contains the best preserved of the pyramids at
BPK/SCALA, FLORENCE Mero.Some of the most impressive tombs here
22 NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2016
THEFT OR EXPLORATION
Although the Italian Giuseppe Ferlini
styled himself as an explorer, tomb
raider may be more accurate. In the
course of exploring the Mero
pyramids in 1834, he took the treasure
he found in Queen Amanishakhetos
tomb, and vandalized others. In 1976
Friedrich W. Hinkel, an archaeologist
from former East Germany, set out
to study the damaged monuments.
His meticulous documentation
shed new light on what had been an
underappreciated civilization.
Chapel
Entrance pylons
NEXUSOFTRADE i
Me is
ONTHENILE LOWER
EGYPT
N
O
NE OF THE MOST REMARKABLE features of Meroitic civi- Steps were carved into the rock to the east of
lization was its strong queens. In his Geography, Greek each pyramid leading down to a sealed entrance.
historian Strabo wrote of a queen called Candace who Behind it lay underground rooms with vaulted
signed a peace treaty with the emperor Augustus. Can- ceilings: three for a king and two for a queen. In
dace, in fact, means sister, and was the title given to Kushite the oldest pyramids, the burial chamber was
queens. There were many queens in Mero, such as Amanirenas decorated with scenes from the Egyptian Book
the Candace Strabo was referring toand her successor, Aman- of the Dead.A wooden coffin,depicting the dead
ishakheto, whose treasure was looted in 1834. Archaeologists have persons face, was placed in the burial chamber.
recently been studying the funerary chamber of another queen, The sacrificed bodies of animals and, in some
Khennuwa, whose tomb was excavated by George Reisner in 1922. cases, of human servants were placed nearby.
Attached to one side of a standard Mero pyr-
amid was a chapel, its entrance formed by twin
taperingpylons.Inside,itwascommontoplacea
stela,an offering table,and a distinctive element
of Mero culture: a statue of the bathe aspect
of the human soul believed to give the deceased
their individualitydepicted as the body of a
bird and a human head.
1
1 Rows of high- 2 A large table 3 Tables are laid 4 Queen 5 A prince 6 The goddess
ranking officials is loaded with out in an offering Shanakdakhete rests on a Isis spreads
bring offerings, offerings of food before Thoth, the presides over the footstool. Below her protective
parading before and drink to lay god of writing, scene. Under her him are more wings to bless
the gods and before Osiris, who served as throne lie bound young people, both Queen
the queen the god of the the scribe of the prisoners, in thrall perhaps the Shanakdakhete
Shanakdakhete. underworld. underworld. to her power. queens children. and her family.
THIS SANDSTONE RELIEF, FOUND IN THE FUNERARY CHAPEL OF QUEEN SHANAKDAKHETE FROM THE SECOND CENTURY B.C., IS DISPLAYED IN THE BRITISH MUSEUM, LONDON.
3 4 5 6
SPARTAS
MILITARY
MACHINE
War: Spartas entire culture centered on it.
A lifelong dedication to military discipline,
service, and precision gave this kingdom
a strong advantage over other Greek
civilizations, allowing Sparta to dominate
Greece in the fifth century B.C.
ANTONIO PENADS
HEAVY METAL
A Greek helmet
from the fifth
century b.c. At
the peak of their
power, the Spartans
defeated the Persian
army, and then
turned their ire on
neighboring Athens.
BRIDGEMAN/ACI
A SPARTAN CULTURE
Even at its most powerful, Spartans
distrusted grand monuments. Spartas
theater, shown here, was built by the
Romans in 30 b.c. The site was built
near the ancient shrine of Athena
Chalkioikos, patron of Sparta.
DEA/AGE FOTOSTOCK
S
partas enemies, when facing the intimidating Spartan
forces, would see a wall of shields, bristling with lances, in-
exorably bearing down on themnot to the beat of drums,
but as the Greek historian Thucydides explains, to the
music of many flute-players, a standing institution in their
army, which has nothing to do with religion, but is meant to make
them advance evenly, stepping in time, without breaking their order.
Little remains of the ancient city of Sparta, cap- The Athenian view of Sparta oscillated be-
ital of the Laconia region, situated on the Pelo- tween admiration and fear, according to whether
ponnesus peninsula in modern Greece, but the their warlike neighbors were allies or enemies.
impact of its unique culture is impossible to ig- Without Spartan participation in the war against
nore. Unlike Athens to the north, Sparta was Persia at the beginning of the fifth century B.C.
famed for its austerityits spartan charac- especially their heroic stand at the critical Battle
terwas, and is, proverbial. A state run by an of Thermopylae in 480the Persians may well
inflexible military regime, whose people existed have conquered Greece. Later in the same cen-
almost entirely to serve the army, the Spartans tury, however, Athens found itself at war with
were legendary for their professionalism, in- its ferocious former ally, a venture that greatly
tense physical and mental stamina, and absolute sapped its energy and resources. Even as Ath-
dedication to the defense of their land. No great ens experienced a Golden Age, the conflict with
philosophers would ever arise from Spartan cul- Sparta largely brought about its political decline.
ture the way they did from Athens. The Peloponnesian War in which Athens
fought Sparta began in 431 B.C. At the outset,
Athens and Sparta the Athenian statesman Pericles ordered all
Founded around the ninth century B.C., Spartas inhabitants of the Attica region to take refuge
kings oversaw a society with little interest in within the capitals strong walls. Despite grum-
intellectual and artistic pursuits beyond patri- bling from some quarters that this amounted to
otic poetry. Religion did occupy a central role in cowardice, many Athenians understood Peri-
this warrior society. An efficient military ma- cles pragmatism. Athens was strong at sea, but
chine in almost every other respect, war was only the Spartans were invincible on land. Pericles
unthinkable during the festivities dedicated to knew that facing the enemy there would mean
Apollo Carneus. These were celebrated every certain defeat. Spartas total dedication to mil-
summer, sometimes in full campaign season, itary greatness and discipline earned them their
and it was considered impious to interrupt them. fearsome reputation and their enemiesrespect.
730-660 b.c. 480 b.c. 479 b.c. 418 b.c. 371 b.c.
THE RISE Sparta dominates
the southern
Outnumbered
at the Battle of
Some 40,000
Spartan hoplites
In a major blow to
Athenian power,
At the Battle of
Leuctra, Thebes
OF A Peloponnesus, Thermopylae, 300 play a key role the Spartans rout finally defeats
WARRIOR creating a slave
class known as
Spartans take a
stand against the
in trouncing the
Persians at the
the Athenians
and their allies at
Sparta, ending
their era of military
STATE the Helots. Persian army. Battle of Plataea. Mantineia. dominance.
Spartan egalitarianism was distributed among shields, prepare their weapons, and carefully
soldiers and officers alike. Most campaigns took arrange their long hair, as part of a symbol-
place in the late spring, when water was scarce, ically charged ritual. When the battle
so drinking water also had to be hauled. was imminent, a young goat would
Every Spartan soldier carried his own weap- be sacrificed to Artemis Agrotera,
ons, while a Helot slave took charge of his other goddess of the hunt. The sages
belongings. At night the soldiers had no more examined the entrails under
than capes to protect them from the cold. They the watchful eye of the king,
did not sleep in tents but lay on the ground or who would only give the order
under simple shelters. to attack if he could count on di-
vine approval.
Eve of Battle When the trumpet sounded, all the
After the army arrived at the border of the Spar- Spartan hoplites would chant a paean or
tan region, the king made a new sacrifice, this war song called the Song of Castor,
time dedicated to Zeus and Athena. Upon reach- named in honor of a venerated Spar-
ing the battlefield, the Spartans set up camp in tan hero. The singing was accompa-
the most appropriate placeclose to a water nied by the flautists who played from
source when possible. The camp itself was laid their positions within the ranks. The
out in the form of a square, with the animals, Spartan phalanx, a tight military
supplies, and slaves placed in the middle. The formation usually eight men deep,
elite Skiritai and cavalry made constant patrols would then begin its advance, lances
of the high ground to keep watch. Sometimes raised, in time with the music. One
the guard was more concerned about the Helot measure of the Spartan reputation
slaves trying to flee the camp than about an at- for courage and nerve was the pace
tack from the rival army. with which it proceeded: Its
The Spartan soldiers kept to a strict sched- army would draw close to
ule when on campaign. Having offered the ap- enemy lines more slowly
propriate morning sacrifice, the king gave the than their rivals, always fol-
days orders to his officers. There would be phys- lowing the steady rhythm set by
ical exercise before breakfast, an inspection, a the flutes.
changeover of those on guard duty and then mil-
itary instruction. The historian Plutarch notes Rise to Combat ARMED AND
that, paradoxically, war for Spartans was seen Spartas battle methods were similar to those PROTECTED
almost as a holiday:Their bodily exercises, too, employed elsewhere in the Greek-speaking Packed into the
were less rigorous during their campaigns, and world. Hoplite warriors formed phalanxes, phalanx, the hoplite
used his shield to
[they] were allowed a regimen less rigid. They which advanced in lockstep. The front row pre- protect his left side,
were the only men in the world for whom war sented a barrier of shields locked together, from as seen on this sixth-
brought a respite in the training for war. which a long line of spears protruded. century B.C. bronze
In the afternoon the soldiers would com- Unity within the phalanx was crucial, and figure. Berlin State
pete in athletic exercises in which a polemarch Spartan phalanxes had a fearsome reputation Museums
BPK/SCALA, FLORENCE
(high-ranking military commander) acted as for holding their formation. During the Pelo-
judge and gave a prize to the winner, this usu- ponnesian War, both the Spartan and Athenian
ally being meat for dinner. At the end of the day sides made use of an additional class of soldier,
the soldiers would sing hymns and poems by the peltasts. This division of light infantry sup-
the seventh-century B.C. poet Tyrtaeus, whose plemented the heavily armedand often un-
work exalted Spartan patriotism. wieldyhoplites. But the phalanx remained the
At daybreak on the morning of the battle, Spartansprimary strength. Enemy commanders
sometimes within sight of the enemy, the Spar- justly feared the colossal damage this disciplined
tan hoplites would polish their bronze-coated mass could inflict.
morial engraved with an epitaph, such as that Throughout history, mothers have wept in
composed for the Spartans who died defending seeing their sons set out for war; Spartan wom-
the Thermopylae pass against the Persians: O en, however, developed another ritual, aimed at
Stranger, tell the Spartans that here we remain, preventing the ignominy that would befall them
obedient to their orders. if their son wavered in the line of duty. Plutarch
In a time-honored Spartan tradition, other records Spartan mothers handing the shield to
markers were often erected on the site of the their sons, with the exhortation: Either with this
battle. One of the most common was a tree trunk or upon thiseither return with the shield, vic-
dressed in the helmet, armor, and weapons of the torious; or return lying on it, dead.
defeated. If the battle was particularly signifi-
A PROLIFIC WRITER ON SPARTA AND ATHENS, ANTONIO PENADS
cant, a stone monument might be constructed, TEACHES GREEK HISTORY AT THE LIBER MUSEUM IN VALENCIA, SPAIN.
BRIDGEMAN/ACI
RIGHT: SPARTAN WEARING A CORINTHIAN HELMET AND WRAPPED IN A CAPE.
WADSWORTH ATHENEUM MUSEUM OF ART, HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT
THE PHALANX
THE PHALANX was formed of compact columns of hoplites who
maintained the formation at the exact width and depth required.
Wielding a greater and more powerful block of fighters than the
enemy was one of the keys to victory. The Spartan formation was
1 typically a minimum of eight lines deep. Each soldier had his own
1spear, which he held in front of him, parallel to that of his fellow
warriors. The aim for those in the front row was to injure the arms,
throat, or eyes of their opponents. The front lines made use of
their 2shields to thrust forward into the
enemy line and attempt to breach it. If
a breakthrough happened, it almost
always spelled the beginning of
2 the end for the Spartans enemies.
DK IMAGES
ART ARCHIVE
HEROD
THE GREAT
In the New Testament King Herod I is a villain, but the
Herod of history was more complex. Balancing the needs
of the Judaean populace and the rulers of Rome, this
consummate politician, ambitious builder, and master
organizer was able to transform the Holy Land.
ANTONIO PIERO
A STUDY IN CONTRASTS
King Herods legacy as an innovative
builder was established by structures
such as the imposing fortress of Masada
nestled in the Judaean cliffs. The Gospel
of Matthew relates the kings order to
murder innocent children, as illustrated
in this 13th-century altarpiece (opposite),
from Pistoia Cathedral, Italy.
ALTARPIECE: AKG/ALBUM; MASADA: DUBY TAL/ALBATROSS/AGE FOTOSTOCK
ew figures in history have had such a con- Herod saved his people from famine in the mid-
F
HALLOWED
GROUND troversial reputation as King Herod I of 20s B.C. Although his reign was largely a time of
Today worshippers Judaea. In the Christian tradition, peace and prosperity for Judaea, he was often
pray at the base of Herod is the villain in the Christmas treated with deep suspicion by his subjects.
the Western Wall in story. The Gospel of Matthew recounts Herods rule was an exquisite balancing act
Jerusalem (above),
the only remains of how the king orders the death of all baby boys between appeasing his Roman masters and serv-
Herods expansion of following the birth of Jesus, an event called the ing the needs of the Judaean people. The strain of
the Second Temple, Massacre of the Innocents. Calling this king this effort, plus the toxic environment of court
which was later great hardly seems fitting, given that atrocity. intrigue, might have led Herod to become in-
destroyed by the
Romans in A.D. 70. To many scholars, however, Herods honorific creasingly paranoid, cruel, and erratic toward
MICHELE FALZONE/AGE FOTOSTOCK is deserved. The king of the Judaeans for the last the end of his life. Some historians believe his
part of the first century B.C. was a skilled admin- behavior during this later period made credible
istrator. He created magnificent public building his ordering of the so-called Massacre of the
works across Judaea, most notably the colos- Innocents despite a lack of historical evidence
sal reconstruction of the Temple in Jerusalem. that such an atrocity ever occurred.
42 NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2016
There is, however, one aspect of this colorful day, and the key role they played in the emer- SWITCHING
king on which all commentators agree: Flattered, gence of Rome as the uncontested power in the SIDES
cajoled, and used by Rome, Herod the Great was eastern Mediterranean. Following the
never able to completely win the hearts and downfall of his
minds of all his Jewish subjects. Rome, on the Rise to Power ally Mark Antony,
depicted on a gold
other hand, needed Herod as much as Herod At the beginning of the second century B.C., the aureus (below),
needed Rome, whose culture and language the Seleucid dynasty,now in decline, ruled the rem- Herod rapidly
Jewish king had closely identified with all his life. nants of Alexander the Greats eastern empire came to terms with
Herods rule over Judaea was continued un- from its base in Syria. Farther south, the Egyp- Octavian. National
Archaeological
der his son Herod Antipasalso infamous in tian dynasty that inherited Alexanders hold- Museum, Naples
Christian scripture as the king reigning during ingsthe Ptolemieswas also beginning to BRIDGEMAN/ACI
Jesus ministry and death. Herod the Great and crumble.Sandwiched between these two weak-
his son became the New Testaments symbol of ening powers, the Jews of Judaea seized their
corrupt earthly authority precisely because of moment in the revolt of the Maccabees (circa
their vital importance in the geopolitics of the 167-164 B.C.), briefly gaining independence
REVOLTING
AGAINST ROME
T
he Jewish uprising that began in 167 B.C. against
the ruling Seleucid kings was headed by a family
of high priests from the Temple in Jerusalem.
Known as the Maccabees, their establishment
oftheindependentHasmonaean dynasty, and their refus-
al to accept the imposition of Greek Seleucid culture, left
a deep mark on the popu- to be stormed by lower-
lar imagination. A century ing crate after crate con-
later, when the Romans taining soldiers. On their
tried to impose dominance capture, Herod ordered all
on the Hasmonaeans, par- the prisoners to be killed.
tisans rose up in the Gali- Angry protests erupted in
lee, dubbing themselves Jerusalem, and Herod was
the new Maccabees. In called before the religious
47 B . C . Herod, who was authorities to answer for
then governor of the re- his actions. In a sign of
gion, was charged with the clashes that he would
putting down the threat. later face as king, Herod
Rebels had hunkered down asserted his authority, and
in near-inaccessible caves, narrowly escaped being
but Herod ordered them condemned to death.
MACCABEE from Seleucid rule and expanding their territo- The triumphant Octavian demanded an au-
MARTYRS ries into lands under the Hasmonaean dynasty. dience with Herod. Fearing for his life, the Ju-
Antonio Ciseris Having at first received the blessing of Rome, daean king swore allegiance to Octavian, who
1863 canvas in the the independent Jewish kingdom increasingly confirmedHerodsplace as king. The Jewish his-
church of Santa felt the pressure of the Roman Republics ex- torianFlaviusJosephus writes that Octavian saw
Felicita, Florence,
marks the moment pansion into the region. When Judaea became a Herods faithfulness to Mark Antony as a good
the Maccabees rose vassal state of Rome in 63 B.C.,the rulers found a indicator that he would also be faithful to Rome.
against the Seleucids, willingcollaboratorintheformofHerodsfather, In the eyes of his pious, Jewish subjects,
who had banned the Antipater,who was made procuratorfinancial however, Herods loyalty to the pagan Romans
celebration of Jewish
rites circa 167 B.C.
governorof the new Roman province. and admiration of Hellenistic style smacked of
AKG/ALBUM Divided over whether to fight the Romans or treachery. He had been put on the throne of Ju-
join them, civil war broke out among the Has- daea only after considerable Jewish blood had
monaean dynasty. Antipaters son Herod ap- been shed by Roman forces. Added to this, his
pealed to Rome for aid, and was appointed king lineage was far from pure. Herods family had
of Judaea in 40 B.C. At that time Jerusalem was converted to Judaism, but his fathers family
occupied by Parthian troops, fighting on behalf was descended from Edom and his mother was
of the anti-Roman Jews.With Roman help King Arabic. Worst of all, Herod rode roughshod over
Herod retook the city in 37 B.C., from where he the customs and laws of the Jewish religion.
developed excellent relations with high-ranking
imperial figures, including Mark Antony. Crowning Achievements
This relationship could have led to Herods Herod carefully cultivated his image as a so-
demise, as Antony tried to defeat Octavian (the phisticate steeped in Greco-Roman culture. If
future Emperor Augustus) but was himself de- the writers of the New Testament saw him as
feated at the Battle of Actium in 31 B.C. a tyrant, Herod saw himself as the paragon of
44 NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2016
refinement. He befriended leading Roman fig- impossible without the consent of the influen- SPECTACULAR
ures, showering them with invitations to his tial Pharisees, whom he carefully courted with CITY
palaces in Jerusalem and Jericho. The succes- various concessions. He was able to keep them Still in use today,
sion of gentile nobles, philosophers, historians, just about on side, but he would never win their the amphitheater
dominated Caesarea
poets, and playwrights flowing through the royal total trust or loyalty.
Maritima. Named
court rankled with the Pharisees and the Es- According to the historian Josephus, Herods in honor of Caesar
senes, the principal Jewish sects concentrated new cities irked the Jewish priestly class because Augustus, the project
in and around Jerusalem. In some ways, both their pagan monuments were insultingly close gave Herod the
groups were very different: The Pharisees repre- to Jerusalem.Built between 22 and 10 B.C.,Herod chance to build a
completely Roman
sented the establishment, holding high religious named Caesarea Maritima for his patron, Caesar city from scratch.
office in the Temple, while the Essenes were Augustus. It was constructed around an artificial DUBY TAL/ALBATROSS/AGE FOTOSTOCK
an apocalyptic sect who wanted to see Judaism harbor, protected with concrete breakwaters.
purified and reformed. Even so, both believed This remarkable feat of engineering was the base
that the king was intentionally corrupting Jew- of the Herodian fleet, which the king placed en-
ish customs within his court. tirely at the service of Rome.
According to the historian Nicholas of Da- Caesareas temples were dedicated to the god-
mascus, one of Herods close friends, the king dess Roma, and to Augustus himself. Every five
neglected affairs of state and the study of Jew- years, Herod organized gladiatorial fights, dedi-
ish law to spend his time studying philosophy, cated to Augustus and his wife Livia, and where
rhetoric, and the history of Greece and Rome. foreign dancers almost outnumbered the guests.
State affairs were delegated to those officials Magnificent prizes were awarded to the winners,
with a Greek education. When the king did carry and rumors of wild, orgiastic parties circulated.
out religious acts, his pious critics remained un- The Jewish authorities looked on the excess with
convinced. Herod knew that ruling Judaea was deep disapproval. They saw gladiatorial fighting
KING HERODS
TIME OF DYING
M
any Jews considered Herods poor health
divine retribution for the crimes they be-
lieved he committed during his reign. The
historianFlavius Josephus, who was writing
a century later, left the most detailed chronicle of Herods
reign and wrote of a protracted and painful demise:
Herods distemper greatly his colon; an aqueous and
increased upon him after a transparent liquor also
severe manner, and this by had settled itself about his
Gods judgment upon him feet, and a like matter af-
for his sins; for a fire glowed flicted him at the bottom
in him slowly, which . . . of his belly. Nay, further, his
augmented his pains in- privy-member was putre-
wardly; for it brought upon fied, and produced worms;
him a vehement appetite and when he sat upright, he
to eating, which he could had a difficulty of breath-
not avoid to supply with ing, which was very loath-
one sort of food or other. some, on account of the
His entrails were also ex- stench of his breath; he had
ulcerated, and the chief also convulsions in all parts
violence of his pain lay on of his body.
BURIAL OF as fundamentally immoral,believing that all hu- had long circulated that the tomb believed to be
A KING man life belonged to the Most High. Davids resting place hid treasure. Having spent
Herod died in his If Caesareaofficially the Judaean capital largesumsofmoneyon the building of Caesarea,
palace at Jericho in from 6 B.C.could be written off as a city for pa- and perhaps seeing himself as the descendant of
the spring of 4 B.C.
gans, the holy city of Jerusalem was also threat- King David, Herod, it was said, secretly accom-
This illustration by
Hongnian Zhang ened by the Romanizing instincts of their ruler. panied workmen to rob the tomb. The historian
depicts the funeral Tension focused on the Second Temple there, a Josephus recounts how, on entering, they found
procession to his building that symbolizes Herods complex re- that nothing remained of the riches. According
massive mausoleum lationship with his faith. to his account, Herods two guards were killed
at Herodium.
HONGNIAN ZHANG
Begun in 20 B.C.,Herods restoration program bya flame that burst out upon those that went
refacedthestructureinwhitestone,anddoubled in,and Herod fled the scene.
the courtyard around it. Herod sought to exalt Modern historians argue that, in spite of such
the Jewish faith, yet did so using Hellenic archi- colorful instances of greed, Herods rule was re-
tects. The grandiose court was soon filled with markably constructive. For all the caviling of the
moneylendersan affront to pious Jews, who, priests, Herods diplomacy ensured the survival
according to Josephus and other Jewish writers of Jewish identity at a turbulent moment in the
of the time, were angered at the corrupt man- eastern Mediterranean. His contribution to the
agement of the Temple, an anger felt later by material culture of Judaea was unprecedented.
one Jesus of Nazareth:My house shall be called He built the fortresses of Masada and Herodium,
the house of prayer,Jesus cries in the Gospel of as well as ensuring a water supply for Jerusalem.
Matthew,but ye have made it a den of thieves. Using his contacts with Rome during the famine
Perhaps the most spectacular religious scan- of 25-24 B.C., he arranged for the importation of
dal Herod the Great unleashed was the breach- Egyptian grain to feed his people. However, even
ing of King Davids tomb in Bethlehem. Rumors sympathetic biographers of Herod acknowledge
46 NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2016
the violent behavior of his later years did much sons, Alexander and Aristobulus. He disinher- THE FORTRESS
to sully his legacy. ited his oldest son, Antipater, borne to him by ON THE HILL
his first wife, Doris, only to execute him later. Rounded in the
The Mad King Many civilians also ended their lives in the shape of a breast,
in the words of
Throughout his reign, King Herods domestic dungeons of the palace, victims of Herods sys-
Josephus, Herods
life was a source of growing scandal in Jerusalem. tematic plan to eliminate anyone who showed hilltop fortress of
In addition to consorting with a large number allegiance to the previous Hasmonaean regime. Herodium lies near
of concubines, Herod is thought to have had a Tortured by insecurity, Herods desire for Bethlehem. His tomb
total of nine wives, and was sometimes married revenge became increasingly lurid. Josephus was finally found in
the complex in 2007.
to more than one at the same time. writes how, having entered his agonizing last BORCHI MASSIMO/FOTOTECA 9X12
Palace intrigues and dynastic plots fueled a illness, Herod ordered that after his death the
growing sense of paranoia in Herod. Some may key noblemen in the country should be corralled
have been genuine, but others were the fruit of into the amphitheater in Jericho and slain with
Herods vivid imagination. The continual sus- arrows. On his death in 4 B.C., the order was
picion of a conspiracy launched by remnants of never carried out. There is no direct proof that
the Hasmonaean dynasty prompted a wave of the slaughter of the innocents in Bethlehem oc-
bloodletting. Herod had many members of his curredeither,althoughthestoryisnotincredible
own family killed during his frequent purges. given Herods mental state. His actions created
Among his victims were his brother-in-law an intriguing historical paradox: a ruler who
Aristobulus the Younger, whom he had previ- could, on the one hand, create a stable, wealthy
ously named as high priest, as well as the former kingdom,yet still stir up feelings of distrust and
Hasmonaean king Hyrcanus II, who had ruled disrespect among his subjects.
before him. His wife Mariamne also perished on
ANTONIO PIERO IS PROFESSOR OF GREEK PHILOLOGY AT THE COMPLUTENSE
his orders, andmost brutally of allher two UNIVERSITY OF MADRID, SPAIN.
2 Herods Palace
Located to the south of
Herod wanted to convert Judaea into the greatest
the city, the complex
kingdom in the east. A key part of this plan was included two luxurious halls
the transformation of Jerusalem, whose walls he adorned with marble and
extended, and whose public areas he filled with cedarwood, courtyards,
colonnades, and gardens.
monumental buildings. Home to 30,000
people, the city was divided into four
districts: the upper city, housing
the palace and theater,
following the Hellenic model
Herod so admired; the
lower city, with its more
modest neighborhoods
and the great hippodrome;
the north, a commercial
neighborhood; and the east,
ontaining Herods expansion
BRIDGEMAN/ACI
PRESENTATION OF THE
VIRGIN BEFORE THE HIGH
PRIEST IN THE TEMPLE
TITIAN, 1534
ALBUM
7 8
AQUEDUCTS
Ancient masters of engineering, aqueduct builders
created a vast network of pipes, channels, and bridges
to bring water to Rome, creating in the process an
enduring symbol of Roman civilization and innovation.
ISABEL ROD
THE GREAT
WASHED
The Caracalla Baths,
depicted in this 19th-
century engraving,
opened in A.D. 217.
Thanks to the
aqueduct, free public
access to baths
became a highly
valued privilege of
Roman civic life.
AKG/ALBUM
R
CLAUDIUS, ome is known for many things: its of Crete, the Minoans developed sophisticated
BRINGER OF military conquests, its civic architec- rain-harvesting and filtering systems as early
WATER ture, temples, roads, emperors, and as the middle of the third millennium B.C. Cre-
Emperor Claudius sculpture. Yet none of these would tan water management techniques were later
(pictured below on have been possible without the most adopted across the Greek-speaking world, and
a coin) completed
Romes principal vital resource of all: water. Now, as then, water examples abound of tunnels, drainage systems,
aqueduct in A.D. 52. is life, and without effective distribution, there and cisterns, sometimes of considerable size.
Nearly 43 miles would have been no great Roman civilization. Yet although the water management tradi-
long, the Aqua Even until relatively modern times, Roman tion Rome inherited was rich and extensive, no
Claudia delivered techniques to collect, store, and channel water previous system came close to the sophistica-
water to all of the
citys 14 districts. over huge distances remained unsurpassed. tion and reach of the Roman aqueduct. Striding
Such technology,was not,of course,invented across the landscape from Spain to Syria, these
from scratch by the Romans, and many earlier awe-inspiring structures not only carried life
Mediterranean peoples had poured resources and livelihood but also proclaimed the great-
andexpertisseintomanagingwater.Ontheisland ness of Rome.
TO ROME which runs almost entirely has doubled in size since the
H MU
EN
CE
AWE-INSPIRING ARCHES
Built by Trajan in the second century a.d.
to serve the colony of Emerita Augusta
(modern-day Mrida), in Spain, the 100-
foot-high Prosperina aqueduct is known
locally as Los Milagros, the miracles,
for its breathtaking triple tier of arches.
JUERGEN RICHTER/GTRES
DEA/ALBUM
1
4
SOL 90/ALBUM
began building two aqueducts that were finished
by Emperor Claudius, the Aqua Claudia and
Aqua Anio Novus. Trajan built the Aqua Traiana,
which is 37 miles long, in A.D. 109. The last of
Romes aqueducts was the Aqua Alexandrina,
nearly 14 miles long, built by Alexander Severus
in A.D. 226. Some have calculated that, once com-
pleted, Romes aqueducts delivered roughly 1.5
million cubic yards of water per dayabout 200
gallons per person. Its water network supplied
11 grand-scale baths, as well as the 900 or so
public baths, and almost 1,400 monumental
fountains and private swimming pools.
A crucial later stage in the conveying of water
was, of course, its disposal. Romes Cloaca Max-
ima sewer, which flowed into the Tiber River,
became the model for urban sanitation. By the
time Pliny the Elder was writing in the first cen-
tury A.D., the Cloaca was already ancient: [F]or
700 years from the time of Tarquinius Priscus,
the sewers have survived almost completely in-
tact, he notes admiringly in his encyclopedia
Naturalis historia.
A Titanic Enterprise
From planning to completion, building an aq-
ueduct was an extremely costly enterprise, a
SCALA, FLORENCE
project for which many Roman cities proudly
raised funds. Evidence shows that money often
THE URBAN for its sponsor,the censor Appius Claudius Cae- came from both public and private sources.
LANDSCAPE cus, better known for another great pioneering Sometimes aqueducts were paid for by lead-
A model of ancient structure of ancient Rome: the Appian Way,one ing citizens. The work was usually carried out as
Rome (above), of the first major Roman roads. part of their political role. For example, as aedile
on display at the
Three more aqueducts were built in the third and consul, Augustusson-in-law Agrippa used
citys Museo della
Civilt Romana, and second centuries B.C.: Aqua Anio Vetus, his own mines to produce the lead pipes that
shows the path of AquaMarcia,andAquaTepula.Aidedbyhisson- lined the Aqua Julia and Aqua Virgo. From Au-
the Aqua Claudia, in-law Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa,Emperor Au- gustus time onward, emperors regularly made
one of Romes most gustus was particularly active in improving the donations to the upkeep of this expensive in-
important aqueducts,
passing in front of the capitals water supply,repairing old systems and frastructure.
Coliseum. building new ones.The Augustan-era Aqua Vir- Among the very few sources to shed light on
gonamed, according to legend, for the young how aqueducts were built is a Roman funerary
girl who directed thirsty soldiers to the springs monument found at the city of Bejaa in Algeria.
that fed ithas been used uninterrupted ever This commemorates the life of one Nonius Da-
since its construction.During his reign,Caligula tus, an engineer, and recounts the difficulties he
encountered in carrying out his work. The long
text, written after the aqueducts completion
around A.D. 152, describes how the citys inhabi-
Piped water, baths, and tants lobbied for an improved water supply. The
process was not as speedy as might have been
sanitation were a justifiable hoped. Datus planned the aqueducts route in
source of Roman pride. around 138. However, the work was not com-
pleted until 152, following a series of setbacks,
LYBIAN MOSAIC WITH SANDALS. THE LATIN MEANS BATHE SAFELY. which the monument describes in detail. Most
ALAMY/ACI
56 NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2016
THE AQUA VIRGO STILL
SUPPLIES ONE OF THE MOST
FAMOUS FOUNTAINS IN THE
WORLD: THE 18TH-CENTURY
TREVI FOUNTAIN IN ROME.
RICCARDO AUCI
UNDERNEATH SPELEOLOGISTS
CAREFULLY EXAMINE THE
FOUNTAINS
THE ONLY ROMAN AQUEDUCT still functioning to-
day is the Aqua Virgo, known in Italian as Ac-
qua Vergine. Built in 19 B.C. to a plan by Marcus
Vipsanius Agrippa during the boom in hydrol-
ogy projects ordered by Augustus, its survival
to the present day is a remarkable example of
how ancient infrastructure can evolve to meet
the needs of different ages. The popes restored
it several times in the Christian era: Adrian I, in
the eighth century; Nicholas V in the 15th century
(he is responsible for installing the vertiginous
spiral staircase that makes it possible to climb
inside); and Pius V in the 16th century. Concrete
structures have been added in more recent times
and urban growth has, unfortunately, polluted
water that was once highly prized for its purity.
RICCARDO AUCI
excavating the two sides of the tunnel did not of their access pipe,a not entirely foolproof bill-
HOW DID
THEIR GARDENS meet where they were supposed to. On another ing system. There are records of homeowners
GROW? occasion, bandits attacked the site and Datus slyly installing wider pipes than those for which
Well-to-do Romans escaped by the skin of his teeth,naked,battered, they paid. This scam led to the invention of the
had ornamental and bruised. calix, a sleeved pipe fitted into the wall, which
fountains in their
The Roman administration expended huge wasdecoratedtopreventforgeriesoralterations.
gardens, as shown
by this fresco from efforts not just in conveying water,but in main- They were also used in the castella aquarum, the
the first century a.d., taining its purity. A large group of specialized tanks from which water was distributed to dif-
found in the House of workers known as aquarii, ensured the aque- ferent parts of the city.Despite regulation,some
the Golden Bracelet ductsproper operation and cleanliness. These Romans tried to steal water from the source and
in Pompeii.
technicians carried out repairs and would drain off water from the aqueduct or bribe
systematically cleaned the channels the aquarii to do so. In the first century A.D. the
to prevent blockages and maintain senator Sextus Julius Frontinus mentioned this
a decent water quality. The channel practice in his treatise De aquaeductu as fraus
along which the water flowed was al- aquariorum: plumbing fraud.
ways kept covered and tanks called To such a practical people as the Romans,aq-
piscinae limariae were placed along ueducts were a source of great pride and even
the route into which impurities were part of their identity. Frontinus made that clear
regularly decanted. in his treatise on these great public works.With
such an array of indispensable structures carry-
Siphoning Off ing so much water, compare, if you will, the idle
Even for Romans, private access to Pyramids or the useless, though famous, works
water came at a price. Homeowners of the Greeks!
who could afford running water paid
ISABEL ROD IS PROFESSOR OF ARCHAEOLOGY
for the service based on the diameter AT THE AUTONOMOUS UNIVERSITY OF BARCELONA, SPAIN.
SCALA, FLORENCE
A PALACE BUILT
FOR WATER
Impressive as any
aqueduct, the Basilica
Cistern (Yerebatan
Sarnc) in Istanbul
built in Emperor
Justinians time in the
sixth century a.d.
could hold nearly
three million cubic
feet of water.
STEFANO BROZZI/FOTOTECA 9X12
FROM SOURCE WATER SOURCES
The ideal source produced clean
CASTELLUM AQUAE
When the water reached the city, it
was collected in a tank, the castellum
aquae. Often exquisitely decorated,
this tank fed different channels that
distributed water through the city.
Trap system. The water flowed from a cistern into a U-shaped
pipe. The pressure from the water backed up behind could push
it up to a slightly lower point on the other side of the valley. The
arches reduced the slope that had to be negotiated. The lead
pipes were buried some three feet deep into the hillside.
WATERCOLOR: DK IMAGES
A doctor treats wounds
in this 12th-century
illustration from the
Maqamat, a collection
of Islamic tales. Opposite:
An 18th-century copper
still from Morocco,
essential equipment in
a Muslim physicians
medical kit. Muse du
Quai Branly, Paris
MINIATURE: BRIDGEMAN/ACI
STILL: QUAI BRANLY/RMN-GRAND PALAIS
MUSLIM
MEDICINE
The growth of Islam in the seventh century sparked
a golden age of scientific discovery. Building on the
wisdom of ancient civilizations, Muslim doctors pushed
the boundaries of medical science into bold new places.
VCT
V CTOR
R ALLE
LEJ
BUST
BU STINZA
ZA
Golden
Age of
Knowledge
SEVENTH CENTURY
After the Prophet Muhammads
death in 632, Islam expands
beyond Arabia to Persia,
Palestine, Syria, Lebanon, Iraq,
and North Africa.
EIGHTH CENTURY
Caliph Harun al-Rashid founds
the House of Wisdom in
Baghdad. The citys scholars
translate many ancient
manuscripts and medical texts.
NINTH CENTURY
Al-Razi (Rhazes) is born in
Persia. Physician, chemist,
and teacher, he writes many
important medical works later
translated into Latin and Greek.
10th CENTURY
Surgeon Al-Zahrawi
(Abulcasis) is born in Crdoba.
Inventor of many medical
S
instruments, he writes the first FAITH IN ancho I, ruler of the kingdom of Lon
illustrated surgical book. MEDICINE in the north of modern-day Spain, was
Located in modern- overthrown by rebel nobles in A.D. 958.
day Turkey, the Their motive, even by the turbulent
11th CENTURY 13th-century Divrigi
In Baghdad, Ibn Sina politics of the day, was an unusual one:
Hospital (above)
(Avicenna) writes the Canon was built alongside a The king was unable to fulfil his regal duties with
of Medicine, a five-volume mosque, and the two dignity, the rebels said, because he was too fat.
work encompassing all known are a UNESCO World TherelativesofSanchoactedquicklyto restore
medical knowledge of the time. Heritage site. hispower.Inanexampleofthelivelyinterchange
LUCA MOZZATI/AGE FOTOSTOCK
of ideas and loyalties in multicultural, medieval
12th CENTURY Spain, his grandmother, Queen Toda Aznar of
Ibn Rushd (Averros) is born. the Christian kingdom of Navarra, sought
Philosopher, astronomer, and help from another Spanish kingdom deep
physician, he writes a medical
encyclopedia known as the in Spains south: the Muslim Caliphate
Colliget in Latin. of Crdoba. Queen Toda approached
Crdobas great ruler, the caliph Abd
14th CENTURY al-RahmanIII,withtwoboldrequests:
Ottoman Serefeddin help with a cure for her grandsons
Sabuncuoglu is born. A morbid obesity and military support
surgeon, he creates illustrated to regain the throne.
works showing the advanced The caliph put the first matter in the
procedures of Muslim medicine.
hands of Hisdai ibn Shaprut, his Jewish
physician, who put the Leonese king on a
CURATIVE ARABIC TALISMAN ORIENTAL INSTITUTE, NAPLES
66 NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2016 ORONOZ/ALBUM
MANUSCRIPT OF AVICENNAS
CANON OF MEDICINE
LANGUAGE OF LEARNING
ISLAMIC MEDICINE spread far beyond the bounds of the Muslim
world, making Arabic the international language of science in the
late Middle Ages. In the city of Montpellier in southern France,
the 13th-century scholar Arnau de Villanova studied, taught, and
translated Arabic. In 1593 Avicennas Canon of Medicine was pub-
lished in Rome by the Medicis prestigious press. Despite there
having been a Latin version since the 12th century, it was published
in Arabic as a mark of the prestige and scholarship of the edition.
AKG/ALBUM
strict diet. Once Sancho slimmed down enough and the use of suction cups (hijama) are still used MAKERS OF
to be able to ride properly, he reclaimed his lost today in many Islamic countries and around the MEDICINE
crown with the help of Muslim troops. world to treat ailments. Muslim doctors
Physicians from Islamic countries during the An indicator of health in this early Muslim so- were also
pharmacists who
late Middle Ages enjoyed great respect. Their ciety was ones dreams. Muhammad ibn Sirin, produced their own
reputation was well deserved, for the study and working in what is today Iraq, composed a great medicines. Below,
practice of medicine was then led by Muslim so- Arabic work, Tabir al-Anam, on dream interpre- a 14th-century
cieties across their immense territory, which ex- tation in the eighth century. Its main source was pharmaceutical
container made in
tended from modern-day southern Spain to Iran. OneirocriticaThe Interpretation of Dreams
Damascus.
written by the Greek author Artemidorus Dal- AKG/ALBUM
HEALING
WITH ANIMALS
Islamic medicine had some roots in folk
remedies that used animals organs. Many
manuscripts drew on these traditions, such
as Book on the Usefulness of Animals by the
14th-century Syrian scholar Ibn al-Durayhim
(see excerpts, right). Avicenna also wrote of
the use of birds wings, pigeons blood, and
donkeys liver as cures for certain maladies.
spread with Islam, its rulers were also keen to INSTRUMENTS Greek science became the basis for the devel-
absorb the wisdom of other cultures, especially OF CHANGE opment of Arabic medicine. The early theoretical
the Greco-Roman culture preserved in Egypt Surgery underwent basis of Islamic medicine drew on the Greek and
considerable
and the Near East. They sought to lay claim to Roman theory of humors, attributed to Hip-
development in
the knowledge of philosophy, technology, and the Islamic world. pocrates, writing in the fourth century B.C. The
medicine, sometimes referred to as the science Below, instruments system of humors divides human fluids into four
of the ancients. depicted on a copy basic types: blood, phlegm, yellow bile, and black
of Abulcasiss 10th- bile. The balance between each one determines
century work The
The Old Wisdom Method of Medicine whether an individual is sick or well. Patients
As Islam expanded, the cities where Greek became depressed, for example, because
science had flourished came under Mus- of a surfeit of black bile. The combination,
lim control. These included Alexandria in in Greek, of the words for black, mela-
Egypt and Edessa in modern-day Turkey. nin, andbile,khole, is the root of the word
On the eastern bounds of Islam, Gonde- melancholy. Sanguine, phlegmatic, or
shapur in Persia had become a center for choleric temperaments likewise suffered
Greek medicine and learning after scholars from an imbalance in the other humors.
migrated there in A.D. 529, following the Health could be restored by rebalancing
decision of the emperor Justinian to close them with diets and purges, and explains
the Academy in Athens. The new Muslim the importance that Islamic medicine
elites who occupied Gondeshapur were placed on hygiene and diet.
determined to revive, absorb, and spread Gifted translators gave the Muslims ac-
what they saw as this lost learning. They cess to these Greek and Latin texts. Scholars
also wanted to build on it. such as Yahya ibn Masawayh (known in the
68 NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2016
AKG/ALBUM
1 Snake
The viper is skinned and dried [to become] a hair-
removal paste. If its ashes are mixed with vinegar and
smeared on erysipelas [a skin infection] they cure it,
and hemorrhoids too.
2 Hare
Hare rennet drunk with pure wine is good for fever.
Mix it with marshmallow and oil and rub it on an
arrowhead to remove it . . . When given to a woman,
she becomes pregnant.
3 Camel
He who drinks its milk and urine in the springtime will
4 be cured of liver pain and tumors of the liver and navel.
It also softens hardness of the spleen when drunk with
5 mandrake milk and cures all ulcers washed with it.
4 Heron
Split a herons testicles, sprinkle salt over them, dry
them and crush them. Then mix them with sea foam,
lizard excrement and sugar in equal parts. It removes
leucoma when used as eye drops.
5 Horse
Horse bile mixed with myrrh, lavender, resin, and
incense . . . benefits those who urinate blood. When
horse sweat is mixed with mares milk and given to a
pregnant woman, she will immediately miscarry.
West as Ioannis Mesue) and his student, Hu- The Abbasid Caliphate of Baghdad enjoyed a ABOVE: 1 SNAKE MINIATURE,
14TH CENTURY EDITION, FROM
nayn ibn Ishaq (known as Johannitius in Latin) long period of intellectual experimentation that MARVELS OF CREATION, BY AL-
QAZWINI. AKG/ALBUM 2 HARES
produced over 50 translations alone. Both men lasted throughout the 10th and 11th centuries. MINIATURE, 14TH-CENTURY,
PANCHATANTRA, COLLECTION
were Syrian Nestorians, a denomination of Chris- Among its many glittering figures was Al-Razi, OF INDIAN FABLES. AKG/ALBUM
tianity considered heretical in the eastern Roman known in Latin as Rhazes, a Persian pharma- 3 CAMELS MINIATURE, 14TH-
CENTURY, THE REVELATION OF
Empire, and had been forced to flee to Persia. cologist and physician who ran the hospital in SECRETS, BY IBN AL-GHANIM
MAQDISI. AKG/ALBUM 4 HERONS
Their ability to speak several languages Baghdad. But the brightest star in the Baghdad AND 5 HORSE MINIATURES,
including Greek and Syriac (a Semitic language firmament was undoubtedly the extraordinary 14TH-CENTURY, BOOK ON THE
USEFULNESS OF ANIMALS, BY
close to Arabic)was in high demand. In other Ibn Sina,knownintheWestasAvicenna.Already IBN AL-DURAYHIM, MONASTERY
OF SAN LORENZO, EL ESCORIAL,
cities across the new Islamic world, Muslim pa- a doctor at age 18, his great volume Al-Qanun fi SPAIN. ORONOZ/ALBUM
trons hired these men. The caliph Al-Mamun al-TibbCanon of Medicinebecameoneofthe
of the Abbasid dynasty in Baghdad put Hunayn most famous medical works of all time, and an
ibn Ishaq in charge of the translators at the citys extraordinary exercise in the bringing together
famous Bayt al-Hikma, or House of Wisdom.
By the 900s, drawing from a growing body of
Greek, Persian, and Sanskrit works translated
into Arabic, Islamic medicine quickly became
the most sophisticated in the world. Chris-
By the 900s, drawing from a growing
tians, Jews, Hindus, and scholars from many body of Greek, Persian, and Sanskrit
other traditions, looked to Arabic as a language works, Islamic medicine was the most
of science. Doctors of different faiths worked
together, debating and studying with Arabic as
sophisticated in the world.
the common tongue.
S partofmarriageintheMuslim faith,
and medical works on the subject
reflect that belief. A genre of me-
dieval text known as kitab al-bahbooks
on the libidoexplored both reproduction
and eroticism as well as embryology, ob-
stetrics, and pediatrics. Issues of sexual
health were also addressed, with attention
given to sexual disorders, impotence, and
loss of desire. Authors also covered aph-
rodisiacs and substances that decreased
libido. These treatises fascinated the Brit-
ish traveler and scholar Richard F. Burton,
who collected copies for study in Britain.
Burton also translated the great Mideast-
ern classic One Thousand and One Nights,
a work whose sexual frankness delighted
lovers of Arabic culturebut scandalized
Victorian England.
BRIDGEMAN/ACI
of different disciplines and cultures. Avicennas of the emperor Nero in the first century A.D., AVICENNA
attempttoharmonizethemedicalpracticesofthe was translated into Arabic in Crdoba, on the THE WISE
GreekthinkerGalenwiththephilosophyofAris- ordersofCaliphAbdal-RahmanIII.Thispracti- A romanticized
engraving of
totlerevealsthemultiplenatureofthedebtowed cal study of the medicinal qualities of plants and
the 11th-century
to Muslim scholarship,which did not merely re- herbs, including a study of cannabis and pep- scholar Avicenna,
vive Greek authors,but stimulated new patterns permint, was now accessible to more scholars who provided a
of thought for the centuries ahead. The recon- than ever before. strong theoretical
ciling of practical science, thought, and religion One of the caliphs brilliant courtiers,the sur- framework for
medicine
ensured Canon was studied by European medics geonAl-Zahrawi,alsoknownasAbulcasis,com- BRIDGEMAN/ACI
until the 18th century. piled the Al-TasrifThe Method of Medicinea
M di i
30-volume encyclopedia that documented ac-
Scholarly Works in Spain counts of his and his colleaguesexp periences in
At the westernmost limits of the Islamic world, treating the sick and injured: surgiical instru-
Muslim Spain was also undergoing a period of ments, operating techniques, pharm macological
scholarly development. By the 10th century, Cr- methods to prepare tablets and druggs to protect
doba was the biggest, most cultured city in Eu- the heart, surgical procedures usedin nmidwifery,
rope, described by some asthe Ornament of the cauterizing and healing wounds, and the treat-
World. The city was also a great center of study ment of headaches. It also drew upo on the work
and exploration. of previous scholars, such as seven nth-century
Essential volumes in any scientists library Byzantine medic Paul of Aegina.Translated into
were preserved in Crdoba. For instance, De Latin in the 12th century, Method waas a foun-
materia medicaOn Medical Materialthe clas- dational medical text in Europe welll into the
sic treatise of Dioscorides, written at the time Renaissance.
1 2
SURGEON
AND SCHOLAR
Serefeddin Sabuncuoglu was a 15th-century
surgeon who worked at the hospital in
Amasya (in modern-day Turkey). In 1466 he
presented the Ottoman sultan Mehmed II
with the medical atlas Imperial Surgery, 3
which contains 140 miniatures depicting
procedures such as incisions, setting
fractures, and cauterizations.
The 12th century saw the emergence of the FAITH treatment to treat cataracts. The 10th-century
work of the outstanding Ibn Rushdknown in HEALERS physician Al-Mawsili developed a hollow sy-
Christendom as Averrosand the Jewish physi- Pilgrims to Mecca ringe to remove cataracts via suction; the tech-
cian and thinker Moses Maimonides. Both men returned home with this nique has improved with time, but the basic
copper bowl (below),
reflect the strong ties between philosophy and thought to bestow premise of the procedure remains sound to
medicine during the Islamic golden age. Aver- healing properties to this day. Ibn Isa, a 10th-century scholar from
ros, author of some of the greatest commen- water drunk from it. Iraq, wrote perhaps what was the most com-
taries of the Middle Ages on Aristotle and Plato, Faithful Muslims put plete book of eye diseases, the Notebook of the
their trust in both Allah
was also personal physician to thecaliiphs.Moses
h M Oculist,
O li t detailing
d t ili 130 condit ditions. The book
and the doctors skill.
Maimonides became the personaldoctorofSala- AKG/ALBUM was translated into Latin in 14 497 followed by
din, the Muslim champion against thet Crusad- several more languages, allowiing it to serve as
ers. Among Maimonidess many works was his an authoritative work for centturies.
Moreh Nevukhim, or Guide for the Perp
plexed,a The greatest advances in surgery of the era
masterwork attempting to reconcile reli- were detailed by Al-Zahraawi who invent-
gious belief with philosophical inquiiry. ed a wide range of instru
uments: forceps,
pincers, scalpels, catheters, cauteries,
Under the Knife lancets,and specula,all carefully illus-
While writing about medicine trated in his writings. His recommen-
predominated in Islamic culture, dationsonpain-reducction techniques,
the practice of medicine made such as the use of verry cold sponges,
great progress as well. New treat-- were followed by Wesstern medics for
ments were developed for specific centuries. One of his greatest
g innova-
ailments, including a revolutionaary tions was the use of catggut for stitching
72 NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2016
Cutting Edge
For generations, surgical practice in both the
Islamic world and in Christian Europe followed the
precepts of the 10th-century Muslim surgeon and
scholar Abulcasis. The lack of effective anesthetic
and the very high risk of infection limited surgery
to the treatment of wounds and traumas, removal
of abscesses and growths, extraction of kidney
stones, and treatment of cataracts. Cauterization
the procedure depicted in Sabuncuoglus work
4
was used to destroy diseased tissue.
Sabuncuoglus Operations
Illustrations of a number of operations are provided
in Sabuncuoglus book. Pictured here:
1 Cauterization to treat a toothache; 2 Treatment
of hemorrhoids; 3 Draining fluid from the
abdominal cavity of a patient suffering from dropsy;
4 Drainage of fluid that has built up in a patients
head; 5 Cauterization to treat migraine headaches
(2)
(4)
(5)
TURKISH MINIATURE OF A
PUBLIC BATH, KNOWN AS A
HAMMAM, 17TH CENTURY
; A G/ L O ; CE
John Quincy Adams, Andrew Jackson,
and the Corrupt Bargain
THE ELECTION OF
1824
,
President James Monroe gave no sign as to whom
he wished would succeed him in office. His non-
decision led to a bitterly fought contest and the
birth of modern politics in the United States.
JAMES TRAUB
B
efore the election of 1824, the United States
was at the tail end of the so-called Era of Good
Feelings, a time when political partisanship was
low and one party, the Democratic-Republicans,
dominated U.S. national politics. The election of
1824 ended that era. Clashing interests on protectionism and
trade, as well as sharply divided views on the role of govern-
ment and Americas place in the larger world, created lasting
schisms. By declining to give the nod to a designated successor,
President James Monroe allowed a wide-open campaign
to develop. Four menJohn Quincy Adams, Henry Clay,
William Crawford, and Andrew Jacksonsought the presi-
dency. The ensuing battles would transform politics, leading
to a new democratic culture as well as to the Democratic Party.
THE CONTENDERS
The candidates for president in the election of 1824 were (clockwise from lower left) William Crawford, Henry Clay, John Quincy
Adams , and Andrew Jackson. After Clay was eliminated from the race, no one had received an outright majority of electoral college
votes, leaving the final decision to the House of Representatives.
CLOCKWISE FROM LOWER LEFT: REDWOOD LIBRARY AND ATHENAEUM, NEWPORT, RHODE ISLAND; GRANGER COLLECTION/CORDON PRESS; ART RESOURCE/SCALA, FLORENCE; NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY, SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION
AN EVER
CHANGING
NATION
E
IGHTEENTH-CENTURY AMERICANS
would have hardly recognized the
United States of 1824. Since 1789,
the number of states had nearly
doubled, growing to 24. The population
roughly tripled from about 3.9 million in
1789 to 9.6 million in 1820. Despite the
cessation of the international slave trade
in 1807, the number of enslaved African
Americans continued to grow, rising from
just under 700,000 in 1780 to 1.5 million in
1820. Native American nations continued
to hold their lands, but by 1824, through a
series of treaties often negotiated by John
Quincy Adams in conjunction with mili-
tary campaigns spearheaded by Andrew
Jackson, the U.S. was laying claim to their
territories, expanding the nations holdings
from the Atlantic to the Pacific Northwest.
80 NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2016
Andrew Jackson was the wild card of the race. PRESIDENTIAL Crawford suffered another stroke, in May, Henry
People all over the country knew his legend: He PLATES Clay wrote exultantly to a confidante that the
had killed a man in a duel after being shot in James Monroes Georgian would soon die. The stroke had left
the chest, fought alongside Davy Crockett to bold White House Crawford nearly blind and had so impaired his
china service
decimate a force of Red Stick warriors from the (below) features circulation that he walked around with thick
Creek tribe, won millions of acres for settlers a red band layers of cloth wrapped around his freezing feet.
in treaties imposed on Indian tribes, and anni- with symbolic But Crawford, a huge, robust man, would recover
hilated the British force at New Orleans while illustrations once again and stay in the race.
representing
losing only thirteen men. Newspapers wrote Strength, the Arts, Clay was the one candidate who could be said
lavish profiles; supporters compared him tothe Commerce, the to berunningfor president. He had a platform,
immortal Washington. Jackson was also the Sciences, and and he gave long, impassioned speeches on his
first candidate torun against Washington.He Agriculture. favorite topics. But he knew very well that policy,
2000 WHITE HOUSE HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION
had the military mans scorn for the pettiness by itself, would not carry the day. He needed
and haggling of political life, to which he joined his friends to neutralize his rivals and influence
an unflagging faith in his own honor. prominent men. Adams, meanwhile, was, if not
In the first months of 1824 the political running, then at least unmistakably stand-
odds favored William Crawford. Over the ing. His front door was spinning with
summer Crawford had suffered a de- friends, would-be friends, and friends
bilitating stroke, but he was protected of his rivals: At the end of March he re-
by the prohibition against public ap- corded in his journal that he had received
pearances by candidates. The Georgian 235 visitors that month, or 8 a day, taking
was widely expected to carry the South, up at least four hours.
thanks in part to a tacit endorsement Adams increasingly found that he
from Thomas Jefferson. However, when needed to offer reassurances not only about
T
HE U.S. TREASURY
2015 a makeover for the $10 bill,
but a resurgence in Alexander
Hamiltons popularity scuttled
that plan. In 2016 the Treasury decided to
update the $20 bill instead: Freedom fight-
er Harriet Tubman will grace the front, and
Jackson will move to the back. When cho-
sen for the bill in 1928, many felt Jackson
stood for the American ideal of the self-
made man, but since then his stock has
fallen, largely due to his forced removal of
Native Americans from their lands, which
resulted in thousands of deaths. Others felt
that Jackson, who despised banks, would
never have wanted to be on its currency.
The new bill is set to debut in 2020.
ADIOS ANDREW! IN 2020 HARRIET TUBMAN WILL BE THE
NEW FACE ON THE FRONT OF THE $20 BILL.
ALAMY/ACI
his views, which was second nature to him, but HIS NAME onlyinGeorgia,Virginia,andDelaware.Clay car-
about his willingness to find a place for men IN LIGHTS ried only the three western states of Kentucky,
whose support he needed, which violated his Active campaigning Missouri, and Ohio. And Adams won nowhere
most deeply held principles.Adams was divided for office came to outside New England, though he had picked up
dominate 19th-
against himself, as men like Clay and Crawford century politics. votes throughout the country.
were not.He played the game of politics because Andrew Jacksons In those states where citizens voted for presi-
he wanted to be president far more than he could supporters may dent,Jacksonhadtaken153,544;Adams108,740;
ever admit to himself. He wanted it, but he did have carried this tin Clay47,136;Crawford46,618.Butitwastheelec-
campaign lantern
not want to want it. Adamss parents had raised (below) that spells
toral votes that counted, and here the final tally
him both to expect great things for himself and out Old Hickory for read:Jackson99,Adams84,Crawford41,Clay 37.
to scorn the idea of ambition.His internal strug- President. The Constitution stipulated that, absent a ma-
gle was robbing him of the sense of self-mastery DON TROIANI/BRIDGEMAN/ACI
jority,the House would choose the winner from
he always sought but rarely found. amongthethreetopfinishers.NowonlyJackson,
By mid-October, the twenty-four states of the Adams, and Crawford, a broken man, survived.
Union were poised to begin choosing a president. According to the Constitution, each state
No one could confidently predict the winner. would have one vote, to be determined by a vote
taken among the congressmen from that state.
The Results Roll In Balloting would continue until one man won
When the first results began arriving in Wash- thirteen or more of the twenty-four states. What
ington, Andrew Jackson proved to be the only this meant was that little Rhode Island mattered
candidate with true national appeal. He won all as much as giant New York. The House would
of Pennsylvanias electoral votes, as well as those convene for the vote on February 9, 1825.
of New Jersey. And he surged as Clay faded in the Adams could have taken the position that
West and Crawford in the South. Crawford won the nation had spoken and thus withdrawn.
82 NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2016
Jacksons friends put it out that this would be the On December 15, Edward Wyer, a former dip- WINNING THE
correct thing to do. There is no sign that this idea lomat whom Adams used on sensitive missions WHITE HOUSE
crossed Adamss mind. And in any case, he had and who was obviously in his confidence, came Andrew Jackson
admitted to himself that nothing could cool off by to say thathe had it from good authority that may have lost the
the fire of his ambition. Already he had allowed Mr. Clay was much disposed to support me, if election of 1824, but
he rallied to win the
himself to offer the kind of veiled reassurances at the same time he could be useful to himself. presidency in 1828
that once would have struck him as low politi- Wyer returned the next day and repeated his and again in 1832.
cal bargaining; now Adams would shred the fine story, refusing to disclose his source. On the sev- This bronze statue
tissue of his conscience. enteenth, Clays friend paid another call. of Jackson (above)
was erected in front
Letcher explained that Kentuckians preferred
of the White House
Striking a Bargain Jackson to Adams, as Adams knew perfectly well. in Lafayette Square
Every congressman would have a hand in de- A faction of them were at odds with Clay himself; in 1853.
termining the next president. On December 9, they were scarcely bound to one another by ties WIM WISKERKE/ALAMY/ACI
a full week before the final results were in, Ad- of loyalty. Clay wished tostand with his friends;
ams began fielding a flood of visitors from the his friends wished to stand with him. Then he got
Congress, both at home and in the office. And he to the point: What were Adamss sentiments to-
did something he had not done before: He went ward Clay? Letcher was obviously Wyers source:
around to the rooming houses where almost all He had reached out, friend to friend.
members of Congress stayed during the session. Adams understood that Letcher was telling
And he listened, if noncommittally, to sugges- him that if he could reassure Clays friends that
tions about potential appointments should he their man would have a prominent share in
become president. He met with Robert P. Letch- the administration, they would be prepared to
er, a Kentucky congressman who was close to disregard the instructions they received from
Clay and shared lodgings with him. Kentucky, whose state legislature had voted
84 NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2016
might only last one term, while a President Jackson one. Jackson was immensely popular there, and ADAMS
might prove impossible to dislodge. Clay would the state plainly would have gone for him had ARTIFACTS
support Adams, but not without exacting a price. Clay not been a favorite son. Adams would never This blue-and-white,
On January 9, Clay paid a quiet visit to Adams have to know how Clay would exert his influence, porcelain salt-
at the latters home. There he spoke of the ad- but he would know that the consequence was cellar (below) was
obtained by John
vances he had spurned over the previous weeks. that the will of the people would be overborne. Quincy and Louisa
He observed, with splendid disingenuousness, That was a grave violation of his own republican Adams when they
that he had needed to reassure his friends that principles. Adams would have said that no price lived in Europe. Prior
they should vote according to their own con- was worth paying for the sacrifice of principle, to his presidency,
Adams served as
sciences. But the time had come for him to but there is no sign that he believed at the time the minister to the
choose. As for the contest in the House, Adams that he had done any such thing. He was thinking Netherlands, Russia,
recorded,he had no hesitation in saying that his about the goal, not the means. and Great Britain.
2000 WHITE HOUSE HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION
preference would be for me. Clay later wrote in On January 24, the Kentucky congressio-
a letter to an ally that, though Adams had made nal caucus announced for Adams. Clay had
no promises, he concluded from the interview delivered his state. But Kentucky was
that he could have whatever job he wanted. That hardly going to put Adams over the top.
may well have been true. By January 28, news of the corrupt
Adams might have installed Clay in his Cabi- bargain between Adams and Clay
net under any circumstances. He admired Clays had gone public. It was an astonish-
judgment, if not his personal morals. But Adams ing last-minute bonus for Jackson,
understood that reassuring Clay and his followers for the story reinforced the central
would put Kentucky in his column, and prob- theme of his campaignthat poli-
ably Ohio and Missouri as well. Adams had not tics was a rotten business pursued by
received a single popular vote in Kentuckynot rotten men. The Columbian Observer of
influenced by Clays support. Upon learning the sons embitterment propelled the rise of a new
news, Adams uttered a prayerMay the bless- political party and thus new forms of political
ing of God rest upon the event of this day! It contest. From that moment forward, Jackson
was, he said in a note to his father, the most went into opposition; the 1828 campaign began
important day of my life. beforeAdamseventookoffice.Adamshadfinally
That night, President Monroe held one of wontheprizehehadlongsought,buthehadwon
his rare social evenings. All of Washington was it under circumstances that would turn the next
thereCalhoun and Clay and Webster, and four years of his life into a terrible struggle.
of course Adams and Jackson. People pressed CELEBRATED AUTHOR AND COLUMNIST FOR FOREIGNPOLICY.COM, JAMES TRAUB
through the dense throng to get a view of the TEACHES FOREIGN POLICY AT NEW YORK UNIVERSITY.
winner and loser of this unprecedented, and EXCERPTED FROM JOHN QUINCY ADAMS: MILITANT SPIRIT BY JAMES TRAUB.
COPYRIGHT 2016. AVAILABLE FROM BASIC BOOKS, AN IMPRINT OF PERSEUS BOOKS, LLC,
increasingly ugly, contest. The crowd parted, A SUBSIDIARY OF HACHETTE BOOK GROUP, INC.
6
5
3
worth a thousand words
head lamenting, D__n it I cant save my distanceso I may A Foot-Race circulated between late October
as well draw up. Onlookers, many politicians themselves, and early December, and its direct impact on voting is
encourage their candidates. 5 John Adams cheers on his unknown. Historians use the cartoon to assess the political
son: Hurra for our son Jack! while a 6 Jackson supporter atmosphere of 1824, in which elections were seen as self-
calls out Hurra for our Jack-son! 7 A large throne labeled interested sporting contests rather than noble democratic
the Presidential Chair sits in the background, next to a exercises. It also foretells of the brewing sectionalism that
price tag, suggesting that the office was for sale. will bring about the end of the Era of Good Feelings.
D
iscoveredagainst in artifacts from their many
UZB.
Meaning golden hill, ples from India, China, and many of these were crafted
Tillya Tepe is located in Iran, each adding new cul- from precious stones such
Bactria, an ancient region tural elements to the Hel- as turquoise, carnelian, and
located in what is now part lenistic culture established lapis lazuli.
of Afghanistan, Uzbeki- in the region by Alexander. Scholars believe the
stan, and Tajikistan. It is Sarianidi knew that an ar- graves were of six wealthy found with them exhib-
thought the hoard was bur- ea that had been conquered Asian nomads, five wom- it a rare blend of aesthetic
ied by Scythian or Chinese and reconquered by so many en and one man. The influences (from Persian
nomads at the beginning of peoples was likely to be rich 2,000-year-old artifacts to classical Greek) and the
GOLDEN FOLDING CROWN, TILLYA TEPE, FIRST CENTURY A.D. NATIONAL MUSEUM OF AFGHANISTAN
BRIDGEMAN/ACI
THE EXCAVATION at Tillya Tepe in
northern Afghanistan was carried
out by the Soviet archaeologist
Viktor Sarianidi in 1978.
GOLDEN GIRLS
OF THE SIX TOMBS DISCOVERED, five contained fe-
male skeletons covered in jewelry. Among the
bones were found golden disks, earrings, and
other decorative
ornaments. Of par-
great number of precious identified as clearly belong- ticular interest was
objects found surprised the ing to a nomadic culture. the nomad princess
archaeologists, in particular At the time of the burials, in the sixth grave.
the intricate golden crown Bactria was on the Silk Road The golden crown
found in the sixth tomb. that linked China with the pictured (opposite)
The woman buried with West, a region crisscrossed was found in place
the crown was found lying by traders carrying goods, on her head, its intri-
with her head pointing to- ideas, and religions. Sari- cate design of thin,
ward the west. The crown anidi himself believed that cut gold allowing it
to be folded when not
SPUTNIK/ALBUM
PHOTOGRAPHS: RAM: RICHARD BARNES/NGS; DAGGER: SPUTNIK/ALBUM; EARRING: AP IMAGES/GTRES; APHRODITE: KENNETH GARRETT
the second century b.c., and Safekeeping reveal its whereabouts un- In 2003, however, fol-
who later established what In 1988 the president of til peace was restored. For lowing the overthrow of
is known as the Kushan Afghanistan, Mohammad more than a decade of war the Taliban regime, the
Kingdom in India. Other Najibullah, made a fate- and chaos they kept their new Afghan government
scholars believe the hoard ful decision. After years of secret. revealed that the treasure
was interred by Scythians combat, exhausted Soviet In 1993 the National Mu- was safe and had been hid-
from modern-day Iran. The troops were finally with- seum was hit by a missile, den in a vault of the central
contesting theories reveal drawing from the country. and nearly three-quarters bank. Carefully cataloged
the variety of influences Fearing Afghanistan was of its treasures were looted by the National Geograph-
that make up this huge col- about to descend into chaos, during the ensuing years. ic Society, the treasure was
lection of objects. Other Najibullah felt that the Na- Many Afghans assumed moved back to the newly
items include a Roman coin tional Museum of Afghan- that the Tillya Tepe trea- renovated museuma rare
with the head of the emperor istan was no longer safe for sure had shared the same happy ending for a country
Tiberius, a silver mirror the Bactrian gold. A select fate, and that this part of that had lost so many lives,
with Chinese engravings, team moved the treasure Afghanistans national heri- and so much of its heritage.
rings with Greek text, and a to a secure hiding place, its tage had been sold off on the
coin with Buddhist imagery. members swearing never to antiquities black market. Alejandro Gallego
92 NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2016
Handcrated and
painted by hand
Individually
hand-numbered
Includes Certificate
of Authenticity
HamiltonCollection.com/ChiefKitty
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WHO WAS
THE REAL
NAT TURNER?
FREEDOM FIGHTER or cold-
blooded murderer, Nat
Turners true character
remains elusive despite
his role in the largest slave
rebellion in U.S. history.
As depicted in the 2016
film The Birth of a Nation
(left), Turner and more
than 40 enslaved African
Americans rebelled in
Virginia before being
defeated by local militia.
Ever since, historians have
sought the real Nat Turner,
whose many historical
depictions reveal a nations
complex relationship with
race, freedom, and slavery.
COLMAN DOMINGO AS HARK, AND NATE PARKER AS NAT TURNER IN THE BIRTH OF A NATION. PHOTO COURTESY OF FOX SEARCHLIGHT PICTURES. 2016 TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX FILM CORPORATION ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
96 NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2016
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5. How Do Archaeologists Know Where to Dig?
BY D E C E M
6. Prehistoric Archaeology
7. Gbekli Tepe, atalhyk, and Jericho
8. Pyramids, Mummies, and Hieroglyphics
9. King Tuts Tomb
10. How Do You Excavate at a Site?
11. Discovering Mycenae and Knossos
12. Santorini, Akrotiri, and the Atlantis Myth
13. The Uluburun Shipwreck
14. The Dead Sea Scrolls
15. The Myth of Masada?
16. Megiddo: Excavating Armageddon
17. The Canaanite Palace at Tel Kabri
18. Petra, Palmyra, and Ebla
19. How Are Artifacts Dated and Preserved?
20. The Terracotta Army, Sutton Hoo, and tzi
21. Discovering the Maya
22. The Nazca Lines, Sipn, and Machu Picchu
23. Archaeology in North America
Discover the Secrets of 24. From the Aztecs to Future Archaeology
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