The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Story of Mankind
Title: The Story of Mankind
Author: Hendrik Willem Van Loon
Release date: July 24, 2014 [eBook #46399]
Most recently updated: October 24, 2024
Language: English
Credits: Produced by eagkw, Chris Curnow and the Online Distributed
Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
produced from images generously made available by The
Internet Archive)
THE STORY OF MANKIND
By HENDRIK VAN LOON, AB. Ph.D.
Author of The Fall of the Dutch Republic, The Rise of the Dutch
Kingdom, The Golden Book of the Dutch Navigators,
A Short Story of Discovery, Ancient Man.
This book is fully illustrated with eight three-color
pages, over one hundred black and white pictures and
numerous animated maps and half-tones drawn by the
author.
THE STORY OF
MANKIND
BY
HENDRIK VAN LOON
BONI and LIVERIGHT
- First Printing, November, 1921
- Second Printing, December, 1921
- Third Printing, January, 1922
- Fourth Printing, February, 1922
- Fifth Printing, February, 1922
- Sixth Printing, March, 1922
- Seventh Printing, April, 1922
- Eighth Printing, May, 1922
- Ninth Printing, May, 1922
- Tenth Printing, June, 1922
- Eleventh Printing, July, 1922
- Twelfth Printing, July, 1922
- Thirteenth Printing, August, 1922
- Fourteenth Printing, August, 1922
- Fifteenth Printing, September, 1922
- Sixteenth Printing, September, 1922
- Seventeenth Printing, September, 1922
- Eighteenth Printing, October, 1922
- Nineteenth Printing, November, 1922
- Twentieth Printing, December, 1922
THE STORY OF MANKIND
Copyright, 1921, By
Boni & Liveright, Inc.
Copyright in All Countries
Printed in the United States of America
To JIMMIE
“What is the use of a book without pictures?” said Alice.
FOREWORD
For Hansje and Willem:
When I was twelve or thirteen years old, an uncle of mine who gave me my love for books and pictures promised to take me upon a memorable expedition. I was to go with him to the top of the tower of Old Saint Lawrence in Rotterdam.
And so, one fine day, a sexton with a key as large as that of Saint Peter opened a mysterious door. “Ring the bell,” he said, “when you come back and want to get out,” and with a great grinding of rusty old hinges he separated us from the noise of the busy street and locked us into a world of new and strange experiences.
For the first time in my life I was confronted by the phenomenon of audible silence. When we had climbed the first flight of stairs, I added another discovery to my limited knowledge of natural phenomena—that of tangible darkness. A match showed us where the upward road continued. We went to the next floor and then to the next and the next until I had lost count and then there came still another floor, and suddenly we had plenty of light. This floor was on an even height with the roof of the church, and it was used as a storeroom. Covered with many inches of dust, there lay the abandoned symbols of a venerable faith which had been discarded by the good people of the city many years ago. That which had meant life and death to our ancestors was here reduced to junk and rubbish. The industrious rat had built his nest among the carved images and the ever watchful spider had opened up shop between the outspread arms of a kindly saint.
The next floor showed us from where we had derived our light. Enormous open windows with heavy iron bars made the high and barren room the roosting place of hundreds of pigeons. The wind blew through the iron bars and the air was filled with a weird and pleasing music. It was the noise of the town below us, but a noise which had been purified and cleansed by the distance. The rumbling of heavy carts and the clinking of horses’ hoofs, the winding of cranes and pulleys, the hissing sound of the patient steam which had been set to do the work of man in a thousand different ways—they had all been blended into a softly rustling whisper which provided a beautiful background for the trembling cooing of the pigeons.
Here the stairs came to an end and the ladders began. And after the first ladder (a slippery old thing which made one feel his way with a cautious foot) there was a new and even greater wonder, the town-clock. I saw the heart of time. I could hear the heavy pulsebeats of the rapid seconds—one—two—three—up to sixty. Then a sudden quivering noise when all the wheels seemed to stop and another minute had been chopped off eternity. Without pause it began again—one—two—three—until at last after a warning rumble and the scraping of many wheels a thunderous voice, high above us, told the world that it was the hour of noon.
On the next floor were the bells. The nice little bells and their terrible sisters. In the centre the big bell, which made me turn stiff with fright when I heard it in the middle of the night telling a story of fire or flood. In solitary grandeur it seemed to reflect upon those six hundred years during which it had shared the joys and the sorrows of the good people of Rotterdam. Around it, neatly arranged like the blue jars in an old-fashioned apothecary shop, hung the little fellows, who twice each week played a merry tune for the benefit of the country-folk who had come to market to buy and sell and hear what the big world had been doing. But in a corner—all alone and shunned by the others—a big black bell, silent and stern, the bell of death.
Then darkness once more and other ladders, steeper and even more dangerous than those we had climbed before, and suddenly the fresh air of the wide heavens. We had reached the highest gallery. Above us the sky. Below us the city—a little toy-town, where busy ants were hastily crawling hither and thither, each one intent upon his or her particular business, and beyond the jumble of stones, the wide greenness of the open country.
It was my first glimpse of the big world.
Since then, whenever I have had the opportunity, I have gone to the top of the tower and enjoyed myself. It was hard work, but it repaid in full the mere physical exertion of climbing a few stairs.
Besides, I knew what my reward would be. I would see the land and the sky, and I would listen to the stories of my kind friend the watchman, who lived in a small shack, built in a sheltered corner of the gallery. He looked after the clock and was a father to the bells, and he warned of fires, but he enjoyed many free hours and then he smoked a pipe and thought his own peaceful thoughts. He had gone to school almost fifty years before and he had rarely read a book, but he had lived on the top of his tower for so many years that he had absorbed the wisdom of that wide world which surrounded him on all sides.
History he knew well, for it was a living thing with him. “There,” he would say, pointing to a bend of the river, “there, my boy, do you see those trees? That is where the Prince of Orange cut the dikes to drown the land and save Leyden.” Or he would tell me the tale of the old Meuse, until the broad river ceased to be a convenient harbour and became a wonderful highroad, carrying the ships of De Ruyter and Tromp upon that famous last voyage, when they gave their lives that the sea might be free to all.
Then there were the little villages, clustering around the protecting church which once, many years ago, had been the home of their Patron Saints. In the distance we could see the leaning tower of Delft. Within sight of its high arches, William the Silent had been murdered and there Grotius had learned to construe his first Latin sentences. And still further away, the long low body of the church of Gouda, the early home of the man whose wit had proved mightier than the armies of many an emperor, the charity-boy whom the world came to know as Erasmus.
Finally the silver line of the endless sea and as a contrast, immediately below us, the patchwork of roofs and chimneys and houses and gardens and hospitals and schools and railways, which we called our home. But the tower showed us the old home in a new light. The confused commotion of the streets and the market-place, of the factories and the workshop, became the well-ordered expression of human energy and purpose. Best of all, the wide view of the glorious past, which surrounded us on all sides, gave us new courage to face the problems of the future when we had gone back to our daily tasks.
History is the mighty Tower of Experience, which Time has built amidst the endless fields of bygone ages. It is no easy task to reach the top of this ancient structure and get the benefit of the full view. There is no elevator, but young feet are strong and it can be done.
Here I give you the key that will open the door.
When you return, you too will understand the reason for my enthusiasm.
Hendrik Willem van Loon.
CONTENTS
| PAGE | ||
|---|---|---|
| 1. | The Setting of the Stage | 3 |
| 2. | Our Earliest Ancestors | 9 |
| 3. | Prehistoric Man Begins to Make Things for Himself | 13 |
| 4. | The Egyptians Invent the Art of Writing and the Record of History Begins | 17 |
| 5. | The Beginning of Civilisation in the Valley of the Nile | 22 |
| 6. | The Rise and Fall of Egypt | 27 |
| 7. | Mesopotamia, the Second Centre of Eastern Civilisation | 29 |
| 8. | The Sumerian Nail Writers, Whose Clay Tablets Tell Us the Story of Assyria and Babylonia, the Great Semitic Melting-Pot | 32 |
| 9. | The Story of Moses, the Leader of the Jewish People | 38 |
| 10. | The Phœnicians, Who Gave Us Our Alphabet | 42 |
| 11. | The Indo-European Persians Conquer the Semitic and the Egyptian World | 44 |
| 12. | The People of the Ægean Sea Carried the Civilisation of Old Asia Into the Wilderness of Europe | 48 |
| 13. | Meanwhile the Indo-European Tribe of the Hellenes Was Taking Possession of Greece | 54 |
| 14. | The Greek Cities That Were Really States | 59 |
| 15. | The Greeks Were the First People to Try the Difficult Experiment of Self-Government | 62 |
| 16. | How the Greeks Lived | 66 |
| 17. | The Origins of the Theatre, the First Form of Public Amusement | 71 |
| 18. | How the Greeks Defended Europe Against an Asiatic Invasion and Drove the Persians Back Across the Ægean Sea | 74 |
| 19. | How Athens and Sparta Fought a Long and Disastrous War for the Leadership of Greece | 81 |
| 20. | Alexander the Macedonian Establishes a Greek World-Empire, and What Became of This High Ambition | 83 |
| 21. | A Short Summary of Chapters 1 to 20 | 85 |
| 22. | The Semitic Colony of Carthage on the Northern Coast of Africa and the Indo-European City of Rome on the West Coast of Italy Fought Each Other for the Possession of the Western Mediterranean and Carthage Was Destroyed | 88 |
| 23. | How Rome Happened | 105 |
| 24. | How the Republic of Rome, After Centuries of Unrest and Revolution, Became an Empire | 109 |
| 25. | The Story of Joshua of Nazareth, Whom the Greeks Called Jesus | 119 |
| 26. | The Twilight of Rome | 124 |
| 27. | How Rome Became the Centre of the Christian World | 131 |
| 28. | Ahmed, the Camel Driver, Who Became the Prophet of the Arabian Desert, and Whose Followers Almost Conquered the Entire Known World for the Greater Glory of Allah, the “Only True God” | 138 |
| 29. | How Charlemagne, the King of the Franks, Came to Bear the Title of Emperor and Tried to Revive the Old Ideal of World-Empire | 144 |
| 30. | Why the People of the Tenth Century Prayed the Lord to Protect Them from the Fury of the Norsemen | 150 |
| 31. | How Central Europe, Attacked from Three Sides, Became an Armed Camp and Why Europe Would Have Perished Without Those Professional Soldiers and Administrators Who Were Part of the Feudal System | 155 |
| 32. | Chivalry | 159 |
| 33. | The Strange Double Loyalty of the People of the Middle Ages, and How It Led to Endless Quarrels Between the Popes and the Holy Roman Emperors | 162 |
| 34. | But All These Different Quarrels Were Forgotten When the Turks Took the Holy Land, Desecrated the Holy Places and Interfered Seriously with the Trade from East to West. Europe Went Crusading | 168 |
| 35. | Why the People of the Middle Ages Said That “City Air Is Free Air” | 174 |
| 36. | How the People of the Cities Asserted Their Right to Be Heard in the Royal Councils of Their Country | 184 |
| 37. | What the People of the Middle Ages Thought of the World in Which They Happened to Live | 191 |
| 38. | How the Crusades Once More Made the Mediterranean a Busy Centre of Trade and How the Cities of the Italian Peninsula Became the Great Distributing Centre for the Commerce with Asia and Africa | 198 |
| 39. | People Once More Dared to Be Happy Just Because They Were Alive. They Tried to Save the Remains of the Older and More Agreeable Civilisation of Rome and Greece and They Were so Proud of Their Achievements That They Spoke of a “Renaissance” or Re-birth of Civilisation | 206 |
| 40. | The People Began to Feel the Need of Giving Expression to Their Newly Discovered Joy of Living. They Expressed Their Happiness in Poetry and in Sculpture and in Architecture and Painting, and in the Books They Printed | 219 |
| 41. | But Now That People Had Broken Through the Bonds of Their Narrow Mediæval Limitations, They Had to Have More Room for Their Wanderings. The European World Had Grown Too Small for Their Ambitions. It was the Time of the Great Voyages of Discovery | 224 |
| 42. | Concerning Buddha and Confucius | 241 |
| 43. | The Progress of the Human Race is Best Compared to a Gigantic Pendulum Which Forever Swings Forward and Backward. The Religious Indifference and the Artistic and Literary Enthusiasm of the Renaissance Were Followed by the Artistic and Literary Indifference and the Religious Enthusiasm of the Reformation | 251 |
| 44. | The Age of the Great Religious Controversies | 262 |
| 45. | How the Struggle Between the “Divine Right of Kings” and the Less Divine but More Reasonable “Right of Parliament” Ended Disastrously for King Charles I | 279 |
| 46. | In France, on the Other Hand, the “Divine Right of Kings” Continued with Greater Pomp and Splendor Than Ever Before and the Ambition of the Ruler Was Only Tempered by the Newly Invented Law of the “Balance of Power” | 296 |
| 47. | The Story of the Mysterious Muscovite Empire Which Suddenly Burst upon the Grand Political Stage of Europe | 301 |
| 48. | Russia and Sweden Fought Many Wars to Decide Who Shall Be the Leading Power of Northeastern Europe | 308 |
| 49. | The Extraordinary Rise of a Little State in a Dreary Part of Northern Germany, Called Prussia | 313 |
| 50. | How the Newly Founded National or Dynastic States of Europe Tried to Make Themselves Rich and What Was Meant by the Mercantile System | 317 |
| 51. | At the End of the Eighteenth Century Europe Heard Strange Reports of Something Which Had Happened in the Wilderness of the North American Continent. The Descendants of the Men Who Had Punished King Charles for His Insistence upon His “Divine Rights” Added a New Chapter to the Old Story of the Struggle for Self-Government | 323 |
| 52. | The Great French Revolution Proclaims the Principles of Liberty, Fraternity and Equality Unto All the People of the Earth | 334 |
| 53. | Napoleon | 349 |
| 54. | As Soon as Napoleon Had Been Sent to St. Helena, the Rulers Who So Often Had Been Defeated by the Hated “Corsican” Met at Vienna and Tried to Undo the Many Changes Which Had Been Brought About by the French Revolution | 361 |
| 55. | They Tried to Assure the World an Era of Undisturbed Peace by Suppressing All New Ideas. They Made the Police-Spy the Highest Functionary in the State and Soon the Prisons of All Countries Were Filled With Those Who Claimed That People Have the Right to Govern Themselves as They See Fit | 373 |
| 56. | The Love of National Independence, However, Was Too Strong to Be Destroyed in This Way. The South Americans Were the First to Rebel Against the Reactionary Measures of the Congress of Vienna. Greece and Belgium and Spain and a Large Number of Other Countries of the European Continent Followed Suit and the Nineteenth Century Was Filled with the Rumor of Many Wars of Independence | 381 |
| 57. | But While the People of Europe Were Fighting for Their National Independence, the World in Which They Lived Had Been Entirely Changed by a Series of Inventions, Which Had Made the Clumsy Old Steam-Engine of the Eighteenth Century the Most Faithful and Efficient Slave of Man | 402 |
| 58. | The New Engines Were Very Expensive and Only People of Wealth Could Afford Them. The Old Carpenter or Shoemaker Who Had Been His Own Master in His Little Workshop Was Obliged to Hire Himself Out to the Owners of the Big Mechanical Tools, and While He Made More Money than Before, He Lost His Former Independence and He Did Not Like That | 413 |
| 59. | The General Introduction of Machinery Did Not Bring About the Era of Happiness and Prosperity Which Had Been Predicted by the Generation Which Saw the Stage Coach Replaced by the Railroad. Several Remedies Were Suggested, but None of These Quite Solved the Problem | 420 |
| 60. | But the World Had Undergone Another Change Which Was of Greater Importance Than Either the Political or the Industrial Revolutions. After Generations of Oppression and Persecution, the Scientist Had at Last Gained Liberty of Action and He Was Now Trying to Discover the Fundamental Laws Which Govern the Universe | 427 |
| 61. | A Chapter of Art | 433 |
| 62. | The Last Fifty Years, Including Several Explanations and a Few Apologies | 446 |
| 63. | The Great War, Which Was Really the Struggle for a New and Better World | 456 |
| 64. | Animated Chronology | 467 |
| 65. | Concerning the Pictures | 473 |
| 66. | An Historical Reading List for Children | 475 |
| 67. | Index | 484 |
LIST OF COLORED PICTURES
| The Scene of Our History is Laid Upon a Little Planet, Lost in the Vastness of the Universe |
Frontispiece |
| FACING PAGE |
|
|---|---|
| Greece | 84 |
| Rome | 126 |
| The Norsemen Are Coming | 156 |
| The Castle | 164 |
| The Mediæval World | 194 |
| A New World | 238 |
| Buddha Goes into the Mountains | 246 |
| Moscow | 306 |
LIST OF HALF TONE PICTURES
| FACING PAGE |
|
|---|---|
| The Temple | 68 |
| The Mountain-pass | 148 |
| The Mediæval Town | 180 |
| The Cathedral | 220 |
| The Blockhouse in the Wilderness | 328 |
| Off for Trafalgar | 362 |
| The Modern City | 404 |
| The Dirigible | 430 |
LIST OF PICTURES AND ANIMATED MAPS
| PAGE | ||
| 1. | High Up in the North | 1 |
| 2. | It Rained Incessantly | 4 |
| 3. | The Ascent of Man | 5 |
| 4. | The Plants Leave the Sea | 6 |
| 5. | The Growth of the Human Skull | 9 |
| 6. | Pre-history and History | 11 |
| 7. | Prehistoric Europe | 15 |
| 8. | The Valley of Egypt | 23 |
| 9. | The Building of the Pyramids | 25 |
| 10. | Mesopotamia, the Melting-pot of the Ancient World | 30 |
| 11. | A Tower of Babel | 34 |
| 12. | Nineveh | 35 |
| 13. | The Holy City of Babylon | 36 |
| 14. | The Wanderings of the Jews | 39 |
| 15. | Moses Sees the Holy Land | 41 |
| 16. | The Phœnician Trader | 42 |
| 17. | The Story of a Word | 45 |
| 18. | The Indo-Europeans and Their Neighbours | 46 |
| 19. | The Trojan Horse | 48 |
| 20. | Schliemann Digs for Troy | 49 |
| 21. | Mycenæ in Argolis | 50 |
| 22. | The Ægean Sea | 51 |
| 23. | The Island-Bridges Between Asia and Europe | 52 |
| 24. | An Ægean City on the Greek Mainland | 54 |
| 25. | The Achæans Take an Ægean City | 55 |
| 26. | The Fall of Cnossus | 56 |
| 27. | Mount Olympus, Where the Gods Lived | 59 |
| 28. | A Greek City-State | 63 |
| 29. | Greek Society | 67 |
| 30. | The Persian Fleet is Destroyed Near Mount Athos | 75 |
| 31. | The Battle of Marathon | 76 |
| 32. | Thermopylæ | 78 |
| 33. | The Battle of Thermopylæ | 78 |
| 34. | The Persians Burn Athens | 79 |
| 35. | Carthage | 89 |
| 36. | Spheres of Influence | 90 |
| 37. | How the City of Rome Happened | 92 |
| 38. | A Fast Roman Warship | 97 |
| 39. | Hannibal Crosses the Alps | 99 |
| 40. | Hannibal and the CEF | 101 |
| 41. | The Death of Hannibal | 103 |
| 42. | How Rome Happened | 105 |
| 43. | Civilisation Goes Westward | 107 |
| 44. | Cæsar Goes West | 114 |
| 45. | The Great Roman Empire | 117 |
| 46. | The Holy Land | 121 |
| 47. | When the Barbarians Got Through With a Roman City | 126 |
| 48. | The Invasions of the Barbarians | 128 |
| 49. | A Cloister | 133 |
| 50. | The Goths Are Coming! | 134 |
| 51. | The Flight of Mohammed | 139 |
| 52. | The Struggle Between the Cross and the Crescent | 143 |
| 53. | The Holy Roman Empire of German Nationality | 147 |
| 54. | The Home of the Norsemen | 151 |
| 55. | The Norsemen Go to Russia | 152 |
| 56. | The Normans Look Across the Channel | 152 |
| 57. | The World of the Norsemen | 153 |
| 58. | Henry IV at Canossa | 165 |
| 59. | The First Crusade | 170 |
| 60. | The World of the Crusaders | 171 |
| 61. | The Crusaders Take Jerusalem | 172 |
| 62. | The Crusader’s Grave | 173 |
| 63. | The Castle and the City | 179 |
| 64. | The Belfry | 182 |
| 65. | Gunpowder | 183 |
| 66. | The Spreading of the Idea of Popular Sovereignty | 185 |
| 67. | The Home of Swiss Liberty | 188 |
| 68. | The Abjuration of Philip II | 189 |
| 69. | Mediæval Trade | 199 |
| 70. | Great Nowgorod | 202 |
| 71. | The Hansa Ship | 204 |
| 72. | The Mediæval Laboratory | 209 |
| 73. | The Renaissance | 210 |
| 74. | Dante | 212 |
| 75. | John Huss | 220 |
| 76. | The Manuscript and the Printed Book | 222 |
| 77. | Marco Polo | 225 |
| 78. | How the World Grew Larger | 227 |
| 79. | The World of Columbus | 230 |
| 80. | The Great Discoveries. Western Hemisphere | 233 |
| 81. | The Great Discoveries. Eastern Hemisphere | 234 |
| 82. | Magellan | 237 |
| 83. | The Three Great Religions | 243 |
| 84. | The Great Moral Leaders | 249 |
| 85. | Luther Translates the Bible | 257 |
| 86. | The Inquisition | 263 |
| 87. | The Night of St. Bartholomew | 268 |
| 88. | Leyden Delivered by the Cutting of the Dikes | 269 |
| 89. | The Murder of William the Silent | 270 |
| 90. | The Armada is Coming! | 271 |
| 91. | The Death of Hudson | 273 |
| 92. | The Thirty Years War | 275 |
| 93. | Amsterdam in 1648 | 277 |
| 94. | The English Nation | 280 |
| 95. | The Hundred Years War | 281 |
| 96. | John and Sebastian Cabot See the Coast of Newfoundland | 284 |
| 97. | The Elizabethan Stage | 285 |
| 98. | The Balance of Power | 299 |
| 99. | The Origin of Russia | 303 |
| 100. | Peter the Great in the Dutch Shipyard | 308 |
| 101. | Peter the Great Builds His New Capital | 310 |
| 102. | The Voyage of the Pilgrims | 318 |
| 103. | How Europe Conquered the World | 321 |
| 104. | Sea Power | 322 |
| 105. | The Fight for Liberty | 323 |
| 106. | The Pilgrims | 324 |
| 107. | How the White Man Settled in North America | 325 |
| 108. | In the Cabin of the Mayflower | 327 |
| 109. | The French Explore the West | 328 |
| 110. | The First Winter in New England | 329 |
| 111. | George Washington | 331 |
| 112. | The Great American Revolution | 332 |
| 113. | The Guillotine | 337 |
| 114. | Louis XVI | 339 |
| 115. | The Bastille | 342 |
| 116. | The French Revolution Invades Holland | 347 |
| 117. | The Retreat from Moscow | 355 |
| 118. | The Battle of Waterloo | 358 |
| 119. | Napoleon Goes Into Exile | 359 |
| 120. | The Spectre Which Frightened the Holy Alliance | 364 |
| 121. | The Real Congress of Vienna | 367 |
| 122. | The Monroe Doctrine | 385 |
| 123. | Giuseppe Mazzini | 395 |
| 124. | The First Steamboat | 407 |
| 125. | The Origin of the Steamboat | 408 |
| 126. | The Origin of the Automobile | 409 |
| 127. | Man-power and Machine-power | 414 |
| 128. | The Factory | 416 |
| 129. | The Philosopher | 427 |
| 130. | Galileo | 429 |
| 131. | Gothic Architecture | 437 |
| 132. | The Troubadour | 442 |
| 133. | The Pioneer | 447 |
| 134. | The Conquest of the West | 451 |
| 135. | War | 457 |
| 137. | Animated Chronology | 467 |
| 142. | The End | 472 |
THE STORY OF MANKIND