Eberhard Zangger

Eberhard Zangger during fieldwork at the Palace of Nestor in Pylos, Greece, in 1998.

Eberhard Zangger (born in 1958, Kamen, Germany) is a Swiss geoarchaeologist, corporate communications consultant and publicist. Since 1994 he has been advocating the view that a Luwian civilization existed in Western Asia Minor during the 2nd millennium BC.

Life and Work

Eberhard Zangger studied geology and paleontology at the University of Kiel and obtained a PhD from Stanford University in 1988.[1] After this he was a senior research associate in the Department of Earth Sciences at the University of Cambridge (198891).[2] In June 1991 he founded the consultancy office Geoarcheology International in Zurich, Switzerland, from where he participated archaeological projects in the eastern Mediterranean each year until 1999.

Zangger began concentrating on geoarchaeology in 1982. His early research work and discoveries included the coastal situation of Dimini Magoula in Neolithic Central Greece, the extent of Lake Lerna[3] in the Argive Plain, the age and function of the Mycenaean river diversion and extent of the lower town of Tiryns,[4] the insular character of Asine,[5] the artificial harbor of Nestor at Pylos,[6] including its clean water flushing mechanism, and a human-made dam in Minoan Monastiraki in central Crete.

In 1992, Zangger suggested that Plato used an Egyptian version of a story about Troy for his legendary account of Atlantis.[7][8] Zangger based his argument on comparisons between Mycenaean culture and Plato’s account of the Greek civilization facing Atlantis, as well as parallels between the recollections of the Trojan War and the war between Greece and Atlantis. He recognized similarities between the Sea People invasions and the aggressors described by Plato and he also saw parallels between the Sea People invasions and the Trojan War. In 1992 Zangger arrived at the conclusion that Troy must have been much bigger than the archeological scholarship had presumed, and that the city must have had artificial harbors inside the modern floodplain. In a 1993 article, Zangger listed many commonalities between Plato's description of Atlantis and different accounts of Troy as it looked in the late Bronze Age.[9]

In 1994, Zangger presented a chronology of political and economic developments in the eastern Mediterranean during the 13th century BC.[10] This time, Zangger interpreted the legend of the Trojan War to be the memory of a momentous war which led to the collapse of many countries around the eastern Mediterranean around 1200 BC. Zangger’s overall research goal was to find an explanation for the end of the Bronze Age in the eastern Mediterranean around 1200 BC. In contrast to the archaeological scholarship of the time, Zangger attributed greater importance to the states in Western Anatolia that are known from Hittite documents, including the Luwian kingdoms Arzawa, Mira, Wilusa, Lukka and Seha River Land. In Zangger’s view, if these petty kingdoms had stood united, they would have matched the economic and military importance of Mycenaean Greece or Minoan Crete.[11]

In his third book, Zangger turned to developments in the 12th century BC after the Trojan War.[12] According to Zangger, scattered groups of survivors of the Sea People invasions and the Trojan War founded new settlements in Italy and Syria/Palestine from which the Etruscan and Phoenician cultures emerged. Zangger also argued against the overrating of natural disasters as a trigger for cultural change. In his opinion, natural scientists and specialists in urban development and hydraulic engineering should become more often involved in archaeology.

In collaboration with the Federal Institute for Geosciences and Natural Resources in Hannover, Zanier proposed a geophysical exploration of the plain of Troy to locate settlement layers and artificial port basins.[13] The Turkish Ministry of Culture did not grant permission to conduct this project. In 2001 Zangger said that because of a vigorous scholarly dispute with the Troy excavator Manfred Korfmann, Zangger was ceasing his research.[14][15]

In the fall of 1999, Zangger became a business consultant specializing in corporate communications and public relations.[16] In 2002 he founded science communication GmbH, a consultancy firm for corporate communications.

Since April 2014, Zangger is president of the board of the international non-profit foundation Luwian Studies. The commercial register of Canton Zurich (Switzerland) states as the foundation's purpose “to explore the second millennium BC in Western Asia Minor as well as to spread knowledge of it”.[17]

Selected Publications

Notes

  1. "Eberhard Zangger's (then Eberhard Finke) PhD dissertation at Stanford University". Retrieved 2012-10-08.
  2. Tjeerd van Andel; Eberhard Zangger; Anne Demitrack. "Land Use and Soil Erosion in Prehistoric and Historical Greece" (PDF). Journal of Field Archaeology, Vol. 17 (1990). Retrieved 2012-10-08.
  3. "Prehistoric Coastal Environments in Greece: The Vanished Landscapes of Dimini Bay and Lake Lerna" in Journal of Field Archaeology 18 (1991) pp115 Abstract
  4. Zangger, Eberhard: Landscape Changes around Tiryns during the Bronze Age in American Journal of Archeology 98 (2) (1994) pp189212.
  5. Zangger, Eberhard: The island of Asine: A palaeogeographic reconstruction in Opuscula Atheniensia XX:15 (1994) pp221239.
  6. "The Pylos Regional Archaeological Project". Retrieved 2015-01-22.
  7. "The Flood from Heaven – Deciphering the Atlantis Legend." Sidgwick & Jackson, London; 256 pages 1992
  8. "Wegweiser nach Utopia". Der Spiegel (in German). 1992-05-11. Retrieved 2012-10-02.
  9. "Plato's Atlantis account - a distorted recollection of the Trojan War". Oxford Journal of Archaeology, Volume 12, Issue 1, pages 77–87, March 1993. Retrieved 2014-09-05.
  10. "Ein neuer Kampf um Troia – Archäologie in der Krise." Droemer Verlag, Munich, 1994
  11. "Who Were the Sea People?". Saudi Aramco World Volume 46, Number 3 (May/June 1995). Retrieved 2012-10-08.
  12. "The Future of the Past: Archaeology in the 21st Century." Weidenfeld & Nicolson, London, 2001
  13. "Das Puzzle des Philosophen". Der Spiegel (in German). 1998-12-28. Retrieved 2012-10-08.
  14. Zick, Michael. "Das Enfant terrible". Bild der Wissenschaft (in German). Retrieved 2012-10-08. Issue 6/2001, p. 114
  15. Some Open Questions About the Plain of Troia. In: Troia and the Troad – Scientific Approaches. Springer, Berlin, 317-324, 2003.
  16. Gabriela Bonin: „Geoarchäologie: Provokateur Eberhard Zangger“ (in German), Merian, Kreta, October 2000
  17. Entry for the foundation Luwian Studies in the commercial register of canton Zurich

References

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