by Peter » Thu 16 Jan 2014 10:55 am
Claude Schaeffer and the Isaiah disaster
Geoffrey Gammon begins his paper, Bronze Age Destructions in the Near East, published in SIS Review vol. 4:4, with “The extensive work of the eminent French archaeologist Claude Schaeffer, correlating the chronology and stratigraphy of Bronze Age sites in the Near East, led him to conclude that many of the phases of Bronze Age civilisation were ended by catastrophes not caused by man”. Gammon’s table on page 104 showing the stratigraphy of Ugarit on the north Syrian coast showed several major destruction layers. He dated the last, after which the devastated Ugarit site was abandoned, to the end of the Late Bronze Age, because it held Mycenaean and Egyptian 19th Dynasty material. The destruction layer below it apparently contained material contemporary with the Egyptian Amarna period while the next one down held material contemporary with earlier in the Egyptian 18th Dynasty.
Gammon said that Schaffer was less concerned by what had caused the shattering events than with establishing that they had occurred. However, he was apparently satisfied that earthquakes had caused destruction throughout Anatolia, Syria and Palestine on a number of occasions. This investigation conclusion, that is still considered impossible by earthquake experts, effectively ended Schaeffer’s career.
The Book of Isaiah tells of a Schaeffer magnitude catastrophe and of the condition of Judah and its neighbours following it. Just as hardly anyone thought that Schaeffer’s investigation conclusion was credible, hardly any reader of the Book of Isaiah thinks that it is credible that the condition of Judah and its neighbours was as described by Isaiah; the consensus view is that the reported destruction has to be prophetical not true. However, what Isaiah described was, I believe, a genuine disaster in the true meaning of the word namely “destruction by a star”.
It is not surprising that a Schaeffer style catastrophe cannot be explained by modern earth scientists who cannot conceive of a world encompassing disaster. However, we know that Velikovsky, in Worlds in Collision, wrote about a world encompassing catastrophe at the time of the Exodus that, according to Jewish tradition, brought the 6th World Age to an end. I believe that the Exodus catastrophe saw the demise of Early Bronze Age III at which time, according to Schaeffer, there was destruction seen throughout Western Asia.
In his sections about world ages and sun ages in chapter 2 of Worlds in Collision, Velikovsky said that the Chinese maintain that 10 world ages had perished from the beginning of the world until Confucius and, additionally, that throughout the world there was a tradition that there was a new sun in the sky at the beginning of every new age. In my World Ages paper, published in SIS Workshop 2011:1, I wrote about the first 6 world ages that I believe can be equated with the Biblical 6 days of creation. After surviving the Exodus catastrophe Moses promised his people that the 7th day of creation was a day of rest, in other words there would be no further such world encompassing catastrophes, but he was wrong. Despite Lucifer/Venus having been cast down and forced into an orbit between the Earth and the Sun, the world, according to the Chinese, saw a 4 further world ages perish before the time of Confucius with each successor age having a new sun; Confucius is generally thought to have been born during the 7th century BC.
As we have quite a number of ancient reports about the Sun setting where it now rises and rising where it now sets and have records of climate change in Europe that implies reversals in the flow of the Gulf Stream, I am convinced that the world has experienced 4 inversions since the Exodus catastrophe that Velikovsky dated to around 1,450 BC. Peter Warlow, in his book The Reversing Earth, has explained how the world could have been inverted if subjected to sufficient external force and when inverted would experience a reversal in ocean currents while Wal Thornhill has explained how electromagnetic forces would be generated between 2 charged planets if they came close to one another. Consequently, an inversion cannot be considered inconceivable to science.
In his chapter entitled Klimasturz in Earth in Upheaval, Velikovsky reported that a German archaeologist called Gustaf Kossinna dated a severe Scandinavian climatic plunge “to about the year 700 BC and stressed that it took place with catastrophic suddenness”. Velikovsky thought that the climate change could be attributed to the Mars axis shift that he dated to the funeral of Ahaz of Judah and that its reversal could be attributed to the axis shift during the during the reign of Hezekiah when the Bible reports that the clock come back by the amount it went forward earlier. However, while an axis shift such as is reported to have occurred at the time of the funeral of king Ahaz must have caused climate change in Europe I cannot believe that it could have caused the reversal in prevailing climate that is known to have occurred at the start of the Sub-boreal climate phase. I believe that a Warlow inversion must have been responsible for the climate change and that this inversion must be dated to around 700 BC with its reversal dated a Venus cycle of around 52 years later.
I believe that the first 35 chapters of the Book of Isaiah tell of the damage suffered during the earlier of these 2 inversions and of the condition of the Middle East after it. The first verse of chapter 24 of the Book of Isaiah that says “the Lord maketh the earth empty and maketh it a waste and turneth it upside-down” supports my suggestion that the earth experienced an inversion late in the life of Isaiah that caused devastation throughout the Near East and even worse damage elsewhere; Emmet Sweeney has reported that three quarters of the population of Ireland died at this time.
At the beginning of the Book of Isaiah verse 7 of chapter 1 says “your country is desolate your cities are burned by fire” and verse 25 of chapter 5 says “therefore is the anger of the Lord kindled against his people and he has stretched forth his hand against them and has smitten them; and the hills did tremble”. Clearly Judah suffered extreme damage when “visited by the Lord of Hosts with thunder, and with earthquakes, and great noise, with storm and tempest, and the flame of devouring fire” (Isaiah 29:6) and this is really what the book is about. I believe that verse 7 of chapter 1 tells of the condition of Judah after the catastrophe that I date to the 22nd year of Manasseh because of the Jewish tradition that he was carried back Jerusalem by a great wind after being held as a hostage by the Assyrians; at this time Assyria was the dominant power ruling Babylon as well as Syria and Palestine through client kings. A great wind would be experienced during an inversion as well as earthquakes and serious flooding.
The Bible does not tell us much about the reign of Manasseh apart from Kings 2 saying he was made king as a 12 year old and ruled for 55 years, but did evil in the sight of the Lord and provoked him to great anger. Apparently, according to Kings 2, 21:13, the Lord spoke by his servants the prophets warning Manasseh of the wrath of the Lord saying "I will wipe Jerusalem as a man wipeth a dish, wiping it and turning it upside-down". The mention of prophets saying that Manasseh provoked the Lord’s anger suggests to me that Isaiah actually told Manasseh that he was responsible for the catastrophe which probably explains, why according to Jewish tradition, Manasseh executed Isaiah.
In addition to the report about the world being turned upside down there are other clear inversion features mentioned in the Book of Isaiah. A mighty wind would be experienced during an inversion and sea levels in the south of the Mediterranean would have fallen as water was drawn to the north (see 11:15). This would have drained the 7 branches of the Nile leaving only a modest rate of flow. The inversion would have seen Babylon flooded by the waters of the Persian Gulf that were drawn to the north and it would have taken a long time for the waters to drain away (14:23). Most of the people living in Lower Mesopotamia must have died leaving the land virtually uninhabited. The Assyrian king, Esarhaddon, said, when writing about Babylon in his annals, that "before my time there befell evil days in Sumer and Akkad; anger sized the Lord of Gods; Marduk poured floods into the city and made it a ruin heap.” Although not reported by Isaiah the islands and the northern coast of the Mediterranean suffered devastating flooding as well as Babylon; the Greeks called this the Flood of Deukalion after the king of Crete at the time of the inversion and of the Trojan war.