Hamlet's Mill: An Essay Investigating The Origi... May 2026
Santillana and von Dechend suggest that a high-level Neolithic or early Bronze Age civilization discovered precession thousands of years before Hipparchus, its traditionally credited discoverer in 127 B.C.. This knowledge was so vital that it was encoded into oral traditions to ensure its survival through "the steep attrition of the ages". Academic Reception and Criticism
: The authors interpret the "World Tree" or "Axis Mundi" found in many cultures as a representation of the Earth’s axis. The Argument for a Prehistoric "High Culture" Hamlet's Mill: An Essay Investigating the Origi...
First published in 1969, is a seminal work by Giorgio de Santillana, a professor of the history of science at MIT, and Hertha von Dechend, an anthropologist at Frankfurt University. The book proposes a radical reinterpretation of ancient mythology as a sophisticated technical language used to preserve and transmit complex astronomical data, specifically the Precession of the Equinoxes . Core Thesis: Myth as Encoded Science Santillana and von Dechend suggest that a high-level
The authors argue that ancient myths—from Norse and Greek to Polynesian and West African traditions—are not primitive "fairy tales" about fertility or agriculture. Instead, they are "relics and fragments" of an exacting preliterate science. The Argument for a Prehistoric "High Culture" First