,T5 rom Ancient Egypt to Potsdam A WORLD HISTOIiY REVIEW BY EDITH THOMSON PRICE, ONE DOLLAR From Ancient Egypt to Potsdam A WORLD HISTORY REVIEW BY EDITH THOMSON PRICE $1.00 ^5 coptbiqht, 1918, By EDITH THOMSON ©CI.A5072'n Press of J. J. Little & Ives Co., New York OCT 18 Ibid n-AO \ FROM ANCIENT EGYPT TO POTSDAM- AN HISTORICAL DEDl'CTION To get even a superficial idea of the immense struggle which is going on in the world to-day, and of international relations, it is necessary to study the history, psychology and ge- rreface ograpliv of the various nations concerned, and then get a general idea of their individual constitutions and religions. To attempt any understanding of the present war without these, is pure arrogance ; and to gain, even a slight knowledge of the situa- tion, one must go hack, not two or three centuries, but to the early days before Europe became great as she is to-day, to the time when Egj-pt was the center of the earth. The civilization of Eg>'pt is, as we all know, the earliest we have been able to penetrate, dating back as far as 9000 years B. C. ; and ancient Thebes could boast a knowledge of many things that until Ancient recently have been a mysterA' to the present era ; such as History tlying, feats of engineering, and the making of dyes and chemicals. Spreading by conquest and colonization through Persia, Palestine and Greece, P'gypt was later confjuered by ^^^^' the Greeks, Macedonians and Romans; who in their turn wrested supremacy from each other. About 2000 years B. C, the power of ancient Egj-pt began to decline, and Greece rose to supplant her in greatness ; to attain after twelve or thirteen centuries, a wonderful culture as ^'■«««=® well as military power. At this period Greek architec- ture, sculpture, literature and philosophy were at their zenith, and the Greeks were victorious in many wars. Some three hun- dred years later, however, her epoch of leadership was at an end: her strength was undermined by her wars, Persian, Messinian, etc., and to the east Alexander of :\Iacedon threatened Greece, while westwards the power of Rome was growing. In the second century before Christ, after Hannibal had invaded 'The titlo refers to the resemblance between the armies of ancient EfO'Pt and those of modern Germany— The former were ignorant, the latter misin- formed; but both summoned and orpanized by absolute autocracy; in strik- inp contrast to the responsible armies of the allies, fighting for an ideal Democracy. 3 Italy and the Punic wars, Rome finally conquered Greece ; and not Rome content with being the lords of Europe, in the next hundred years, reduced the now weakened Egypt to a state of subjection also. Thus at the time of Christ, the Roman Empire stood at the height of its glory, dominating Southern Europe and the Mediterranean coast of Africa. The race that has given us the Armenian, the Turk, the Syrian, the Levan- tine and the Jew, had fallen, with the crushing of Egypt, after such centuries of supremacy as history has never known before or since : and having given the final blow to both Egyptian and Greek sovereignty, the Latins, not as they became later under Nero and his successors, indolent and degenerate from too much ease, but alert and vigorous, were the masters of the world. As the Egyptians had done, they sent great forces against the savage tribes, conquering new worlds as well as old. Gaul, Albion and the barbaric hordes of Teutons fell before them ; to overcome them later in their turn, after having absorbed by proximity and marriage, the strength and knowledge of the invaders.^ Expelling the Romans, wresting some of their territory from them, resisting Attila and the Huns, the Franks (a people from the Rhine, but settled in Gaul) now became the domi- nant people ; until culminating in her greatness under Charlemagne, France stepped gracefully aside, not through outside force, but because she lacked a strong man to hold her together; and preferred to keep what she could intact, than by greed to lose much, as Rome did after the days of Julius and Augustus. This was the beginning of a new epoch: the tremendous power of one race was ended, and definite nations began to shape them- The selves. Founded on the ruins of the Empire of Rome, Ages the Italian states were formed ; each with its sovereign rights, quarreling much between themselves, but still with a sem- blance of being a union. Spain, with its population derived from Moors, Latins, and the original inhabitants something like the Gauls, was becoming powerful. Even the Teuton tribes, though still lagging far behind, were showing the influence of the Roman domination, and were becoming organized into a group of semi- civilized nations : while that magnificent race of Vikings and Norse- men had set up a civilization in the North, that though got through piratage and theft was yearly growing stronger. England, set apart by the sea, had both lost and gained by this natural boundary ; her invasions had been less frequent, but she had -g had less opportunity too, to feel the influence of the "^ ^" invaders. So, though held in turn by Roman, Dane and Saxon, up to the eleventh century, she was individual and dis- *The Romans sowed seeds of modern culture and civilization in the coun- tries they conquered. tinct ; and having had little need to ujiite against a common foe, she had become disintegrated. Then the Norman conquest united her people, and under the Norman rule which followed she became organized as France was. The old story was repeated, as the Egyp- tians, Greeks, and Romans had done, the invaders gave far more than they took, by giving learning and discipline to the conquered people ; but unlike those other powers, however, the Conquest Xormans became acclimatized, completely assimilated with the Saxons, and instead of being a subject colony England was for the first time a powerful nation. Scotland soon began to absorb the civilization of England and her clans became united ; she kept, however, her complete independ- ence. Ireland was invaded and settled under the reign of Henry ]I.. as it had been in Roman times; the Celtic inhabitants going South and West, while the settlers from England and Scotland made their homes in that part which is to-day known as rister. Two events only occurred during this period re and which have any immediate influence on the present ; the i\Iagna Charta which King John gave to the barons in 1215, and the first parliament with the connnon people represented in 1299. These two events are the foundation of the democracy Charta which is Spreading over the world in the Twentieth Century ; but at the time they were of little consequence outside the British Isles. From the eleventh to the fifteenth century, with the exception of these local events in England, little of vital importance occurred except the invention of gunpowder. Historians cannot powder agree upon who made this discovery, which was destined to play such a tremendous part in histor^^ ; some say it was Roger Bacon in England, but most give the credit to Berthold Schwartz, a German, and the first organized gunpowder works were established at Augsburg in 1348.^ Nations during this period waged wars, made treaties, changed their boundaries, but nothing was permanent or of great moment, with the exception of the crusades against the Turks and Saracens. These fruitless ef- forts to regain the Holy Sepulcher would temporarily unite the nations, but usually ended in fresh wars between the allies. Then when all seemed comparatively quiet, came one of the greatest events of history: the Reformation. With the Westward sweep of civilization, and the great Empire of Rome, Christianity, born as civilization was in the East, came M'cstward from Palestine, too. The followers of Jesus Rlugions Christ, in the century that succeeded His death, brought their new faith to Rome, knowing that it was the center of the world of that day. 'It h:is been established that the early Cluncsc used gunpowder. Up to that time the Greeks had had their gods and goddesses, the Egyptians theirs, and the Romans yet another set ; while the Chris- Jewish belief, though more enlightened than the Pagan, tianity ^nd recognizing but one God, was the very antithesis of our own. Now through untiring labor and often martyrdom, the little band of disciples did their work, spreading the doctrines of Christianity until with unbelievable speed the new faith was ac- cepted by those who had persecuted it the most. The followers of Christ worked in a way that brought wonderful spiritual returns; with no rules save those which the Master had given Church^^ them, but with complete unity that brought a great yearly increase in their conversions. Then after several centuries the organized church was formed, and from that time there were sects and parties, schisms and dissensions. The cardi- nals quarreled with each other for the favor of the Pope, now the recognized head of the church ; the bishops intrigued Rome^ ° to bcconie cardinals; and at one time there were even two popes, one at Avignon and one at Rome. The crusades, sanctioned by the popes, and supported by France, England and the most advanced of the European nations, now involved the church with politics for the first time. Politics Until this period, its influence had been spiritual, now the Vatican began to interfere in the national quarrels of its adherents; and among the sovereign duchies and kingdoms of Italy, the Papal state became a great political factor. Soon the princes of the church were religious in name only, leaving spiritual teachings to more humble brothers, while they ruled kings, and governed states. Until the fifteenth century the Church of Rome was the ac- cepted church of Europe, but at this time a new thought was offered the world by Luther and was eagerly snatched at by those who disapproved of some of the usages enforced by the organized church, or were disgusted by the corrupt atmos- phere of the Vatican of those times. In the new religion, people could keep their old beliefs and at the same time be free of certain things that were obnoxious to them. The new sect spread rapidly, and got a large following through Northern Germany, the Scandinavian countries, Scotland, England Reforma- ^nd France ; while the Church of Rome kept its power t^°" almost intact through Italy, Spain, Austria and Portugal. All through the sixteenth century Protestants were persecuted, and the hopes of the new faith went up and down : the Vatican established the Inquisition to exterminate it, in the nations where the Church of Rome was supreme, but in spite of all it grew. In England, to suit his own convenience, Henry VIII. adopted the reformed religion, establishing it as the Church of England; and though his daughter Queen Mary, a zealous Catholic (married to a Spaniard), did her best to stamp down the Reformation, on the accession of her sister Elizabeth it was again restored. In France, Henry IV., a Huguenot, fought for the new faith against the league of nobles who upheld the Church of Rome : when he became king, however, though he liad nearly lost his life in the St. Bartholomew massacre of Huguenots under his brother-in-law Charles IX., Henry revoked the edict of Nantes, proclaiming relig- ious freedom; and took for his second wife Marie de ^ledici, a stanch Catholic. So much for the ups and downs of the Protestant church, which partly because of its fine (jualities, partly because of its opposition, became firmly established: meanwhile another sect, a Church branch of the early Christian church had become or- ganized in Greece; known as the Orthodox Greek Church. Completely independent of the Church of Rome, though built on the same foundation, this faith strangely enough resembles the Protestant religion in many ways; its interpretation of the sacrament of communion is the same, and there is no celibacy in the Greek Church ; but on the other hand its relics and saints are unlike the reformed church. It is interesting to realize that in 1014 there was for the first time inter-communication between the Episcopal and Greek churches; but to go back to the early cen- turies, this faith grew and spread in Eastern Europe, as the Catho- lic did in the West ; and gradually made its way northward through what is to-day the Balkans and Russia. Now, while Europe was changing and molding itself into the Europe of to-day, the Orient was developing an entirely different, but equally wonderful civilization. The drift of cul- o?ient *"^'^ ^"^ learning had gone eastward more slowly than it had west, for it was not by conquest and wars, but by gradual absorption. The greatness of Persia was temporarily dead but some seeds of her learning and art had been sown in India, and Indian Sanscrit literature and architecture of the earlj- cen- turies equal anything that is in Europe to-day. It is remarkable how civilization and religion react on one another; civilization is essential to religion, and religion is neces- sary to civilization. Had the followers of Christ ^"^ crossed the Indian Ocean, in those early days, history would probably have been very difTerent; but as Christianity was unknown east of Palestine, Buddhism became the religion of the Orient. The followers of Buddha, the prophet of the East, a good man and groat philosopher, wont north and east making conversions as the Christian missionaries had done, spreading their faith through Burmah, China and later Japan. These missionaries, who carried Indian civilization to China, found one already established there, and though comparatively little is known to-day of that early Chinese life, we know that it built great walls, molded beautiful figures, but above all that it had wonderful thoughts, that have survived all the centuries. The philosophers of China were truly great; and their leader, Confucius, gave China her second religion; the third, the Lama faith, which exists also in Tibet, is a relic of Barbarism, and cannot in any way be compared with Buddhism or Confucianism. By the eighth or ninth century, intercourse between the differ- ent countries of the Orient became established ; China was an Em- pire, Korea a nation, and venturesome missionaries crossed the China Sea, to carry their belief to the inhabitants of Japan. Until then little had been known of Nippon ; the Koreans and Japanese had had several wars, but they had left few marks, and a mystery surrounded the island neighbor, which was too busy with its own civil wars to bother about outsiders. Many centuries before, how long we do not know, though history puts it about the seventh century B. C, the sun goddess had given Japan a ruler; and the descendants of this Mikado, Jimmu Tenno, son of Heaven and representative of the Sun itself, nominally ruled Japan; but in reality had but a small loyal following. The Empress Jingo (200 A, D.) for a time pulled the Island Empire together, but after her death it again became divided. In the South near Kyoto, the Mikado ruled, but in the North the Daimeos and Samurai fought, murdered and robbed each other to their heart's content. At last after a long struggle, in the ninth century the Tokaido road was built joining the North and South, and the various nobles met with the Emperor at Kamakura, and made a truce. From that time a shogun, a sort of viceroy, was chosen from among the nobles to represent the Mikado in the North, while he ruled in the South. The outcome of this was of course constant warfare between the Mikados and the Shoguns, until centuries later the famous Toku- gawa Shoguns got control of all Japan, ruling in the Emperor's name, but really their own masters, while they held each Mikado in turn practically a prisoner in Kyoto. In religion, too, Japan was divided ; the North adhering to the Shinto belief in nature and ancestors' spirits, while the South welcomed Buddhism. The mis- sionaries were allowed to establish themselves in Southern Japan, but there was little communication between the island and the continent of Asia until centuries later. in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries another race reappeared to play an important part in Asia. The Tartars, a yellow race, _, coming from Central Asia, began making savage raids upon China; until they conquered the northern prov- 8 inces, and set the IManchu emperors upon the throne, wliere their descendants remained until the revolution in 1911. The Tartars had turned west too, making their attacks upon Russia, which was at that time but a group of clans ruled by Boy- Russia ^^^ ^"^ independent nobles, who had been little in- fluenced by Western civilization, except through the Greek Church. In the fifteenth century, they united to meet the invaders, and so became a nation ; the nucleus of the huge Russian Empire — as culture had gone west and turned east, it also went east to return west, and met last of all almost due north of where it had started, in Russia; which to this day keeps its curious mix- ture of oriental and occidental customs. By this time a new phase had come in the southeast, the Turk was by his aggression becoming known in Europe; though distinctly The Turk '^'^ Asiatic, he was not content to remain in Asia, and after conquering the Eastern P]mpire and making Con- stantinople his capital, he invaded the Balkans and Austria, mak- ing his power felt in the Western world. Persia meanwhile had built on the ruins of her ancient gran- deur a new and prosperous civilization, closely resembling that of India. At length legendary tales of their wealth and and luxury drifted to Europe, and lured adven- india turous Seamen to investigate their truth. Men had become interested and curious about other parts of the earth , navi- gation was not so hazardous as it had been, and at the end of the fifteenth century the theory of a round earth had been proved by the discover}' of a new continent — America. For some time men had been suggesting the probability of a new continent. The Renaissance, which had succeeded the ignorance of the middle ages in Europe, had started in Italy European developing all the art and intelligence of the Venetians, Renais- i. c c? 7 sance iMilancse and Florentines; and spread to the courts of Vienna and ^Madrid, the latter being at the zenith of its power. France, although responding to the influence of the times, had not yet attained the brilliancy she knew a few years later under Francois I. and the infamous Catherine de ]\Iedici; and England torn by the wars of the roses had none of the enlight- enment that made her rise to leadership in the six- Discovery tccnth century under Henry VIII. and Queen Eliza- America beth. So when Christopher Columbus, a Genoese of humble birth, determined to start out in search of a new world, it was to Ferdinand and Isabella of Spain that he took his plans and received their support. For several centuries, intercourse and trade had existed between certain Northeast Scottish clans and the Canadian Indians; but this had never spread to England or the continent, and was prac- tically unknown : so, as we all know, when Columbus discovered America, he proclaimed it a Spanish colony in the name of Ferdi- nand and Isabella, and returned to Europe with glowing accounts of the new world. He was immediately followed by a succession of explorers of different nationalities : during the sixteenth century it was mostly sailors of Spain and England who ventured across the cronies" Atlantic; but early in the seventeenth, Dutch and French settlers crossed the sea, in search of religious freedom. This migration to America was another immediate result of the Reformation. The wars that existed in Europe were now carried on in minia- ture by the colonists of the various nations in the new world ; while the Red Indian inhabitants were, in spite of continuous raids, driven to the West. Though at first not very antagonistic to the settlers, their treatment by the white men, particularly by the Span- iards, had made bitter enemies of them. The English fought the Spaniards in America as well as in Europe, and later the Dutch, establishing themselves firmly from the Carolinas to Massachu- setts ; and later still scored against their enemy of the moment, the French, by the conquest of Canada. Tobacco, a new necessity, was grown in Virginia, as was cotton throughout the South ; and the colonies of North America prospered under the hard work of the stalwart settlers. African Negroes were imported to do the agricultural work of the plantations, and became an institution in the South ; while the industrial North had little use for them, and developed settlements and towns, rather than large land estates. Governors of the colonies were appointed by England, but throughout the Stuart rule, there were too many civil wars at home for the English Government to think very seriously of America, except as a far away land, to which rebels could be shipped; and in consequence there was more liberty in the colonies than in Great Britain herself. Meanwhile, in Central Europe, which had no seacoast to inspire navies or oversea colonies, there had become organized a great league of states, known as the Holy Roman Empire.^ AVhile France under the Valois and the Bourbon had been grow- ing in power, and England had been extending her dominions across the seas both in America and India, Central Holy Europe had formed, first for protection, then for its Empire advantage, a group of nations; which elected their emperor, to whom they owed their allegiance and sup- * Charlemagne's empire, which had become disintegrated, was revived under a Saxon emperor in the 10th century. 10 port. For years, this privilege had been held by the Dukes of Austria, because of tiie superior size of their domains ; until at the end of the seventeenth century, the imperial throne was prac- tically a hereditary possession of the Ilapsburpj family. Established and powerful for centuries, the oldest of the ruling families, the Ilapsburgs had absorbed by annexations and marriage . alliances, Hungary, Bohemia, Tuscany, and several other of the petty states; while their recent successful wars against the Turks had given them new realms to the Southeast. The states were glad to lend their armies to the powerful Austrian Emperor of their Empire in return for his support, which carried Bavaria Weight in Spain and France, where they were thought Saxony little of. Among the other leading sovereigns of the Hanover . T-ii ^ t-» • . tt Branden- empire Were the Electors of Bavaria, Saxony, Hanover, ""^^ and Brandenburg; the latter at this time with the sanc- tion of the Emperor added to his Duchy of Brandenburg the King- dom of Prussia. All through the seventeenth century there were continuous wars: tile Thirty Years' War, which included most of Europe; the over- Prussia throw of foreign rule in Holland; the Xorthern wars, in which first Gustavus Adolphus and then Charles XII. raised Sweden to a power it had never known before or since; constant civil wars in Poland and Russia, which under Ivan VI. Seven- an