A long while ago I posted about my interactions with Ms V, the historical
ultra-sceptic whose shifting beliefs about the origins of Cerne Abbey and various
other Dark Age issues gradually reduced me to incredulity. I concluded that to justify
those ideas, someone would have to dispose of the entire corpus of Anglo-Saxon
writing. Yesterday, as a result of a similar discussion about what may or may
not have happened at Beckery just west of Glastonbury in the 5th
century (archaeological opinion at the moment is that it was a very early
monastic settlement of some kind), I spent far too long discovering that yes,
that is indeed exactly the proposition. Every document claiming to be prior to the
12th century is a forgery.
At this point, because it would be impossible not to, I will name Ms V fully as
Harriet Vered. Her main claim to public notice is The Megalithic Empire (2012),
a book arguing that the stone monuments of western Europe were markers in a
vast system of trading routes. This is quite a fun suggestion taking advantage
of the fact that we don’t really know what most of these places were, even if
it doesn’t work in detail (a mystical earth-mysteries site, no less, has a nice
review pointing out the gaps in the argument, especially when it cavalierly sweeps
aside the possibility of water-based transport in prehistory). Meanwhile, this elderly website promoting the book does so in rather a light-hearted way, suggesting
that it is, if not exactly satire as some have guessed, aimed modestly at injecting
some new ideas into a field devoid of them; and who could object to that, even
if one of the ideas is that modern humans originated not in Africa but the
Arctic. It’s positive to have insights coming into the discipline of history
from outside, even if they turn out not to have legs.
The Megalithic Empire’s co-author is Michael J Harper, a far more
challenging figure, it turns out, than Ms Vered. His other books include 2003’s
The History of Britain Revealed, which champions the idea that the inhabitants
of the British Isles have always spoken English (not Old English, mind you, but
modern English, the stuff I’m typing) and that French and German are derived
from it; 2014’s Meetings With Remarkable Forgeries, arguing that ten axial historical
texts from Caesar’s De Bello Gallico to Voltaire’s Candide are fakes; and the
latest, Revisionist Historiography, which was only published last year and hasn’t
received any reviews. It’s a bit expensive for me to try out, especially given
the amount I’ve been spending recently.
I grappled with all this rather more than I should have done, but then
much of my approach to the world has manuscripts and their implications at its
heart. I’m used to people attacking the credibility of the Gospels, and have
often made the point that compared to many other ancient texts their
credentials are actually rather good, but at least Mr Harper is fair in
asserting that virtually every important text historians rely on is fake.
As far as English historical documents are concerned, the Harper-Vered
thesis is that there were two great campaigns of forgery, in the 12th
century and the 16th, both politically-motivated: the first to
cement the rule of the Norman kings and the Church they brought with them, and
the second to bolster the Tudors and their pet Church as they justified a national
identity separate from that of Europe and Rome. This is, I feel, not remotely
likely: such initiatives were unnecessary, and the theory requires assuming, contrary
to what we know, that texts are no older than the oldest datable copy:
that inevitably leads you to look for fakes and forgeries regardless of the circumstances
surrounding the texts themselves. Cast an eye towards this interview with
Harriet Vered. The interviewer is generally very sympathetic to her ideas, but
when (at 0.59) he asks why, given their absolute control over land, the Norman
kings couldn’t just give their new abbeys and churches anything they wanted
without engaging in an elaborate fraud involving inventing an entire fake history
for a country, Ms Vered can’t answer, merely repeating that that’s what
happened. At 1.09-1.10, discussing Samuel Pepys’s diary, she clearly thinks it’s
prima facie absurd that such a document could have existed for 150 years
without being published, and therefore that too must be a much later fake.
Because these assertions don't rest on evidence, I thought
there must be a set of beliefs behind them, and so there is. Mr Harper
and those he associates with call it Applied Epistemology, though it bears only
a remote relationship to the philosophical study which goes under that
title. In the account of The Applied Epistemology Library, this is translated
into a set of rules to govern enquiry, to which a set of people are committed:
AEists, they call themselves. The rules boil down thus:
- If the truth is not
simple, prove it!
- If what was differs
from what is, prove it!
- If different inputs
will produce the same outcome, prove it!
I’m not clear where these dicta come from, and I’m not sure
I can think of practical meanings for the last one, but on the face of it these
are not particularly objectionable guides to thinking in a variety of disciplines.
The AEists don’t often stick to them, though, because there are other motivations
operating. It must surely be simpler to believe that English history is real, and
its core texts genuine, than to assume they were all produced in two completely
otiose campaigns of fraud.
In fact, the bigger rule and the one which clearly excites
the AEists more than the stated ones, is the injunction to come up with interesting,
unorthodox ideas, even if they involve contradicting yourself. Mr Harper says:
an orthodoxy is established as soon as two people are agreed
on something. This is the origin of the Applied Epistemological mantra
'Everything you say must be original to you (or it isn't worth saying)'.
To an extremist, and all AE-ists are extremists, if you say something
completely original except that you said it last week, an orthodoxy has been
formed, and you shouldn't say it. But this is a counsel of perfection and, so
as long as you feel a little uncomfortable spouting something you said last week,
that is usually enough since it will force the brain to put a slight spin (even
a literary flourish) on such a hackneyed thought.
Obviously you would rip your own tongue out rather than repeat what somebody
else said last week. … As long as you get your brain used to constantly
'diving down' you will eventually bottom out ie actually start being
compulsively original.
This is, of course, an ideology – a counter-orthodoxy, if you will – and
where it takes you is, for instance, claiming (as Mr Harper implied on
well-known alternative historian Graham Hancock’s website in 2003), that the
Ancient Egyptians created Lakes Victoria and Tanganyika as reservoirs and the
northern course of the Nile is due to artificial engineering. One might counter
that this is explanation is a lot less ‘simple’ than the Nile not flowing into
the Indian Ocean or west to the Atlantic because there are bloody great mountains
in the way, or that Lake Victoria doesn’t look ‘squarish’ at all, but one
suspects Mr Harper is just saying something plainly ludicrous for the sake of
it. Should you be tempted to believe any of this, consider the 14 species of
Mastacembelus spiny eels unique to Lake Tanganyika, which would have
taken longer than 5000 years to develop.
No, the root of AEism, if such a thing can be said to exist, lies not in high-minded
rationalistic principles, but rather in the belief that people are largely
liars or fools, and those who expose them should consider themselves superior. You
will recognise this as the same energies that drive conspiracy theories. It
produces ideas that dissipate when actual data are applied to them, but you
have to wonder how much their proponents actually believe in them: perhaps they just find reality a bit dull. It's hard to tell. In Harriet
Vered’s interview on Adzcast, she insists that ‘we don’t have a single Anglo-Saxon
church in this country’ (which will be news to the good parishioners of Wing, Brixworth,
or St Peter’s Monkwearmouth), ‘you can’t date a stone cross’ (pity poor Rosemary
Cramp, then, who devoted her entire life to dating Dark Age sculpture), and alleges that orthodox archaeologists force their unsubstantiated
ideas on the general public. In fact, for instance, English Heritage who own
Stonehenge are quite open in stating that nobody knows what it was for (though
they speculate, quite reasonably). Is she ignorant, malicious, or mischievous?
My contrary experience is that people, no matter their degree of ignorance
about facts, are generally neither liars nor fools, though they might be
either on occasion. And this is probably where my unconscionable credulity
arises.