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Extreme Antiquity of Pictorial Notation
Antiquity of the Art of Pictorial Writing; Its general use amongst the
Oriental Nations; its connection with Idolatry; the multiplicity of its Symbols,
and its peculiarities as a System of communicating Ideas. Its advance, in the
progress of Nations, into the Hieroglyphic, the Phonetic, and the Alphabetical
Mode. Consideration of the Egyptian Systems of Hieroglyphics.
Picture writing was the earliest form of the notation of ideas adopted by
mankind. There can be little question that it was practised in the primitive
ages, and that it preceded all attempts both at hieroglyphic and alphabetic
writing. It is impossible to think of a time when man had not the faculty and
disposition to draw a figure. The very power of imitation, implanted in the
mind, implies it. The first track of an animal on the sand, the very shadow of a
tree on the plain, would suggest it. The figure of an animal would be the symbol
for the animal; and that of a man, for a man. A bow or a spear drawn in the hand
of the latter would be the natural symbol for an act. Thus actual objects, and
actual deeds, past or future, would at once be symbolized. Was man ever in a
condition not to accomplish this? Even supposing that he was created a
barbarian, and not a civilized or industrial being, which would be adverse to
all sacred authority, he would not long wait to compass this simple attainment.
Here, then, is the first element of transmitting thought. A bow and arrow, a
spear and club, a sword and javelin, were no sooner made than they were employed
as symbols of acts: for next to action itself, is the desire of perpetuating the
remembrance of the act, however rudely or imperfectly it may be done.
All arts and inventions are but the monuments of pre-existing thought. They
embody, in wood, iron, or other materials, forms which had been pre-conceived,
and thus depict the involutions and inventions of the mind. There is nothing new
in this general principle of depicting objects, whether it be done by pigments,
or represented in the solid realities of wood or stone. The mind itself, so far
as related to its natural powers, was as fully endowed with the power of
induction and analogy in the first, as in the last ages; and those are quite
mistaken, who, with respect to the common arts and wants of life, suppose that
the earlier ages were lacking in ingenuity. Industrial labors were performed
with far more perfection at an early day than is generally supposed, as all must
admit who have searched into the history and antiquity of cutting gems, of
mosaics, pottery, metallurgy, and other early-noticed arts. How far
representations by pictures and figures kept pace with inventions, we are left
in a great measure to infer. We only perceive that some of the elements of a
pictorial system were very ancient. Idolatry itself had its rise in this system,
and it is only from the denunciations on this head, contained in the Scriptures,
that we are historically apprized of the early existence of the art, both in its
form of images and of symbolic devices.
One of the most obvious devices of the primitive ages, in picture-writing, would
appear to have been to leave a personal device or mark, to stand as the sign of
a name; and hence we see that seals and "signets" were used long before letters.1
To mark public transactions, heaps of stones were erected. This was probably the
type and origin of the rage for pyramids, to which the early nations so long
directed their efforts, and by which they sought to perpetuate their fame and
the memory of their power. It is owing, indeed, to this trait of raising massive
structures of earth and stone, towering to the skies, that we owe the
preservation of our best and most ancient evidences of the pictorial,
hieroglyphic, and inscriptive arts. Traces of these arts are found on the oldest
existing monuments in the world. Outlines of animals, and things rudely drawn,
are yet to be seen on the bricks of Babylon. The valley of the Nile is replete
with evidences of the more advanced stages of this art, in which the simple
pictorial gave way to the true hieroglyphic, and finally to the phonetic. Among
the most ancient forms of inscription, which are now proved to have been
provided with an alphabetic key, the ancient arrow-headed character of Persia
may be adduced. German research has mastered, so far as the subject permits, the
inscriptions of the Mokah-Wadey, near Mount Sinai. Important advances have been
made in the recovery of the Etruscan language and alphabet. The gradation
between a heap of stones, a barrow, a mound, a teocalli, and a pyramid, are not
more marked as connected links in the rise of architecture, than are a
representative figure, an ideographic symbol, a phonetic sign, and an
alphabetical symbol, in the onward train of letters.
But however symbols and figures may have connected their existence with the
early monuments of mankind, there is no branch of the representative or
pictorial art in which they led to such deplorable moral results, as in the form
and expression which these figures anciently gave to idolatry. If letters may be
called the language of Christianity, picture writing is emphatically the
language of idolatry. It filled the human mind with gross material objects of
veneration. It put the shadow for the substance; and having given distinct form
to the idea of a deity, the devotee was not long in attributing to the form all
power and honor that pertained to the deity itself. Every class of nature put in
its claims as the representative of God; and it is no wonder that a calf, a
plant, an insect, a bird, and other images were employed. Two of the most
ancient forms of this kind are found in the following representations of Baal,
and the Egyptian Fly-God, both of which are taken from ancient coins. (See Plate
66, Figures 3 and 5.)
Man had but just emerged from the hands of his Creator he had scarcely passed
from his early pastoral seats, when he began to materialize the divine idea.
What he could not see, eye to eye, he did not long believe. Symbols and images
were substituted, and filled the Pagan world. All knowledge of the true God was
forgotten. And God found himself in a position requiring a new revelation of
himself to men. Is there any better proof that idolatry had filled the world and
corrupted the race? In this declension what agent can we name so powerful in its
influences as the rude symbols and images of antiquity? That the art thus
became, very early, one of the chief means of propagating idolatry, we may infer
from the solemn prohibition of it in the decalogue. The early employments and
amusements of mankind, perhaps the very circumstances of the fine climate, soil,
and spontaneous productions of the latitudes of the human family, led them to
the adoption of gross material habits of thinking. Accustomed only to see and
hear the great phenomena of the elemental world, they pictured out the fancied
forms of the supernatural power under a thousand shapes. Infinity itself was
soon the only limit to those fanciful creations. Every class of priests and
magii formed a god of its own. Nor were they limited to gods of a general
character.
Not satisfied with fixing the exhibition of divine power in the image of an ox,
an ibis, or a cat, the oriental nations at once assigned to its operations a
locality; and thus every nation and every country was furnished with a local
god, and each country with its own god. How absorbing, degrading, and mentally
besotting this idea became how completely it took away from the Creator the
ascription of power to himself, while it placed it in material or brutal
objects, and thus destroyed the responsibility of man to his Maker, the
tremendous denunciations of Sinai may satisfactorily serve to explain. We allude
to this passage in the Pentateuch, as the only authentic historical proof of so
early a date. But it is corroborated by the universality of the practice, as
proved by ancient monuments, and as traced among barbarous tribes, at the
present day. If all Asia and all Africa were overrun by it, so was all America
when first discovered. And in every place where the art exists, between the
Arctic and Antarctic poles, we see it employed agreeably to the ancient notions;
not to sustain and uphold, but to undermine and destroy the true idea of the
Divinity. It is thus perceived, that the mode of communicating ideas, by the use
of symbols of some sort, and with a more or less degree of perfection, was an
early and a common trait of the human race. Alphabetic characters, it is
thought, were known in Asia about 3317 years before the discovery of America. We
must assign much of the prior era of the world to picture writing and
hieroglyphics. It is proposed to inquire how far, and to what extent, the
pictographic art was known to, or practised by, the American tribes.
Idle, indeed, would be the attempt, at this day, to look for the origin of the
American race in any other generic quarter than the eastern continent. When they
came hither? Time they came? and why they came? have been vainly inquired. But
we may, it is conceived, employ the pictorial art to aid in denoting
internationalism. If we take the invention of letters, as the era of their
departure from the East, either with its Egyptian or Grecian date, the Ked Man
came hither before this era, or, at least, before his ancestors were
participants in the knowledge. Letters were used about 1822 to 2000 years before
the Christian era. As he brought no such knowledge, it is inferable that he
departed before that era. But he had the pictorial system he could inscribe
figures and devices, in various ways, and this at least, is known, that he early
developed the art in the Aztec race, and carried it to its utmost perfection.
In what respects, we may inquire, was this ancient Toltecan art superior to, or
different from, the pictography of the United States tribes? Both are
ideographic. Both are mnemonic to a large extent. Both appeal strongly to the
power of the association of ideas by symbols. Both require interpretation by the
system of ideography. Neither presents a method for the preservation of sounds.
Proper names of men and animals are preserved by representative figures and
drawings, and may be recalled so long as the language itself is not extinct.
With respect to the North American pictography, it may be inquired, is it
universal, or confined to particular tribes?
What is the character of these devices, compared with analogous inscriptions,
among the Mongolian and the wild Tartar, and the Nomadic races of Asia, and
other parts of the globe? Are they mere representative symbols, or
hieroglyphics? Is there more than one kind of ideographic device, or do the
Indian priests and the common people use the same? Are there any characters that
may be deemed hieratic? If the native jossakeeds, or medicine-men, use a more
mystical method, in recording their songs, or arts, how is this denoted?
Finally, is there sufficient fixity and uniformity in the application and
connection of the symbols, among our forest tribes, to permit the system to be
explained?
It will be evident, from these suggestions, that a new, and hitherto untrodden
field of inquiry, with respect to these tribes, is hereby opened. The early
history of the race is such a blank we are, in truth, so completely at a loss,
for anything of a satisfactory character reaching beyond the close of the 15th
century, that it behooves us, in the spirit of cautious research, to scrutinize
every possible source of information. The oblivion of centuries rests upon this
branch of the human family. By their physical traits they are clearly identified
with some of the ancient leading stocks of Asia. But they appear to have broken
off, and found their way hither, before the dawn of authentic profane history,2
probably, as we have indicated, before the invention of letters. A few
incidental notices in the early annals of Grecian literature, are all that
remain, of ancient tradition, prior to Herodotus, to denote the probability of
such a separation, at a remote epoch. But is this obscurity destined to be
perpetual? Can it not, at least, be mitigated by a study of this ante-alphabetic
branch of their antiquities? Are there no strong and undeniable coincidences,
which are recorded in these pictographic symbols, between the mythology of the
eastern and western hemispheres? Is there not, at least, an identity in the mode
of recording idolatrous belief?
Are we prepared to conclude that the examination of their monumental ruins, in
both divisions of the continent, does not furnish satisfactory evidences of
identity in the general character of some elements of their astronomical
knowledge, arithmetic, and geometry, as shadowed out in the Toltec and Aztec
race? So in their physiology and cast of mind we perceive very striking points
of similarity, from south to north, not only in their personal generic features
and external traits, but also in proportion as we scrutinize the facts, in the
mental habits and the intellectual structure of the Red Men of Asia and America.
There is, in both, a well-developed cast of character, which is oriental,
relates to the early seat of human origin, and cannot be referred to the
secondary and re-produced stocks of Europe. There is nothing in the manner in
which this race met and opposed the early colonists, or have, subsequently,
prepared to encounter their fate, which admits a serious comparison with the
purpose, forecast, and perseverance, which mark the Magyer, or any variety of
the man of Europe. We must look to another quarter of the globe for our points
of mental affiliation.
One of the hitherto unused evidences of this has been brought to our notice, as
we apprehend, in the specimens submitted in 1825, and in 1839, of their oral
imaginative propensities and lodge lore, consisting of extravagant fictions,
which reveals itself in their domestic oral tales and legends.3
We cannot be sure that, where there are so many points of similarity in the
matters noticed, others may not be found, having still higher claims to
attention. It is believed that there is, yet un-exhumed from their teocalli and
simple cemeteries and isolated graves, objects of art and ingenuity, containing
evidences which will shed important light on the era, or eras, of their primary
separation from the Asiatic continent, and the islands of Oceanica. If they
brought to the western hemisphere the knowledge of observing the solar cycles,
and of measuring their time and adjusting their year thereby, as discoveries in
Mexico and Peru denote, it is hardly probable they were behind-hand in other
attainments of the same epoch. How is it that they had a cycle of 60 years, or a
double cycle of 120 years, corresponding to the Chinese? How did the Mexicans
adjust their year to exactly 365 days and 6 hours? We may, at least, suppose
them to have been conversant with the ancient pictorial signs of the Zodiac, if
not with the early Chinese mixed, or impure hieroglyphic, method of notation.
But if oral fiction be a test of mind in barbarous nations, pictography appears
to be equally so. In order to fix a standard of comparison for the American
ideographic symbols, it will be proper to advert to the state of these arts, as
they existed in other parts of the globe, and particularly in Egypt where
hieroglyphic literature was so extensively cultivated, and brought to a high
degree of perfection, at an early epoch, and before the invention of letters.
Letters, if we take the ordinary chronological accounts, were invented in Egypt,
in 1822, B. C. This is assuming the truth of their discovery by Memnon, and
places the event 331 years before the era of the Exodus. As two systems of
recording ideas, of very different merit and principles, cannot be supposed to
have existed long together, in a state of equal prosperity, but the better would
absorb and supplant the poorer, it may be affirmed that hieroglyphics began to
decline for many centuries before the Christian era. This, at least, is certain,
that Moses, say in the year 1491 B. C., was well versed in the use of an
alphabet of sixteen consonants, so that he recorded, as with the "pen of a ready
writer," the events which we ascribe to him. Theological critics have denied
that the use of letters can be traced to an earlier date:4
others contend for the elder theory of an uninspired in vention.
Egypt was the great theatre of the hieroglyphic art; but it was an art destined
to be forgotten. As if the physical darkness which once shrouded it at noonday
had been a type of its subsequent intellectual and moral degradation, the very
knowledge of the system that once recorded thoughts in hieroglyphic language was
obliterated for fifteen centuries. Letters, if they existed in Egypt at this
epoch, appear to have taken their flight with the Hebrews. Knowledge was
destined to be, in the end, inseparable from revelation. And when, after the
rest of the world was generally enlightened, the spirit of research returned,
with the French expedition to Egypt, in 1798, to the valley of the Nile, it
found a land covered with monuments of forgotten greatness, and a people sunk in
depths of comparative ignorance. It is supposed the mode of hieroglyphic writing
was not laid aside until the third century, A. D. An earlier opinion, generally
affirms that the hieroglyphic enchorial characters had ceased to be employed
after the Persian conquest of Cambyses, in 525 B. C. If the Egyptians, on the
invasion of the French, were found to have substituted the Arabic alphabet in
place of the phonetic-hieroglyphic, and installed Mahomet s system in place of
the ibis, the calf, and the cat, they had completely forgotten the event of this
mutation in their literature, or that the phonetic symbols had ever been
employed by them. The discovery was made by Europeans, and made alone through
the perpetuating power of the Greek and Roman alphabet.
The first travelers who went to Egypt, during the latter half of the eighteenth
century, did little more than wonder. They told us of pyramids, and ruined
cities, and monuments covered with hieroglyphics; but the latter remained
unread. Volney, Pococke, Clarke, and Bruce, imparted no other information.
Kircher, who undertook it, in a work of elaborate pretence, wrote a hieroglyphic
romance. It has long been condemned. The first traveler of a different stamp was
Belzoni. But it is not my design to recite, in detail, the discoveries of the
most distinguished visitors to the banks of the Nile. It remained for the
scientific corps who attended Bonaparte in his invasion of Egypt, to take the
first steps, and prepare the way for the present discoveries. Amongst the
monuments which were figured in "Denon's Description of Egypt," was the Rosetta
stone. This fragment, which I examined in the British Museum in 1842, was dug up
on the banks of the Nile by the French, in erecting a fort, in 1799. It is a
sculptured mass of black basalt, bearing trilingual inscriptions in the
hieroglyphic, the demotic, and the ancient Greek characters. Copies of it were
multiplied, and spread before the scientific minds of England and the Continent,
for about twenty years before the respective inscriptions were satisfactorily
read. It would transcend my purpose to give the details of the history of its
interpretation; but as it has furnished the key to the subsequent discoveries,
and serves to denote the patience with which labors of this kind are to be met,
a brief notice of the subject will be added. The Greek inscription, which is the
lowermost in position, and, like the others, imperfect, was the first made out
by the labors of Dr. Heyne of Germany, Professor Person of London, and by the
members of the French Institute. They, at the same time, demonstrated it to be a
translation.
The chief attention of the inquirers was next directed to the middle
inscription, which is the most entire, and consists of the demotic, or enchorial
character. The first advance was made by De Lacy, in 1802, who found, in the
groups of proper names, those of Ptolemy, Arsinoe, and others. This was more
satisfactorily demonstrated by Dr. Young, in 1814, when he published the result
of his labors on the demotic text. These labors were further extended, and
brought forward in separate papers, published by him in 1818 and 1819, in which
he is believed to have shed the earliest beam of true light on the mode of
annotation. He was not able, how ever, to apply his principles fully, or at
least without error, from an opinion that a syllabic principle pervaded the
system. He carried his interpretations, however, much beyond the deciphering of
the proper names. It was the idea of this com pound character of the phonetic
hieroglyphics, that proved the only bar to his full and complete success; an
opinion to which he adhered in 1823, in a paper in which he maintains, that the
Egyptians did not make use of an alphabet to represent elementary sounds and
their connection, prior to the era of the Grecian and Roman domination.
Champollion the Younger himself entertained very much the same opinion, so far,
at least, as relates to the phonetic signs, in 1812. In 1814, in hi? "Egypt
under the Pharaohs," he first expresses a different opinion, and throws out the
hope, that "sounds of language and the expressions of thought," would yet be
disclosed under the garb of "material pictures." This was, indeed, the germ in
the thought-work of the real discovery, which he announced to the Royal Academy
of Belles Letters at Paris, in September, 1822. By this discovery, of which Dr.
Young claims priority, in determining the first nine symbols, a new link is
added in the communication of thought by signs, which connects picture and
alphabet writing. Phonetic hieroglyphics, as thus disclosed, consist of symbols
representing the sounds of first letters of words. These symbols have this
peculiarity, and are restricted to this precise use: that while they depict the
ideas of whole objects, as birds, &c., they represent only the alphabetic value
of the initial letter of the name of these objects. Thus the picture may, to
give an example in English, denote a man, an ox, an eagle, or a lotus; but their
alphabetical value, if these be the words inscribed on a column, would be
respectively, the letters M. 0. E. L. These are the phonetic signs, or
equivalents for the words. It is evident that an inscription could thus be made,
with considerable precision, but not unerring exactitude, and it is by the
discovery of this key, that so nuch light has been, within late years, evolved
from the Egyptian monuments.
It may be useful, in this connection, to bear in mind two facts, namely, that
the discovery aims at greater accuracy and precision, than it has attained; and
that, the result, striking and brilliant as it confessedly is, is the
accumulation of the patient research of many years, and a plurality of
intellects. Without the accidental discovery of the Rosetta stone, containing
the trilingual inscription, it is doubtful whether the system would have ever
been guessed at. And here is one, and we think by far the greatest benefit,
which the world owes to the French invasion of Egypt. It has been seen, that the
first step to an interpretation, was the detection of the proper names, as
disclosed by the Greek copy, coupled with the linguistical conclusion arrived at
by Heyne. Scholars perceived that this Greek text must be a " translation" This
hint gave the impulse to research. What was translated must necessarily have had
an original.
The next step was taken by Quatremere, who proved the present Coptic to be
identical with the ancient Egyptian. To find this language, then, recorded in
the hieroglyphics, was the great object. It is here that the younger Champollion
exercised his power of definition and comparison. By the pre-conception of a
phonetic hieroglyphical alphabet, as above denoted, he had grasped the truth,
which yet lay concealed, and he labored at it until he verified his conceptions.
It is thus that a theory gives energy to research; nor is there much hope of
success without one, in the investigation of the unknown. Columbus had never
reached America, without a theory. Nor did this investigation want the
additional stimulus of rivalry. The discoveries of Dr. Young, and the
injudicious criticisms and wholesale praises of the British press, (particularly
the London Quarterly,) of his papers on the hieroglyphic literature of Egypt,
were calculated to arouse in France and Germany a double feeling of rivalry. It
was not only a question between the respective archaeological merits of Dr.
Young and M. Champollion; it was also a question of national pride between
England, France, and Germany. And, for the first time in their fierce and
sanguinary history, hieroglyphics were the missives wielded. Victory decided in
favor of Champollion, as displayed in the triumph of the pure phonetic method
elucidated in his "Précis du systéme hiéroglyphiques des anciens Egyptians,"
published in 1824.
It is a striking feature in hieroglyphical phonetic writing, and the great cause
of imprecision, that its signs are multiform, often arbitrary, and must be
constantly interpreted, not only with an entire familiarity with the language of
the people employing them, but with their customs, habits, arts, manners, and
history. All who have studied the Egyptian hieroglyphic literature, have
experienced this. The number of phonetic synonyms, or homoplianous signs, in the
phonetic alphabet, has been increased, at the last dates, to 864. Of this
number, 120 are devoted to the human figure, in various positions, and 60 to
separate parts of the body. 10 represent celestial bodies; 24, wild, and 10,
domestic quadrupeds; 22, limbs of animals; 50, birds and parts of birds; 10,
fishes; 30, reptiles, and portions of reptiles; 14, insects; 60, vegetables,
plants, flowers, and fruits; 50, fantastic, arbitrary forms; and the remaining
404, artificial objects. Nor is it supposed that this is the full extent of the
phonetic signs.
Homophons have been added to the list by every new discoverer, and .the best
results which are now predicted for the alphabet, denote that the round number
of 900 is expected to comprise all the various signs. Where an alphabet is so
diffuse, there must be danger of error and imprecision. We do not fall in with
the too-sweeping conclusions of some erudite critics, against the general value
of the principles and results; which, however, must be received with abatements.
It is sufficient to bear in mind, as a reason for caution, that the
interpretations of different minds vary; and that Rossolini and Champollion did
not coincide. There is a manifest tendency, at the present day, to over-estimate
the civilization, learning, and philosophy of the Egyptians and Persians in
these departments, chiefly from hieroglyphic and pictorial records. If I mistake
not, we are in some danger of falling into this error, on this side of the
water, in relation to the character of the ancient Mexican civilization. The
impulsive glow of one of our most chaste and eloquent historians, gives this
natural tendency to our conceptions. The Aztec semi-civilization was an
industrial civilization; the giving up of hunting and roving for agriculture and
fixed dwellings. But we must not mistake it. They built teocalli, temples,
palaces, and gardens; but the people lived in mere huts. They were still
debased. Woman was dreadfully so. The mind of the Aztecs, while the hand had
obtained skill and industry, was still barbaric. The horrific character of their
religion made it impossible it should be otherwise. Civilization had but little
affected the intellect, the morals not at all. They commemorated events by the
striking system of picture-writing; but there is strong reason to suspect, since
examining the principles of the North American system, as practised by our medas
and jossakeeds, that the Mexican manuscripts were also constructed on the
mnemonic principle, and always owed much of their value and precision to the
memory of the trained writers and painters. If these occupied, before the
law-chiefs of Montezuma, the relative position of clerks of courts and
recorders, as some of the picture-writings preserved by Hackluyt denote, these
interpreters of the national rolls relied greatly on memory. Conventional signs
had done much, but the painted record still required these verbal explanations
which a knowledge of the system only could supply.
1 Genesis.
2.The era of Herodotus is
413 B. C.
3. Vide Algic Researches.
4. See Dr. Spring s
Obligations to the Bible.
Archives Of
Aboriginal Knowledge
Archives Of Aboriginal
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