Dechend - Ham... - Giorgio De Santillana, Hertha Von

The book has a polarized legacy, often described as more of a "monumental art of the fugue" than a standard textbook.

The authors propose that preliterate civilizations possessed a sophisticated understanding of , specifically the precession of the equinoxes . Giorgio de Santillana, Hertha von Dechend - Ham...

: How ancient cultures used the "fixed" stars to create a stable reference for tracking the slow "wobble" of the Earth (precession). The book has a polarized legacy, often described

: Exploring how the figure of Hamlet—before Shakespeare—represented the "owner" of the cosmic mill that "grinds out" the ages of the world. The book (1969), co-authored by Giorgio de Santillana

: They suggest all great world myths share a common origin in this celestial cosmology, which was later suppressed or forgotten by Greco-Roman worldviews. Academic Reception

: Instead of primitive storytelling, myths were a precise technical language used to preserve complex astronomical observations across generations.

The book (1969), co-authored by Giorgio de Santillana and Hertha von Dechend, is a seminal and controversial work that argues ancient myths are actually encoded proto-science. Core Thesis