Webmaster Tools and Resources  

Home    Paid Surveys     Work at Home     Affiliate Programs     Web Master Resources     Web Master Directory     Templates & Scripts
Reliable Hosting     Tutorials     eBay™ Resources     Free Articles & Content     Pay Per Click Advertising     Recommended Resources

Great Reading For Learning & Thinking


TROY AND THE TROJAN HORSE

A TALE OF MEN OR OF SCHEMING GODS?

Copyright: Z. Sitchin
The Epic of Gilgamesh
was inscribed on stone tablets by the Sumerians in the Akkadian language a thousand years before the Iliad and the Bible and was found in fragments. The tablets were buried during the fall of Nineveh. Various portions of the epic were composed in the late third millennium B.C. The writing includes a flood story that very closely parallels the description of Noah and his ark in Genesis of the Bible. Gilgamesh is described as a giant with wealth and power.

Buy The Epic of Gilgamesh
Finger Prints of the Gods

Graham Hancock, the bestselling author of The Sign and the Seal, reveals the true origins of civilization. Connecting puzzling clues scattered throughout the world, Hancock discovers compelling evidence of a technologically and culturally advanced civilization that was destroyed and obliterated from human memory. Four 8-page photo inserts.

He begins the book by introducing us to an ancient map of Antartica, made in 1513. It is called the Piri Reis map and was drawn up in Constantinople. It is an enigma because according to our current "knowledge" Antartica was not discovered until 1818.

Hancock goes on to reveal many examples wich indicate that at some time in the distant past mankind was much more "evolved" tecnologically than in the recent past. Somehow the ancients had detailed knowledge about astronomy, mathematics, engineering, etc much of which we have only "learned" in the past century. How did they learn of these things? How did we - as a species - forget or lose this knowledge?

The earth Chronicles Expedition by Z Sitchin The release in May of the mega-movie Troy has triggered an avalanche of popular articles, learned studies, TV documentaries and other media hype about the ancient tale of a splendid city at the edge of Asia Minor whose prince abducted a beautiful demi-goddess who happened to be married to the king of Greek Sparta, causing the Greeks to send an army in a thousand ships to attack and lay siege to Troy; a tale of a long war that was ended only by the treacherous trick of the Trojan Horse.

The articles and documentaries dealt less with the movie as such than with the lingering questions: Was there indeed a city name Troy? Was there a Trojan War?

The subject and the questions happen to have relevance to my writings, especially so because my latest book, THE EARTH CHRONICLES EXPEDITIONS: Journeys to the Mythical Past, begins with a chapter titled The Trojan Horse. It describes a visit, as part of the Earth Chronicles Expeditions, to the excavated site at Hissarlik in Turkey whose ruins are deemed to be those of ancient Troy.

Homer's Iliad: History, or Myth?

The tale of the Trojan War is known mostly (but not only) from the Iliad by the Greek poet Homer, who lived some seven centuries after the event. That time lapse has been one of the reasons for doubting the veracity of his tale. Although many aspects of the tale and its heroes were found depicted in ancient Greek art, and although Alexander the Great made it a point to visit and worship at Troy's remains as he crossed over from Europe to Asia, the fact that Troy's ruins were buried away by the sands of time made its very existence questionable.

But as I point out in my latest book, the notion that Homer's tale was basically fiction or myth had to do less with the inability to find Troy’s remains than with details of the tale in the Iliad; because according to it, the Trojan War was actually instigated not by men but by the gods; and gods and goddesses actually participated in the warfare and intervened on this or that side at crucial moments. But since respectful scholars consider Greek tales of the gods to be pure mythology, the tale of Troy that asserts them had to be classified as a myth as well.

Schliemann's Discoveries and Modern Archaeology

When Heinrich Schliemann's excavations at Hissarlik, beginning in the 1870's, identified the site as Troy, the fact that he was a businessman and not an established academic archaeologist was reason enough to doubt his findings More than a century of continued excavations and evaluations verified the site as that of Troy; yet one can still find an article or a TV program asking: Was there a Troy? Was there a Trojan War?

A series of articles in the (May/June 2004) issue of the authoritative journal Archaeology gives yes answers to both questions. There is nothing in the archaeological record to contradict the assertion that Troy and the surrounding countryside formed the setting for Homer's Iliad, the journal concludes in one study. Another cites evidence from the deciphered written records of the Hittite empire, contemporary with the time of the Trojan War, of the city's existence and the war. Other articles review the numerous ancient depictions, as this one from Greece's classical period, that also attest to ancient familiarity with aspects of the Trojan War and the Trojan Horse episode.

trojhorse.jpeg

Troy's Tale: The Reality of the gods

As told in my new book, I chose to begin a tour of ancient civilization sites in Turkey with a visit to Troy because I presented to my group the following line of logic: If Homer was right that there was a Troy, a king Menelaus and a King Priam and the hero Achilles etc. etc., and a Trojan War why not accept that he was also right in telling how the gods instigated that war and took part in it? In other words, if Troy and its War were fact not myth, why not deem the references in the Iliad to the existence in antiquity of omnipotent gods also as fact not myth?

It was only thus, I explained, that all the texts and depictions from antiquity showing men and gods can be explained and understood. The visit to Troy and its tale was affirmation of the actual presence of those whom the Sumerians called Anunnaki: Those who from Heaven to Earth came.

The visit to Troy, described in the first chapter of my new book, was thus my Trojan Horse for that logical conclusion.

ZECHARIA SITCHIN
Reprints are permitted and must state:
© Z. Sitchin
Reprinted with permission

Return to Article Index

Would you like to use this article on your website, ezine or newsletter?
A free pre-licensed version is available provided that you leave all author information and links intact.
The article must not be edited but used "as is".

NOTE: The code will not include the Amazon links

Click here to get the HTML for this article.
Simply copy and paste into your page and it is ready to go.
 


 
Unless otherwise noted all content
Copyright © 2005-2007 HonestInformation.Com All rights Reserved
All Information Presented Here Is True & Accurate To The Best Of My Ability
 

Back to Top  §  Home

Become a Web Host