FOREWORD
	
		
		“For money has been the ruin of many and has 
		misled the minds of Kings.” 
		
		Ecclesiacticus 8, Verse 2.
	
	
	When I originally approached my study as best as 
	I might, dealing with the growth in pre-antiquity and antiquity of what is 
	known as the International Money Power, and the particular derivative of the 
	money creative activities of such International Money Power that might be 
	defined as the Life Alternative Factor, I did so with some diffidence.
	
	 
	
	Perhaps I was overly conscious of what seemed to 
	be the inadequateness of my preliminary training in these matters and that 
	in no way could I describe myself as deeply conversant with the languages of 
	ancient times, or, in the case of Mesopotamia, their scripts.
	
	However, in my preliminary studies involving checking through the indices of 
	a number of those standard books of reference dealing with the ancient 
	civilizations, I soon found that any feelings of inferiority in so far as 
	the adequacy of my scholarship relative to my particular subject was 
	concerned were unwarranted, and that qualms in these respects were by no 
	means justified...
	
	In almost all of such books of reference, except those that classified 
	themselves as economic or monetary histories, was practically no clear 
	approach to the subject of money and finance, or to those exchange systems 
	that must have existed in order that the so-called civilizations might come 
	to be. In the odd case where the translations of the texts might reveal some 
	key clue, no more special emphasis was placed herein than might have been 
	placed on the mention of a gold cup, a ring, a seal, or some exquisite piece 
	of stone work.
	
	In Jastrow's Assyria there was no reference to money at all; in Breasted's 
	History of Egypt a volume of six hundred pages or so, only brief mention on 
	pages 97-98. In A History of Egypt by Sir William M. Flinders-Petrie, in the 
	records of Sir John Marshall and E.J.C. McKay in respect to the diggings at 
	Mohenjo-Daro, and in the writings of Sir Charles L. Woolley and others on 
	their findings from their studies of the exhumed archives of the city states 
	of ancient Mesopotamia, little enough information exists on the matters 
	referred to above. 
	 
	
	In Christopher Dawson who wrote widely on 
	ancient times, particularly in the Age of the Gods which dealt with most 
	cultures until the commencement of that period known as antiquity, there is 
	only one reference to money, casual and not conveying much to the average 
	reader; this reference to be found on page 131... In King's History of 
	Babylon there was practically nothing on these matters.
	
	Thus in almost all of the works of the great archaeologists and scholars 
	specializing in the ancient civilizations, there is a virtual silence on 
	that all important matter, the system of distribution of food surpluses, and 
	surpluses of all those items needed towards the maintenance of a good and 
	continuing life so far as were required by climate and custom.
	
	In all the writings of these great and practical scholars, the workings of 
	that mighty engine which injects the unit of exchange amongst the peoples, 
	and without which no civilization as we know it can come to be, is only 
	indicated by a profound silence. 
	 
	
	Of the systems of exchanges, of the unit of 
	exchange and its issue by private individuals, as distinct from its issue as 
	by the authority of sovereign rule, on this all important matter governing 
	in such totality the conditions of progression into the future of these 
	peoples, not a word to speak of...
	
	While it is true that the average archaeologist, in being primarily 
	concerned with the results of the forces that gave rise to the human 
	accretions known as civilizations, has little enough time to meditate on 
	these forces themselves, especially since so little evidence exists of what 
	created them, or of how they provided guidance to men in the earlier days, 
	the widespread character of this omission borders on the mystifying. 
	
	 
	
	Virtual failure to speculate on those most 
	important matters of all: the structure of the machinery of the systems of 
	exchanges which undoubtedly had given rise to the ancient city 
	civilizations, and the true nature of the energy source by which such 
	machinery was driven, whether by injections of money as known this last 
	three thousand years or so, or by injections of an exchange medium of which 
	little significant evidence or memory remains, is cause for concern. 
	
	 
	
	The truth of the lines as quoted herein from 
	Boeckh's Public Economy of Athens (p.ii, present work) is immediately clear 
	to all and that the physical force underlying all civilizations must have 
	been the system whereby surpluses were allocated to the people according to 
	their place in the pyramid of life and to their need; thus, when being 
	controlled by the benevolent law of a dedicated ruler, maintaining at all 
	times the true and natural order of life.
	
	It must not be supposed, therefore, that there is lack of understanding of 
	the importance of these matters; nor that there is any special conspiracy of 
	silence, even though there might indeed be temptation to arrive at such a 
	conclusion. (1) 
	 
	
	Rather it were better to accept things as they 
	appear, and assume that these scholars merely present the fragments of fact 
	as they unearth them; leaving speculation of the true significance of such 
	fragments of fact in relation to the weft and warp of life, to those 
	considered to be particularly specialized in the various fields represented. 
	In the case of money and finance, the scholars concerned would be classified 
	as economic or monetary historians.
	
	Thus little enough seems to be available on the subject of money and finance 
	in ancient days. 
	 
	
	Nor seems to exist examination of the 
	significance of such money and finance relative to the progress about which 
	so much has been written in modern times. Apart from that of Alexander Del 
	Mar who wrote in relatively recent days, and apart from that of the 
	philosophers of antiquity such as Plato, Aristotle, Socrates, Zeno, etc., 
	almost no speculation seems to be available from scholarly sources in 
	regards to the unprejudiced PHILOSOPHY of money, in ancient times. 
	
	 
	
	On the all important subject of the consequences 
	of the creation and issuance of money by private persons as opposed to its 
	creation and issuance according to the will of a benevolent, instructed and 
	dedicated ruler, almost no speculation seems to exist in ancient or in 
	modern times. 
	 
	
	Of those forces that sought throughout history 
	to undermine any ruler who may have been firmly in the saddle because of his 
	exercise of that prerogative which is the foundation of the State Power or 
	God-Will of which he is the living evincement, insomuch as he maintained 
	firm control of the original issuance of money and its injection into 
	circulation amongst the people as against State expenditures, almost nothing 
	seems to be known. Very little information is available of the means those 
	forces employed towards this purpose through injection into circulation 
	amongst the peoples of silver and gold, and of instruments indicating 
	possession of the same.
	
	Practically no information seems to exist of the growth of private money 
	creation in the days of the ancient city states of Mesopotamia, of which, 
	because of their records being preserved on fire-baked clay, more is known 
	than of more recent civilizations; and the gap must necessarily be filled by 
	a certain amount of speculation. 
	 
	
	Little is known of the beginnings of the 
	fraudulent issuance by private persons of the unit of exchange, as in 
	opposition to the law of the gods from whom kings in ancient times claimed 
	to derive their divine origin; nor is there any information on the 
	significance of such practice relative to the continued stability of the 
	natural order of life in which obtained that system wherein the fount of all 
	power was the God; such power descending to man by way of king and 
	priesthood and directing him as he proceeded about his everyday affairs, 
	content that God's in His Heaven and all's right with the world.
	
	The use of tools of hardened iron in the mining industry about the beginning 
	of the first millennium B.C., together with a changed attitude towards slave 
	labour in which the slave, so far as mining was concerned, was assessed at 
	cost per life, must have brought relatively a very flood of silver into the 
	circulation of the cities of the Near East.
	
	Such flood of silver injected into the circulation largely by private 
	business houses who no doubt controlled the mines, however distant, 
	especially after the institution of coinage in which a piece of silver of 
	known weight and fineness passed from hand to hand, must finally and forever 
	have broken that control of exchanges previously exercised by the god of the 
	city through priest king, and priest.
	
	Thus all, priest-kings and priests, came to forget that the foundations of 
	the power given to them from on High towards the maintenance of the right 
	living and tranquil procession through life, of their peoples, were the laws 
	of distribution of surpluses as written on the scribes tablet; laws 
	instituted by the god himself each ordering a specified dispensation from 
	the surpluses in his warehouses in the Ziggurat, to the holder of the 
	tablet. 
	 
	
	They too fell into the error of believing that 
	silver with value created as a result of its being used as a balancing 
	factor in international exchange could become a perpetual storehouse of 
	value... They themselves became consumed in the scramble for this gleaming 
	metal, so conceding it, through its controllers the power to set itself up 
	in opposition to the law of the gods; to raise itself up in its own right, 
	god in itself.
	
	In its exercise, the fiat of the internationally minded group of merchants 
	or bullion brokers that arbitrarily dictated the exchange value of such 
	silver, being in actuality determination internationally of the value of 
	money, placed such groups controlling silver exchanges above and beyond 
	local law and the law of the local god, and indeed conferred on them the 
	power to influence kingly appointment. 
	 
	
	It made of them the servants of a one god, a god 
	above all gods; thereby somewhat relegating the god whose order on the state 
	warehouses as inscribed on clay by scribe or priest, had been the law 
	governing exchanges, to the place of their servant, the instrument...
	
		
		"I have however, kept before me as a guiding 
		principle, in this as other historical works I have written, the maxim 
		that the complexity of life should never be forgotten, and that no 
		single feature should be regarded as basic and decisive", (2) 
		wrote Professor Rostovtsev, scholar and Economic Historian of renown.
	
	
	It is true that while no single feature in the 
	progression of history might be regarded as basic and decisive, it is 
	certain that neither money nor treasure will protect the weak and disarmed 
	in the face of a brutal and determined conqueror beyond whose successful 
	achievements, can be no decision more final. 
	 
	
	It is also certain that the money accumulation 
	mania injected by fame into the minds of the people as a replacement to 
	their concern with those natural qualities endeavoring to color the current 
	of human life through time, amongst which are numbered virtue, honor, and 
	godliness, destroys equally as any other debilitating disease, and will 
	surely and speedily drag any people down to degeneracy and decay... A great 
	army could not be more efficient in its power of destruction.
	
	The main discussion of the Artha-Sastra of Kautilya, Hindu classic 
	instructing kings and rulers as to their proper conduct towards good 
	government, was as to whether financial or military organization came first 
	of all as the root of strength and power in any organized state. (3) 
	Clearly in that day no less than in this day, financial organization 
	preceded military organization; therefore there is not much point really in 
	discussion of so obvious a fact and truth.
	
	While an effete people, though money as it is known, is in their hands, soon 
	give way to vigor; nevertheless vigor, without strict organization of its 
	finances, which, while constituting strict organization of its labour, also 
	enables it to create, or to obtain by purchase from elsewhere the finest of 
	weapons, will not much avail... Thus, and it has been demonstrated through 
	history over and over again, it is clear there is one feature basic and 
	decisive in the progression of human life; certainly during the latter years 
	of which memory exists. 
	 
	
	That feature, particularly in relatively modern 
	societies from the bronze age onwards, and during that period of the rapid 
	perfection of the mass production of weapons, is monetary organization, and 
	what precious metals are available for purposes of international exchange as 
	against. 
	 
	
	The purchase of those finest of weapons and 
	essential materials of war only obtainable abroad, and as wages for the most 
	skilled men at arms from wherever obtainable, abroad or otherwise...
	
		
			
			The gates of Egypt stand fast like 
			Inmutet 
			
			They open not to the Westerners
			
			They open not to the Easterners
			
			They open not to the Northerners
			
			They open not to the Southerners
			
			They open not to the enemy who dwells 
			within (4)
		
	
	
	Much of history as we know it is the record of 
	civilizations to counter and evade destruction of themselves from without or 
	within, or is the record of their efforts to destroy other seemingly 
	competing civilizations or peoples attacking them from without or within.
	
	War is as inevitable as is peace as the result of the exhaustion of war, and 
	there are few peoples that escape; but wars of the last three thousand years 
	have not been relatively infrequent occurrences, and have been an 
	incessantly recurring evil... It is no chance that; the growth of warfare 
	into a very cancer eating into the vitals of mankind, and more particularly 
	the white races is parallel to the growth of that other cancer which is 
	private, and therefore irresponsible, money creation and emission...
	
	It seems that almost none of the scholars make any serious effort to throw 
	light on the real meaning of this matter of private monetary emission, and 
	the disastrous effects that it has had, and in finality, will have, towards 
	the defining of the remaining period of time of man upon this earth, as 
	being brief and uncertain.
	
	Those strange decisions of kings signaling the opening of wars as frightful 
	and disastrous to the European peoples, as the last two so-called "World 
	Wars," decisions so abnegatory of self, but more than that, abnegatory of 
	the best interests of the peoples they represented before God, far from 
	being the directives of benevolent force, are the directives of a force 
	which cannot but be described in any way but as being wholly malevolent.
	(5)
	
	The great engine which is the international control of monetary emission and 
	regulation, driven as it was until recently by the catalytic fuel of gold 
	alone, is now almost world embracing in the scope of its operations. It 
	seems there is no change in the attitude of those its guides, nor any 
	admission of the folly of their misuse of this God-Power which they direct 
	towards the good of themselves and their friends. 
	 
	
	Their obsession, despite ruin for all looming on 
	every horizon, seems to remain the same narrow vision of the day of their 
	own world supremacy wherein they will rule as absolute lords over all; 
	although by now it should be apparent to them, no less than to all thinking 
	people, that if this madness concealed within the much talked about 
	conception known as progress is not brought to a complete arrestment, 
	nothing remains but an end wherein shall be silence and no song, for indeed 
	there will be no singer, nor any to sing to . . .
	
	As it looks today, it may be the end for the Indo-European peoples whose 
	diligent labours made so much of this world of today... It may be the end, 
	final and absolute for all men for that matter... it may be the end for this 
	our Earth, our only place and home and hope in the awful endlessness of 
	space and time...
	
	It should be more than apparent that in the relatively recent day when 
	kingship and god-ship were one, so far as the simple souls were concerned, 
	and the god and his viceroy on earth, the priest-king, were creators and 
	controllers of the economic good, exchanges were created in order that the 
	people might live a fuller life, and not so much to benefit any secret 
	society or interlocked group standing aside from the main paths of mankind, 
	but to benefit all who kneeled humbly before the Almighty, each fully in 
	acceptance of himself as part of the god-wish, eternal and infinite; each 
	one in his time an integral unit carefully placed in the pyramid of life 
	itself.
	
	History over these last three thousand years particularly, has largely been 
	the interweaving of both a witting, and an unwitting distortion of the 
	truth, with all the inevitable consequences which have been expected 
	(6) and now are but a little way ahead. 
	 
	
	Kings largely became the mouthpiece and sword 
	arm of those semi-secret societies that controlled the material of money as 
	its outward and visible symbols came to be restricted to gold, silver, and 
	copper... 
	 
	
	The fiat of the god in heaven which had been the 
	decisive force behind that which brought about an equitable exchange, was 
	replaced by the will of those classes controlling the undertones of 
	civilization, leaders of the world of slave drivers, caravaneers, outcasts, 
	and criminals generally, such as was to be discerned on the edges of the 
	ancient city civilizations, and followed the trade routes between them...
	
	 
	
	The instrument of this will was precious metal, 
	whose supply was controlled by the leaders of these classes through their 
	control of the slave trade, since mining was rarely profitable in the case 
	of the precious metals, except with slave labour, even after the development 
	of hardened iron tools and efficient methods of smelting.
	
	The power of these men, indifferent and alien to most cities as they were, 
	relative to that power it was replacing, which was the will of the 
	benevolent god of the city, had been made absolute by sowing in the minds of 
	men over the thousands of years, the idea of such metals having a specially 
	high value relative to other goods and services being offered for exchange; 
	indeed that they were veritable store house of value.
	
	The law of the ruler previously exercised towards the well being of the 
	people in that they might live a good and honorable life accordingly became 
	corrupted. It became merely a symbol raised before their gaze, in order that 
	they might not look down and see the evil gnawing away at the roots of the 
	Tree of Life itself, destroying all peace and goodness. 
	 
	
	Nor could those semi-secret groups of persons be 
	seen who so often were the sources of such evil. In their contemptuous 
	indifference to the men of the state who found meaningfulness and 
	tranquility through life lived in natural order under the law of the King, 
	they constituted hidden force deeply inimical to the best interests of 
	mankind.
	
	Through stealthy issue of precious metal commodity money into circulation 
	amongst the peoples, replacing that money which represented the fiat or will 
	of the god of the city and which was merely an order on the state warehouses 
	through his scribes, this internationally minded group from the secrecy of 
	their chambers were able to make a mockery of the faith and belief of simple 
	people. 
	 
	
	The line of communication from god to man 
	through priest-king and priest was cut, being replaced by their own twisted 
	purposes such as they were; not however guiding mankind into the heaven that 
	could have been and where all would be life, and light. and hope, but into 
	such a hell as to escape from which men might gladly come to accept the idea 
	of Mass Suicide...
	
	My sincere acknowledgements are due to :
	
		
			- 
			
			Professor Fritz Heichelheim, and 
			Sijthoff International Publishing Company, Leyden, for their very 
			kind permission to use the short extracts from Professor 
			Heichelheim's work: An Ancient Economic History.
 
 
- 
			
			Professor W.F. Albright, and Cambridge 
			University Press for their very kind permission to use the short 
			extracts from Professor Albright's work The Amarna Letters from 
			Palestine; the same being found in Volume II of the Cambridge 
			Ancient History.
 
 
- 
			
			G.R. Driver and John C. Miles, and the 
			Clarendon Press, Oxford, for their very kind permission to use the 
			rendering of 
			
			Hammurabai's Law No. 7, as given by G.R. Driver and 
			John C. Miles in their joint work: Ancient Codes and Laws of the 
			Near East.
 
 
- 
			
			Dr. T.B.L. Webster and Messrs. Methuen 
			Publications for their very kind permission to use the short 
			extracts from Dr. Webster's work: From Mycenae to Homer.
 
 
- 
			
			Sir Charles Leonard Woolley and Messrs. 
			Faber & Faber Ltd. for their very kind permission to use the short 
			extracts from Sir Charles Leonard Woolley's work: Abraham.
 
 
- 
			
			Sir Charles Leonard Woolley and Messrs. 
			Ernest Benn for their very kind permission to use the short extracts 
			from Sir Charles Leonard Woolley's work: Excavations at Ur.
 
 
- 
			
			Christopher Dawson & John Murray 
			Publishing House for their kind permission to use an extract from 
			Christopher Dawson's work: The Age of the Gods.
 
 
- 
			
			Dr William Langer and The Houghton 
			Mifflin Company for their very kind permission to use the short 
			extracts from the Encyclopaedia of World History.
 
 
- 
			
			Dr. Charles Seltsman and the Associated 
			Book Publishers for their very kind permission to use the short 
			extracts from Greek Coins. 
	
	My sincere acknowledgements are also due to all 
	those friends and acquaintances who in any way have assisted me in the 
	present work.
 
	 
	
	References
	
		
		1. According to Tragedy and Hope, the 
		important and compendious work of Dr. Carroll Quigley, an outstanding 
		scholar of liberal outlook, (as interpreted by the reviewer, W. Cleon 
		Skousen), such conspiracy certainly exists, and is vast in scope to say 
		the least.
		
		2. Mikhail I. Rostovtsev: A Social and Economic History of the 
		Hellenistic World, p. viii, Vol. I. (Oxford; 1941).
		
		3. Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan and Charles Moore: A Source Book in Indian 
		Philosophy, pp 219-220. Princeton; 1957.
		
		4. Ancient Egyptian Poem; Christopher Dawson: The Age of the Gods, p. 
		148.
		
		5. For example, the folly of Britain in letting itself and the Empire be 
		stamped into these last two so-called "Great" wars, may be compared to 
		that of the man described by the Emperor Augustus who goes fishing with 
		a golden hook; he has everything to lose and little to gain. (Suetonius: 
		the Twelve Caesars II,25)
		
		6. Much of this was foretold in the Revelation of St. John the Divine.
	
	
	
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