This 1957 work is a relaxed, casual survey of the explorations for and uncoverings of a half dozen or so cities of once dominant civilizations which, as the title indicates, succumbed to the passage of time to the point that only ruins or hidden edifices remain. As the author indicates, the book was written for amusement and simply to entertain. Such was my impression reading it: I felt as if I was sitting in an overstuffed armchair in a darkened library watching the fire blazing in the grate as the evening wiled away, listening to an aged traveller recounting what he'd discovered in his journeys to ancient lands.
Henry Layard's discovery of the ruins of Nineveh from the Sumerian civilization, the center of Boghaz Koy of the ancient Hittites in Asia Minor, the ruined outlines of Babylon in modern day Iraq, the Hindu cities of Harappa and Mohenjidaro in the Punjub, the remains of Anuradhapura on the island now known as Sri Lanka, the ruins of Pompeii and Heraculaneum in Italy, those of Chichen-Itza of the Mayans in Yucatan and of Macchu Pichu of the Incas in Peru are all analyzed, sometimes focusing on the Europeans who uncovered them, sometimes on the cultures and customs of the ancient peoples and sometimes on the fates which brought their civilizations to a close.
The catastrophic devastation which befell Pompeii is described in agonizingly minute detail, as are the exploits of Hiram Bingham who struggled up steep mountains covered in rainforests to find the hardwood-covered remains of the Incan city of Vilcabamba, now known as Macchu Pichu. The ofttimes lascivious hedonism of Pompeii is honestly accepted, as are the horrific cruelties involved in Mayan, Aztec, Incan, Assyrian, Sinhalese and Christian treatments of both their own subjects and their enemies. Cottrell's comparison of these practises with the relatively eschewing of barbaric sacrifices by the Egyptians, who for three thousand years followed a relatively animistic religion largely lacking in any strong moral code led him to claim that 'there seems to be no necessary connection between morality and religion.' Interesting, eh?
A highly diverting, largely entertaining and quite informative work. Recommended.