Digging for Lost African Gods

ebook Five Years' Archeological Excavation in North Africa

By Byron Khun de Prorok

cover image of Digging for Lost African Gods

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Byron Khun de Prorok began excavating Carthage and Utica in 1921. Digging for Lost African Gods is an almost lyrical account of archeology, the passage of time, and connections between people from century to century. "The twelfth tomb was not rich, but it contained a surprise. The objects were near the motionless hands, telling their tale as plainly as though men from the past had been standing by interpreting for us. The little cubes within reach of the dead man's fingers were a pair of dice! They were made of bone, and identical in shape, size, and numbering, with those used to-day." Digging For Lost African Gods tells us more about the science of archeology, as it was practiced in the early 1920s, than any of Prorok's other books. After Carthage, Prorok went deepsea diving (in the huge old headgear) looking for a sunken city off Djerba. Later, he took a thousand-mile drive in custom-made, six-wheel Renault cars across the Algerian and Libyan deserts to the Hoggar mountains. Some of his techniques were brand new at the time: This was the first use of the Aeroplane in archaeology...In 1922, we took our first films and photographs from different heights, which resulted in our being able to trace the great submerged walls of ancient Carthage. Flying above the Gulf of Tunis, we were able to film clearly six miles of submerged wall, showing constructions a hundred and fifty yards from the present shore. The aeroplane was piloted by Captain Peletier d'Oisy, the famous French ace, who recently made the phenomenal flight from Paris to Tokyo. As in all of Prorok's books, there is plenty of hair-raising adventure. At one point Prorok and his camera man face a small army of Mohammedan dancers driven on by priests: "Faster, ever faster they revolved, until hysteria caught them, and then, it seemed, hypnotized epilepsy. They foamed at the mouth, and as they reached the climax, priests caught them, and threw them almost at our feet. The fanatics barked like dogs, and handsful of broken glass were presented to the delirious performers by the priests. As a famishing man would relish a handful of crumbs, the glass was chewed by the dancers. After the glass, nails, and after the nails the priests gave knives to the writhing madmen. The nails and knives were thrust through the flesh, and the dancers cried for more. The priests maintained a certain poise throughout it all, increasing the frenzy and leading to more diabolical exhibition step by step. Even while the glass was being chewed, and the nails and knives were thrust into the living bodies of the zealots, the priests procured masses of live scorpions and plied the dancers with them. They might have been shrimps, so eagerly were they devoured." This book makes you want grab and shovel and go...Well, maybe not. But we're glad Prorok was there, and that he wrote about it. His other books (all available from The Narrative Press) are just as good: Mysterious Sahara (1929), In Quest of Lost Worlds (1935), and Dead Men Do Tell Tales (1942).
Digging for Lost African Gods