Henriette Mertz

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Henriette Mertz
Born1896 (1896)
DiedAugust 17, 1985(1985-08-17) (aged 88–89)
OccupationPatent attorney
Known forFringe archaeological theories

Henriette Mertz (1896 – August 17, 1985) was an American patent attorney from Chicago and a proponent of pseudoarchaeological hyperdiffusionism in relation to ancient American history.[1] During World War II, she worked as a code-breaker for the U.S. government's cryptography department. She published several controversial works during the 1960s and 1970s relating to the early discovery and settlement of America.

She died on August 17, 1985, in Chicago at 89; her book The Mystic Symbol was published posthumously.[2]

Career[edit]

Mertz was a cryptographer for the U.S. Navy during World War II.[3] She then worked at the U.S. Copyright Office in Washington, D.C., as a patent lawyer.[3] She traveled extensively to locations including the Amazon, the Andes, and Mexico.[3]

Theories[edit]

In 1936, Mertz met a man in Mexico who she said "looked to be pure Chinese" but described himself as "Indian".[3] It turned out that his family was originally from China, but had settled and lived in Mexico for many generations.[3] After the war, she read An Inglorious Columbus (1885) by writer Edward P. Vining, which argued that Chinese explorers had founded Mexican culture and religion.[3] To Mertz, this explained the curious case of the Mexican-Chinese-Indian man she had met many years prior.[3] Lacking any training as a historian, she started developing her own theories about the Chinese discovery of the Americas, and decided to self-publish Pale Ink (1953) after the manuscript was rejected by commercial publishers.[3]

Bat Creek Stone[edit]

In 1964, Mertz suggested that a photograph of the Bat Creek inscription had been published upside down.[4] Later Cyrus H. Gordon, scholar of Near Eastern cultures and ancient languages, suggested that the inscriptions were derived from a Hebrew alphabet from the 1st century AD but today mainstream archaeologists consider it to be a fraud.[5]

Chinese voyages[edit]

In her work entitled Pale Ink (self-published c. 1958), Mertz proposed that two accounts of Chinese travels to Fusang—one found in the Shan Hai Jing (which Mertz dates to 2250 BC) and the other by Buddhist missionary Hui Shen in 499 AD—describe visits to the American continent.[6] As supporting evidence she proposed that the Milk River inscriptions were Chinese glyphs made by one of the exploration parties. According to author David Hatcher Childress, Mertz also interpreted Fusang as meaning "fir trees" in Chinese, and ruminated that they might refer to the fir trees of British Columbia.[7] The hypothesis had long been rejected by academic sinologists having been first advocated in English by Charles Godfrey Leland in 1875, but apparently Mertz was unaware of these facts. In her book, Mertz also proposed that Quetzalcoatl was Hui Shen, the 5th century Buddhist traveler to Fusang. About Mertz's hypotheses, sinologist Joseph Needham writes in a footnote that "the proposed identities in general require a heroic suspension of disbelief".[6]

Published works[edit]

  • 1986: The Mystic Symbol: Mark of the Michigan Mound Builders. Global Books, ISBN 0-9617235-0-5.
  • 1976: Atlantis: Dwelling Place of the Gods, ISBN 0-9600952-3-3.
  • 1974: Gods from the Far East: How the Chinese Discovered America. Seattle, Washington: Ballantine Books, ISBN 0-345-23964-4.
  • 1964: The Wine Dark Sea: Homer's Heroic Epic of the North Atlantic, ASIN: B0006CHG68.
  • 1958, 1972: Pale Ink: Two Ancient Records of Chinese Exploration in America. Swallow Press, ISBN 0-8040-0599-0.
  • 1957: The Nephtali: One Lost Tribe, ASIN: B0007EYTXS.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Fagan, Garrett G., ed. (2006). Archaeological Fantasies. Oxford, England: Routledge. pp. 362–367. ISBN 978-0-415-30593-8.
  2. ^ "HENRIETTE MERTZ". Chicago Tribune. 20 August 1985. Retrieved 10 March 2023.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Regal, Brian (2022). "The Asia and Africa Theories". The Battle Over America's Origin Story. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 167–195. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-99538-6_8. ISBN 9783030995386.
  4. ^ The Wine Dark Sea p.130
  5. ^ Mainfort & Kwas "The Bat Creek Stone Revisited: A Fraud Exposed" American Antiquity 69.4 (Oct 2004): p761
  6. ^ a b Joseph Needham; Ling Wang; Gwei-Djen (1971). Science and civilisation in China: Vol. 4, Physics and physical technology. Pt. 3, Civil engineering and nautics. Cambridge University Press. pp. 540–542. ISBN 978-0-521-07060-7.
  7. ^ Childress, Lost Cities of North & Central America, p. 565. "Other ancient inscriptions on the Milk River include the Writing-On-Stone Provincial Park carvings south of Lethbridge. Here can be found all kinds of "writing" though no one may ever decipher these strange glyphs. Henriette Mertz in her book Pale Ink, about two Chinese voyages to the Americas, mentions the Milk River inscriptions by name, and claims that they are Chinese glyphs made by one of the exploration parties. The book "Fu-Sang," traditionally said to have been written in 499 A.D. is said to mean "Fir Tree" when translated from Chinese. Asks Mertz, Did the ancient Chinese know British Columbia as the land of the fir tree?"


External links[edit]