Ethel Bristowe

From Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Ethel Susan Graham Bristowe
Born1864 (1864)
Died1952 (aged 89–90)
NationalityBritish
Known forPainting, Writing

Ethel Susan Graham Bristowe, also known as E.S.G. Bristowe (1864–1952[1]) was a British painter, and an early 20th-century author on alternative theories within Assyriology.[2]

She moved to Scotland in 1907 and lived for the rest of her life at Craig, a country house at Balmaclellan near Castle Douglas in Kirkcudbrightshire.

Due to the absence of an exhibition space, in 1938 Ethel Bristowe bequeathed an art gallery to the people of Castle Douglas (with several of her works). The gallery was built as an extension to the town's library on the Market Hill.

Cain-Sargon theory[edit]

Bristowe is most well known for her Cain-Sargon of Akkad equation theory in her book Sargon the Magnificent (1927). In this work Bristowe reconstructs the ancient chronology of Mesopotamia based on the Cylinder of Nabonidus. The cylinder dates Naram-Sin, son of Sargon of Accad, 3200 years before Nabonidus, and so Sargon to c. 3800 BC. This sharply contrasts with mainstream scholarship which dates Sargon to the 23rd century BC. Bristowe controversially defended the earlier dating from the cylinder, to then argue Sargon was the Biblical Cain.

The Cain-Sargon theory is not at all popular with contemporary Assyriologists, but has received support from British Israelites and proponents of Christian Identity whose publishing houses reprinted Bristowe's work.[3] A sequel was published by Bristowe in 1950 entitled Cain - An Argument.

Works[edit]

  • The Oldest Letters In The World (1923)
  • Sargon the Magnificent (1927)
  • The Man Who Built The Great Pyramid (1932)
  • Naphuria - The History Of The True Akhnaton (1936)
  • Christ And Early Christianity Through Pagan Eyes (1937)
  • Cain - An Argument (1950)

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Ethel Susan Graham Bristowe". In the Artists Footsteps. Retrieved 19 May 2018.
  2. ^ "Ethel Susan Graham Paterson Bristowe". Library Thing. Retrieved 19 May 2018.
  3. ^ Barkun, Michael (1997). Religion and the Racist Right: The Origins of the Christian Identity Movement. University of North Carolina Press. p. 165.

External links[edit]