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Table of contents
INTRODUCTION.
THE ASSASSINS[3].
Chapter I.
Chapter II.
Chapter III.
Chapter IV.
Chapter V.
Chapter VI.
Chapter VII.
Chapter VIII.
Chapter IX.
Chapter X.
Chapter XI.
Chapter XII.
THE TEMPLARS.
Chapter I.
Chapter II.
Chapter III.
Chapter IV.
Chapter V.
Chapter VI.
Chapter VII.
Chapter VIII.
Chapter IX.
Chapter X.
Chapter XI.
THE SECRET TRIBUNALS OF WESTPHALIA[110].
Chapter I.
Chapter II.
Chapter III.
Chapter IV.
Chapter V.
Chapter VI.
Chapter VII.
footnotes
INTRODUCTION.
If
we had the means of investigating historically the origin of Secret
Societies, we should probably find that they began to be formed
almost as soon as any knowledge had been accumulated by particular
individuals beyond what constituted the common stock. The same thing
has happened to knowledge that has happened to all other human
possessions,—its actual holders have striven to keep it to
themselves. It is true that in this case the possessor of the
advantage does not seem to have the same reason for being averse to
share it with others which naturally operates in regard to many good
things of a different kind; he does not, by imparting it to those
around him, diminish his own store. This is true, in so far as
regards the possession of knowledge considered in its character of a
real good; the owner of the treasure does not impoverish himself by
giving it away, as he would by giving away his money, but remains as
rich as ever, even after he has made ever so many others as rich as
himself. But still there is one thing that he loses, and a thing upon
which the human mind is apt to set a very high value; he loses the
distinction which he derived from his knowledge. This distinction
really serves, in many respects, the same purpose that money itself
does. Like money, it brings observation and worship. Like money, it
is the dearest of all things, power. Knowledge, however held, is
indeed essentially power; to
ken, that is, to
know, is the same word and the same thing with to
can, that is, to be
able. But there is an additional and a different species of power
conferred by knowledge when it exists as the distinction of a few
individuals in the midst of general ignorance. Here it is power not
only to do those things the methods of doing which it teaches; it is,
besides, the power of governing other men through your comparative
strength and their weakness.So
strong is the motive thus prompting the possessor of knowledge to the
exclusive retention of his acquisitions, that unless it had been met
by another motive appealing in like manner directly to our
self-interest, it appears probable that scarcely any general
dissemination of knowledge would ever have taken place. The powerful
counteracting motive in question is derived from the consideration
that in most cases one of the most effective ways which the possessor
of knowledge can take of exciting the admiration of others, is to
communicate what he knows. The light must give itself forth, and
illuminate the world, even that it may be itself seen and admired. In
the very darkest times, the scholar or philosopher may find his
ambition sufficiently gratified by the mere reputation of superior
attainments, and the stupid wonder, or it may be superstitious
terror, of the uninquiring multitude. But as soon as any thing like a
spirit of intelligence or of curiosity has sprung up in the general
mind, all who aspire to fame or consideration from their learning,
their discoveries, or their intellectual powers, address themselves
to awaken the admiration of their fellow-men, not by concealing, but
by displaying their knowledge—not by sealing up the precious
fountain, but by allowing its waters to flow freely forth, that all
who choose may drink of them. From this time science ceases almost to
have any secrets; and, all the influences to which it is exposed
acting in the same direction, the tendency of knowledge becomes
wholly diffusive.But
in the preceding state of things the case was altogether the reverse.
Then there was little or no inducement to the communication of
knowledge, and every motive for those who were in possession of it to
keep it to themselves. There was not intelligence enough abroad to
appreciate, or even to understand, the truths of philosophy if they
had been announced in their simplicity, and explained according to
their principles; all that was cared for, all that was capable of
arousing the vulgar attention, was some display, made as surprising
and mysterious as possible, of their practical application. It would
even have been attended with danger in many cases to attempt to teach
true philosophy openly, or to make open profession of it; it was too
much in opposition to some of the strongest prejudices which
everywhere held sway. It is not, then, to be wondered at, that its
cultivators should have sought to guard and preserve it by means of
secret associations, which, besides excluding the multitude from a
participation in the thing thus fenced round and hidden, answered
also divers other convenient purposes. They afforded opportunities of
free conference, which could not otherwise have been obtained. There
was much in the very forms of mystery and concealment thus adopted
calculated to impress the popular imagination, and to excite its
reverence and awe. Finally, the veil which they drew around their
proceedings enabled the members of these secret societies to combine
their efforts, and arrange their plans, in security and without
interruption, whenever they cherished any designs of political
innovation, or other projects, the open avowal and prosecution of
which the established authorities would not have tolerated.The
facilities afforded by the system of secret association, and it may
even be said the temptations which it presents, to the pursuit of
political objects forbidden by the laws, are so great as to justify
all governments in prohibiting it, under whatever pretence it may be
attempted to be introduced. It is nothing to the purpose to argue
that under bad governments valuable political reforms have sometimes
been effected by such secret associations which would not otherwise
have been attained. The same mode of proceeding, in the nature of the
thing, is equally efficacious for the overthrow of a good government.
Bad men are as likely to combine in the dark for their objects as
good men are for theirs. In any circumstances, a secret association
is an imperium in
imperio, a power
separate from, and independent of, that which is recognized as the
supreme power in the state, and therefore something essentially
disorganizing, and which it is contrary to the first principles of
all government for any state to tolerate. In the case of a bad
government, indeed, all means are fairly available for its overthrow
which are not morally objectionable, the simple rule for their
application being that it shall be directed by considerations of
prudence and discretion. In such a case a secret association of the
friends of reform may sometimes be found to supply the most effective
means for accomplishing the desired end; but that end, however
desirable it may be, is not one which the constitution of the state
itself can rationally contemplate. The constitution cannot be founded
upon the supposition that even necessary alterations of it are to be
brought about through agencies out of itself, and forming no part of
its regular mechanism. Whenever such agencies are successfully
brought into operation, there is a revolution, and the constitution
is at an end. Even the amendment of the constitution so effected is
its destruction.Yet
most of the more remarkable secret associations which have existed in
different ages and countries have probably either been originally
formed to accomplish some political end, or have come to contemplate
such an object as their chief design. Even when nothing more than a
reformation of the national religion has been, as far as can be
discovered, the direct aim of the association, it may still be fairly
considered as of a political character, from the manner in which
religion has been mixed up in almost every country with the civil
institutions of the state. The effect which it was desired to produce
upon the government may in many cases have been very far from
extending to its complete abolition, and the substitution of another
form of polity; an alteration in some one particular may have been
all that was sought, or the object of the association may even have
been to support some original principle of the constitution against
the influence of circumstances which threatened its subversion or
modification. Whether directed to the alteration or to the
maintenance of the existing order of things, the irregular and
dangerous action of secret combinations is, as we have said, a
species of force which no state can reasonably be expected to
recognize. But it may nevertheless have happened at particular
emergencies, and during times of very imperfect civilization, that
valuable service has been rendered by such combinations to some of
the most important interests of society, and that they have to a
considerable extent supplied the defects of the rude and imperfect
arrangements of the ordinary government.The
system of secret association is, indeed, the natural resource of the
friends of political reform, in times when the general mind is not
sufficiently enlightened to appreciate or to support their schemes
for the improvement of the existing institutions and order of things.
To proclaim their views openly in such circumstances would be of no
more use than haranguing to the desert. They might even expose
themselves to destruction by the attempt. But, united in a secret
association, and availing themselves of all the advantages at once of
their superior knowledge and intelligence, and of their opportunities
of acting in concert, a very few individuals may work with an effect
altogether out of proportion to their number. They may force in a
wedge which in time shall even split and shiver into fragments the
strength of the existing social system, no matter by how many ages of
barbarism it may be consolidated. Or, in the absence of a more
regular law and police, they may maintain the empire of justice by
stretching forth the arm of their own authority in substitution for
that of the state, which lies paralysed and powerless, and turning to
account even the superstitions and terrors of the popular imagination
by making these, as excited by their dark organization and mysterious
forms of procedure, the chain whereby to secure the popular
obedience.On
the whole, the system of secret association for political objects,
even when there is no dispute about the desirableness of the ends
sought to be accomplished, may be pronounced to be a corrective of
which good men will avail themselves only in times of general
ignorance, or under governments that sin against the first principles
of all good government, by endeavouring to put a stop to the
advancement of society through the prohibition of the open expression
of opinion; but, in countries where the liberty of discussion exists,
and where the public mind is tolerably enlightened, as entirely
unsuited to the circumstances of the case as it is opposed to the
rules and maxims on which every government must take its stand that
would provide for its own preservation. In these happier
circumstances the course for the friends of social improvement to
follow is to come forward into the full light of day as the only
place worthy of their mission, and to seek the realization of their
views by directly appealing to the understandings of their
fellow-citizens.One
evil to which secret societies are always exposed is the chance of
the objects and principles of their members being misrepresented by
those interested in resisting their power and influence. As the
wakeful eyes of the government, and of those concerned in the
maintenance of the actual system, will be ever upon them, they must
strictly confine the knowledge of their real views and proceedings to
the initiated, and as their meetings must for the same reason be held
in retired places, and frequently by night, an opportunity, which is
rarely neglected, is afforded to their enemies of spreading the most
calumnious reports of their secret practices, which, though conscious
of innocence, they may not venture openly to confute. By arts of this
kind the suspicions and aversion of the people are excited, and they
are often thus made to persecute their best friends, and still to bow
beneath the yoke of their real foes. The similarity of the
accusations made against secret associations in all parts of the
world is a sufficient proof of their falsehood, and we should always
listen to them with the utmost suspicion, recollecting the quarter
from which they proceed. Of the spotless purity of the Christian
religion when first promulgated through the Roman world no one can
entertain a doubt; yet when persecution obliged its professors to
form as it were a secret society, the same charges of Thyestian
banquets, and of the promiscuous intercourse of the sexes, were made
against them, which they themselves afterwards brought, and with
probably as little truth, against the various sects of the Gnostic
heresy. Wherever there is secrecy there will be suspicion, and
charges of something unable to bear the light of day will be made.The
ancient world presents one secret society of a professedly political
character—that of the Pythagoreans. Of religious ones it might be
expected to yield a rich harvest to the inquirer, when we call to
mind all that has been written in ancient and modern times concerning
the celebrated mysteries. But the original Grecian mysteries, such as
those of Eleusis, appear to have been nothing more than public
services of the gods, with some peculiar ceremonies performed at the
charge of the state, and presided over by the magistrates, in which
there were no secrets communicated to the initiated, no revelation of
knowledge beyond that which was generally attainable. The
private mysteries,
namely, the Orphic, Isiac, and Mithraic, which were introduced from
the East, were merely modes employed by cunning and profligate
impostors for taking advantage of the weakness and credulity of the
sinful and the superstitious, by persuading them that by secret and
peculiar rites, and the invocation of strange deities, the
apprehended punishment of sin might be averted. The nocturnal
assemblies for the celebration of these mysteries were but too often
scenes of vice and debauchery, and they were discountenanced by all
good governments. It is to these last, and not to the Eleusinian
mysteries, that the severe strictures of the fathers of the church
apply[1].The
history of Pythagoras and his doctrines is extremely obscure. The
accounts of this sage which have come down to us were not written
till many centuries after his death, and but little reliance is to be
placed on their details. Pythagoras was a Samian by birth; he
flourished in the sixth century before Christ, at the time when Egypt
exercised so much influence over Greece, and its sages sought the
banks of the Nile in search of wisdom. There is, therefore, no
improbability in the tradition of Pythagoras also having visited that
land of mystery, and perhaps other parts of the East, and marked the
tranquil order of things where those who were esteemed the wise ruled
over the ignorant people. He may therefore have conceived the idea of
uniting this sacerdotal system with the rigid morals and aristocratic
constitution of the Dorian states of Greece. His native isle, which
was then under the tyranny of Polycrates, not appearing to him suited
for the introduction of his new system of government, he turned his
eyes to the towns of Magna Græcia, or Southern Italy, which were at
that time in a highly flourishing condition, whose inhabitants were
eager in the pursuit of knowledge, and some of which already
possessed written codes of law. He fixed his view on Croton, one of
the wealthiest and most distinguished of those towns.Aristocracy
was the soul of the Dorian political constitutions, and the towns of
Magna Græcia were all Dorian colonies; but in consequence of their
extensive commerce the tendency of the people was at that time
towards democracy. To preserve the aristocratic principle was the
object of Pythagoras; but he wished to make the aristocracy not
merely one of birth; he desired that, like the sacerdotal castes of
the East, it should also have the supremacy in knowledge. As his
system was contrary to the general feeling, Pythagoras saw that it
was only by gaining the veneration of the people that he could carry
it into effect; and by his personal advantages of beauty of form,
skill in gymnastic exercises, eloquence, and dignity, he drew to
himself the popular favour by casting the mantle of mystery over his
doctrines. He thus at once inspired the people with awe for them, and
the nobles with zeal to become initiated in his secrets.The
most perfect success, we are told, attended the project of the
philosopher. A total change of manners took place in Croton; the
constitution became nearly Spartan; a body of 300 nobles, rendered by
the lessons of the sage as superior to the people in knowledge of
every kind as they were in birth, ruled over it. The nobles of the
other states flocked to Croton to learn how to govern by wisdom;
Pythagorean missionaries went about everywhere preaching the new
political creed; they inculcated on the people religion, humility,
and obedience; such of the nobles as were deemed capable were
initiated in the wisdom of the order, and taught its maxims and
principles; a golden age, in which power was united with wisdom and
virtue, seemed to have begun upon earth.But,
like every thing which struggles against the spirit of the age, such
a political system was not fated to endure. While Croton was the
chief seat of Pythagoreanism, luxury had fixed her throne in the
neighbouring city of Sybaris. The towns were rivals: one or the other
must fall. It was little more than thirty years after the arrival of
Pythagoras in Croton that a furious war broke out between them. Led
by Milo and other Pythagoreans, who were as expert in military
affairs as skilled in philosophy, the Crotoniates utterly annihilated
the power of their rivals, and Sybaris sank to rise no more. But with
her sank the power of the Pythagoreans. They judged it inexpedient to
give a large share of the booty to the people; the popular discontent
rose; Cylon, a man who had been refused admittance into the order,
took advantage of it, and urged the people on; the Pythagoreans were
all massacred, and a democracy established. All the other towns took
example by Croton, a general persecution of the order commenced, and
Pythagoras himself was obliged to seek safety in flight, and died far
away from the town which once had received him as a prophet. The
Pythagoreans never made any further attempts at attaining political
power, but became a mere sect of mystic philosophers, distinguished
by peculiarities of food and dress.Ancient
times present us with no other society of any importance to which we
can properly apply the term
secret.The
different sects of the Gnostics, who are by the fathers of the church
styled heretics, were to a certain extent secret societies, as they
did not propound their doctrines openly and publicly; but their
history is so scanty, and so devoid of interest, that an examination
of it would offer little to detain ordinary readers.The
present volume is devoted to the history of three celebrated
societies which flourished during the middle ages, and of which, as
far as we know, no full and satisfactory account is to be found in
English literature. These are the Assassins, or Ismaïlites, of the
East, whose name has become in all the languages of Europe synonymous
with murderer, who
were a secret
society, and of whom we have in general such vague and indistinct
conceptions; the military order of the Knights Templars, who were
most barbarously persecuted under the pretext of their holding a
secret doctrine, and against whom the charge has been renewed at the
present day; and, finally, the Secret Tribunals of Westphalia, in
Germany, concerning which all our information has hitherto been
derived from the incorrect statements of dramatists and romancers[2].It
is the simplicity of truth, and not the excitement of romance, that
the reader is to expect to find in the following pages,—pictures of
manners and modes of thinking different from our own,—knowledge,
not mere
entertainment, yet as large an infusion of the latter as is
consistent with truth and instruction.
THE ASSASSINS[3].
Chapter I.
State
of the World in the 7th Century—Western Empire—Eastern
Empire—Persia—Arabia—Mohammed—His probable Motives—Character
of his Religion—The Koran.At
the commencement of the 7th century of the Christian era a new
character was about to be impressed on a large portion of the world.
During the two centuries which preceded, the Goths, Vandals, Huns,
and other martial tribes of the Germanic race, had succeeded in
beating down the barriers opposed to them, and in conquering and
dismembering the Western Empire. They brought with them and retained
their love of freedom and spirit of dauntless valour, but abandoned
their ancient and ferocious superstitions, and embraced the corrupt
system which then degraded the name of Christianity. This system,
hardened, as it were, by ideas retained and transferred from the
original faith of its new disciples, which ideas were fostered by
those passages of the books of the Hebrew Scriptures which accorded
with their natural sentiments, afterwards, when allied with
feudalism, engendered the spirit which poured the hosts of Western
Europe over the mountains and plains of Asia for the conquest of the
Holy Land.A
different picture was at this time presented by the empire of the
East. It still retained the extent assigned to it by Theodosius; and
all the countries from the Danube, round the east and south coasts of
the Mediterranean, to the straits of Gades, yielded a more or less
perfect obedience to the successors of Constantine. But a despotism
more degrading, though less ferocious, than those of Asia paralyzed
the patriotism and the energy of their subjects; and the acuteness,
the contentiousness, and the imagination of the Greeks, combined with
mysticism and the wild fancy of the Asiatics to transform the
simplicity of the religion of Christ into a revolting system of
intricate metaphysics and gross idolatry, which aided the influence
of their political condition in chilling the martial ardour of the
people. The various provinces of the empire were held together by the
loosest and feeblest connexion, and it was apparent that a vigorous
shock would suffice to dissolve the union.The
mountains of Armenia and the course of the Euphrates separated the
Eastern Empire from that of Persia. This country had been under the
dominion of the people named Parthians at the time when the eagles of
the Roman republic first appeared on the Euphrates, and defeat had
more than once attended the Roman armies which attempted to enter
their confines. Like every dominion not founded on the freedom of the
people, that of the Arsacides (the Parthian royal line) grew feeble
with time, and after a continuance of nearly five centuries the
sceptre of Arsaces passed from the weak hand of the last monarch of
his line to that of Ardeshir Babegan (that is the son of Babec), a
valiant officer of the royal army, and a pretended descendant of the
ancient monarchs of Persia. Ardeshir, to accomplish this revolution,
availed himself of the religious prejudices of the Persian people.
The Parthian monarchs had inclined to the manners and the religion of
the Greeks, and the Light-religion—the original faith of Persia,
and one of the purest and most spiritual of those to which a divine
origin may not be assigned—had been held in slight estimation, and
its priests unvisited by royal favour. It was the pride and the
policy of Ardeshir to restore the ancient religion to the dignity
which it had enjoyed under the descendants of Cyrus, and Religion, in
return, lent her powerful aid to his plans of restoring the royal
dignity to its pristine vigour, and of infusing into the breast of
the people the love of country and the ardour for extending the
Persian dominion to what it had been of old; and for 400 years the
Sassanides[4]
were the most formidable enemies of the Roman empire. But their
dominion had, at the period of which we write, nearly attained the
greatest limit allotted to Oriental dynasties; and though Noosheerwan
the Just had attained great warlike fame, and governed with a vigour
and justice that have made his name proverbial in the East, and
Khoosroo Purveez displayed a magnificence which is still the theme of
Persian poetry and romance, and carried his victorious arms over
Syria and Egypt, and further along the African coast than even those
of Darius I. had been able to advance, yet defeat from the gallant
Emperor Heraclius clouded his latter days, and the thirteenth year
after his death, by showing the Persian armies in flight, and the
palladium of the empire, the jewel-set apron of the blacksmith Kawah,
in the hands of the rovers of the deserts, revealed the secret that
her strength was departed from Persia. The brilliancy of the early
part of the reign of Khoosroo Purveez had been but the flash before
death which at times is displayed in empires as in individuals. The
vigour was gone which was requisite to stem the torrent of fanatic
valour about to burst forth from the wilds of Arabia.It
is the boast of Arabia that it has never been conquered. This
immunity from subjugation has, however, been only partial, and is
owing to the nature of the country; for although the barren sands of
the Hejaz and Nejed have always baffled the efforts of hostile
armies, yet the more inviting region of Yemen, the Happy Arabia of
the ancients, has more than once allured a conqueror, and submitted
to his sway. The inhabitants of this country have been the same in
blood and in manners from the dawn of history. Brave, but not
sanguinary, robbers, but kind and hospitable, of lively and acute
intellect, we find the Arabs, from the days of Abraham to the present
times, leading the pastoral and nomadic life in the desert,
agriculturists in Yemen, traders on the coasts and on the confines of
Syria and Egypt. Their foreign military operations had hitherto been
confined to plundering expeditions into the last-mentioned countries,
unless they were the Hycsos, or Shepherd Kings, who, according to
tradition, once made the conquest of Egypt. Arabia forming a kind of
world in itself, its various tribes were in ceaseless hostility with
each other; but it was apparent that if its brave and skilful
horsemen could be united under one head, and animated by motives
which would inspire constancy and rouse valour, they might present a
force capable of giving a fatal shock to the empires of Persia and of
Rome.It
is impossible, on taking a survey of the history of the world, not to
recognize a great predisposing cause, which appoints the time and
circumstances of every event which is to produce any considerable
change in the state of human affairs. The agency of this overruling
providence is nowhere more perceptible than in the present instance.
The time was come for the Arabs to leave their deserts and march to
the conquest of the world, and the man was born who was to inspire
them with the necessary motives.Mohammed
(Illustrious[5])
was the son of Abd-Allah (Servant
of God), a noble
Arab of the tribe of Koreish, which had the guardianship of the Kaaba
(Square House of
Mecca), the
Black Stone
contained in which (probably an aerolite) had been for ages an object
of religious veneration to the tribes of Arabia. His mother was
Amineh, the daughter of a chief of princely rank. He was early left
an orphan, with the slender patrimony of five camels and a female
Æthiopian slave. His uncle, Aboo Talib, brought him up. At an early
age the young Mohammed accompanied his uncle to the fair of Bozra, on
the verge of Syria, and in his 18th year he signalized his valour in
an engagement between the Koreish and a hostile tribe. At the age of
25 he entered the service of Khadijah, a wealthy widow, with whose
merchandise he visited one of the great fairs of Syria. Mohammed,
though poor, was noble, handsome, acute, and brave; Khadijah, who was
fifteen years his senior, was inspired with love; her passion was
returned; and the gift of her hand and wealth gave the nephew of Aboo
Talib affluence and consideration.Mohammed's
original turn of mind appears to have been serious, and it is not
unlikely that the great truth of the Unity of the Deity had been
early impressed on his mind by his mother or his Jewish kindred. The
Koreish and the rest of his countrymen were idolaters; Christianity
was now corrupted by the intermixture of many superstitions; the
fire-worship of the Persians was a worshipping of the Deity under a
material form; the Mosaic religion had been debased by the dreams and
absurd distinctions of the Rabbis. A simpler form than any of these
seemed wanted for man. God, moreover, was believed to have at sundry
times sent prophets into the world for its reformation, and might do
so again; the Jews still looked for their promised Messiah; many
Christians held that the Paraclete was yet to come. Who can take upon
him to assert that Mohammed may not have believed himself to be set
apart to the service of God, and appointed by the divine decree to be
the preacher of a purer faith than any which he then saw existing?
Who will say that in his annual seclusions of fifteen days in the
cave of Hira he may not have fallen into ecstatic visions, and that
in one of these waking dreams the angel Gabriel may not have appeared
to his distempered fancy to descend to nominate him to the office of
a prophet of God, and present to him, in a visible form, that portion
of his future law which had probably already passed through his
mind[6]?
A certain portion of self-delusion is always mingled with successful
imposture; the impostor, as it were, makes his first experiment on
himself. It is much more reasonable to conclude that Mohammed had at
first no other object than the dissemination of truth by persuasion,
and that he may have beguiled himself into a belief of his being the
instrument selected for that purpose, than that the citizen of a town
in the secluded region of Arabia beheld in ambitious vision from his
mountain-cave his victorious banners waving on the banks of the Oxus
and the Ebro, and his name saluted as that of the Prophet of God by a
fourth part of the human race. Still we must not pass by another, and
perhaps a truer supposition, namely, that, in the mind of Mohammed,
as in that of so many others, the end justified the means, and that
he deemed it lawful to feign a vision and a commission from God in
order to procure from men a hearing for the truth.Whatever
the ideas and projects of Mohammed may originally have been, he
waited till he had attained his fortieth year (the age at which Moses
showed himself first to the Israelites), and then revealed his divine
commission to his wife Khadijah, his slave Zeid, his cousin Ali, the
son of Aboo Talib, and his friend, the virtuous and wealthy Aboo
Bekr. It is difficult to conceive any motive but conviction to have
operated on the minds of these different persons, who at once
acknowledged his claim to the prophetic office; and it speaks not a
little for the purity of the previous life of the new Prophet, that
he could venture to claim the faith of those who were most intimately
acquainted with him. The voice of wisdom has assured us that a
prophet has no honour in his own country and among his own kindred,
and the example of Mohammed testified the truth of the declaration.
During thirteen years the new religion made but slow and painful
progress in the town of Mecca; but the people of Yathreb, a town
afterwards dignified with the appellation of the City of the Prophet
(Medinat-en-Nabi),
were more susceptive of faith; and when, on the death of Aboo Talib,
who protected his nephew, though he rejected his claims, his
celebrated Flight (Hejra)
brought him to Yathreb, the people of that town took arms in his
defence against the Koreish. It was probably now that new views
opened to the mind of the Prophet. Prince of Yathreb, he might hope
to extend his sway over the ungrateful Mecca; and those who had
scoffed at his arguments and persuasions might be taught lessons of
wisdom by the sword. These anticipations were correct, and in less
than ten years after the battle of Bedr (the first he fought) he saw
his temporal power and his prophetic character acknowledged by the
whole of the Arabian peninsula.It
commonly happens that, when a new form of religion is proposed for
the acceptance of mankind, it surpasses in purity that which it is
intended to supersede. The Arabs of the days of Mohammed were
idolaters; 300 is said to have been the number of the images which
claimed their adoration in the Caaba. A gross licentiousness
prevailed among them; their polygamy had no limits assigned to it[7].
For this the Prophet substituted the worship of One God, and placed a
check on the sensual propensities of his people. His religion
contained descriptions of the future state of rewards and
punishments, by which he allured to obedience and terrified from
contumacy or opposition. The pains of hell which he menaced were such
as were most offensive to the body and its organs; the joys of
Paradise were verdant meads, shady trees, murmuring brooks, gentle
airs, precious wines in cups of gold and silver, stately tents, and
splendid sofas; the melody of the songs of angels was to ravish the
souls of the blessed; the black-eyed Hoories were to be the
ever-blooming brides of the faithful servants of God. Yet, though
sensual bliss was to be his ultimate reward, the votary was taught
that its attainment demanded self-denial on earth; and it has been
justly observed that "a devout Mussulman exhibits more of the
Stoical than of the Epicurean character[8]."
As the Prophet had resolved that the sword should be unsparingly
employed for the diffusion of the truth, the highest degree of the
future bliss was pronounced to be the portion of the martyrs, i. e.,
of those who fell in the holy wars waged for the dissemination of the
faith. "Paradise," says the Prophet, "is beneath the
shadow of swords." At the day of judgment the wounds of the
fallen warrior were to be resplendent as vermilion, and odoriferous
as musk; and the wings of angels were to supply the loss of limbs.
The religion of Mohammed was entitled Islam (resignation),
whence its votaries were called by the Arabs Moslems, and in Persian
Mussulmans. Its articles of belief were five—belief in God, in his
angels, in his Prophet, in the last day, and in predestination. Its
positive duties were also five—purification, prayer, fasting, alms,
and the pilgrimage to Mecca. Various rites and observances which the
Arabs had hitherto practised were retained by the Prophet, either out
of regard for the prejudices of his followers, or because he did not,
or could not, divest his own mind of respect for usages in which he
had been reared up from infancy.Such
is a slight sketch of the religion which Mohammed substituted for the
idolatry of Arabia. It contained little that was original; all its
details of the future state were borrowed from Judaism or from the
Magian system of Persia. The book which contains it, entitled the
Koran (reading),
was composed in detached pieces, during a long series of years, by
the illiterate
Prophet, and taken down from his lips by his scribes. His own account
of its origin was that each Sura, or revelation, was brought to him
from heaven by the angel Gabriel. It is regarded by the Mohammedan
East, and by most European Orientalists, as the masterpiece of
Arabian literature; and when we make due allowance for the difference
of European and Arabian models and taste, and consider that the
rhyme[9]
which in prose is insufferable to the former, may to the latter sound
grateful, we may allow that the praises lavished on it are not
unmerited. Though tedious and often childish legends, and long and
tiresome civil regulations, occupy the greater part of it, it is
pervaded by a fine strain of fervid piety and humble resignation to
the will of God, not unworthy of the inspired seers of Israel; and
the sublime doctrine of the Unity of God runs like a vein of pure
gold through each portion of the mass, giving lustre and dignity to
all. Might we not venture to say that Christianity itself has derived
advantage from the imposture of Mohammed, and that the clear and open
profession of the Divine Unity by their Mohammedan enemies kept the
Christians of the dark ages from smothering it beneath the mass of
superstition and fable by which they corrupted and deformed so much
of the majestic simplicity of the Gospel? No one, certainly, would
dream of comparing the son of Abd-Allah with the Son of God, of
setting darkness by the side of light; but still we may confess him
to have been an agent in the hands of the Almighty, and admit that
his assumption of the prophetic office was productive of good as well
as of evil.The
Mohammedan religion is so intimately connected with history, law,
manners, and opinions, in the part of the East of which we are about
to write, that this brief view of its origin and nature was
indispensable. We now proceed to our history.
Chapter II.
Origin
of the Khalifat—The first Khalifs—Extent of the Arabian
Empire—Schism among the Mohammedans—Soonees and Sheähs—Sects
of the latter—The Keissanee—The Zeidites—The Ghoollat—The
Imamee—Sects of the Imamee—Their political Character—The
Carmathites—Origin of the Fatimite Khalifs—Secret Society at
Cairo—Doctrines taught in it—Its Decline.
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Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
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Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
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Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!