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  • June 1, 1874
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The Masonic Magazine, June 1, 1874: Page 29

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    Article TROY. ← Page 3 of 5 →
Page 29

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Troy.

a " concatenation of circumstances , he has been indeedre warded for his sagacious determination and Ids resolute excavation . Armed with plenty of "firmans " andsuppliedivith plenty of money , hehas laboured diligently for three long years ,

and has penetrated to the original rock , as ive understand it , 50 feet below the present surface , and wonderful have been his discoveries . Eor though , to use the words of an able reviewer , Herr Schliemann at first

believed that old Troy must hai e been the most ancient of all these superimposed cities , yet ivhen he had dug down beneath them all , and came at last upon the primeval rock , lie was convinced that what he calls Old Troy

was not the first but the second in the series of time in its construction , and that it had been built upon the ruins of a still more ancient town , the stones and dust of which covered it to the

depth of 20 feet ; while above this second toivn of Old Troy three other toivns , including that called Neiv Troy , had been erected . It will give us some conception of the magnitude of Herr Schliemann ' s labours if we add that

the primeval rock is not found till from 45 feet to 50 feet of " debris" have been excavated , while to arrive at this depth the ruins of the temples , houses , and fortifications of the several toivns bad to be piercedand in many cases cleared

, away and thrown doivn into the plain . Again , let any man accustomed to earthworks consider the difficulty of moving such masses of earth even in this country , with all the inventions of steam and tramways at his disposal

, aud then reflect on the enhanced toil of such operations when carried on in a wilderness and a country ivhere the construction of even a wheel-barroiv is a difficulty .

Thus , then , we come first of all to this fact , astounding in itself , that five cities have actually been built on this very site , and that Troy itself was built on the ruins of a still more ancient city . Well , in this second city of construction ( to use a foreign idiom ) , Dr . Schliemann

has discovered alike remains , and objects of "bigotry and virtue , " which have convinced him , that he at last stood within the walls of Troy , and had seen "ipsissimis oculis" the Sccean Gate , and the pavement before Priam ' s

palace ; nay , the palace itself of the good old Icing himself . It ivas in June of last year , to use Mr . Taylor ' s words , " the rubbish , fifty feet deep , of three or four thousand ivas sloivly cleared awayand the

years , foundation at last of Homer ' s Sciean Gate looked once more across the plain of Troy to Tenedos and Imbros , and the Samothracian Ida . "

Mr . Bayard Taylor , ive may observe , has prepared for the " American Daily Tribune , " of March 2 nd , an interesting paper , dated Gotha , February 10 th , from Dr . Schliemann ' s MS ., ivhich has just appeared at Leipsic , published by E . A . Brockhaus . As the discoveries which led Dr . Schliemann to the

conclusion that he had actually found Iroy itself , are very important , we think it better to give them in detail , though ive would premise that , in addition to the discoveries here enumerated , the Dr . has safely housed at Athens many

thousand objects , including copper and stone arms , and a remarkable " basso relievo" of Apollo , ivhich , however , did not belong to the Old Troy but to New Troy . Let us listen to his own account of

lus great discovery : " In the course of my excavations , in April , 1873 , on the Trojan wall , and in the immediate neighbourhood of Priam ' s house , I fell on a great copper object of remarkable form , ivhich attracted my attention all the

more , as I thought I saw gold behind it . On this copper object rested a thick crust of red ashes and calcined ruins , on ivhich again weighed a wall nearly six feet thick and eighteen feet high , built of great stones and earth , and ivhich must have belonged

to the period immediately after the destruction of Troy . In order to save the treasure from the greed of my ivnrkmen , and to secure it for science , it was necessary to use the very greatest haste , and so , though it was not yet breakfast time , I had paidos

“The Masonic Magazine: 1874-06-01, Page 29” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 5 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01061874/page/29/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
OUR GRAND MASTER. Article 2
THE OLD MASONIC POEM. Article 3
BYE-LAWS OF MILLTARY LODGES. Article 4
THE NEW MORALITY, 1874. Article 6
ROOKSTONE PRIORY. Article 7
THE HISTORY OF FREEMASONRY IN RUSSIA. Article 12
SERMON BY THE REV. H. W. KEMP, B.A., P.P.G.O., Article 14
THE OLD TILER. Article 16
SYMBOLISMS OF THE APRON. Article 16
THE MASON'S WIFE. Article 17
OUR LATE BRO. WM. CARPENTER. Article 17
UNDER THE TRAIN. Article 19
AN APRIL SERMON. Article 22
LANGUAGE. Article 22
ST. VINCENT. Article 24
WELCOMBE HILLS, STRATFORD-ON-AVON. Article 27
TROY. Article 27
LECTURE BY BRO. EMRA HOLMES ON " TOM HOOD." Article 31
THE FOOTSTEPS OF DECAY. Article 32
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Troy.

a " concatenation of circumstances , he has been indeedre warded for his sagacious determination and Ids resolute excavation . Armed with plenty of "firmans " andsuppliedivith plenty of money , hehas laboured diligently for three long years ,

and has penetrated to the original rock , as ive understand it , 50 feet below the present surface , and wonderful have been his discoveries . Eor though , to use the words of an able reviewer , Herr Schliemann at first

believed that old Troy must hai e been the most ancient of all these superimposed cities , yet ivhen he had dug down beneath them all , and came at last upon the primeval rock , lie was convinced that what he calls Old Troy

was not the first but the second in the series of time in its construction , and that it had been built upon the ruins of a still more ancient town , the stones and dust of which covered it to the

depth of 20 feet ; while above this second toivn of Old Troy three other toivns , including that called Neiv Troy , had been erected . It will give us some conception of the magnitude of Herr Schliemann ' s labours if we add that

the primeval rock is not found till from 45 feet to 50 feet of " debris" have been excavated , while to arrive at this depth the ruins of the temples , houses , and fortifications of the several toivns bad to be piercedand in many cases cleared

, away and thrown doivn into the plain . Again , let any man accustomed to earthworks consider the difficulty of moving such masses of earth even in this country , with all the inventions of steam and tramways at his disposal

, aud then reflect on the enhanced toil of such operations when carried on in a wilderness and a country ivhere the construction of even a wheel-barroiv is a difficulty .

Thus , then , we come first of all to this fact , astounding in itself , that five cities have actually been built on this very site , and that Troy itself was built on the ruins of a still more ancient city . Well , in this second city of construction ( to use a foreign idiom ) , Dr . Schliemann

has discovered alike remains , and objects of "bigotry and virtue , " which have convinced him , that he at last stood within the walls of Troy , and had seen "ipsissimis oculis" the Sccean Gate , and the pavement before Priam ' s

palace ; nay , the palace itself of the good old Icing himself . It ivas in June of last year , to use Mr . Taylor ' s words , " the rubbish , fifty feet deep , of three or four thousand ivas sloivly cleared awayand the

years , foundation at last of Homer ' s Sciean Gate looked once more across the plain of Troy to Tenedos and Imbros , and the Samothracian Ida . "

Mr . Bayard Taylor , ive may observe , has prepared for the " American Daily Tribune , " of March 2 nd , an interesting paper , dated Gotha , February 10 th , from Dr . Schliemann ' s MS ., ivhich has just appeared at Leipsic , published by E . A . Brockhaus . As the discoveries which led Dr . Schliemann to the

conclusion that he had actually found Iroy itself , are very important , we think it better to give them in detail , though ive would premise that , in addition to the discoveries here enumerated , the Dr . has safely housed at Athens many

thousand objects , including copper and stone arms , and a remarkable " basso relievo" of Apollo , ivhich , however , did not belong to the Old Troy but to New Troy . Let us listen to his own account of

lus great discovery : " In the course of my excavations , in April , 1873 , on the Trojan wall , and in the immediate neighbourhood of Priam ' s house , I fell on a great copper object of remarkable form , ivhich attracted my attention all the

more , as I thought I saw gold behind it . On this copper object rested a thick crust of red ashes and calcined ruins , on ivhich again weighed a wall nearly six feet thick and eighteen feet high , built of great stones and earth , and ivhich must have belonged

to the period immediately after the destruction of Troy . In order to save the treasure from the greed of my ivnrkmen , and to secure it for science , it was necessary to use the very greatest haste , and so , though it was not yet breakfast time , I had paidos

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