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Fingerprints of the Gods

Page 54

by Graham Hancock


  historical period has been vindicated by archaeology,11 isn’t it a bit

  premature for us to assume that his pre-dynastic chronology is wrong

  because excavations have not yet turned up evidence confirming it?12

  6 Egypt before the Pharaohs, pp. 12-13; The Encyclopaedia of Ancient Egypt, pp. 200,

  268.

  7 Egypt before the Pharaohs, p. 12.

  8 Archaic Egypt, p. 23; Manetho, (trans. W. G. Waddell), William Heinemann, London,

  1940, Introduction pp. xvi-xvii.

  9 Egypt before the Pharaohs, p. 11.

  10 Ibid., p. 11-13; Archaic Egypt, pp. 5, 23.

  11 See, for example, Egypt before the Pharaohs, pp. 11-13.

  12 This is a particularly important point to remember in a discipline like Egyptology

  where so much of the record of the past has been lost through looting, the ravages of

  time, and the activities of archaeologists and treasure hunters. Besides, vast numbers of

  Ancient Egyptian sites have not been investigated at all, and many more may lie out of

  our reach beneath the millennial silt of the Nile Delta (or beneath the suburbs of Cairo

  for that matter), and even at well-studied locations such as the Giza necropolis there are

  huge areas—the bedrock beneath the Sphinx for example—which still await the

  attentions of the excavator.

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  Gods, Demigods and Spirits of the Dead

  If we are to allow Manetho to speak for himself, we have no choice but to

  turn to the texts in which the fragments of his work are preserved. One of

  the most important of these is the Armenian version of the Chronica of

  Eusebius. It begins by informing us that it is extracted ‘from the Egyptian

  History of Manetho, who composed his account in three books. These

  deal with the Gods, the Demigods, the Spirits of the Dead and the mortal

  kings who ruled Egypt ...’13 Citing Manetho directly, Eusebius begins by

  reeling off a list of the gods which consists, essentially, of the familiar

  Ennead of Heliopolis—Ra, Osiris, Isis, Horus, Set, and so on:14

  These were the first to hold sway in Egypt. Thereafter, the kingship passed from

  one to another in unbroken succession ... through 13,900 years— ... After the

  Gods, Demigods reigned for 1255 years; and again another line of kings held sway

  for 1817 years; then came thirty more kings, reigning for 1790 years; and then

  again ten kings ruling for 350 years. There followed the rule of the Spirits of the

  Dead ... for 5813 years ...’15

  The total of all these periods adds up to 24,925 years and takes us far

  beyond the biblical date for the creation of the world (some time in the

  fifth millennium BC16). Because it suggested that biblical chronology was

  wrong, this created difficulties for Eusebius, a staunchly Christian

  commentator. But, after a moment’s thought, he overcame the problem

  in an inspired way: ‘The year I take to be a lunar one, consisting, that is,

  of 30 days: what we now call a month the Egyptians used formerly to

  style a year ...’17

  Of course they did no such thing.18 By means of this sleight of hand,

  however, Eusebius and others succeeded in boiling down Manetho’s

  grand pre-dynastic span of almost 25,000 years into a sanitized dollop a

  bit over 2000 years which fits comfortably into the 2242 years orthodox

  biblical chronology allows between Adam and the Flood.19

  A different technique for downplaying the disturbing chronological

  implications of Manetho’s evidence is employed by the monk George

  Syncellus ( c. AD 800). This commentator, who relies entirely on invective,

  writes, ‘Manetho, chief priest of the accursed temples of Egypt [tells us]

  of gods who never existed. These, he says, reigned for 11,895 years ...’20

  Several other curious and contradictory numbers crop up in the

  fragments. In particular, Manetho is repeatedly said to have given the

  13 Manetho, p. 3.

  14 Ibid., pp. 3-5.

  15 Ibid., p. 5.

  16 Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1991, 12:214-15.

  17 Manetho, p. 5.

  18 There is absolutely no evidence that the Ancient Egyptians ever confused years and

  months, or styled one as the other; ibid, p. 4, note 2.

  19 Ibid., p. 7.

  20 Ibid., p. 15.

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  enormous figure of 36,525 years for the entire duration of the civilization

  of Egypt from the time of the gods down to the end of the thirtieth (and

  last) dynasty of mortal kings.21 This figure of course, incorporates the

  365.25 days of the Sothic year (the interval between two consecutive

  heliacal risings of Sirius, as described in the last chapter). More likely by

  design than by accident, it also represents 25 cycles of 1460 Sothic years,

  and 25 cycles of 1461 calendar years (since the ancient Egyptian civil

  calendar was constructed around a ‘vague year’ of 365 days exactly).22

  What, if anything, does all this mean? It’s hard to be sure. Out of the

  welter of numbers and interpretations, however, there is one aspect of

  Manetho’s original message that comes through loud and clear.

  Irrespective of everything we have been taught about the orderly progress

  of history, what he seems to be telling us is that civilized beings (either

  gods or men) were present in Egypt for an immensely long period before

  the advent of the First Dynasty around 3100 BC.

  Diodorus Siculus and Herodotus

  In this assertion, Manetho finds much support among classical writers.

  In the first century BC, for example, the Greek historian Diodorus

  Siculus visited Egypt. He is rightly described by C.H. Oldfather, his most

  recent translator, as ‘an uncritical compiler who used good sources and

  reproduced them faithfully’.23 In plain English, what this means is that

  Diodorus did not try to impose his prejudices and preconceptions on the

  material he collected. He is therefore particularly valuable to us because

  his informants included Egyptian priests whom he questioned about the

  mysterious past of their country. This is what they told him:

  ‘At first gods and heroes ruled Egypt for a little less than 18,000 years, the last of

  the gods to rule being Horus, the son of Isis ... Mortals have been kings of their

  country, they say, for a little less than 5000 years ...24

  Let us review these figures ‘uncritically’ and see what they add up to.

  Diodorus was writing in the first century BC. If we journey back from there

  for the 5000 years during which the ‘mortal kings’ supposedly ruled, we

  get to around 5100 BC. If we go even further back to the beginning of the

  age of ‘gods and heroes’, we find that we have arrived at 23,100 BC, when

  the world was still firmly in the grip of the last Ice Age.

  21 Ibid., p. 231; see also The Splendour that was Egypt, p. 12.

  22 Like the Maya, (see Part III), the Ancient Egyptians made use for administrative

  purposes of a civil calendar year (or vague year) of 365 days exactly. See Skywatchers of

  Ancient Mexico, p. 151, for further details on the Maya vague year. The Ancient Egyptian

  civil calendar year was geared to the Sothic year so that both would coincide on the

  same
day/month position once every 1461 calendar years.

  23 Diodorus Siculus, translated by C.H. Oldfather, Harvard University Press, 1989, jacket

  text.

  24 Ibid., volume I, p. 157.

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  Long before Diodorus, Egypt was visited by another and more

  illustrious Greek historian: the great Herodotus, who lived in the fifth

  century BC. He too, it seems, consorted with priests and he too managed

  to tune in to traditions that spoke of the presence of a high civilization in

  the Nile Valley at some unspecified date in remote antiquity. Herodotus

  outlines these traditions of an immense prehistoric period of Egyptian

  civilization in Book II of his History. In the same document he also hands

  on to us, without comment, a peculiar nugget of information which had

  originated with the priests of Heliopolis:

  During this time, they said, there were four occasions when the sun rose out of his

  wonted place—twice rising where he now sets, and twice setting where he now

  rises.25

  What is this all about?

  According to the French mathematician Schwaller de Lubicz, what

  Herodotus is transmitting to us (perhaps unwittingly) is a veiled and

  garbled reference to a period of time— that is, to the time that it takes for

  sunrise on the vernal equinox to precess against the stellar background

  through one and a half complete cycles of the zodiac.26

  As we have seen, the equinoctial sun spends roughly 2160 years in

  each of the twelve zodiacal constellations. A full cycle of precession of

  the equinoxes therefore takes almost 26,000 years to complete (12 x

  2160 years). It follows that one and a half cycles takes nearly 39,000

  years (18 x 2160 years).

  In the time of Herodotus the sun on the vernal equinox rose due east at

  dawn against the stellar background of Aries—at which moment the

  constellation of Libra was ‘in opposition’, lying due west where the sun

  would set twelve hours later. If we wind the clock of precession back half

  a cycle, however—six houses of the zodiac or approximately 13,000

  years—we find that the reverse configuration prevails: the vernal sun now

  rises due east in Libra while Aries lies due west in opposition. A further

  13,000 years back, the situation reverses itself once more, with the vernal

  sun rising again in Aries and with Libra in opposition.

  This takes us to 26,000 years before Herodotus.

  If we then step back another 13,000 years, another half precessional

  cycle, to 39,000 years before Herodotus, the vernal sunrise returns to

  Libra, and Aries is again in opposition.

  The point is this: with 39,000 years we have an expanse of time during

  which the sun can be described as ‘twice rising where he now sets’, i.e. in

  25 The History, pp. 193-4. In the first century AD a similar tradition was recorded by the

  Roman scholar Pomponious Mela: ‘The Egyptians pride themselves on being the most

  ancient people in the world. In their authentic annals one may read that since they have

  been in existence, the course of the stars has changed direction four times, and that the

  sun has set twice in the part of the sky where it rises today.’ (Pomponious Mela, De Situ

  Orbis.)

  26 Sacred Science, p. 87

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  Graham Hancock – FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS

  Libra in the time of Herodotus (and again at 13,000 and at 39,000 years

  earlier), and as ‘twice setting where he now rises’, i.e. in Aries in the time

  of Herodotus (and again at 13,000 and 39,000 years earlier).27 If

  Schwaller’s interpretation is correct—and there is every reason to

  suppose it is—it suggests that the Greek historian’s priestly informants

  must have had access to accurate records of the precessional motion of

  the sun going back at least 39,000 years before their own era.

  The Turin Papyrus and the Palermo Stone

  The figure of 39,000 years accords surprisingly closely with the

  testimony of the Turin Papyrus (one of the two surviving Ancient Egyptian

  king lists that extends back into prehistoric times before the First

  Dynasty).

  Originally in the collection of the king of Sardinia, the brittle and

  crumbling 3000-year-old papyrus was sent in a box, without packing, to

  its present home in the Museum of Turin. As any schoolchild could have

  predicted, it arrived broken into countless fragments. Scholars were

  obliged to work for years to piece together and make sense of what

  remained, and they did a superb job.28 Nevertheless, more than half the

  contents of this precious record proved impossible to reconstruct.29

  What might we have learned about the First Time if the Turin Papyrus

  had remained intact?

  The surviving fragments are tantalizing. In one register, for example,

  we read the names often Neteru with each name inscribed in a cartouche

  (oblong enclosure) in much the same style adopted in later periods for

  the historical kings of Egypt. The number of years that each Neter was

  believed to have reigned was also given, but most of these numbers are

  missing from the damaged document.30

  In another column there appears a list of the mortal kings who ruled in

  upper and lower Egypt after the gods but prior to the supposed

  unification of the kingdom under Menes, the first pharaoh of the First

  Dynasty, in 3100 BC. From the surviving fragments it is possible to

  27 As the following table makes clear:

  IN OPPOSITION

  VERNAL EQUINOX

  SUNRISE

  (DUE WEST)

  AT SUNRISE

  Fifth century BC (time of Herodotus)

  Aries

  Libra

  Approx 13,000 years before Herodotus

  Libra

  Aries

  Approx 26,000 years before Herodotus

  Aries

  Libra

  Approx 39,000 years before Herodotus

  Libra

  Aries

  28 See, for example, Sir A.H. Gardner, The Royal Cannon of Turin, Griffith Institute,

  Oxford.

  29 Archaic Egypt, p. 4.

  30 For further details, Sacred Science, p. 86.

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  establish that nine ‘dynasties’ of these pre-dynastic pharaohs were

  mentioned, among which were ‘the Venerables of Memphis’, ‘the

  Venerables of the North’ and, lastly, the Shemsu Hor (the Companions, or

  Followers, of Horus) who ruled until the time of Menes. The final two lines

  of the column, which seem to represent a summing up or inventory, are

  particularly provocative. They read; ‘... Venerables Shemsu-Hor, 13,420

  years; Reigns before the Shemsu-Hor, 23,200 years; Total 36,620 years’.31

  The other king list that deals with prehistoric times is the Palermo

  Stone, which does not take us as far back into the past as the Turin

  Papyrus. The earliest of its surviving registers record the reigns of 120

  kings who ruled in upper and lower Egypt in the late pre-dynastic period:

  the centuries immediately prior to the country’s unification in 3100 BC.32

  Once again, however, we really have no idea how much other information,

  perhaps relating
to far earlier periods, might originally have been

  inscribed on this enigmatic slab of black basalt, because it, too, has not

  come down to us intact. Since 1887 the largest single part has been

  preserved in the Museum of Palermo in Sicily; a second piece is on

  display in Egypt in the Cairo Museum; and a third much smaller fragment

  is in the Petrie Collection at the University of London.33 These are

  reckoned by archaeologists to have been broken out of the centre of a

  monolith which would originally have measured about seven feet long by

  two feet high (stood on its long side).34 Furthermore, as one authority has

  observed:

  It is quite possible—even probable—that many more pieces of this invaluable

  monument remain, if we only knew where to look. As it is we are faced with the

  tantalising knowledge that a record of the name of every king of the Archaic

  Period existed, together with the number of years of his reign and the chief events

  which occurred during his occupation of the throne. And these events were

  compiled in the Fifth Dynasty, only about 700 years after the Unification, so that

  the margin of error would in all probability have been very small ...’35

  The late Professor Walter Emery, whose words these are, was naturally

  concerned about the absence of much-needed details concerning the

  Archaic Period, 3200 BC to 2900 BC,36 the focus of his own specialist

  interests. We should also spare a thought, however, for what an intact

  31 Ibid., p. 86. See also Egyptian Mysteries, p. 68.

  32 Archaic Egypt, p. 5; Encyclopaedia of Ancient Egypt, p. 200.

  33 Archaic Egypt, p. 5; Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1991, 9:81.

  34 Encyclopaedia of Ancient Egypt, p. 200.

  35 Archaic Egypt, p. 5.

  36 Egypt to the End of the Old Kingdom, p. 12.

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  Palermo Stone might have told us about even earlier epochs, notably Zep

  Tepi—the golden age of the gods.

  The deeper we penetrate into the myths and memories of Egypt’s long

  past, and the closer we approach to the fabled First Time, the stranger

  the landscapes that surround us become ... as we shall see.

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  Chapter 44

  Gods of the First Time

  According to Heliopolitan theology, the nine original gods who appeared

 

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