The Prophetic Telegraph - No.77
THE TIN ISLANDS
Further to "Amazing
Historical Evidence", P.T. 76, our enquiry now turns almost exclusively to
Joseph of Arimathea. Who was he? Why was he such a rich man? And what was his
previous connection with the British Isles?
In order to appreciate fully the material now extant, which can help us in our
enquiry, we must first of all investigate why in ancient times Britain (or at least, that part of it now
known as Cornwall) was sometimes called "The Tin
Islands." And please note, the word "island" in Semitic
literature can refer to islands, peninsulas, and maritime regions, as a careful
study of the Old Testament will prove. (See Bullinger's comments on the word in
his "Companion Bible.")
Herodotus, aptly described as the "Father of History", was a Greek
historian who lived in the fifth century B.C. During his life he travelled over
most of the then-known world, and within his writings (Book 3:115 circa 450
B.C.) we find him referring to Britain as "The Cassiterides". The pronunciation places the
emphasis on the second ' i ', and the final 'es' is long, in other words 'ees',
in the same manner that we pronounce Archimedes. The entry in Liddell &
Scott's Greek Lexicon is as follows:-
KassiterideV, the Cassiterides or
Tin-islands.
The full quotation from
Herodotus is as follows -
"Of that
part of Europe nearest to the west, I am not able to speak
with decision. I by no means believe that the barbarians give the name of
Eridanus to a river which empties itself into the Northern Sea; whence, it is said, our amber
comes. Neither am I better acquainted with the islands called the Cassiterides,
from which we are said to have our tin. The name Eridanus is certainly not
barbarous; it is of Greek derivation, and, as I should conceive, introduced by
one of our poets. I have endeavoured, but without success, to meet with someone
who, from ocular observation, might describe to me the sea which lies in that
part of Europe. It is nevertheless certain that both our tin and our amber are
brought from those extreme regions."
(Please note that the word
"barbarian" does not carry the modern connotation. The bar-bar part
of the Greek word indicated to them the sound of foreign speech, and
therefore the word merely refers to ALL foreign-speaking people, those they
could not understand.)
The reason for Herodotus's
assertion was simply that Cornwall had almost the world monopoly of
tin production, and archaeological evidences show clearly that the Tin
Islands were exporting the metal as early as 1500 BC. Biblical "ships
of Tarshish" (a name given to ocean-going vessels, and used
in the same way that Victorians spoke of "East-India-Men") operating
mainly from the Phoenician port of Tyre were the main agents in transporting
this valuable metal to different parts of the world.
Using modern equipment, capable of determining very precisely the isotopic
content of different metals, it has been shown that lead used in drainpipes in
the area of Solomon's Temple came from the Mendip
Hills in Somerset. This type of analysis is made possible because lead
samples from different locations contain varying amounts of the isotopes of
lead, resulting from the decay of radioactive materials. Similarly with tin,
the Temple was adorned with plenty of bronze,
and this alloy was made by adding tin to copper in the smelting. The presence
of tin causes copper to become much harder and less easily tarnished. It was
British tin that was used by Solomon, and the date was about 1000 BC. Sir
Edward Creasy, (1812 - 1878) the English barrister, professor, and historian,
said in one of his books, as a result of his research,
"The British
mines mainly supplied the glorious adornment of Solomon's Temple."
Concerning the port of Tyre, and the evident wealth of the
Phoenicians as traders, we can refer to the prophet Ezekiel, writing in about
600 B.C.
"Tarshish
was thy merchant by reason of the multitude of all kinds of riches; with
silver, iron, tin, and lead, they traded in thy fairs." (Ezekiel 27:12)
Herodotus was not the only writer of ancient times to refer to the mining of
tin in Cornwall. It should be mentioned in passing that the
Greek navigator and geographer Pytheas, who lived at Massilia (now the French port of Marseilles) in the late 5th century B.C.,
explored the coasts of Spain, France, and the British Isles, visiting the tin miners at
Belerium (Cornwall) and Ictis. He was the first man to formulate
a correct theory of the periodic fluctuation of the tides in relation to the
movement of the Moon. In his writings the Cassiterides are mentioned by name.
Julius Caesar, writing in B.C. 40 about Britain, in his "Wars" (v.12) had
this to say -
"The
inland parts of Britain are inhabited by those, whose fame
reports to be the natives of the soil. The sea-coast is peopled with the
Belgians, drawn thither by the love of war and plunder. These last, passing
over from different parts, and settling in the country, still retain the names
of the several states whence they are descended. The island is well peopled,
full of houses, built after the manner of the Gauls, and abounds in cattle.
They use brass money, and iron rings of a certain weight. The provinces remote
from the sea produce tin, and those upon the coast, iron, but the latter in no
great quantity." (It must be remembered that Caesar collected his information whilst at Boulogne, Calais, and Dover. His remarks about tin were
therefore hearsay concerning a region where Rome was never to become ruler.)
So also does Timaeus,
(circa 400 B.C.), Aristotle, the Greek philosopher, (384 - 322 B.C.); Polybius,
(205 - 125 B.C.) author of "Histories"; Diodorus Siculus, Greek
historian of the late 1st century B.C., Pliny, (23 - 79 A.D.) and Posidonius,
the Greek Stoic philosopher, also of the 1st century B.C. All these, amongst
others, deal at length with the British tin industry in the centuries before
Christ, some extracts from these authors now following-
Timaeus, writing of the
"Islands in the Ocean" says,
"Opposite
to Celtiberia are a number of islands, by the Greeks called Cassiterides, in
consequence of their abounding in tin, and facing the promontory of the
Arrotrebae, are the six islands of the gods, which some persons have called the
Fortunate Islands."
Pliny, writing in his
"Natural History" repeated this statement from Timaeus, and went on
to speak about our islands in this way -
"The
nature of lead comes next to be considered. There are two kinds of it, the
white (i.e., tin, called plumbum album) and the black (lead, called plumbum
nigrum). The white is the most valuable; it was called by the Greeks cassiteros;
and there is a fabulous story of their going in quest of it to the islands
of the Atlantic, and of its being brought in barks made of osiers, and covered
with hides. It is now known that it is the production of Lusitania and Gallaecia. It is a sand found
on the surface of the earth, and of a black colour, and is only to be detected
by its weight. It is mingled with small pebbles, particularly in the dried beds
of rivers. The miners wash this sand, and calcine the deposit in the furnace.
It is also found in the gold mines that are known as alutiae, the stream
of water which is passed through them detaching certain black pebbles, mottled
with small white spots, and of the same weight as gold. Hence it is that they
remain with the gold in the baskets in which it is collected; and being
separated in the furnace, are then melted, and become converted into white lead
(tin.)" . . . . "White lead was held in esteem in the days even of
the Trojan War - a fact attested by Homer, who called it 'cassiteros'."
(Nat. Hist. book xxxiv.
Ch.47. It must be stated that Pliny was not always very accurate concerning his
geographical information. For example, although tin is known in the
region he calls Gallaecia, it is vanishingly small in comparison with Cornwall, and never mined there in any
quantity. But to balance the evidence, the following quote from elsewhere in
Pliny's writings does show that he knew about the abundance of tin in Cornwall.)
"It (tin)
is extracted with great labour in Spain and throughout all the Gallic
provinces, but in Britannia it is found in the upper stratum of the earth in
such abundance, that a law has been spontaneously made prohibiting anyone from
working more than a certain quantity of it."
Elsewhere, Pliny mentions
that a Greek named "Midacritus (the Greek name for
Melkarth, about 600 B.C.) was the first who brought tin from the
island called Cassiteris."(Nat.Hist. 7.197)
Now hear what Diodorus Siculus had to say about the British tin mining industry-
"Then all
the rest of your voyage is eastward, thus making an obtuse angle to your former
course, until you reach the headlands of the Pyrenees that abut on the ocean. The
westerly parts of Britain lie opposite these headlands
towards the north, and in like manner the islands called Cassiterides, situated
in the open sea approximately in the latitude of Britain , lie opposite to, and north of,
the Artabians. (the modern La Coruna, [Corunna] the port in NW Spain from which the Spanish Armada
sailed in 1588)" (D.Sic.Book II.v.15)
"Now we shall speak something concerning the tin that is dug and
gotten there. They that inhabit the British promontory of Belerium, [possibly
the ancient name of Polurrion, near the Lizard in Cornwall] by reason of their converse with
the merchants, are more civilised and courteous to strangers than the rest.
These are the people that make the tin, which with a great deal of care and
labour, they dig out of the ground, and that being rocky, the metal is mixed
with some veins of earth, out of which they melt the metal and then refine it.
Then they beat it into four-square pieces the size of dice, and cart it to a
British island, near at hand, called Ictis. For at low tide, all being dry
between them and the island, they convey over in carts an abundance of tin in
the mean time. But there is one thing peculiar to those islands, which lie
between Britain and Europe; for at full sea they appear to be
islands, but at low water for a long way they look like so many peninsulas.
Hence the merchants transport the tin they buy of the inhabitants to France, and for thirty days' journey they
carry it in packs on horses' backs through France to the mouth of the river Rhone. Thus much concerning tin." .
. . . "And not only do they go into the ground a great distance, but they
also push their diggings many stades in depth and run galleries off at every
angle, turning this way and that, in this manner bringing up from the depths
the ore which gives them the profit they are seeking." (D.Sic.Book V:1-4, 35)
And later in the same
account he had this to say -
"Above
Lusitania (a Roman province roughly equivalent to modern Portugal) there is
much of this tin metal, that is, in the islands lying in the ocean over against
Iberia, (the peninsula dividing Spain from Portugal by the Pyrenees) which are
therefore called Cassiterides; and much of it likewise is transported out of
Britain into Gaul, the opposite continent, which the merchants carry on
horseback through the heart of Celtica to Massilia (Marseilles) and the city
called Narbo (Narbonne)." (D.Sic.Book V.2)
The island he called Ictis is none other than St.
Michael's Mount, just offshore from Marazion in Cornwall, and
exactly fits Diodorus's description. In 1969, in the little harbour of the
island, skin divers found a stone bowl with a handle, which was subsequently
identified by the British Museum as Phoenician, - and dating as far back as
1500 B.C. When visiting Truro recently, we were able to see the
massive H-shaped tin ingot that was dredged from the St Mawes harbour in 1812,
weighing 158 pounds. The shape indicated that they were designed to be carried
one on each side of a horse for transportation, as mentioned above.
Who were the people who worked the mines? Undoubtedly ancient British men. But
records show that others were also involved. The eminent English antiquarian
and historian, William Camden (1551 - 1623), wrote a book called
"Britannia" which was published in Latin in 1586 and in English
translation in 1610. It was a landmark in the topographical study of Britain. In this work he said,-
"The merchants of Asher worked the tin mines of Cornwall, not as slaves, but as masters and
exporters."
Solinus (3rd Century A.D.)
writing in his "Collectanea Rerum Memorabilium" states that the Tin Islands were "severed from the
coast of Damnonii by a rough narrow sea." The Damnonii were the inhabitants of
Devon and Cornwall. Hence Solinus seems to be
referring to the Scilly Isles. Again he refers to them as follows:- "Oft
the Tartessians through the well-known seas would sail for Traffic to the
Oestrymnides, and Carthaginians too . . ."
And so we gather snippets of information from the past. Now we must record what
the Greek geographer Strabo (B.C.63 - A.D.24) (who obtained his information
concerning the location of the Cassiterides from Poseidonius,) wrote concerning
the traders -
"The
Cassiterides are ten in number, (was he referring to the Scilly Isles?) and lie
near each other in the ocean toward the north from the haven of the Artabri (Corunna,
as mentioned above.). One of them is desert, but the others are inhabited by
men in black cloaks, clad in tunics reaching to the feet, girt about the
breast, and walking with staves, thus resembling the furies we see in tragic
representations. They subsist by their cattle, leading for the most part a
wandering life. Of the metals, they have tin and lead, which, with skins, they
barter with the merchants for earthenware, salt, and brasen vessels. Anciently
the Phoenicians alone, from Gades (Cadiz), engrossed this market, hiding the
navigation from all others. When the Romans followed a certain shipmaster, that
they might discover the market, the jealous shipmaster willfully stranded his
vessel on a shoal, misleading those who were tracking him, to the same
destruction. Escaping from the shipwreck by means of a fragment of the ship, he
was indemnified for his losses out of the public treasury. The Romans,
nevertheless, by frequent efforts discovered the passage; and as soon as
Publius (Licinius) Crassus, passing over to them, (about B.C. 95) perceived
that the metals were dug out at a little depth, and that the men were peaceably
disposed, he declared it to those who already wished to traffic in this sea for
profit, although the passage was longer than that to Britain. (i.e. the
Cassiterides were further removed from the coast of Spain than the rest of the southern
coasts of Britain.) Thus far concerning Iberia and the adjacent islands." (Strabo. iii., v., 11)
This Phoenician ploy, we are told elsewhere, worked satisfactorily until B.C.
450, when the Carthaginian General Hamilcar sailed through the Straits of
Gibraltar and northwards, thereby discovering Cornwall. With such scanty evidence, it is
perhaps best to speak of the Cassiterides being TWICE discovered, with a space
of 350 years between. The account of Hamilcar may be found in the writings of
Rufus Festus Avienus, entitled "Ora Maritima", from
which comes the following extract -
"Where
the ocean flood presses in, and spreads wide the Mediterranean waters, lies the
Atlantic Bay; here stands Gadira, of old
Tartessus, here the Pillars of Hercules, Abyla . . . (here the record is
missing). . Here rises the head of the promontory, in olden times named
Oestrymnon, and below, the like-named bay and isles; wide they stretch, and are
rich in metals, tin and lead. There a numerous race of men dwell, endowed with
spirit, and no slight industry, busied in all the cares of trade alone. They
navigate the sea on their barks, built not of pines or oak, but wondrous made
of skins and leather. Two days' long is the voyage thence to the Holy Island,
once so called, the dwelling of the Hibernian race (Ireland); at hand lies the
Isle of Albion (mainland Britain). Of yore the trading voyages from Tartessus
(Possibly the Biblical Tarshish) reached to the Oestrymnides; but the
Carthaginians and their colonies near the Pillars of Hercules (The Straits of
Gibraltar) navigated in this sea, which Hamilcar (or Himilco) by his own
account, was upon during four months." (Extracted from
A.H.L.Heeren's African Nations, 1832, Vol.i.pp.503-504)
Who were these Phoenicians? They were a mixture of Canaanites and Semitic
peoples, trading mainly from the port and island of Tyre. Many of those who used the port
were Israelites, who sailed to various destinations, and in fact set up distant
colonies and settlements.
A final quote from ancient
writings may not be out of place here. It comes from Dionysius of Alexandria, a
Roman Catholic Bishop and theologian of the 3rd century. Only fragments of his
writings remain.
"Against
the sacred Cape* great Europe's head,
Th' Hesperides along the ocean spread;
Whose wealthy hills with mines of tin abound,
And stout Iberians till the fertile ground."
(* this is Cape Ortegal, the northern-most tip of Spain, near to Corunna)
In many of the places where
Israelites set up their colonies, we find inscriptions and tombstones, bearing
witness to the fact. The south of Spain is not wanting in this respect, and
neither is Cornwall . This is probably the reason why the Apostle
Paul said that he intended to visit Spain. But our particular concern is Cornwall , and this is where the story of
Joseph of Arimathea begins to unfold.
In times long gone by, Cornwall was literally riddled with mines.
The remains of their shafts are still in evidence, and care must be taken in
certain areas not to fall into these when hiking. For example, the ancient Ding
Dong mine, which we visited recently, still has a deep shaft now covered over
with an iron grating. Standing there, one can see St Michael's Mount in the
distance. But of all the mines, there remains but one that is still in
operation, and that has recently been shut down, only to re-open due to public
pressure. However, traditions still linger with considerable strength about
Joseph's involvement. The miners have always sung songs during their work
underground, and the refrain has always been, "Joseph was a tin miner.
Joseph was in the tin trade."
Is this an empty boast? Hardly. Throughout the world there are very persistent
traditions that just will not die, and when investigated, are found to contain
memories of important historical events. They say that there is no smoke
without fire. Likewise there is no tradition without historical fact, even
though in the process of time some of the facts get covered over with the
barnacles of human invention. And this is what I believe to be true here. Even
in the Cornish language there are clear references to the ancient Jewish
presence and trade in Cornwall. One still hears about "Jews
Houses" (ancient smelting places for tin,) "Jews Pieces" (very
ancient blocks of tin,) "Jews Works" (very ancient stream works,
which were sometimes called Attal Sarazin, or "the leavings of the
Saracens",) and even "Jews Fish" (referring to the Halibut,
their favourite in Cornish diet.) One remembers names like Marazion,
(or Markesew) meaning "Market Jew", the ancient
trading town opposite St Michael's Mount (Ictis), and Market Jew Street
in the centre of Penzance.
Joseph of Arimathea was a Pharisee of great reputation in Jerusalem. He was a rich man, as the
Scriptures inform us, and one who could go privately to Pontius Pilate and make
bold requests. Pilate knew him and respected him, and granted him leave to
remove our Lord's body from the cross and bury it in his own newly-hewn
sepulchral chamber. This was in accordance with the Roman Law then extant, (See
"Digest", xlviii.24, 'De cadav. punit.) that a near relative could
attend to the burial of a crucified man. And according to persistent tradition,
Joseph was the great uncle of Jesus. However, that Friday was no ordinary day,
and Pilate's temper had been severely frayed. But nevertheless he entertained
Joseph with all due respect and courtesy, and that from a Roman who admitted
hatred of all the Jews.
It might be pointed out, with profit to our programme of research, that the
Jewish Sanhedrin, consisting of seventy one members, was composed only of the
aristocracy, there being three orders of election, (a) the chief priests, (b)
the elders, being the principal men in the community, and (c) the scribes. It
would have been from among the elders that Joseph had been elected to
membership of the Sanhedrin.
The Greek text of Mark 15 speaks of Joseph as an "honourable
counsellor" in other words he was a man of high esteem. The
Vulgate Latin is "Nobilis Decurio ", a nobleman, a
member of the aristocracy and the Sanhedrin, and in Roman society, suggesting
the position of Town Counsellor, or Senator of a Municipium or Colonia. Matthew
27:57 says that he was "a rich man from Arimathea."
It could be that he was "head man" of that whole region, which
according to the "Onomasticon", an ancient record of
place names (225.12) is identical to Ramathaim-Zophim, or just
Rama, the home town of Elkanah and Samuel, in the hill country
of Ephraim, but which was transferred to Judaea in B.C.145. It is rather
tantalising, not having more specific facts to go on, but enough is given in
the N.T. to show us that this man was no ordinary Pharisee, but a man of
substance, position, and honour amongst his peers in Jerusalem, and also one who was in fairly
constant touch with the Procurator, Pontius Pilate. One can imagine that he had
qualities that made him a useful political "go-between" in times of
national stress, a useful person to have around if you happened to be a Pilate
or a Caiaphas!
Now we also know that Joseph was a secret disciple of Jesus, secret "for
fear of the Jews". It could be that he considered his position
important enough to keep quiet about his religious aspirations. But unlike
other members of our Lord's family, he was in earnest about his belief that
Jesus was the Messiah. He was a "good and just man",
and one who was "himself looking for the Kingdom of God." When our Lord was being tried by the
Sanhedrin on that infamous Thursday night, Joseph was undoubtedly there. So
also was Nicodemus. It is inconceivable that they would be elsewhere. What they
said, if anything at all, no one knows. But Joseph "came out into the
open" as soon as Jesus had died. No longer was he a secret disciple. And
so it was that Saul of Tarsus, another Pharisee, and also a member of the
Sanhedrin, hounded him in the great persecution that followed soon after the
crucifixion and resurrection.
In the last paper I gave several written evidences to the effect that Joseph
was cast adrift on a boat, from which oars and sails had been removed. I see
this as an act of Saul, who rather than bring down ignominy on his own head for
arraigning such an august company of disciples, decided secretly to commit them
to the "mercy" of the waves. In this way he would not have been held
responsible for their fate.
Let us draw together some of the threads. It is clear that Joseph was a rich
man because he was involved in the tin trade. From what little we can muster,
one might see him as the owner of several "ships of Tarshish", plying
their trade between Tyre and Massilia, the latter being the
"staging post" for the tin trade. Joseph would have been a frequent
traveller on this route, using his own ships, and thereafter taking the
overland route across Gaul
from Massilia to Morlaix in Brittany (Armorica), from whence he would sail across
to Cornwall , landing probably at St.Just in
Roseland. On the other hand he might have taken a boat round Land's End and sailed
to Glastonbury via the rivers Brue and Parrot. But
whatever the purpose of his visits, he must have had a good working knowledge
of the terrain in Devon
and Cornwall, and also in that area of Somerset, which was then known as the
Summerlands, and included Glastonbury. In Roman times the whole peninsula
was known as Dumnonia, but it was never conquered by them.
Joseph's association with the tin trade would have been connected with the
Israelites of the tribe of Asher, living in Cornwall. According to ancient records, the
inhabitants of the region, being Israelites and Celts, conversed in Greek and
Hebrew, and had a highly sophisticated way of life. They were by no means
savages, but people who had built up a way of life over centuries, and had
contact with most other places in the then known civilised world through their
trade. Thus it was that Joseph became the patron saint of tin-miners, and his
memory is still vivid in the minds of Cornishmen to this day. When travelling
back to the mainland from St Michael's Mount, we noticed that the boat was
flying a black flag with a white cross. On asking, I was told that it was the
flag of St. Piran, patron saint of Cornwall. The black ground represents the
black grains of tin that were panned in the early days, and the white cross,
the appearance of the tin when it is flashed at about 1200 degrees C. and run
into the moulds.
When archaeologists find a few fragments of a broken pot , and try to assemble
it, they are usually able to assess exactly what the missing parts looked like
because of the pattern. In the same way historians are able to assess missing
information by a similar process, though not with such great accuracy. In this
paper we have tried to paint a picture of the Cassiterides and Joseph of Arimathea
from available evidence. Some may consider it highly conjectural. So be it. But
Joseph DID come to Britain, and the British church WAS founded
at Glastonbury. Of that there is little doubt.
- - - - - - - -oOo- - - - -
- - -
Biblography. Material for this essay was gleaned
from various sources, but in particular the book by George Smith, entitled "The
Cassiterides" (1863) has been most helpful. Other works are
as follows - "The Place-names of Roman Britain" by
A.L.F.Rivet & C.Smith; Webster's "Biographical
Dictionary"; "A New Cornish Dictionary" by
R. Morton Nance; "Glossary of the Cornish Dialect" by
F.W.P.Jago (1882); "A Glossary of Cornish Names" by
J. Bannister (1871) "The Cornwall Gazetteer" by
Gillian Thompson, (1996); "Tin in Antiquity" by
R.D.Penhallurick (1986); "A History of Tin Mining and Smelting
in Cornwall" by D.B.Barton (1967); "The Child
Christ at Lammana", by Rev. H.A.Lewis (1934); "Bible
Research Handbook" Published by The National Message, 1946
(Sections 571.3, and 572.942); "The Story of Cornwall" by
A.K.Hamilton Jenkin (1934); "The Origin and Early History of
Christianity in Britain" by Dr Andrew Gray (1897); "The
Coming of the Saints" by John W. Taylor (1906); "The
Drama of the Lost Disciples" by George F. Jowett (1961); "The
Dawn of Christianity in the West" by Walter de M. Seaman
(1993); "Did our Lord visit Britain, as they say in Cornwall
and Somerset?" by Rev. C.C.Dobson (1936) "The
Fortunate Islands" by E.L.Bowley (1945).