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01 June 2011 By Mshari Al-Zaydi There is a theory that maintains that our human
history includes three "false" centuries. This is the
conclusion drawn by the German researchers Hans-Ulrich
Niemitz and Heribert Illig, which they called "The
Phantom Time Hypothesis". In this theory, the two researchers claim that
approximately 297 fictitious years have been added to
history, whereby the events of this period have formed
an illusionary chronology. According to Niemitz and
Illig, a historical conspiracy was instigated against
the conventional chronology, a conspiracy with a
political undercurrent, aiming to "rewrite" history
from scratch. The two researchers explain their theory by
referring to a conspiracy that was woven throughout
the course of history from Julius Caesar to the
Byzantines. They claim that "phantom years" gradually
went missing, and were not lost all at once. In other
words, a decade may have gone missing here, or a
century there, during the process of "recording and
documenting the Byzantine era in the ninth century, or
during the reign of Otto III [980 – 23 January 1002
AD, the fourth ruler of the Saxon or Ottonian dynasty
of the Holy Roman Empire], who artificially advanced
the date of his rule to approach the year 1000 AD, a
year he considered symbolic." According to the theory, this major chronological
"leakage" took place throughout the entire course of
history, in which historians have complained of black
undocumented "gaps" in preceding or succeeding
periods. To support their idea, Niemitz and Illig
cited evidence from the Byzantine period in the Middle
East between 600 – 900 AD, during which the Byzantine
and Islamic kingdoms were fighting one another in the
Far East and the Mediterranean Basin. Nevertheless, these conclusions remain an
interesting theory and a subject of debate amongst
scientists and specialists. The claim has not become a
scientific fact, not even close to that. Yet this piece of scientific news raises important
questions such as: What if we chose to delete three
centuries at once from our history? Would these three
centuries be the era of submission to colonialism, in
all its various forms and locations? Or would we omit
the declining years of the Mamluk and Ottoman empires?
Or would we delete the fierce struggles between the
princes of various sects in Andalus, and consequently,
the fall of Andalus? Or the breakup of the Abbasid
Caliphate? Or what if we deleted the period in which
we gained liberation and independence, and formed the
modern nation state? Are we now, in the time of Arab popular uprisings,
finally patching together the garment of our history?
Or are we further tearing apart an already ragged
garment, and thus entering another black hole of
history which will devour our events and facts? Let us consider carefully such an exciting piece of
news. How deceitful is history, and how illusionary is
this age? |