"In the Timaios, ... Plato admitted an ancient ‘genetic’ relationship between Egypt and Greece, in general; and Athens and Sais, the major city at the north-western edge of the Delta, in particular. But, rather implausibly, he claimed priority for Athens. Like some other Greeks, Aischylos and Plato appear to have been offended by the legends of colonization because they put Hellenic culture in an inferior position to that of the Egyptians and Phoenicians, towards whom most Greeks of this time appear to have felt an acute ambivalence. The Egyptians and Phoenicians were despised and feared, but at the same time deeply respected for their antiquity and well-preserved ancient religion and philosophy. The fact that so many Greeks overcame their antipathies and transmitted these ‘traditions [of colonization] so little accommodating to national prejudice’ greatly impressed the 18th-century historian William Mitford, who used it to maintain that ‘for their essential circumstances they seem unquestionable.’ Before Mitford no one questioned the Ancient Model, so there was no need to articulate a defence of it. Such motives of ‘national prejudice’ would help explain Thucydides’ failure to mention these legends, of which he was certainly aware."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Historians from EnglandJews from the United KingdomUniversity of Cambridge alumniUniversity of Cambridge facultyCornell University faculty
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Introduction (p. 22)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Martin_Bernal
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Martin Bernal
Martin Gardiner Bernal (10 March 1937 – 9 June 2013) was a British scholar of modern Chinese political history. He was a Professor of Government and Near Eastern Studies at Cornell University. He is best known for his work Black Athena, a well-known, controversial work which argues that the culture, language, and political structure of Ancient Greece contained substantial influences from Egypt and Syria-Palestine.
40 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Martin Bernal →
Related Quotes
"I...became convinced that anything up to a quarter of the Greek vocabulary could be traced to Semitic origins. This, …"
"I was staggered to discover that what I began to call the ‘Ancient Model’ had not been overthrown until the early 19t…"
"The ‘Ancient Model’ was the conventional view among Greeks in the Classical and Hellenistic ages. According to it, Gr…"
"Most people are surprised to learn that the Aryan Model, which most of us have been brought up to believe, developed …"
"If I am right in urging the overthrow of the Aryan Model and its replacement by the Revised Ancient one, it will be n…"
"Müller urged scholars to study Greek mythology in relation to human culture as a whole, but was adamantly opposed to …"
"This pantheism could be traced back past Spinoza to Bruno and beyond, to the Neo-Platonists and Egypt itself. The fir…"
"Newton had merely tried to demote Egypt in relation to Christianity; he did not try to raise Greece. By the middle of…"
"The paradigm of ‘races’ that were intrinsically unequal in physical and mental endowment was applied to all human stu…"
"The scattered Jewish components of my ancestry would have given nightmares to assessors trying to apply the Nuremberg…"