Where is it? ‘At Charing
Cross, of course,’ says the self-assured Londoner;
and in one sense he may not be far wrong. ‘At
Boston,’ says the cultured inhabitant of the
‘hub’ of the universe. ‘Wherever
I am,’ says the autocrat who essays to sway
the destinies of nations. Well, we all know the
story of the Head of the Table, and even if we did
not know it, instinct would tell us where to look.
But the centre of the world, in an actual, physical,
racial, and mundanely comprehensive sense where
is it?
One does not find it so easy to answer
the question as did good old Herodotus, who scouted
as absurd the idea of the earth being circular.
‘For my own part,’ says the Father of History and
of lies, according to some people ’I
cannot but think it exceedingly ridiculous to hear
some men talk of the circumference of the Earth, pretending
without the smallest reason or probability that the
ocean encompasses the Earth, that the Earth is round
as if mechanically formed so, and that Asia is equal
to Europe.’
Herodotus found no difficulty in describing
the figure and size of the portions of the earth whose
existence he recognised, but then he said, ’from
India eastward the whole Earth is one vast desert,
unknown and unexplored.’ And for long after
Herodotus, the Mediterranean was regarded as the central
sea of the world, and in the time of Herodotus, Rhodes
was accounted the centre of that centre.
It is very interesting, however, to
trace how many centres the world has had in its time or
rather within the range of written history. The
old Egyptians placed it at Thebes, the Assyrians at
Babylon, the Hindus at Mount Meru, the Jews at Jerusalem,
and the Greeks at Olympus, until they moved it to
Rhodes. There exists an old map in which the world
is represented as a human figure, and the heart of
that figure is Egypt. And there exists, or did
exist, an old fountain in Sicily on which was this
inscription: ’I am in the centre of the
garden; this garden is the centre of Sicily, and Sicily
is the Centre of the whole Earth.’
It is a grand thing to be positive
in assertion when you are sure of your ground, and
the builder of this fountain seems to have been sure
of his. But then other people can be positive
too, and in that vast desert eastward of India, imagined
by Herodotus, there is the country of China, which
calls itself the Middle Kingdom, and the Emperor of
which, in a letter to the King of England in this
very nineteenth century, announced that China is endowed
by Heaven as the ‘flourishing and central Empire’
of the world.
And yet, once upon a time, according
to some old Japanese writings, Japan was known as
the Middle Kingdom; and the Persians claimed the same
position for Persia; and according to Professor Sayce,
the old Chaldeans said that the centre of the earth
was in the heart of the impenetrable forest of Eridu.
This forest, by the way, was also
called the ‘holy house of the Gods,’ but
it does not seem to have had anything to do with the
Terrestrial Paradise, the exact location of which
Mr. Baring-Gould has laboriously tried to identify
through the legends of the nations. It is a curious
fact that a ninth-century map, in the Strasburg Library,
places the Terrestrial Paradise the Garden
of Eden in that part of Asia we now know
as the Chinese Empire, and it is also so marked in
a map in the British Museum.
In a letter supposed to have emanated
from the mysterious if not mythical Prester John,
it is written: ’The river Indus which issues
out of Paradise flows among the plains through a certain
province, and it expands, embracing the whole province
with its various windings. There are found emeralds,
sapphires, carbuncles, topazes, chrysolites, onyx,
beryl, sardius, and many other precious stones.
There, too, grows the plant called Asbestos.’
And all this was reported to be just
three days’ journey from the garden from which
Adam was expelled, but as the geographical position
of the province was not specified the information
was a trifle vague. Prester John, however, described
a wonderful fountain, the virtues of which correspond
with those of a well in Ceylon described by Sir John
Mandeville, and this is why some people say that the
Garden of Eden was in the Island of Spices.
There is a twelfth-century map of
the world at Cambridge, which shows Paradise on an
island opposite the mouth of the Ganges. And in
the story of St. Brandan, the saint reaches an island
somewhere ’due east from Ireland,’ which
was Paradise, and on which he met with a man who told
him that a stream which no living being
might cross flowing through the island,
divided the world in twain. Another centre!
In an Icelandic story of the fourteenth
century are related the marvellous adventures of one
Eirek of Drontheim, who, determined to find out the
Deathless Land, made his way to Constantinople.
There he received a lesson in geography from the Emperor.
The world, he was told, was precisely one hundred
and eighty thousand stages, or about one million English
miles, round, and is not propped up on posts, but is
supported by the will of God. The distance between
the earth and heaven, he was told, is one hundred
thousand and forty-five miles, and round about the
earth is a big sea called the ocean.
‘But what is to the south of
the earth?’ asked the inquisitive Eirek.
‘Oh,’ replied the Emperor,
’the end of the earth is there, and it is called
India.’
‘And where shall I find the
Deathless Land?’ he inquired; and he was told
that slightly to the east of India lies Paradise.
Thereupon Eirek and a companion started
across Syria, took ship and arrived at India, through
which they journeyed on horseback till they came to
a strait which separated them from a beautiful land.
Eirek crossed over and found himself in Paradise,
and, strange to say, an excellent cold luncheon waiting
for him. It took him seven years to get home
again, and, as he died soon after his return, the map
of the route was lost.
Still, Eirek’s Paradise may
not improbably have been Ceylon.
The latest location of the Garden
of Eden is by a recent traveller in Somaliland, in
the north-east shoulder of Africa and south of the
Gulf of Aden. This is in the neighbourhood of
the country of Prester John, but in its present aspects
can by no means be regarded as a Terrestrial Paradise.
Sir John Mandeville’s description
of the Terrestrial Paradise which he discovered gives
it as the highest place on the earth so
high that the waters of the Flood could not reach
it. And in the very centre of the highest point
is a well, he said, that casts out the four streams,
Ganges, Nile, Tigris, and Euphrates all
sacred streams. Now, in the Encyclopædia of
India it is stated that ’The Hindus at Bikanir
Rajputana taught that the mountain Meru is in the
centre surrounded by concentric circles of land and
sea. Some Hindus regard Mount Meru as the North
Pole. The astronomical views of the Puranas
make the heavenly bodies turn round it.’
So here again we have a mountain as the terrestrial
centre.
In the Avesta there is reference to
a lofty mountain at the centre of the world from which
all the mountains of the earth have grown, and at
the summit of which is the fountain of waters, whereby
grow two trees the Heavenly Soma, and another
tree which yields all the seeds that germinate on
earth. From this fountain, according to the Buddhist
tradition, flow four streams to the four points of
the compass, each of them making a complete circuit
in its descent.
This central mountain is the Navel
of Waters where originated all matter, and where sits
Yama under the Soma tree just as in the
Norse legend the Norns, or Fates, sit by the great
central earth-tree, Yggdrasil.
According to the Greek tradition,
Jupiter, in order to settle the true centre of the
earth, sent out two eagles, one from east and one from
west. They met on the spot on which was erected
the Temple of Delphi, and a stone in the centre of
that temple was called the Navel of the World.
A golden eagle was placed on each side of this stone.
The design is preserved in many examples of Greek
sculpture, and the stone itself is mentioned in several
of the Greek plays.
With reference to this, Mr. Lethaby,
in his Architecture, Mysticism, and Myth, observes:
’We may see embodied in this myth of the centre-stone
the result of the general direction of thought; as
each people were certainly “the people”
first born and best beloved of the gods, so their
country occupied the centre of the world. It would
be related how the oldest and most sacred city, or
rather temple, was erected exactly on the navel.
A story like this told of a temple would lead to the
marking in the centre of its area the true middle
point by a circular stone, a stone which would become
most sacred and ceremonial in its import.’
And Dr. Schliemann thus writes of
a central circle he unearthed in the palace at Tirynthus:
’In the exact centre of the hall, and therefore
within the square enclosed by the four pillars, there
is found in the floor a circle of about 3.30 m. diameter.
There can be little doubt that this circle indicates
the position of the hearth in the centre of the megaron.
The hearth was in all antiquity the centre of the house,
about which the family assembled, at which food was
prepared, and where the guest received the place of
honour. Hence it is frequently indicated by poets
and philosophers as the navel or centre of the house.
In the oldest time it was not only symbolically but
actually the centre of the house, and especially of
the megaron. It was only in later days, in the
palaces of the great Romans, that it was removed from
the chief rooms and established in a small by-room.’
All which may be true enough, and
yet the placing of the hearthstone in the centre of
the house may have had less reference to the earth-centre
idea, than to the fact that in the circular huts of
primitive man it was necessary to have a hole at the
apex of the roof. Still, it is interesting to
note that, as in the Imperial palace at Constantinople,
so on the floor of St. Peter’s at Rome, and elsewhere,
is a flat circular slab of porphyry, associated with
all cérémonials.
Is there any connection between the
old central hearthstone and the Dillestein Lid
of Hell one meets with in Grimm?
We have seen that the centre of the
world is placed in Europe, in Asia, and in Africa,
but who would expect to find it in America many centuries
ago? Yet the traditions of Peru have it that Cuzco
was founded by the gods, and that its name signifies
‘navel’; and traditions of Mexico describe
Yucatan as ‘the centre and foundation’
of both heaven and earth. We must, however, go
back to the East as the most likely quarter in which
to find it, and as the quarter to which the eyes of
man have been most consistently turned.
To successive centuries of both Jews
and Christians Jerusalem has been the centre of the
world, and the Temple the centre of Jerusalem.
The Talmud gives directions to those who are in foreign
countries to pray with their faces towards the sacred
land; to those in Palestine to pray with their faces
towards Jerusalem; to those in Jerusalem to pray with
their faces towards the Mount; to those in the Temple
to pray with their faces towards the Holy of Holies.
Now, this was not merely because this sacred spot
was a ceremonial centre, but also because it was regarded
as the geographical centre of the earth. According
to the Rabbis the Temple was built on the great
central rock of the world.
It is written in the Talmud:
’The world is like the eyeball of man: the
white is the ocean that surrounds the wall, the black
is the world itself, and the pupil is Jerusalem, and
the image of the pupil is the Temple.’
And again: ’The land of Israel is situated
in the centre of the world, and Jerusalem in the centre
of the land of Israel, and the Temple in the centre
of Jerusalem, and the Holy of Holies in the centre
of the Temple, and the foundation-stone on which the
world was grounded is situated in front of the ark.’
And once more: ’When the ark was removed
a stone was there from the days of the first Prophets.
It was called Foundation. It was three digits
above the earth.’
This claim is direct enough, and at
Jerusalem to this day in the Dome of the Rock, supposed
to occupy the site of Solomon’s Temple, is a
bare stone which, as Sir Charles Warren was assured,
rests on the top of a palm-tree, from the roots of
which issue all the rivers of the world. The
Mohammedans have accepted this same stone as the foundation-stone
of the world, and they call it the Kibleh of Moses.
It is said that Mahomet once intended making this
the sacred centre of Islam, instead of Mecca, but
changed his mind, and predicted that at the Last Day
the black stone the Kaabah will
leave Mecca and become the bride of the Foundation-stone
at Jerusalem. So that there can be no possible
doubt of the centre of sacred influences.
Concerning the stone at Jerusalem,
Professor Palmer says: ’This Sakhrah is
the centre of the world, and on the day of resurrection it
is supposed the Angel Israfil will stand
upon it to blow the last trumpet. It is also
eighteen miles nearer heaven than any other place in
the world, and beneath it is the source of every drop
of sweet water that flows on the face of the earth.
It is supposed to be suspended miraculously between
heaven and earth. The effect upon the spectators,
however, was so startling, that it was found necessary
to place a building round it and conceal the marvel.’
According to Hittite and Semitic traditions
mentioned by Professor Sayce and Professor Robertson
Smith, there was a chasm in this central spot through
which the waters of the Deluge escaped.
Right down to and through the Middle
Ages Jerusalem was regarded by all Christians as the
centre of the world; sometimes as the navel of the
earth; and sometimes as the middlemost point of heaven
and earth. The Hereford map of the thirteenth
century, examined by Mr. Lethaby, shows the world
as a plane circle surrounded by ocean, round whose
borders are the eaters of men, and the one-eyed, and
the half-men, and those whose heads do grow beneath
their shoulders. ’Within this border we
find everything the heart could desire; the sea is
very red, the pillars of Hercules are pillars indeed;
there is the Terrestrial Paradise enclosed by a battlemented
wall, and unicorns, manticoras, salamanders, and other
beasts of fascinating habits are clearly shown in the
lands where they live. The centre of all is Jerusalem,
a circular walled court, within which again is a smaller
circle, the Church of the Holy Sepulchre.’
Even when the earth was recognised
as a sphere, the idea of Jerusalem being the centre
was not given up. Dante held to it, and veracious
Sir John Mandeville endeavoured thus to explain away
the difficulty: ’In going from Scotland
or from England towards Jerusalem, men go always upwards,
for our land is in the low part of the earth towards
the west; and the land of Prester John is in the low
part of the world towards the east; and they have
the day when we have the night, and on the contrary
they have the night when we have the day; for the earth
and sea are of a round form, and as men go upward
towards one point they go downward to another.
Also you have heard me say that Jerusalem is in the
middle of the world; and that may be proved and shown
there by a spear which is fixed in the earth at the
hour of midday, when it is equinoctial, which gives
no shadow on any side.’ Ingenious, if not
convincing!
The Greek Church still regard Jerusalem
as the middle of the world, and Mr. Curzon tells that
in their portion of the Holy Sepulchre they have a
magnificently decorated interior, in the centre of
which is a globe of black marble on a pedestal, under
which, they say, the head of Adam was found, and which
they declare to be the exact centre of the globe.
The Mohammedans generally, however,
regard the Kaabah at Mecca as for the present,
at any rate the true centre. This stone
is supposed to have been lowered directly from heaven,
and all mosques are built to look towards it.
Even in the modern schools of Cairo, according to Mr.
Loftie, the children are taught that Mecca is the centre
of the earth.
The Samaritans, however, look upon
Gerizim as the holy mountain and centre of the religious
and geographical world. And the Babylonians regarded
the great Temple of Bel, according to Professor Sayce,
as the house of the Foundation Stone of Heaven and
Earth.
Gaya, again, is the Mecca of the Buddhists,
where Buddha sat under the tree when he received enlightenment.
This tree is the Bodhi tree described by Buddhist
writers as surrounded by an enclosure rather of an
oblong than of a square shape, but with four gates
opening to the four cardinal points. In the middle
of the enclosure is the diamond throne which a voice
told Buddha he would find under a Pipal tree, which
diamond throne is believed to be of the same age as
the earth. ’It is the middle of the great
Chiliocosm; it goes down to the limits of the golden
wheel and upwards it is flush with the ground.
It is composed of diamonds; in circuit it is a hundred
paces or so. It is the place where the Buddhas
attain the sacred path of Buddhahood. When the
great earth is shaken this spot alone is unmoved.
When the true law decays and dies it will be no longer
visible.’
According to Sir Monier Williams,
a stone marked with nine concentric circles is shown
at Gaya as the diamond throne, and the Chiliocosm is
not the centre of the world alone but of the Universe.
But in China, also a land of Buddhists,
we find another centre, and in India there is an iron
pillar at Delhi, dating from the fourth century, supposed
by the Brahmáns to mark the centre from their
point of view. And in Southern India the Tamils
have the Temple of Mandura, in the innermost sanctuary
of which a rock comes through the floor, the roots
of which are said to be in the centre of the earth.
The Indian Buddhists, of course, denied
that China could be the Middle Kingdom, as the place
where Buddha lived must necessarily be the centre.
Nevertheless, the centre is now found by Chinese Buddhists
in the Temple of Heaven at Pekin, where is one circular
stone in the centre of circles of marble terraces,
on which the Emperor kneels surrounded by circles including
that of the horizon and believes himself
to be in the Centre of the Universe and inferior only
to Heaven.
But in the sixth century a certain
Chinese traveller, called Sung-Yun, went to India
for Buddhist studies, and he made his way by the Pamirs,
the watershed of the great Asiatic rivers Indus and
Oxus. And of this country he wrote:
’After entering the Tsung Ling
mountains, step by step, we crept upwards for four
days, and reached the highest point of the range.
From this point as a centre, looking downwards, it
seemed just as though we were poised in mid-air.
Men say that this is the middle point of heaven and
earth.’
This was written more than thirteen
hundred years ago, and men to-day still call this
part of Asia the Roof of the World.