Professor Carl Schuchhardt
Prussian Academy of Sciences, Berlin
A hundred years ago, when the study of comparative
languages was still at an immature stage of development, it was possible to
give currency to the idea that central Asia was the original home of the Indo-Germanic
Race. This conjecture is no longer tenable. Germanic archaeology has disproved
the Asiatic thesis, and has clearly established the influence of currents from
middle and northern Europe, especially in Greece. Two streams of immigration
flowed towards that land. The first set in about 1,800 B.C., and is called the
Achaean stream, because it brought Homer's Achaeans into Greece, which until
that time had been the land of the Pelasgians. The second stream brought the
Dorians, about 1,200 B.C., and hence is called the Dorian stream.
The
Achaean current must have come from the north, because it brought the megaron
house of northern Germany, the influence of which we see in the palaces of
Troy, Tiryns, and Mycenae. Illyrians must have been brought along on that
stream, for not only the language of old Greece but also the forms of art and
the customs show their influence. The spiral decoration so often found on
Mycenaean ornaments of gold had already reached a high development in Illyria
(Butmir in Bosnia). The deep shafts of the graves and the custom of decking the
bodies in golden masks, breastplates, and gauntlets were also Illyrian. These
peculiarities remained in the highlands on Lake Ochrida and also near Graz,
Styria, as late as the sixth century B.C.
Perhaps
the Illyrians who were borne along in the stream of immigration formed a link
between the Northerners and the Pelasgians, because soon the Northerners took
on in many ways the customs of the Folk near the Mediterranean Sea. The death
masks show that they came with beards. But after a hundred, or a hundred and
fifty, years the gravestones show them all smooth shaven. Moreover they gave up
the simple shaft graves and took to the great domed graves which belong to the
Iberian Pelasgian culture. To honour the dead man with so proud a dwelling was
a sign of a turning to the Mediterranean faith in The Beyond, a faith which saw
the soul as living on and knowing the respect shown to it. At the graves
sacrifices were made to the soul, which was supposed to be enthroned on a high
stone above the grave.
Thus
harmony had been brought about between the ancient Folk in the Mediterranean
Sea area and the new lords from the North. But the second stream of immigration
broke in upon this. Whence the Dorians came we do not quite know, but the
impression which they made was far more purely Nordic than that of the Achaeans
in their mingling with the Illyrians. The art of painting with joy in Nature
was now no more; the simple technical style of the so called geometrical
culture had had its day. The time for belief in the soul had gone by; the
departed was a sad shadow in the dark underworld. Homer stands in the midst of
the second northern period. As he describes the graves of Patroklus and Hector,
they were like the burial mounds in middle and northern Europe at that time.
Over a small hole a heavy laver of stones was placed and covered with earth.
Homer is also familiar with the custom of building the walls of castles and
camps with posts. As he describes the wall of the naval camp before Troy, it
was like those we have found in the fortresses of Lausitz. The Trojans had to
force out the posts --- the Stelai problhtej -- in order to make the wall fall
down.
Bat
as the first northern period had reached a length of 600 years, so the second
lasted no longer. By 600 B.C. much of the old Mediterranean culture had again
grown up out of the ancient soil, again art had turned to the living forms of
plants, animals, and human beings. The mysteries of Eleusis and Samothrace were
laid bare and made way for the old belief in the soul. The lofty stone was
again erected at the grave, and on it beautiful sculptures showed how those
left behind visited the grave of the departed soul to comfort it and bring
gifts.
Thus
in its turn classical Greece is an equal fusion of the clear northern mind and
the imagination of the warm south.
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