* The Achaeans built 1186 ships for their attack
on Troy, they could have travelled the short distance
overland far quicker and cheaper if Troy really had
been in the Turkish setting.
* Odysseus claimed to have got home by travelling
as a passenger on a ship going from Crete to Sidon (present
day Saïda in Lebanon), but that is the opposite
direction he needed to go in the Mediterranean
setting.
* Agamemnon tells us it took him a full month to
sail from his kingdom Argos to Ithaca, we know the
trip takes less than 24 hours in the Mediterranean
setting.
* The mythical location for Troy in Turkey is far
too small to accommodate the invading army of about
100,000 men and the long pursuits in horse-drawn
chariots.
* The extensively travelled Greek geographer
Strabo who lived 2000 years ago (1200 years after the
Trojan War) believed that some of the ports of call
in the Odyssey should be found in the Atlantic
because of the mention of tides that do not really
exist in the Mediterranean.
Well, what really baked my noodle was the part
about the rivers. Language and how it morphs over
time is a particular interest of mine and Wilkens
showed that he knew his stuff. The plains near
Cambridge and the Gog Magog Hills is a place where
more than 12 rivers mentioned in the Iliad can still
be recognised by name even today.
Iman Wilkens is not the only one who has suspected
that there was something fishy about locating Troy in
Turkey. The modern day scholar Professor Sir Moses
Finley, emeritus of Ancient History at the University
of Cambridge (Fellow of British Academy) after years
of study and writing countless renowned books on
Greek history, also opined that the weight of
evidence made it clear that Troy and the Trojan War
did not occur in Greece and Turkey, but some where
else. Sir Moses said...
"There has come to be an abundance of
empirical evidence that the world Homer wrote
about did exist.
"The opinions of later Greeks and 19th
Century scholars are irrelevant. We are
confronted with this paradox that the more we
know, the worse off we are. Homer's Trojan War
must be evicted from the history of the Greek
Bronze Age..."
In an even older work "Troje lag in
Engeland: Odysseus landde in Zeeland" (translated:
Troy lay in the United Kingdom: Odysseus landed
in the Netherlands) Ernst Gideon followed the
work of the 18th and 19th century Belgium authors De
Grave and Cailleux, who took pains to show that Troy
was located in England and that the Odyssey took
place in the Atlantic Ocean and the English Channel.
Like Iman Wilkens, Ernst Gideon realized that the
ocean Homer wrote about is wide, wild and dangerous,
never smooth and sunny, the color was gray and never
blue, and such an ocean could not have been the
Mediterranean sea.
In short, the weight of the EVIDENCE makes it
quite clear that Troy and the Trojan War did not
occur in Greece and Turkey (as we know it today), but
some where else.........................................................
Iman Wilkens discusses the Celts
and their culture as well.
Celtic vernacular literature, including myths,
stories and poems, in its written form, dates mainly
from the Middle Ages. It is based on oral
transmission that goes far beyond the Christian Era.
It is very difficult to get a clear picture of the
pre-Christian Celts from the transmitted texts, not
only because of the typical mixture of myth and
reality, and the lapse of time, but also because the
Roman empire sought to stamp it out starting with
Caesar and continuing with the Roman church under the
influence of Christianity, daughter of Judaism.
However, studying what is available closely, one
gets the impression of a dynamic, somewhat
undisciplined people. The Celts were proud,
imaginative, artistic, lovers of freedom and
adventure, eloquence, poetry, and arts. You can
always discern the Celtic influence by the great
artistic talents of these peoples.
The Celts were VERY suspicious of any kind of
centralized "authority," and this is, in
the end, what brought about their downfall. They
could not stand against the hierarchical war machine
of the Roman empire. In a sense, you could almost say
that this is how Hitler nearly conquered Europe, most
especially France. Gauls take the principles of
liberty and equality VERY seriously - right down to
the common man on the street who in no way considers
himself inferior to the Prime Minister.
One of the principal historians of the Roman era,
Julius Caesar, tells us that the Celts were ruled by
the Druids. The druids "held all knowledge."
The Druids were charged with ALL intellectual
activities, and were not restricted to religion, per
se, which suggests to us that "religion"
and "knowledge" in a more or less
scientific approach, were considered essential to one
another - symbiotic.
It is later writers who began to vilify the Celts
by accusing them of the usual things that people get
accused of when someone wants to demonize them: human
sacrifice, homosexuality, and so on. Most of that
nonsense goes back to Posidonius, who has been quoted
as an "authority" by every other "authority"
on the Celts since. Unfortunately, when one checks
Posidonius, one finds that he really didn't have a
clue and was probably making stuff up to fulfill an
agenda.
The lack of written texts by the Celts has been
the greatest problem for historians and students of
the Celts. A lot of ideas are "supposed" or
ancient sources with agendas have been relied on, and
some of them even propose that there was a "taboo"
by the Celts on putting things into writing.
Iman Wilkens idea of why the Celts didn't write
things down is one of the flaws of the book. He
suggests that this was how the Druids kept their
power.
But, if we look at what Caesar said was that the
reason for the ban on writing, we find that it was
really quite logical. The Druids were concerned that
their pupils should not neglect the training of their
memories, i.e. the Frontal Cortex, by relying on
written texts.
It is worth noting that, in the nineteenth century,
it was observed that the illiterate Yugoslav bards,
who were able to recite interminable poems, actually
lost their ability to memorize once they had learned
to rely on reading and writing.
So, it seems that the Druids were actually
concerned more about the accurate transmission of
their knowledge than "holding power."
Although the Druids prohibited certain things from
being written down, it's clear that they DID write.
Celtic writings in Ogamic script have been found on
many ancient stones. Caesar tells us that the Celts
were using the Greek alphabet when the Romans arrived
in Gaul in the first century BC.
The destruction of Celtic culture was so complete
that we know very little about their religion. We do
know that they celebrated their "rites" in
forests and by lakes without erecting any covered
temples or statues of divinities. Tacitus tells us:
"They do not think it in keeping with the
divine majesty to confine gods within walls, or
to portray them in the likeness of any human
countenance. Their holy places are woods and
groves and they apply the names of deities to
that hidden presence which is seen only by the
eyes of reverence."
Plato had doubts about the Greek origins of Homer's
work because not only do the physical descriptions in
his poems not correspond to the Greek world, but also
the Homeric philosophy is very different from the
mainstream Greek philosophy we know about today.
According to Homer, the philosophy of the ancient
world was that there was a third element that linked
opposing elements. Between the body and the soul,
there is the spirit. Between life and death there is
the transformation that is possible to the individual,
between father and mother there is the child who
takes the characteristics of both father and mother,
and between good and evil there is the SPECIFIC
SITUATION that determines which is which and what
ought to be done.
In other words, there are three simultaneous
determinants in any situation that make it impossible
to say that any list of things is "good" or
"evil" intrinsically, and that the true
determinant is the situation.
In any event, the symbol of this philosophy is the
triskele, representing three waves joined together.
The simultaneous existence of the third element
does not mean that the notion of "good" and
"evil" did not exist or was not reflected
in the Celtic law. There is no way to make "black
or white" laws that must be followed by rote. A
people must have wisdom to discern each situation and
apply justice, not blindly, but with eyes wide open
to the realities of the world and the situation. What
was clear was that it was understood that nothing
could be "cut and dried" in terms of law,
that each situation was unique and the circumstances
had to be carefully weighed.
Aristotle considered Gaul to be the "teacher"
of Greece and the Druids to be the "inventors of
philosophy." The Greeks also considered the
Druids to be the world's greatest scholars, and whose
mathematical knowledge was the source of Pythagoras'
information.
What we can discern from Wilken's work is that
there was an ancient and noble civilization
associated with the Megaliths that no longer exists
and even its high knowledge and nuanced philosophy
has been forgotten - except for the Iliad and Odyssey.
It is a fact that the Earth is literally blanketed
with megaliths from some ancient civilization. Tens
of thousands of them! There are variations in
placement and style, but the thing they all have in
common is their incredible size and their undeniable
antiquity. It is now understood by the experts that
the megalithic structures demanded complex
architectural planning, and they propose that it was
the labor of tens of thousands of men working for
centuries.
No one has ever made a systematic count of the
megaliths, but the estimate goes beyond 50,000. It is
also admitted that this figure represents only a
fraction, since many have been destroyed not only by
the forces of nature, but also by the wanton
destruction of man.
Even though there are megalithic monuments in
locations around the world, there is nothing anywhere
else like there is in Europe. The megaliths of Europe
form an "enormous blanket of stone." Great
mounds of green turf or gleaming white quartz pebbles
formerly covered many of them. The megalithic mania
of ancient Europe is:
"Unparalleled indeed in human history.
For there has never been anything like this rage,
almost mania, for megalith building, except
perhaps during the centuries after AD 1000 when
much the same part of Europe was covered with
what a monk of the time called a 'white mantle of
churches.' [...]
"The megaliths, then, were raised by some
of the earliest Europeans. The reason that this
simple fact took so long to be accepted was the
peculiar inferiority complex which western
Europeans had about their past. Their religion,
their laws, their cultural heritage, their very
numerals, all come from the East. The inhabitants,
before civilisation came flooding in from the
Mediterranean, were illiterate; they kept no
records, they built no cities. It was easy to
assume that they were simply bands of howling
half-naked savages who painted their bodies, put
bear-grease on their hair and ate their cousins."
(Reader's Digest, The World's Last Mysteries,
1977.)
The interesting thing about the megalith builders
is that the peoples who were able to perform these
utterly amazing feats of engineering are still, in
most circles, considered to be barbarians because
they did not build cities, engage in agriculture,
develop the wheel, or writing. Yet, they did
something that clearly cannot be, and was not, done
by "civilized" peoples who did all of those
"civilized" things. They had some sort of
"power" that we cannot replicate and do not
understand.
What is also found in the same areas are many
sculptures of female goddesses found in the most
ancient archaeological levels.
According to the experts, the discernible idea of
the religion of the goddess is that of an infinite
bounty of the Great Mother. It is proposed that such
peoples didn't engage in agriculture because the idea
of "owning land" may have been abhorrent to
them. The idea of "forcing" the earth to
yield, rather than accepting the natural abundance
the Goddess provided was simply not a part of their
philosophy. Their Goddess was a Star Being, and she
was worshipped in outdoor Temples that were laid out
along Celestial Archetypes.
Iman Wilkens restores to us a fragment of True
European History and perhaps it is time for us to
turn our attention to trying to learn more about it
in the proper context. After all, Judao-Christianity
has brought the world to the verge of total
destruction in less than 2000 years. The Celtic
cultures existed for many, many thousands of years,
accomplishing great feats of engineering and
producing a culture that was pre-eminent throughout
the world until they were destroyed by the
monotheistic infection - due mainly to the fact that
they did not accept a single, monolithic authority.
Iman Wilkens book is filled with rich details and
piles of supporting evidence that includes ancient
historic writings, accurate geographic and
topographic description matching, detailed maps,
countless archaeological finds, historic place name
matching, cultural and linguistic evidence.
This book is a MUST read for everyone, most
particularly people of European and Mediterranean
heritage.