and after the last Ice Age, which drew the series of highly accurate and

  technically advanced world maps reviewed in Part I? And might not that

  same hand have left its ghostly fingerprints on another body of universal

  myths? those concerning the death and resurrection of gods, and great

  trees around which the earth and heavens turn, and whirlpools, and

  churns, and drills, and other similar revolving, grinding contrivances?

  According to Santillana and von Dechend, all such images refer to

  celestial events5 and do so, furthermore, in the refined technical language

  of an archaic but ‘immensely sophisticated’ astronomical and

  mathematical science:6 ‘This language ignores local beliefs and cults. It

  4 Hamlet’s Mill, p. 7.

  5 Ibid.; Death of Gods in Ancient Egypt.

  6 Hamlet’s Mill, p. 65.

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  concentrates on numbers, motions, measures, overall frames, schemas—

  on the structure of numbers, on geometry.’7

  Where could such a language have come from? Hamlet’s Mill is a

  labyrinth of brilliant but deliberately evasive scholarship, and offers us no

  straightforward answer to this question. Here and there, however, almost

  with embarrassment, inconclusive hints are dropped. For example, at one

  point the authors say that the scientific language or ‘code’ they believe

  they have identified is of ‘awe-inspiring antiquity’.8 On another occasion

  they pin down the depth of this antiquity more precisely to a period at

  least ‘6000 years before Virgil’9—in other words 8000 years ago or more.

  What civilization known to history could have developed and made use

  of a sophisticated technical language more than 8000 years ago? The

  honest answer to this question is ‘none’, followed by a frank admission

  that what is being conjectured is nothing less than a forgotten episode of

  high technological culture in prehistoric times. Once again, Santillana and

  von Dechend are elusive when it comes to the crunch, speaking only of

  the legacy we all owe to ‘some almost unbelievable ancestor civilization’

  that ‘first dared to understand the world as created according to number,

  measure and weight.’10

  The legacy, it is clear, has to do with scientific thinking and complex

  information of a mathematical nature. Because it is so extremely old,

  however, the passage of time has dissipated it:

  When the Greeks came upon the scene the dust of centuries had already settled

  upon the remains of this great world-wide archaic construction. Yet something of

  it survived in traditional rites, in myths and fairy-tales no longer understood ...

  These are tantalising fragments of a lost whole. They make one think of those

  ‘mist landscapes’ of which Chinese painters are masters, which show here a rock,

  here a gable, there the tip of a tree, and leave the rest to imagination. Even when

  the code shall have yielded, when the techniques shall be known, we cannot

  expect to gauge the thought of these remote ancestors of ours, wrapped as it is in

  its symbols, since the creating, ordering minds that devised the symbols have

  vanished forever.’11

  What we have here, therefore, are two distinguished professors of the

  History of Science, from esteemed universities on both sides of the

  Atlantic, claiming to have discovered the remnants of a coded scientific

  language many thousands of years older than the oldest human

  civilizations identified by scholarship. Moreover, though generally

  cautious, Santillana and von Dechend also claim to have ‘broken part of

  that code’.12

  This is an extraordinary statement for two serious academics to have

  7 Ibid., p. 345.

  8 Ibid., p. 418.

  9 Ibid., p. 245.

  10 Ibid., p. 132.

  11 Ibid., pp. 4-5,348.

  12 Ibid., p. 5.

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  made.

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  Chapter 30

  The Cosmic Tree and the Mill of the Gods

  In their brilliant and far-reaching study Hamlet’s Mill, Professors de

  Santillana and von Dechend present a formidable array of mythical and

  iconographic evidence to demonstrate the existence of a curious

  phenomenon. For some inexplicable reason, and at some unknown date,

  it seems that certain archaic myths from all over the world were ‘coopted’ (no other word will really do) to serve as vehicles for a body of

  complex technical data concerning the precession of the equinoxes. The

  importance of this astonishing thesis, as one leading authority on ancient

  measurement has pointed out, is that it has fired the first salvo in what

  may prove to be ‘a Copernican revolution in current conceptions of the

  development of human culture.’1

  Hamlet’s Mill was published in 1969, more than a quarter of a century

  ago, so the revolution has been a long time coming. During this period,

  however, the book has been neither widely distributed among the general

  public nor widely understood by scholars of the remote past. This state of

  affairs has not come about because of any inherent problems or

  weaknesses in the work. Instead, in the words of Martin Bernal, professor

  of Government Studies at Cornell University, it has happened because

  ‘few archaeologists, Egyptologists and ancient historians have the

  combination of time, effort and skill necessary to take on the very

  technical arguments of de Santillana.’2

  What those arguments predominantly concern is the recurrent and

  persistent transmission of a ‘precessional message’ in a wide range of

  ancient myths. And, strangely enough, many of the key images and

  symbols that crop up in these myths—notably those that concern a

  ‘derangement of the heavens’—are also to be found embedded in the

  ancient traditions of worldwide cataclysm reviewed in Chapters Twentyfour and Twenty-five.

  In Norse mythology for example, we saw how the wolf Fenrir, whom the

  gods had so carefully chained up, broke his bonds at last and escaped:

  ‘He shook himself and the world trembled. The ash-tree Yggdrasil was

  shaken from its roots to its topmost branches. Mountains crumbled or

  split from top to bottom ... The earth began to lose its shape. Already the

  stars were coming adrift in the sky.’

  In the opinion of de Santillana and von Dechend, this myth mixes the

  1 Livio Catullo Stecchini, ‘Notes on the Relation of Ancient Measures to the Great

  Pyramid’, in Secrets of the Great Pyramid, pp. 381-2.

  2 Martin Bernal, Black Athena: The Afro-asiatic Roots of Classical Civilization, Vintage

  Books, London, 1991, p. 276.

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  familiar theme of catastrophe with the quite separate theme of

  precession. On the one hand we have an earthly disaster on a scale that

  seems to dwarf even the flood of Noah. On the other we hear that

  ominous changes are taking place in the heavens and that the stars,

  which have come adrift in the sky, are ‘dropping into the void.’3

  Such cele
stial imagery, repeated again and again with only relatively

  minor variations in myths from many different parts of the world, belongs

  to a category earmarked in Hamlet’s Mill as ‘not mere storytelling of the

  kind that comes naturally’.4 Moreover the Norse traditions that speak of

  the monstrous wolf Fenrir, and of the shaking of Yggdrasil, go on to

  report the final apocalypse in which the forces of Valhalla issue forth on

  the side of ‘order’ to participate in the terrible last battle of the gods—a

  battle that will end in apocalyptic destruction:

  500 doors and 40 there are

  I ween, in Valhalla’s walls;

  800 fighters through each door fare,

  When to war with the Wolf they go.5

  With a lightness of touch that is almost subliminal, this verse has

  encouraged us to count Valhalla’s fighters, thus momentarily obliging us

  to focus our attention on their total number (540 x 800 = 432,000). This

  total, as we shall see in Chapter Thirty-one is mathematically linked to the

  phenomenon of precession. It is, unlikely to have found its way into

  Norse mythology by accident, especially in a context that has previously

  specified a ‘derangement of the heavens’ severe enough to have caused

  the stars to come adrift from their stations in the sky.

  To understand what is going on here it is essential to grasp the basic

  imagery of the ancient ‘message’ that Santillana and von Dechend claim

  to have stumbled upon. This imagery transforms the luminous dome of

  the celestial sphere into a vast and intricate piece of machinery. And, like

  a millwheel, like a churn, like a whirlpool, like a quern, this machine turns

  and turns and turns endlessly (its motions being calibrated all the time by

  the sun, which rises first in one constellation of the zodiac, then in

  another, and so on all the year round).

  The four key points of the year are the spring and summer equinoxes

  and the winter and summer solstices. At each point, naturally, the sun is

  3 The reader will recall from Chapter Twenty-five how Yggdrasil, the world tree itself, was

  not destroyed and how the progenitors of future humanity managed to shelter within its

  trunk until a new earth emerged from the ruins of the old. How likely is it to be pure

  coincidence that exactly the same strategy was adopted by survivors of the universal

  deluge as described in certain Central American myths? Such links and crossovers in

  myth between the themes of precession and global catastrophe are extremely common.

  4 Hamlet’s Mill, p. 7.

  5 Grimnismol 23, the Poetic Edda, p. 93, cited in Death of Gods in Ancient Egypt, p. 199;

  Hamlet’s Mill, p. 162; Elsa Brita Titchenell, The Masks of Odin, Theosophical University

  Press, Pasadena, 1988, p. 168.

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  seen to rise in a different constellation (thus if the sun rises in Pisces at

  the spring equinox, as it does at present, it must rise in Virgo at the

  autumn equinox, in Gemini at the winter solstice and in Sagittarius at the

  summer solstice). On each of these four occasions for the last 2000 years

  or so, this is exactly what the sun has been doing. As we have seen,

  however, precession of the equinoxes means that the vernal point will

  change in the not so distant future from Pisces to Aquarius. When that

  happens, the three other constellations marking the three key points will

  change as well (from Virgo, Gemini and Sagittarius to Leo, Taurus and

  Scorpius)—almost as though the giant mechanism of heaven has

  ponderously switched gears ...

  Like the axle of a mill, Santillana and von Dechend explain, Yggdrasil

  ‘represents the world axis’ in the archaic scientific language they have

  identified: an axis which extends outwards (for a viewer in the northern

  hemisphere) to the North Pole of the celestial sphere:

  This instinctively suggests a straight, upright post ... but that would be an

  oversimplification. In the mythical context it is best not to think of the axis in

  analytical terms, one line at a time, but to consider it, and the frame to which it is

  connected, as a whole:... As radius automatically calls circle to mind so axis

  should invoke the two determining great circles on the surface of the sphere, the

  equinoctial and solstitial colures.6

  These colures are the imaginary hoops, intersecting at the celestial North

  Pole, which connect the two equinoctial points on the earth’s path around

  the sun (i.e. where it stands on 20 March and 22 September) and the two

  solstitial points (where it stands on 21 June and 21 December). The

  implication, is that: ‘The rotation of the polar axis must not be disjointed

  from the great circles that shift along with it in heaven. The framework is

  thought of as all one with the axis.’7

  Santillana and von Dechend are certain that what confronts us here is

  not a belief but an allegory. They insist that the notion of a spherical

  frame composed of two intersecting hoops suspended from an axis is not

  under any circumstances to be understood as the way in which ancient

  science envisaged the cosmos. Instead it is to be seen as a ‘thought tool’

  designed to focus the minds of people bright enough to crack the code

  upon the hard-to-detect astronomical fact of precession of the equinoxes.

  It is a thought tool that keeps on cropping up, in numerous disguises,

  all over the myths of the ancient world.

  At the mill with slaves

  One example, from Central America (which also provides a further

  illustration of the curious symbolic ‘cross-overs’ between myths of

  6 Hamlet’s Mill, p. 232-3.

  7 Ibid., p. 231.

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  precession and myths of catastrophe), was summarized by Diego De

  Landa in the sixteenth century:

  Among the multitude of gods worshipped by these people [the Maya] were four

  whom they called by the name Bacab. These were, they say, four brothers placed

  by God when he created the world at its four corners to sustain the heavens lest

  they fall. They also say that these Bacabs escaped when the world was destroyed

  by a deluge.8

  It is the opinion of Santillana and von Dechend that the Mayan

  astronomer-priests did not subscribe for a moment to the simple-minded

  notion that the earth was flat with four corners. Instead, they say, the

  image of the four Bacabs is used as a technical allegory intended to shed

  light on the phenomenon of precession of the equinoxes. The Bacabs

  stand, in short, for the system of coordinates of an astrological age. They

  represent the equinoctial and solstitial colures, binding together the four

  constellations in which the sun continues to rise at the spring and

  autumn equinoxes and at the winter and summer solstices for epochs of

  just under 2200 years.

  Of course it is understood that when the gears of heaven change, the

  old age comes crashing down and a new age is born. All this, so far, is

  routine precessional imagery. What stands out, however, is the explicit

  linkage to an earthly disaster—in this case a flood—which the Bacabs

  su
rvive. It may also be relevant that relief carvings at Chichen Itza

  unmistakably represent the Bacabs as being bearded and of European

  appearance.9

  Be that as it may, the Bacab image (linked to a number of badly

  misunderstood references to ‘the four corners of heaven’, ‘the

  quadrangular earth’, and so on) is only one among many that seem to

  have been designed to serve as thought tools for precession. Archetypal

  among these is, of course, the ‘Mill’ of Santillana’s title—Hamlet’s Mill.

  It turns out that the Shakespearean character, ‘whom the poet made

  one of us, the first unhappy intellectual’, conceals a past as a legendary

  being, his features predetermined, preshaped by longstanding myth.10 In

  all his many incarnations, this Hamlet remains strangely himself. The

  original Amlodhi (or sometimes Amleth) as his name was in Icelandic

  legend, ‘shows the same characteristics of melancholy and high intellect.

  He, too, is a son dedicated to avenge his father, a speaker of cryptic but

  inescapable truths, an elusive carrier of Fate who must yield once his

  mission is accomplished ...’11

  In the crude and vivid imagery of the Norse, Amlodhi was identified

  8 Yucatan before and after the Conquest, p. 82.

  9 See, for example, The God-Kings and the Titans, p. 64. It may also be relevant that

  other versions of ‘the Bacabs’ myth tell us that ‘their slightest movement produces an

  earth tremor or even an earthquake’ (Maya History and Religion, p. 346).

  10 Hamlet’s Mill, p. 2.

  11 Ibid.

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  with the ownership of a fabled mill, or quern, which, in its time, ground

  out gold and peace and plenty. In many of the traditions, two giant

  maidens (Fenja and Menja) were indentured to turn this great

  contraption, which could not be budged by any human strength.

  Something went wrong, and the two giantesses were forced to work day

  and night with no rest:

  Forth to the mill bench they were brought,

  To set the grey stone in motion;

  He gave them no rest nor peace,

  Attentive to the creak of the mill.

  Their song was a howl,

  Shattering silence;

  ‘Lower the bin and lighten the stones!’

  Yet he would have them grind more.12