To: EEF FROM: Clark Whelton cwhelton@mindspring.com Below is a paper presented by Dr. Gunnar Heinsohn of the U. of Bremen at the 6th International Congress of Egyptology in Turin, September, 1993, posted with permission of Dr. Heinsohn. Dr. Heinsohn, who is co-author of "Wann lebten die Pharaonen?" (Mantis Verlag, 1997), advocates a sharply lower chronology for Egypt and the entire ancient world. His analytical method is based on stratigraphy and material culture. In this paper he applies his method to the problem of identifying the Hyksos. * * * * * * WHO WERE THE HYKSOS? Can Archaeology and Stratigraphy Provide a Solution to the "Enigma of World History?" by Dr. Gunnar Heinsohn I The Graveyard of Theories on the Hyksos The graveyard of theories concerning the Hyksos has been growing for nearly 2,300 years. The tombstones for its 12 major burials carry the names of an impressive array of candidates for the Hyksos title "Rulers of Foreign Lands." Eleven of the candidates are Asian , one is European. These 12 candidates can be identified as: (1) pre-Exodus Israelites [Manetho {Waddell 1940, 89}; Josephus Flavius "Contra Apionem"{I, 14}]; (2) Marauding Arab Bedouins (many authors); (3) -1st millennium Phoenicians [Newton 1728; Illig 1992, 111]; (4) only the invention of a narrator [Uhlemann, 1858]; (5) Indo Aryans [Meyker, 1928 {1952-58}]; (6) Hittites [Procksch, 1914; Pieper 1925]; (7) 15th century BCE Biblical Amalekites [Velikovsky, 1952]; (8) the United Kingdom of Israel from Saul to Solomon [Sieff 1988; Chetwynd 1991]; (9) Old-Babylonian Amorites [Van Seters 1966]; (10) Hurrites [Watzinger 1933; Helck 1971]; (11) Mycenaeans [Dayton 1978]; and (12) Syro-Canaanites [Weinstein 1981; Kempinsky 1985; Dever 1985; Mazar 1990]. Only the twelfth theory, which equates the Hyksos with Palestinian princes or Syro-Canaanites in general, can still muster a considerable number of supporters. Syro-Palestine's Middle Bronze Age IIB-C shows a strong archaeological similarity with Hyksos sites in Egypt, e.g. Tell Daba. However, Mesopotamia proves to be another serious contender in this field. More important, the ancient Egyptians themselves did not identify the Hyksos with Canaanites. On the Amada Stela from the time of Amenophis II (1439-1413) "the Hyksos _and_ the princes of Palestine (Retenu)" are mentioned together (Stock, 1942, 71 - italics added; also Bietak 1980, col. 102]. Obviously the Egyptians could tell the difference between Canaanite chieftains and their non-Canaanite overlords. Another problem for the Canaanite option is provided by an undeniable Hurrian element [Helck, 1971, 89ff] within the predominantly Semitic Hyksos. The Hurrians are not indigenous to Early Bronze or Middle Bronze Palestine. The Canaanite option also suffers if one considers the case of a female slave, "Ishtar-ummi," who was captured by an Egyptian in the Hyksos wars. "This name belongs to north Mesopotamia and not to Canaan, where it would have been Astarte." [Helck 1971, 101]. II Stratigraphy versus Textbook Chronology: The Mitanni as Immediate Successors of Hyksos and Old-Akkadians Alike How can we justify annoying the public with a 13th theory on the identity of the Hyksos? Would it not be more appropriate to accept the fact that "a solution to this enigma of world history lies beyond the scope of scholarship" [ Beckerath, 1964, 113]? Yet, this author felt encouraged to approach the problem afresh because the classical tools of scholarship have never been rigorously used in a search for an Asian home for the Hyksos. Neither comparative stratigraphy and archaeology (architecture, pottery, small finds, etc.) nor paleography and the evaluation of original historiographical source material has been applied to check possible Asian alter egos of the Hyksos. As long as the textbook date of some candidate comes close to the textbook date of the "Rulers of Foreign Lands" as new theory about the Hyksos can be expected to spring up. Researchers took the dates for both the Hyksos and the various candidates for granted, although there exists wide agreement that the chronological systems in use are highly unreliable. This holds notably for the Sothic dating of Egyptologists. This pseudo-astronomical scheme never looked well under scientific scrutiny [Neugebauer, 1938; Velikovsky 1973; Newton 1977] but it was not until 1985 that mainstream Egyptology also questioned it. "Work on chronology has clearly arrived at a crisis. The reason for this is in part due to the adoption of dogmatic [Sothic -G.H.] scientific facts without testing their applicability to Egyptian material and the reliability of this material [Helck 1985, 95]. The chronology ideas of Assyriologists do not look more convincing than Egyptological ones. Third millennium Mesopotamia is dated by counting backwards from Hammurabi, whose "date is the keystone of the chronology of the -2nd and -3rd millennia" [Roux 1980, 43]. Within the last 90 years Hammurabi's date has oscillated between the years -2300 and -1700, with a median date of ca. -2000. It was originally derived from Genesis 14:1, where "Amraphel king of Shinar" is mentioned in connection with Abraham [Genesis 13:18]. For many years Amraphel was equated with Hammurabi, who thereby got his date via Abraham's Bible fundamentalist date. Today many scholars have dropped Abraham as a historical person, and the equation Amraphel = Hammurabi is also no longer adhered to. Yet, unconsciously, Abraham's pious date was kept as Hammurabi's date and, thereby, to this very day serves as the hidden anchor of Mesopotamia's absolute chronology [cf. Heinsohn 1988b, 13-5]. If one wants to escape the quicksand of Bible fundamentalism and pseudo-astronomy alike, -- not to mention wildly differing C14 dates [cf. Illig 1991a; Bloss/Niemitz 1996] -- comparative chronology has to resort to comparative stratigraphy. What does this method tell us about the Hyksos of Syro-Palestine's Middle Bronze Age? _Stratigraphically_ and, therefore, also historically, they immediately preceded the Mitanni/Hurrians of the Late Bronze Age. If the Hyksos originated in Mesopotamia, as is suggested by their being a mixture of Semites and Hurrians, their Mesopotamian alter ego must have preceded the Late Bronze Age Mitanni/Hurrians between the Euphrates and the Tigris in very much the same manner as they preceded the Late Bronze Age in their Syro-Palestinian and Egyptian realm. Any credible candidate for the Hyksos on Mesopotamian territory must be located _stratigraphically immediately underneath_ the Mitanni/Hurrians. What nation settled the strata which are found _immediately_ below the Mitanni/Hurrian layers in northern Mesopotamia? When the most careful excavations of the 1920s and 1930s tried to answer this question, the archaeologists found themselves in confusion, as can be seen at Tell Billa [Speiser, 1932-33], Nuzi [Starr, 1938], Tepe Gawra [Speiser, 1935], and Chagar Bazar [Mallowan, 1936-37]. Contents of Stratum Sites Period _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Tell Tepe Chagar Nuzi/Yor- Billa Gawra Baza r gan Tepe - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Fully developed Hurrian/Mitanni stratum of the 3 III I II-I 14th cent. Amarna Period, which continues from preceding stratum without archaeologically provable hiatus. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Transient stratum with first Hurrian remains plus Old- Akkadian remains 4 IV II part of II -16th/ which continue as IIB-IIA -15th from preceding but stratum without also recognizable hiatus. late -23rd _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Fully developed 5 V III V-III -24th/ -23rd Old Akkadian stratum _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ None of these four sites posed any problem for dating the fully developed Old-Akkadian stratum of the -24th/-23rd century or the fully developed Mitanni/Hurrian stratum of the -14h century. The confusion derived from the intervening stratum (hardly recognizable at Nuzi) which contained a mixture of Old-Akkadian and Hurrian (i.e. -23rd and -15th century remains, but was expected to contain Neo- Sumerian and Old-Babylonian remains of the period -2200 to -1600. Tell Billa 4 was assigned to the early -2nd millennium Old-Babylonian period, which created an unprovable hiatus between levels 5 and 4. Tepe Gawra IV landed in the late -3rd millennium Neo-Sumerian period, which created a similar hiatus between IV and III. Therefore, from a purely archaeological point of view, the so-called Early Bronze IV Old-Akkadians immediately preceded the Late Bronze Hurrians. In this respect they strikingly resembled the Middle Bronze Hyksos preceding the Late Bronze Age in Syro-Palestine and Egypt. Since the 1980s an impressive series of excavations has been undertaken in northern Mesopotamia. The Swiss work at Tell Hamadiyah [Wafler, 1986] and the German dig at Tell Munbaqa are considered examples of careful research on the Mittani/Hurrian period, and the strata preceding them. Hamadiyah, which was settled well beyond the Hellenistic period, is compared here with a site in southern Mesopotamia, Der [Opificius 1961, 7], to allow for an understanding of the total stratigraphic depth from the Old- Akkadians up to the Greeks. If the dates for the Old- Akkadians had been determined by archaeological means alone the scholarly world would have been told that they were located in the third strata group beneath the Hellenistic strata group. While it is true that the two intervening strata groups in the north of Mesopotamia contained somewhat different material remains than those in the south, both areas have only two strata groups between Old-Akkadians and Hellenists. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Mesopotamian Sequences According to Stratigraphic Evidence Hamadiyah Der _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Hellenist stratum Hellenist stratum ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ (1) Pre-Hellenist stratum (1) Pre-Hellenist stratum of the Middle Assyrians of the Old-Babylonians ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ (2) Mitanni/Hurrians (2) Ur-III Neo-Sumerians +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ (3) Old-Akkadians (3) Old-Akkadians +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ The scholarly world is usually not confronted with the above stratigraphic evidence in the ground but instead is offered excavation reports that add historical periods to the strata actually found. This stretching of the sites’ historical duration is done to satisfy preconceived textbook chronology ideas that excavators have on their minds before their work begins. Instead of testing the chronographers’ ideas by their own archaeological results, excavators usually try to adjust their finds to fit these preconceived dates. For our two exemplary tells these reports give the following picture: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Tell I: Hamadiyah Tell II: Der _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Hellenistic stratum from -330 Hellen. Stratum from -330 1st HIATUS HIATUS (1) Middle Assyrians from -1350 (1) Babylonians from -2000 (2) Mitanni/Hurrians from -1750 (2) Ur III Sumerians from -2150 2nd HIATUS (3) Old-Akkadians from -2350 (3) Old-Akkadians from -2350 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Since none of the hiatuses was ever proven by archaeological means -– as, e.g., windblown layers, discontinuity of architecture, pottery, small finds etc. -- our search for the _stratigraphically immediate_ Mesopotamian predecessors of the Mitanni/Hurrians ends at the Old-Akkadians. Stratigraphically, our search for the _immediate_ Mesopotamian predecessors of the Mitanni/Hurrians ends at the Old-Akkadians. And yet every Assyriologist has to reject such a result. Assyriologists have been taught that a 700-year hiatus separates the Old-Akkadians from the Mitanni/Hurrians. Assyriologists are usually not aware of the shaky foundations of the textbook chronology that created the hiatus in the first place – an Egyptological Sothic date for Hyksos and Mitanni, but a Bible fundamentalist date for the Old-Akkadians. Therefore Assyriologists would never consider the contemporaneity – not to mention the identity – of Hyksos and Old-Akkadians. That is why the Old-Akkadians as history’s first “world power” have never been taken into consideration as an alter ego of the Hyksos, the first “superpower” in Syro-Palestine and Egypt. In February, 1988, this author published his stratigraphy-based equation of Hyksos and Old-Akkadians. The German archaeologist, Wilfried Pape, was the first to take up the challenge. Like the site at Hamadiyah, mentioned earlier, Munbaqa exhibited the notorious hiatus between the Old-Akkadian “Early Bronze Age IV” and the Mitanni “Late Bronze Age strata. In 1988, Pape made the first special sounding at Munbaqa, but could not confirm the supposed gap between ca..-2250 and -1475. On the contrary, Pape found clear-cut architectural continuity. His findings were written to me on November 22, 1988. In 1989, three special soundings were made to test the existence of an Akkad-Mitanni gap at Munbaqa. A geologist specializing in sediments and aeolic layers confirmed the work of the archaeologists. There is no hiatus between the Old-Akkadian and Mitanni/Hurrian strata at Munbaqa [Rosner, 1990]. Moreover, Old-Akkadian cylinder seals remained in use for business contracts in the Mitanni/Hurrian stratum [Mayer, 1990, 48], another indication of the uninterrupted continuity between the two periods, i.e., for the very absence of a hiatus of some 750 years. 3. The striking resemblance of Hyksos and Old-Akkadian glyptic, paleography, pottery and weapons Old-Akkadian features are also known from Hyksos cylinder seals. A piece from Tell Beit Mirsim’s Hyksos strata (E/D) carried an Akkadian sign which can be read as Nabu. Another Hyksos-period cylinder seal of unknown provenance combined Egyptian motifs with bull-men (minotaurs) that are particularly prominent in Old-Akkadian times: “The bull-man appears in the Early Dynastic period as is seen after the end of the Akkadian period” [Collon, 1975, 191]. Paleography confirms the Old-Akkadian relationship with the Hyksos. Palestine proper only yields one clearly stratified find of the Hyksos period with a cuneiform inscription. It was excavated at Hazor. The excavators immediately understood that the “the historical conclusions connected with the fact that the grammatical form (of the inscription) is Akkadian and not Western Semitic” [Yadin et al. 1960, 117] would have to be far-reaching. Unwillingly they had confirmed what was already known from pottery studies. The striking resemblance of Early Bronze IV (-26th to -23rd century; Early Dynastic IIIb Sumerian and Old- Akkadian) pottery from south and central Mesopotamia to Palestinian Middle Bronze II pottery (-19th to -16th century) was already seen 60 years ago [Watzinger, 1933] and clearly shown by the Israeli archaeologist Jacob Kaplan. The close relationship between Hyksos and Old-Akkadian recognizable from stratigraphy, glyptic writing and pottery can also be supported in the field of weaponry. “In the second half of the third millennium, the earliest sickleswords make their debut. These were curved swords used for striking. They are clearly depicted on relics from the Akkadian period” [Yadin, 1963, 45]. Archaeologists that, beginning in Mesopotamia, “scimitars certainly very quickly spread to neighboring nations as a weapon, as well as a symbol” [Bonnet 1926, 92]. Yet “there is no hint whatsoever that the scimitar came to Egypt before the time of the Hyksos [Bonnet 1926, 94; cf. Also Daba-D/3 – Bietak 1984, 1985, 1988]. Thus, with a date of -2500/2400 for the earliest Mesopotamian scimitars, this powerful weapon supposedly spent at least 750 years on its journey to Egypt. Even more of a mystery was caused by the conservatism of the Hyksos. When they decided to adopt the scimitar they chose the Old-Akkadian model, which was ‘state of the art” more than seven centuries earlier. By taking the stratigraphical contemporaneity of Hyksos and Old-Akkadians into account, the scimitars belong to one and the same nation, and the mysteries disappear. A surprise even greater than the scimitar’s slow movement to Egypt was caused by the likewise late arrival of the composite bow. After first appearing on Old-Akkadian monuments of the -23rd century [Yadin 1963, 150f] this weapon, which was as revolutionary “ as the discovery of gunpowder thousands of years later” [Yadin, 1963, 48], took some 700 years to strengthen the armies of Egypt, “where it was introduced by the Hyksos” [Decker 1975, 843]. Nobody has ever satisfactorily explained why the Egyptian military was allowed by its superiors to act so tardily in bringing its weaponry up to date. The list of items which, -- _in stratigraphically secured contexts_ -- first appeared in Mesopotamia, in Old-Akkadian times, but were not known in the Levant and Egypt before the Hyksos period, can easily be extended: bellows, true tin bronzes, vertical looms, chariots, peculiar vaulted burials, toggle pins, glass, glazing, sophisticated triple gates etc. Many of these striking similarities between -3rd millennium Mesopotamians and -2nd millennium Hyksos were seen long ago. Yet the appropriate conclusions were never drawn: “It is certain that the earliest dated specimens of forms like, or comparable to, some metal implements regarded as Hyksos have come from _Mesopotamia_. Specifically, we may note crescent-shaped dagger pommels and socketed axheads. Toggle pins, one of the most characteristic of Hyksos metal forms, appeared in Mesopotamia as early as 3,000 B.C. As for the concept of bronze itself, it is an established fact that bronze was known in Sumer and Anatolia by the _first half of -3rd millennium._ _If Mesopotamian parallels of the -3rd millennium_ should prove to have a direct bearing on the case, they would seem to indicate a Semitic or Sumerian contribution, no matter how remote [Engberg 1937, 43/44] (emphasis added). More recent research points to the same relationships: “There is abundant material for the study of the cultural appearance of the Middle Bronze Age in the Nile delta at Tell el-Daba. The cultural background of this MB population was urban rather than nomadic. Indicators of urban culture can be seen in intramural burials, a typical urban custom not practiced by nomads, and distinct architectural traditions of this culture, e.g. the technique of building vaults. The majority of tombs were constructed according to a technique which _had a tradition in [25/24th century; Brink, 1982] Mesopotamia, but not in Egypt._ The Middle Bronze Age element in the town site seems to have been increased by a new influx which most likely was responsible for _the rise of the Hyksos rule in Egypt”_ [Bietak 1987] (emphasis added). 4. Old-Akkadians as Foreign Rulers of Magan (Egypt) and Meluhha (Ethiopia). Stratigraphy, paleography, glyptic, pottery, weaponry, architecture [Kaplan, 1975] and many other technologies point to the contemporaneity of Hyksos and Old-Akkadians. Yet it is Old-Akkadian historiography that provides the decisive clue for the _identity_ of the two nations. Manetho claimed that the Hyksos were the earliest Asians to occupy Egypt. Who were the earliest Asians to claim that they militarily conquered Egypt? The Old-Akkadian Great Kings, Sargon, Naram Sin and Manishtusu: "Sargon [2334- 2279] dismantled (all) the cities, as far as the shore of the sea. At the wharf of Agade he made moor ships from Meluhha, ships from Magan" [ANET, 268]. "I, Naramsin [2254- 2218] the mighty, king of four regions. / Magan he subjugated and Manium lord of Magan had dispatched" ["Barton, 1929, 143]. The location of Magan and Meluhha "is still in doubt, although they may turn out to be Egypt and Ethiopia. In fact, most cuneiformists agree that by the first millennium B.C. Magan and Meluhha did correspond roughly to Egypt and Ethiopia. / This has led to the hypothesis that over the millennia there was a shift of toponomy, that in the third and second millennia B.C. the names Magan and Meluhha corresponded to the lands bordering the east and southeast Arabian coasts but that for one reason or another these names were later transferred to Egypt and Ethiopia" [Kramer, 1963, 276]. It is for reasons of modern chronology only that a Mesopotamian rule over Egypt and Ethiopia (in the - 3rd millennium) is ruled out. This first world power supposedly had no knowledge of Egypt, though cultural features of Mesopotamia were well known in the Nile Valley since the early -3rd millennium. It is admitted, however, that -1st millennium texts mentioning Magan and Meluhha always mean Egypt and Ethiopia. It is also admitted that the Sargonic texts in question were not written in the -3rd millennium but are "depending for the greatest part upon much later tradition" [Gadd 1971, 440] of the -1st millennium, when Magan and Meluhha unquestionably mean Egypt and Ethiopia. Thus, all that is actually stated is: if one day we _original_ -3rd millennium texts mentioning Magan and Meluhha, these toponyms _could not_ mean Egypt and Ethiopia, because such identifications violate modern chronology ideas. Yet even with this assumption an agreement has not been reached, because Naram Sin's booty from Magan does not appear to be southeast Arabian at all, but Egyptian. Therefore, some scholars would also like to translate any forthcoming true -3rd millennium mention of Magan as "Egypt" [for a prominent example cf. Jacobsen, 1988]. This is because Naram Sin's inscriptions speaking of "a vase of the spoil of Magan" [Barton 1929] could be related to "existing alabaster vases inscribed with his name and the words 'booty of Magan'. These vases, combined with the names of Magan and Manium, have given a singular interest to this episode, for Magan was a name undoubtedly applied to Egypt in a later period of Babylonian history, and the vases have _a distinct likeness to Egyptian alabaster vases"_ [Gadd 1971] Thus, Old-Akkadians were in Egypt and are known there as the Hyksos, Asian rulers. Last but not least, the Hyksos realm and period is on record for having the first pottery imports from Crete {Amiran, 1969]. The first Asian power that claimed Kaptaru (Crete) as the western limit of its empire, were the Old- Akkadians. For chronological reasons, modern scholars have ruled out this claim: "It is impossible to impose this on the 3rd millennium [Edzard, 1974]. Yet if the Hyksos are considered as the alter ego of the Old-Akkadians, the former clearly provide the archaeological proof for the political claims of the latter. Conclusion: The two long-standing enigmas of (1) the Semitic Hyksos with no world history of their own, but with substantial archaeological records in the Nile Valley, as well as records written about them in Egypt, and (2) the Semitic Old-Akkadians with cuneiform records of their rule in Egypt and Ethiopia ("Magan and Melukhha") but no material remains or texts in Egypt mentioning them, are solved simultaneously. The Old-Akkadians are the Hyksos. Therefore, it is not by chance that the Hyksos fortress cities with their triple gates lie scattered along the strategic routes between the Nile and the Euphrates. Neither the early -2nd millennium date for the Hyksos nor the -3rd millennium date for the Old-Akkadians can be upheld. Stratigraphically both are found just three strata groups beneath the Hellenistic period in Syro-Palestine/Daba or Mesopotamia respectively. The author (Heinsohn) tentatively equates the Hyksos/Old-Akkadians with the pre- Medish Assyrian superpower mentioned in Herodotus I:95, which is not to be confused with the Sargonid Assyrians found immediately beneath Hellenistic strata. The Medish successors of Herodotus' I:95-102 Assyrians, whose vast Mesopotamian empire supposedly did not leave a single brick or potsherd, are equated with the Mitanni, who only became known a century ago. _Stratigraphically_ the Medes=Mitanni follow the Old-Akkadians in the east as directly as they follow the Hyksos in the west and the "Neo-Sumerians" follow the Old-Akkadians in Babylonia. The alleged gap between Old-Akkadian and Mitanni/Hurrian strata in many Mesopotamian sites represents a pseudo-hiatus. Between the strata of the Medes=Mitanni and Hellenists only one additional strata group could be found in any one individual _north_ Mesopotamian site. It is assigned to "Middle Assyria" known for its enigmatic conquest of Egypt ("Musri"). In the _south,_ the immediately pre-Hellenist stratum is called "Old Babylonian," and lies directly on the "Neo-Sumerians," who _stratigraphically_ are contemporary with the Medes=Mitanni and, therefore, must be identified as the Chaldaeans known from Assyrian, Jewish and Greek sources. Applying historical and stratigraphical reasoning, "Middle Assyria" and "Old-Babylonia" can be none other than the long sought after Persian satrapies Assyria and Babylonia. Their Amorit(d)e or Mart(d)u ethnic background is rooted in Cyrus the Great's tribe of Mardoi (Amardians) mentioned by Herodotus and Ctesias. The duplication of Herodotus' I:95 Assyrians of the - 8th/7th centuries to -17th /16th century Hyksos and their triplication to -24th/23rd century Old-Akkadians is due to pseudo-astronomical and Bible fundamentalist chronology ideas of modern Egyptology and Assyriology respectively. Because of these unscholarly dating ideas, the Bronze and Iron Age chronologies of the ancient Near East and Egypt are haunted by some 2,000 phantom years for which there is no convincing basis in stratigraphy. It is only because of these ghost millennia that the ancient Near East, from Egypt to the Indus Valley, gained its enormous head start into high civilization over the Ganges Valley, India, Southeast Asia, China and Meso-America (Heinsohn, 1990). COMPARATIVE STRATIGRAPHY-BASED CHRONOLOGY Syro-Palestine/Daba Mesopotamia +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Hellenistic Hellenistic Iron Age (1) Middle Assyrians (north) Old Babylonians (south) IA (2) Late Bronze Mitanni (2) Mitanni (north) UR-III Sumerians (south) Middle Bronze IIB-C (3) Old-Akkadians (=EB IV) Hyksos Middle Bronze IIA (4) ED IIIb Sumerians (=EB IV) ----------- * Early Bronze I-III (5) Early Dynastic I-IIIa Chalcolithic (6) Chalcolithic * Early Bronze IV/MBI is without a clear-cut stratum in major tells of Israel [Mazar 1990, 152]. # #