INTRODUCTION
One
of the first facts which strike the traveller in Palestine is the
smallness of a country which has nevertheless occupied so large a
space in the history of civilised mankind. It is scarcely larger than
an English county, and a considerable portion of it is occupied by
rocky mountains and barren defiles where cultivation is impossible.
Its population could never have been great, and though cities and
villages were crowded together on the plains and in the valleys, and
perched at times on almost inaccessible crags, the difficulty of
finding sustenance for their inhabitants prevented them from
rivalling in size the European or American towns of today. Like the
country in which they dwelt, the people of Palestine were necessarily
but a small population when compared with the nations of our modern
age.And
yet it was just this scanty population which has left so deep an
impress on the thoughts and religion of mankind, and the narrow strip
of territory they inhabited which formed the battleground of the
ancient empires of the world. Israel was few in numbers, and the
Canaan it conquered was limited in extent; but they became as it were
the centre round which the forces of civilisation revolved, and
towards which they all pointed. Palestine, in fact, was for the
eastern world what Athens was for the western world; Athens and
Attica were alike insignificant in area and the Athenians were but a
handful of men, but we derive from them the principles of our art and
philosophic speculation just as we derive from Israel and Canaan the
principles of our religion. Palestine has been the motherland of the
religion of civilised man.The
geographical position of Palestine had much to do with this result.
It was the outpost of western Asia on the side of the Mediterranean,
as England is the outpost of Europe on the side of the Atlantic; and
just as the Atlantic is the highroad of commerce and trade for us of
to-day, so the Mediterranean was the seat of maritime enterprise and
the source of maritime wealth for the generations of the past.
Palestine, moreover, was the meeting-place of Asia and Africa. Not
only was the way open for its merchants by sea to the harbours and
products of Europe, but the desert which formed its southern boundary
sloped away to the frontiers of Egypt, while to the north and east it
was in touch with the great kingdoms of western Asia, with Babylonia
and Assyria, Mesopotamia and the Hittites of the north. In days of
which we are just beginning to have a glimpse it had been a province
of the Babylonian empire, and when Egypt threw off the yoke of its
Asiatic conquerors and prepared to win an empire for itself, Canaan
was the earliest of its spoils. In a later age Assyrians,
Babylonians, and Egyptians again contended for the mastery on the
plains of Palestine; the possession of Jerusalem allowed the Assyrian
king to march unopposed into Egypt, and the battle of Megiddo placed
all Asia west of the Euphrates at the feet of the Egyptian Pharaoh.Palestine
is thus a centre of ancient Oriental history. Its occupation by
Babylonians or Egyptians marks the shifting of the balance of power
between Asia and Africa. The fortunes of the great empires of the
eastern world are to a large extent reflected in its history. The
rise of the one meant the loss of Palestine to the other.The
people, too, were fitted by nature and circumstances for the part
they were destined to play. They were Semites with the inborn
religious spirit which is characteristic of the Semite, and they were
also a mixed race. The highlands of Canaan had been peopled by the
Amorites, a tall fair race, akin probably to the Berbers of northern
Africa and the Kelts of our own islands; the lowlands were in the
hands of the Canaanites, a people of Semitic blood and speech, who
devoted themselves to the pursuit of trade. Here and there were
settlements of other tribes or races, notably the Hittites, who had
descended from the mountain-ranges of the Taurus and spread over
northern Syria. Upon all these varied elements the Israelites flung
themselves, at first in hostile invasion, afterwards in friendly
admixture. The Israelitish conquest of Palestine was a slow process,
and it was only in its earlier stages that it was accompanied by the
storming of cities and the massacre of their inhabitants. As time
went on the invaders intermingled with the older population of the
land, and the heads of the captives which surmount the names of the
places captured by the Egyptian Pharaoh Shishak in the kingdom of
Judah all show the Amorite and not the Jewish type of countenance.
The main bulk of the population, in fact, must have continued
unchanged by the Israelitish conquest, and conquerors and conquered
intermarried together. The genealogies given by the Hebrew writers
prove how extensive this intermingling of racial elements must have
been; even David counted a Moabitess among his ancestors, and
surrounded himself with guards of foreign nationality. Solomon's
successor, the first king of Judah, was the son of an Ammonite
mother, and we have only to read a few pages of the Book of Judges to
learn how soon after the invasion of Canaan the Israelites adopted
the gods and religious practices of the older population, and paid
homage to the old Canaanite shrines.A
mixed race is always superior to one of purer descent. It possesses
more enterprise and energy, more originality of thought and purpose.
The virtues and failings of the different elements it embodies are
alike intensified in it. We shall probably not go far wrong if we
ascribe to this mixed character of the Israelitish people the
originality which marks their history and finds its expression in the
rise of prophecy. They were a race, moreover, which was moulded in
different directions by the nature of the country in which it lived.
Palestine was partly mountainous; the great block of limestone known
as the mountains of Ephraim formed its backbone, and was that part of
it which was first occupied by the invading Israelites. But besides
mountains there were fertile plains and valleys, while on the
sea-coast there were harbours, ill adapted, it is true, to the
requirements of modern ships, but sufficient for the needs of ancient
navigation. The Israelites were thus trained on the one hand to the
habits of hardy warriors, living a life of independence and
individual freedom in the fastnesses of the hills, and on the other
hand were tempted to become agriculturists and shepherds wherever
their lot was cast in the lowlands. The sea-coast was left to the
older population, and to the Philistines, who had settled upon it
about the time of the Hebrew exodus from Egypt; but the Philistines
eventually became the subject-vassals of the Jewish kings, and
friendly intercourse with the Phoenicians towards the north not only
brought about the rise of a mixed people, partly Canaanite and partly
Israelitish, but also introduced among the Israelites the Phoenician
love of trade.Alike,
therefore, by its geographical position, by the characteristics of
its population, and by the part it played in the history of the
civilised East, Palestine was so closely connected with the countries
and nations which surrounded it that its history cannot be properly
understood apart from theirs. Isolated and alone, its history is in
large measure unintelligible or open to misconception. The keenest
criticism is powerless to discover the principles which underlie it,
to detect the motives of the policy it describes, or to estimate the
credibility of the narratives in which it is contained, unless it is
assisted by testimony from without. It is like a dark jungle where
the discovery of a path is impossible until the sun penetrates
through the foliage and the daylight streams in through the branches
of the trees.Less
than a century ago it seemed useless even to hope that such external
testimony would ever be forthcoming. There were a few scraps of
information to be gleaned from the classical authors of Greece and
Rome, which had been so sifted and tortured as to yield almost any
sense that was required; but even these scraps were
self-contradictory, and, as we now know, were for the most part
little else than fables. It was impossible to distinguish between the
true and the false; to determine whether the Chaldæan fragments of
Berossos were to be preferred to the second and third hand accounts
of Herodotus, or whether the Egyptian chronology of Manetho was to be
accepted in all its startling magnitude. And when all was said and
done, there was little that threw light on the Old Testament story,
much less that supplemented it.But
the latter part of the nineteenth century has witnessed discoveries
which have revolutionised our conceptions of ancient Oriental
history, and illuminated the pages of the Biblical narrative. While
scholars and critics were disputing over a few doubtful texts, the
libraries of the old civilised world of the East were lying
underground, waiting to be disinterred by the excavator and
interpreted by the decipherer. Egypt, Assyria, and Babylonia have
yielded up their dead; Arabia, Syria, and Asia Minor are preparing to
do the same. The tombs and temples of Egypt, and the papyri which
have been preserved in the sandy soil of a land where frost and rain
are hardly known, have made the old world of the Egyptians live again
before our eyes, while the clay books of Babylonia and Assyria are
giving us a knowledge of the people who wrote and read them fully
equal to that which we have of Greece or Rome. And yet we are but at
the beginning of discoveries. What has been found is but an earnest
of the harvest that is yet in store. It is but two years since that
the French excavator, de Sarzec, discovered a library of 30,000
tablets at Tello in southern Chaldæa, which had already been formed
when Gudea ruled over the city in B.C. 2700, and was arranged in
shelves one above the other. At Niffer, in the north of Babylonia,
the American excavators have found an even larger number of tablets,
some of which go back to the age of Sargon of Akkad, or 6000 years
ago, while fresh tablets come pouring into the museums of Europe and
America from other libraries found by the Arabs at Bersippa and
Babylon, at Sippara and Larsa. The Babylonia of the age of Amraphel,
the contemporary of Abraham, has, thanks to the recent finds, become
as well known to us as the Athens of Periklês; the daily life of the
people can be traced in all its outlines, and we even possess the
autograph letters written by Amraphel himself. The culture and
civilisation of Babylonia were already immensely old. The contracts
for the lease and sale of houses or other estate, the documents
relating to the property of women, the reports of the law cases that
were tried before the official judges, all set before us a state of
society which changed but little down to the Persian era. Behind it
lie centuries of slow development and progress in the arts of life.
The age of Amraphel, indeed, is in certain respects an age of
decline. The heyday of Babylonian art lay nearly two thousand years
before it, in the epoch of Sargon and his son Naram-Sin. It was then
that the Babylonian empire was established throughout western Asia as
far as the Mediterranean, that a postal service was organised along
the highroads which led from one city of the empire to another, and
that Babylonian art reached its climax. It was then, too, that the
Babylonian system of writing practically took its final form.The
civilisation of western Asia is, as has been said, immensely old.
That is the net result of modern discovery and research. As far back
as excavation can carry us there is still culture and art. We look in
vain for the beginnings of civilised life. Even the pictures out of
which the written systems of the ancient East were developed belong
to a past of which we have but glimpses. Of savagery or barbarism on
the banks of the lower Euphrates there is not a trace. So far as our
materials enable us to judge, civilised man existed from the
beginning in "the land of Shinar." The great temples of
Babylonia were already erected, the overflow of the rivers
controlled, and written characters imprinted on tablets of clay.
Civilisation seems to spring up suddenly out of a night of darkness,
like Athena from the head of Zeus.This
is one of the chief lessons that have been taught us by Oriental
archaeology. Culture and civilisation are no new thing, at all events
in the East; long before the days of classical Greece, long before
the days even of Abraham, man was living in ease and comfort,
surrounded by objects of art and industry, acquainted with the art of
writing, and carrying on intercourse with distant lands. We must rid
ourselves once for all of the starveling ideas of chronology which a
classical training once encouraged, and of the belief that history,
in the true sense of the word, hardly goes back beyond the age of
Darius or Periklês. The civilisations of Babylonia and Egypt were
already decrepid when the ancestors of Periklês were still
barbarians.Another
lesson is the danger of forming conclusions from imperfect evidence.
Apart from the earlier records of the Old Testament, there was no
literature which claimed a greater antiquity than the Homeric Poems
of ancient Greece; no history of older date than that of Hellas,
unless indeed the annals of China were to be included, which lay
altogether outside the stream of European history. Criticism,
accordingly, deemed itself competent to decide dogmatically on the
character and credibility of the literature and history of which it
was in possession; to measure the statements of the Old Testament
writings by the rules of Greek and Latin literature, and to argue
from the history of Europe to that of the East. Uncontrolled by
external testimony, critical scepticism played havoc with the
historical narratives that had descended to it, and starting from the
assumption that the world of antiquity was illiterate, refused to
credit such records of the past as dwarfed the proportions of Greek
history, or could not be harmonised with the canons of the critic
himself. It was quite sufficient for a fact to go back to the second
millennium B.C. for it to be peremptorily ruled out of court.The
discoveries of Oriental archaeology have come with a rude shock to
disturb both the conclusions of this imperfectly-equipped criticism
and the principles on which they rest. Discovery has followed
discovery, each more marvellous than the last, and re-establishing
the truth of some historical narrative in which we had been called
upon to disbelieve. Dr. Schliemann and the excavators who have come
after him have revealed to an incredulous world that Troy of Priam
which had been relegated to cloudland, and have proved that the
traditions of Mykenæan glory, of Agamemnon and Menelaos, and even of
voyages to the coast of Egypt, were not fables but veritable facts.
Even more striking have been the discoveries which have restored
credit to the narratives of the Old Testament, and shown that they
rest on contemporaneous evidence. It was not so long ago that the
account of the campaign of Chedor-laomer and his allies in Canaan was
unhesitatingly rejected as a mere reflection into the past of the
campaigns of later Assyrian kings. Even the names of the Canaanite
princes who opposed him were resolved into etymological puns. But the
tablets of Babylonia have come to their rescue. We now know that long
before the days of Abraham not only did Babylonian armies march to
the shores of the Mediterranean, but that Canaan was a Babylonian
province, and that Amraphel, the ally of Chedor-laomer, actually
entitles himself king of it in one of his inscriptions. We now know
also that the political condition of Babylonia described in the
narrative is scrupulously exact. Babylonia was for a time under the
domination of the Elamites, and while Amraphel or Khammurabi was
allowed to rule at Babylon as a vassal-prince, an Elamite of the name
of Eri-Aku or Arioch governed Larsa in the south. Nay more; tablets
have recently been found which show that the name of the Elamite
monarch was Kudur-Laghghamar, and that among his vassal allies was
Tudkhula or Tidal, who seems to have been king of the Manda, or
"nations" of Kurdistan. Khammurabi, whose name is also
written Ammurapi, has left us autograph letters, in one of which he
refers to his defeat of Kudur-Laghghamar in the decisive battle which
at last delivered Babylonia from the Elamite yoke.The
story of Chedor-laomer's campaign preserved in Genesis has thus found
complete verification. The political situation presupposed in
it—however unlikely it seemed to the historian but a few years
ago—has turned out to be in strict harmony with fact; the names of
the chief actors in it have come down to us with scarcely any
alteration, and a fragment of old-world history, which could not be
fitted into the scheme of the modern historian, has proved to be part
of a larger story which the clay books of Babylonia are gradually
unfolding before our eyes. It is no longer safe to reject a narrative
as "unhistorical" simply on the ground of the imperfection
of our own knowledge.Or
let us take another instance from the later days of Assyrian history,
the period which immediately precedes the first intercourse between
Greece and the East. We are told in the Books of the Chronicles that
Manasseh of Judah rebelled against his Assyrian master and was in
consequence carried in chains to Babylon, where he was pardoned and
restored to his ancestral throne. The story seemed at first sight of
doubtful authenticity. It is not even alluded to in the Books of the
Kings; Nineveh and not Babylon was the capital of the Assyrian
empire, and the Assyrian monarchs were not in the habit of forgiving
their revolted vassals, much less of sending them back to their own
kingdoms. And yet the cuneiform inscriptions have smoothed away all
these objections. Esar-haddon mentions Manasseh among the subject
princes of the West, and it was just Esar-haddon who rebuilt Babylon
after its destruction by his father, and made it his residence during
a part of the year. Moreover, other instances are known in which a
revolted prince was reinstated in his former power. Thus
Assur-bani-pal forgave the Egyptian prince of Sais when, like
Manasseh, he had been sent in chains to Assyria after an unsuccessful
rebellion, and restored him to his old principality. What was done by
Assur-bani-pal might well have been done by the more merciful
Esar-haddon, who showed himself throughout his reign anxious to
conciliate the conquered populations. It is even possible that
Assur-bani-pal himself was the sovereign against whom Manasseh
rebelled and before whom he was brought. In this case Manasseh's
revolt would have been part of that general revolt of the Assyrian
provinces under the leadership of Babylon, which shook the empire to
its foundations, and in which the Assyrian king expressly tells us
Palestine joined. The Jewish king would thus have been carried to
Babylon after the capture of that city by the Assyrian forces of
Assur-bani-pal.But
the recent history of Oriental archaeology is strewn with instances
of the danger of historical scepticism where the evidence is
defective, and a single discovery may at any moment throw new and
unexpected light on the materials we possess. Who, for instance,
could have supposed that the name of the Israelites would ever be
found on an Egyptian monument? They were but a small and despised
body of public slaves, settled in Goshen, on the extreme skirts of
the Egyptian territory. And yet in 1886 a granite stela was found by
Professor Flinders Petrie containing a hymn of victory in honour of
Meneptah the son of Ramses II., and declaring how, among other
triumphs, "the Israelites" had been left "without
seed." The names of all the other vanquished or subject peoples
mentioned in the hymn have attached to them the determinative of
place; the Israelites alone are without it; they alone have no fixed
habitation, no definite locality of their own, so far at least as the
writer knew. It would seem that they had already escaped into the
desert, and been lost to sight in its recesses. Who could ever have
imagined that in such a case an Egyptian poet would have judged it
worth his while even to allude to the vanished serfs?Still
more recently the tomb of Menes, the founder of the united Egyptian
monarchy, and the leader of the first historical dynasty, has been
discovered by M. de Morgan at Negada, north of Thebes. It was only a
few months previously that the voice of historical criticism had
authoritatively declared him to be "fabulous" and
"mythical." The "fabulous" Menes, nevertheless,
has now proved to be a very historical personage indeed; some of his
bones are in the museum of Cairo, and the objects disinterred in his
tomb show that he belonged to an age of culture and intercourse with
distant lands. The hieroglyphic system of writing was already
complete, and fragments of obsidian vases turned on the lathe
indicate commercial relations with the Ægean Sea.If
we turn to Babylonia the story is the same. Hardly had the critic
pronounced Sargon of Akkad to be a creature of myth, when at Niffer
and Telloh monuments both of himself and of his son were brought to
light, which, as in the case of Menes, proved that this "creature
of myth" lived in an age of advanced culture and in the full
blaze of history. At Niffer he and his son Naram-Sin built a platform
of huge bricks, each stamped with their names, and at Telloh clay
bullæ have been
discovered, bearing the seals and addresses of the letters which were
conveyed during their reigns by a highly organised postal service
along the highroads of the kingdom. Numberless contract-tablets
exist, dated in the year when Sargon "conquered the land of the
Amorites," as Syria and Canaan were called, or accomplished some
other achievement; and a cadastral survey of the district in which
Telloh was situated, made for the purpose of taxation, incidentally
refers to "the governor" who was appointed over "the
Amorites."Perhaps,
however, the discovery which above all others has revolutionised our
conceptions of early Oriental history, and reversed the critical
judgments which had prevailed in regard to it, was that of the
cuneiform tablets of Tel el-Amarna. The discovery was made in 1887 at
Tel el-Amarna on the eastern bank of the Nile, midway between the
modern towns of Minia and Siût. Here is the site of the city built
by Khu-n-Aten, the "Heretic" Pharaoh, when the dissensions
between himself and the Theban priesthood became too acute to allow
him to remain any longer in the capital of his fathers. He migrated
northward, accordingly, with his court and the adherents of the new
creed which he sought to impose upon his subjects, carrying with him
the archives of the kingdom and the foreign correspondence of the
empire. It was this foreign correspondence which was embodied in the
cuneiform tablets. They make it clear that even under Egyptian rule
the Babylonian language and the Babylonian system of writing
continued to be the official language and script of western Asia, and
that the Egyptian government itself was forced to keep Babylonian
secretaries who understood them. The fact proves the long and
permanent influence of Babylonian culture from the banks of the
Euphrates to the shores of the Mediterranean, and is intelligible
only in the light of the further fact that the empire of Sargon of
Akkad had been founded more than two thousand years before. Nothing
but a prodigiously long lapse of time could explain the firm hold
thus obtained by a foreign language, and a system of writing the most
complex and difficult to learn that has ever been invented.The
tablets further prove the existence throughout the Oriental world of
schools and libraries where the Babylonian language and characters
could be taught and learned and its voluminous literature stored and
studied. The age of Khu-n-Aten, which is also the age of Moses, was
essentially a literary age; a knowledge of reading and writing was
widely spread, and an active correspondence was being constantly
carried on from one part of the civilised world to the other. Even
the Bedâwin shêkhs, who acted as free-lances in Palestine, sent
letters to the Pharaoh and read his replies. The archive-chambers of
the cities of Canaan contained numberless documents contemporaneous
with the events they recorded, and the libraries were filled with the
treasures of Babylonian literature, with legends and stories of the
gods, and the earlier history of the East. Doubtless, as in
Babylonia, so too in Palestine there were also in them contracts and
inventories of property, dated in the Babylonian fashion by the
events which characterised the years of a king's reign. The scribes
and upper classes could read and write, and therefore had access to
all these stores of literature and historical materials.There
is no longer any reason, therefore, for doubting that Moses and his
contemporaries could have read and written books, or that the Hebrew
legislator was learned in "all the wisdom of the Egyptians."
If we are to reject the historical trustworthiness of the Pentateuch,
it must be on other grounds than the assumption of the illiterateness
of the age or the impossibility of compiling at the time an accurate
register of facts. The Tel el-Amarna tablets have made it impossible
to return to the old critical point of view; the probabilities
henceforward are in favour of the early date and historical truth of
the Old Testament narratives, and not against them. Accurately-dated
history and a reading public existed in Babylonia long before the
days of Abraham; in the age of Moses the whole Eastern world from the
Nile to the Euphrates was knit together in the bonds of literary
intercourse, and all who were in contact with the great nations of
the East—with Egypt, with Babylonia, or with Assyria—came of
necessity under its influence and held the book and its author in the
highest reverence.But
besides thus revolutionising our ideas of the age that preceded the
Hebrew Exodus, the Tel el-Amarna letters have thrown a welcome light
on the political causes of the Exodus itself. They have made it clear
that the reaction against the reforms and government of "the
Heretic King" Khu-n-Aten was as much national as religious. It
was directed quite as much against the foreigner who had usurped the
chief offices of state, as against the religion which the foreigner
was believed to have brought with him. The rise of the Nineteenth
dynasty marks the triumph of the national uprising and the overthrow
of Asiatic influence. The movement of which it was the result
resembled the revolt of Arabi in our own days. But there was no
England at hand to prevent the banishment of the stranger and his
religion; the Semites who had practically governed Egypt under
Khu-n-Aten were expelled or slain, and hard measure was dealt out to
such of their kinsfolk as still remained in the land. The free-born
sons of Israel in the district of Goshen were turned into public
serfs, and compelled to work at the buildings with which Ramses II.
was covering the soil of Egypt, and their "seed" was still
further diminished by the destruction of their male offspring, lest
they should join the enemies of Egypt in any future invasion of the
country, or assist another attempt from within to subvert the old
faith of the people and the political supremacy of the Theban
priests. That the fear was not without justification is shown by the
words of Meneptah, the son of Ramses, at the time when the very
existence of the Egyptian monarchy was threatened by the Libyan
invasion from the west and the sea-robbers who attacked it from the
Greek seas. The Asiatic settlers, he tells us, had pitched "their
tents before Pi-Bailos" (or Belbeis) at the western extremity of
the land of Goshen, and the Egyptian "kings found themselves cut
off in the midst of their cities, and surrounded by earthworks, for
they had no mercenaries to oppose to" the foe. It would seem
that the Israelites effected their escape under cover of the Libyan
invasion in the fifth year of Meneptah's reign, and on this account
it is that their name is introduced into the pæan wherein the
destruction of the Libyan host is celebrated and the Pharaoh is
declared to have restored peace to the whole world.If
the history of Israel thus receives light and explanation on the one
side from the revelations of Oriental archaeology, on the other side
it sometimes clears up difficulties in the history of the great
nations of Oriental antiquity. The Egyptologist, for instance, is
confronted by a fact towards the explanation of which the monuments
furnish no help. This is the curious change that passed over the
tenure of land in Egypt during the period of Hyksos rule. When the
Fourteenth dynasty fell, a large part of the soil of Egypt was in the
hands of private holders, many of whom were great feudal landowners
whose acknowledgment of the royal supremacy was at times little more
than nominal. When, however, the Hyksos were at last driven back to
Asia, and Ahmes succeeded in founding the Eighteenth dynasty, these
landowners had disappeared. All the landed estate of the country had
passed into the possession of the Pharaoh and the priests, and the
old feudal aristocracy had been replaced by a bureaucracy, the
members of which owed their power and position to the king. The
history of Joseph accounts for this, and it is the only explanation
of the fact which is at present forthcoming. Famine compelled the
people to sell their lands to the king and his minister, and a Hyksos
Pharaoh and his Hebrew vizier thus succeeded in destroying the older
aristocracy and despoiling the natives of their estates. It was
probably at this period also that the public granaries, of which we
hear so much in the age of the Eighteenth dynasty, were first
established in Egypt, in imitation of those of Babylonia, where they
had long been an institution, and a superintendent was appointed over
them who, as in Babylonia, virtually held the power of life and death
in his hands.One
of the main results, then, of recent discovery in the East has been
to teach us the solidarity of ancient Oriental history, and the
impossibility of forming a correct judgment in regard to any one part
of it without reference to the rest. Hebrew history is unintelligible
as long as it stands alone, and the attempt to interpret it apart and
by itself has led to little else than false and one-sided
conclusions; it is only when read in the light of the history of the
great empires which flourished beside it that it can be properly
understood. Israel and the nations around it formed a whole, so far
as the historian is concerned, which, like the elements of a picture,
cannot be torn asunder. If we would know the history of the one, we
must know the history of the other also. And each year is adding to
our knowledge; new monuments are being excavated, new inscriptions
being read, and the revelations of to-day are surpassed by those of
to-morrow. We have already learnt much, but it is only a
commencement; Egypt is only now beginning to be scientifically
explored, a few only of the multitudinous libraries of Babylonia have
been brought to light, and the soil of Assyria has been little more
than touched. Elsewhere, in Elam, in Mesopotamia, in Asia Minor, in
Palestine itself, everything still remains to be done. The harvest
truly is plentiful, but the labourers are few.We
have, however, learnt some needful lessons. The historian has been
warned against arguing from the imperfection of his own knowledge,
and rejecting an ancient narrative merely because it seems
unsupported by other testimony. He has been warned, too, against
making his own prepossessions and assumptions the test of historical
truth, of laying down that a reported fact could not have happened
because it runs counter to what he assumes to have been the state of
society in some particular age. Above all, the lesson of modesty has
been impressed upon him, modesty in regard to the extent of his own
knowledge and the fallibility of his own conclusions. It does not
follow that what we imagine ought to have happened has happened in
reality; on the contrary, the course of Oriental history has usually
been very different from that dreamed of by the European scholar in
the quietude of his study. If Oriental archæology has taught us
nothing else, it has at least taught us how little we know.