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By
Jay Williams
The Walcott-Bartlett Professor of Religious
Studies
Hamilton College
Edward Robinson (1794-1863) is often described
as the father of Biblical Archaeology but,
strictly speaking, that description is wrong on
at least two counts. First, a perusal of
theological seminary catalogues from the early
19th Century indicates that something called “Biblical
Archaeology” was already being taught before
Robinson ever left for Syria-Palestine. What was
presented probably would not count as Biblical
Archaeology today, but the subject as such was
already recognized. In fact, Johann Jahn
published the first volume of his Biblisch
Archaeologie in1805. Second, and perhaps more
important, Robinson did not conceive of himself
as an archaeologist but rather preferred to be
thought of as a Biblical geographer. The only
digging he ever did was to clear away a little
debris around the Tomb of the Kings near
Jerusalem. He described terrain and identified
sites, often quite accurately, but he did not
excavate or even co-excavate any sites.
Whether he was an archaeologist or a geographer,
however, is not the subject I would like to
consider today. Rather, my concern is with the
political dimensions of his work, which was, no
matter what it is called, the foundation of
archaeology in the Holy Land. That is, I would
like to consider not what he discovered but the
political world that allowed him to do his work
and the possible political ramifications of what
he did.
Although there had been many travelers in the
Holy Land in the late 18th and early 19th
Century, Robinson was really the first person of
the modern period to travel in Palestine who was
both thoroughly trained in Biblical Studies and
who took the study of the geography of the Holy
Land as his primary aim. The reason is fairly
obvious: the Ottoman Empire, the long-time foe
and bęte noir of Christendom had little
interest in having “Franks,” as they called
them, roaming around and examining their
territory. Studying someone else’s geography
seemed to the Ottomans, as it would seem to us,
highly suspicious. Certainly, they did not want
Christian missionaries entering their empire to
make Christians out of the people of the land.
The Porte accepted as subjects Jews and Orthodox
and Marionite Christians, for they were
indigenous believers whose traditions had been
there before Islam even entered the land but was
adamant about new conversions and threatened
punishment by death for those Muslims who
converted to Christianity. Islam was not just a
religion but was the law of the land. To forsake
Islam was considered an act of treason. Even the
non-Muslim religion took on a political tone,
for the Orthodox were considered under the
protection of Russia and the Marionites under
France.
In any event, in 1832 a considerable change
occurred. Mohammed Ali, an Albanian, had been
appointed Governor of Egypt and had worked very
hard to [move the country toward industrial
development and economic self-sufficiency.
Arriving on the scene shortly after the French
were driven from Egypt in 1801, supposedly to
reestablish Turkish authority in the region, Ali
quickly established his own authority. However,
after years of living under the rule of the
Ottoman Empire, Greek citizens of area began to
rise up against their oppressors.] To stop their
revolt against Empire, the Porte called upon
Mohammed Ali to come to his aid. This he did
successfully, and as a result the Sultan
promised to place Greece under his control. When
that plan, because of further Greek successes,
failed to materialize, Ali demanded that
Syria-Palestine be given to him instead. The
Sultan refused, and in the ensuing military
struggle, Mohammed Ali gained control of the
region. In fact, if Western powers had not
intervened, he probably would have won the whole
empire for himself.
In any event, the result was that in 1832 Egypt
gained hegemony over Syria-Palestine and to
curry favor in the West, became far more liberal
in its policies toward travelers and
missionaries. Up until this time, Protestant
missionaries to the region had met largely with
frustration. In fact, the center of the mission
remained in Malta because of the monumental
difficulties in establishing any toehold in West
Asia itself. After Mohammed Ali’s rise to
power in the region, however, missionaries found
it easier to establish at least a beachhead in
Mount Lebanon and then in Jerusalem.
Fortuitously, it was Eli Smith who came to head
the mission in Beirut, learn the language and
folkways of the region, and then meet his old
friend and teacher, Robinson, while on leave in
America. Doubtless, he told Robinson about the
easing of restrictions, and together they
planned the trip which was to transform Biblical
Studies.
Robinson was successful in his epoch-making
journey in 1837 not only because he was allowed
to travel so freely but because his guide, Eli
Smith, already had had---thanks to Mohammed Ali’s
policies---a number of years’ experience in
the region and could negotiate the many
difficulties which they would face. Robinson had
studied Arabic but was by no means fluent. Had
he not had Smith with him, one may suspect that
very little would have been accomplished. It
should also be added that when he got to
Jerusalem, he met several more missionaries who
also aided him in his work. Had he traveled to
Palestine but a few years later, he would have
found Mohammed Ali no longer in control, the
Jerusalem mission closed, and travel to many
areas virtually impossible.
Of course, Eli Smith, the missionary, had to
explain to the American Board of Commissioners
for Foreign Missions just why he spent several
months leading Robinson around Palestine, doing
geographical rather than evangelical work. After
all, he was being supported by them and not by
the government or by an historical or
geographical society. His report to them
indicated that, in fact, this journey was to
survey the Bedouins to see what missionary work
could be done among them. And, upon his return,
he produced an article for The Missionary Herald
on exactly that subject. I mention this in order
to point out that missionaries were very much
involved with politics, too. They had to satisfy
the folks back home who supported them
financially that they were working hard at their
task and that they were, in fact, making some
headway in the evangelization of the world. The
latter was difficult to argue, for what sort of
headway can you make in a country that forbids
its subjects, under penalty of death, to
convert?
The answer, in part, was to find people who were
not subject to such a penalty. One group of
people was, of course, the Christians who were
already there. Even though they had clung to
their faith for centuries against strong
pressure from the Muslims, the missionaries (and
Robinson) regarded them as only “nominal
Christians” who needed education in the true
and simple gospel. The idea was that if you
could give such people a western education,
western science would free them from their
superstitions, and they would quite naturally
become Protestant. Indeed, it is clear from even
a cursory reading of the missionaries that the
great enemy of Christ is superstition and that
that superstition is best overcome by the
introduction of a scientific world view. Thus
Eli Smith, himself, gave lectures on modern
astronomy to interested people in Beirut. Still
another group under consideration for conversion
were the Jews. Mr. Nicholayson, whom Robinson
met in Jerusalem, was sent to the area from a
London organization that specialized in the
conversion of Jews to Protestant Christianity.
When Robinson arrived, there were already plans
underway to build a Church in Jerusalem for that
specific purpose. The whole plan, however, broke
down when it was discovered that part of the
land considered for the site did not belong to
the mission at all. Shortly after Robinson’s
trip, the mission closed down and little more
was accomplished for some time.
Still another group who especially interested
the missionaries was the Druze. Robinson, in
Bibliotheca Sacra, devotes a rather long article
to a discussion of their beliefs and situation.
What made them of interest to the missionaries
was that they were not really Muslims and hence
were potentially convertible. At the same time,
they were not under the protection of any
Western power as the Marionites and Orthodox
were. Some of the missionaries had the idea that
if the English could take them under their
protection, this would give England a toehold in
the Near East and would also be of great benefit
to the missionaries who would then have a
definite group to missionize who were not
Christian or subject to execution. Robinson
apparently thought this was a worthy idea, but
the English diplomats fumbled the ball and
nothing ever came of the idea. In any event, it
is quite clear that the missionaries and
Robinson, too, thought that political control of
the Eastern Mediterranean littoral was a
desirable goal.
Part of the justification for this view,
according to Robinson, came from the
Palestinians themselves. He writes:
The people in general in this part of the
country, were ready to give us information, so
far as they could; and seemed not to distrust
us. Here too we found the same general
impression, that our object was to collect
information and survey the country, preparatory
to the arrival of the Franks; and here too we
were addressed in the usual phrase: “Do not be
long.” Indeed, the inhabitants everywhere
appeared, for the most part, to desire that the
Franks should send a force among them. They were
formerly tired of the Turks; they were now still
more heartily tired of the Egyptians; and were
ready to welcome any Frank nation which should
come, not to subdue, (for that would not be
necessary,) but to take possession of the land.
(Biblical Researches II, 369)
It may very well be that some Palestinians did
think that way. I, myself, have met Palestinians
who prefer to live under the Israeli government
because they were formerly so unhappy with the
Turks and the British. Nevertheless, this sort
of view expressed in the West surely gave great
encouragement to the colonialist movement.
Certainly the West should gain political power
in Asia; that is what the local inhabitants
want! And they want it quickly. European and
American civilization are obviously superior,
for modern science has proved itself true. In
this pre-Darwinian era when science, Scottish
Common Sense philosophy, and evangelical
Protestant piety still formed a very potent
triumvirate, it seemed obvious to those in the
fold that nothing in the world could stand in
their way. The enemy was superstition.
Superstition, in fact, was Robinson’s basic
enemy, too. Indeed, one of the attractive
features of his work is that he does not repeat
the old stories and legends about sites but
tries to look at them afresh, without the
Medieval legends to get in the way. Perhaps for
that reason, he never so much as entered the
Latin convent where many visitors before him had
stayed, nor did he, on his first trip, even go
inside the Church of the Holy Sepulcher. In one
sense, this was all an expression of his
scientific objectivity. He eschewed superstition
in order to concentrate on the facts.
At the same time, this objectivity was also a
clear expression of the strong anti-Catholic
stance of his church and his culture in general.
Although the New School Presbyterians agreed
with the position that Luther and Calvin took
against the Roman Catholic Church, they added
another, in some ways more telling, objection.
The Catholic Church stood condemned in their
eyes because it fostered superstition and
idolatry. To show that some of the most revered
sites of the Orthodox and Catholics were
mistakes, based upon misinformation and
superstition, was to reconfirm Protestantism’s
most common complaint: the Catholics teach
things which are factually and scientifically
untrue.
It should also be noted that although Robinson
and the New School Presbyterians were the
enemies of superstition, they did not at this
time apply their critical reasoning or
scientific method to the Scriptures themselves.
For Robinson, at least, the Bible was, by
definition, true and beyond criticism. Hence, by
extension, since Protestants were the correct
interpreters of Scripture, they, too, were
really beyond superstitious inclinations. Thus,
it was for him superstitious to maintain that
the Church of the Holy Sepulcher is located
correctly but quite rational to believe that
two-and-a-half-million Israelites could live for
forty years in the Negev desert.
After returning to Germany in 1838, Robinson
spent more than two years completing the massive
three-volume description of the trip and his
findings. While Union Theological Seminary
waited for its errant new appointee to assume
his position as Professor of Christian
Literature, E.R. was producing a vast, erudite,
and ponderous work that was to enhance greatly
his reputation as a Biblical scholar. The three
volumes were published in 1841 and immediately
became popular. Within a relatively short space
of time, the first printing of 5,000 copies sold
out. Subsequent editions were also very well
received. The question is why? Why should such a
very detailed, indeed in places quite boring,
work receive such an enthusiastic reception? One
can understand Biblical scholars and geographers
having some interest but not the ordinary
citizen.
There are doubtless many reasons for its
popularity, including Robinson’s own penchant
for promotion through teasers---interesting
little articles about one or another phase of
the trip---placed in newspapers like the New
York Evangelist. High on the list of reasons,
however, should be the way in which the work,
sweetly and scientifically, undercuts Roman
Catholic holy pilgrimage sites. Protestant
America felt itself to be more and more under
seige. Every day brought more shiploads of
immigrants from Ireland and Germany to add to
the growing Catholic population. The old dream
of a pious, Protestant America was dying. Now
Robinson confirmed through the most exact
measurements and explorations what Protestants
had long believed: that Catholicism was
superstitious. Robinson, by refuting those
Medieval legends and identifying so many
Biblical sites, had recaptured Palestine for
Protestantism. His was a one-man, Protestant
crusade that seemed invincibly victorious.
Buyers did not really need to read the books. To
point to them on the bookshelf was enough to
confirm Protestantism’s most ardent hopes.
Catholics, of course, recognized the danger.
Robinson came under attack from no less a person
that John Henry Newman. Biblical Researches was
banned in Catholic Austria. But in England,
America, and Protestant Germany, it was heralded
as one of the great works of the century.
Science had conquered legend, reason,
superstition. Robinson was lauded with honorary
degrees and a gold medal from the Royal
Geographical Society.
There was still another way in which Robinson’s
work conquered, for he dug behind not only the
Greek and Latin names for sites, but the Arabic
names as well. One of the primary ways in which
he identified the sites of antiquity was by
examining their modern Arabic names. Curiously,
after so many centuries of history, these names
often contained a clue as to a place’s
earlier, Biblical identity. So Robinson and
Smith payed close attention to Arabic place
names but only to overcome them. It would be as
though a modern Iroquois was to find in modern
names, like Oneida and Canajohaire and
Schenectady, the real names of the places and
redraw the maps of the area accordingly.
As the writers of the Bible knew, naming is a
powerful action, for it gives power over that
which is named. Hence, Jews came to believe that
it is blasphemous to name or speak the name of
God, for in so doing one claims control. What
Robinson did was to rename the ancient land
according to the English corruptions of the
ancient names. It was to plant in the Land of
the Book the conquering flag of the People of
the Book. The land that Protestants had explored
in Bible reading had now been rediscovered
geographically. In the midst of the Ottoman
Empire was their land, the holy land of their
faith and dreams. The recovery of the old (but
corrupted) names had made it theirs.
Thus, although it may not have been Robinson’s
intention, he helped to do what Edward Said has
said every orientalist attempts. According to
Said, orientalism is the way the West dominates,
restructures, and has authority over what
Europeans and Americans designate “the orient.”
The peeling away of the present in order to
privilege the ancient past, a past which the
West regards as its own, is an act of
orientalism.
Certainly, in all this I do not wish to
denigrate the work which Robinson did. His
contribution to Biblical Studies was enormous
and was the great spur that led to the
development of archaeology in the Holy Land. His
contributions, however, should not blind us to
the political implications of his work. Biblical
geography and, by extension, archaeology, were
closely tied in origin to the missionary
movement. They also grew out of that 19th
Century synthesis of Calvinism, Scottish Common
Sense Philosophy, and natural science that so
dominated American thought. Just as the missions
had overt political ties and implications, so,
too, did Robinson’s work, which can be seen as
an extension of the Protestant mission to
Syria-Palestine.
While his colleagues sought to win souls to
their movement, Robinson worked to convert the
land itself to Protestantism. That conversion
was not a governmental conversion. The British
and then the Israelis would follow much later to
accomplish that. His conversion was an
intellectual one, but once it was accomplished,
it was only a matter of time before political
change took place. The fact that it was
eventually the Jews and not the Protestants who
did the conquering matters less than that the
land of the Bible was once more reclaimed by the
West. In fact, the victory by the Jews made it
easier, for Protestants did not have to feel
guilty about the conquest. Digging in someone
else’s backyard to discover the remains of
someone to whom the digger relates but who is
unrelated to the owner of the yard is an act of
great political consequence. The movement that
Robinson began has been that sort of work, and
all the scientific objectivity of the
archaeologist cannot erase the political
implications.
Jay
Williams is a distinguished Walcott-Bartlett
Professor of Religious Studies at Hamilton
College
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