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| Of the Falseness of the History Which Allots Many Thousand Years to the World’s Past. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter 10.—Of the Falseness of
the History Which Allots Many Thousand Years to the World’s
Past.
Let us, then, omit the conjectures
of men who know not what they say, when they speak of the nature
and origin of the human race. For some hold the same opinion
regarding men that they hold regarding the world itself, that they
have always been. Thus Apuleius says when he is describing our
race, “Individually they are mortal, but collectively, and as a
race, they are immortal.”536 And when they are asked, how, if
the human race has always been, they vindicate the truth of their
history, which narrates who were the inventors, and what they
invented, and who first instituted the liberal studies and the
other arts, and who first inhabited this or that region, and this
or that island? they reply,537
537 Augustin no doubt refers to the
interesting account given by Critias, near the beginning of the
Timæus, of the conversation of Solon with the Egyptian
priests. | that most, if not all lands, were
so desolated at intervals by fire and flood, that men were greatly
reduced in numbers, and from these, again, the population was
restored to its former numbers, and that thus there was at
intervals a new beginning made, and though those things which had
been interrupted and checked by the severe devastations were only
renewed, yet they seemed to be originated then; but that man could
not exist at all save as produced by man. But they say what they
think, not what they know.
They are deceived, too, by those
highly mendacious documents which profess to give the history of
many thousand years, though, reckoning by the sacred writings, we
find that not 6000 years have yet passed.538
538 Augustin here follows the
chronology of Eusebius, who reckons 5611 years from the Creation to
the taking of Rome by the Goths; adopting the Septuagint version of
the Patriarchal ages. | And, not to spend many words in
exposing the baselessness of these documents, in which so many
thousands of years are accounted for, nor in proving that their
authorities are totally inadequate, let me cite only that letter
which Alexander the Great wrote to his mother Olympias,539 giving her
the narrative he had from an Egyptian priest, which he had
extracted from their sacred archives, and which gave an account of
kingdoms mentioned also by the Greek historians. In this letter
of Alexander’s a term of upwards of 5000 years is assigned to the
kingdom of Assyria; while in the Greek history only 1300 years are
reckoned from the reign of Bel himself, whom both Greek and
Egyptian agree in counting the first king of Assyria. Then to the
empire of the Persians and Macedonians this Egyptian assigned more
than 8000 years, counting to the time of Alexander, to whom he was
speaking; while among the Greeks, 485 years are assigned to the
Macedonians down to the death of Alexander, and to the Persians 233
years, reckoning to the termination of his conquests. Thus these
give a much smaller number of years than the Egyptians; and indeed,
though multiplied three times, the Greek chronology would still be
shorter. For the Egyptians are said to have formerly reckoned
only four months to their year;540
540 It is not apparent to what
Augustin refers. The Arcadians, according to Macrobius
(Saturn. i. 7), divided their year into three months, and
the Egyptians divided theirs into three seasons: each of these
seasons having four months, it is possible that Augustin may have
referred to this. See Wilkinson’s excursus on the Egyptian
year, in Rawlinson’s Herod. Book ii. | so that one year, according to the
fuller and truer computation now in use among them as well as among
ourselves, would comprehend three of their old years. But not
even thus, as I said, does the Greek history correspond with the
Egyptian in its chronology. And therefore the former must receive
the greater credit, because it does not exceed the true account of
the duration of the world as it is given by our documents, which
are truly sacred. Further, if this letter of Alexander, which has
become so famous, differs widely in this matter of chronology from
the probable credible account, how much less can we believe these
documents which, though full of fabu
lous and fictitious
antiquities, they would fain oppose to the authority of our
well-known and divine books, which predicted that the whole world
would believe them, and which the whole world accordingly has
believed; which proved, too, that it had truly narrated past events
by its prediction of future events, which have so exactly come to
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