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Know_files/FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS.pdf - D Ank Unlimited

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Lightbringer<br />

Graham Hancock – <strong>FINGERPRINTS</strong> <strong>OF</strong> <strong>THE</strong> <strong>GODS</strong><br />

No documents, only dark and menacing sculptures, have come down to<br />

us from the Olmec era. But the Mayas, justifiably regarded as the greatest<br />

ancient civilization to have arisen in the New World, left behind a wealth<br />

of calendrical records. Expressed in terms of the modern dating system,<br />

these enigmatic inscriptions convey a rather curious message: the Fifth<br />

Sun, it seems, is going to come to an end on 23 December, AD 2012. 17<br />

In the rational intellectual climate of the late twentieth century it is<br />

unfashionable to take doomsday prophecies seriously. The general<br />

consensus is that they are the products of superstitious minds and can<br />

safely be ignored. As I travelled around Mexico, however, I was from time<br />

to time bothered by a nagging intuition that the voices of the ancient<br />

sages might deserve a hearing after all. I mean, suppose by some crazy<br />

offchance they weren’t the superstitious savages we’d always believed<br />

them to be. Suppose they knew something we didn’t? Most pertinent of<br />

all, suppose that their projected date for the end of the Fifth Sun turned<br />

out to be correct? Suppose, in other words, that some truly awful<br />

geological catastrophe is already unfolding, deep in the bowels of the<br />

earth, as the wise men of the Maya predicted?<br />

In Peru and Bolivia I had become aware of the obsessive concern with<br />

the calculation of time shown by the Incas and their predecessors. Now,<br />

in Mexico, I discovered that the Maya, who believed that they had worked<br />

out the date of the end of the world, had been possessed by the same<br />

compulsion. Indeed, for these people, just about everything boiled down<br />

to numbers, the passage of the years and the manifestations of events.<br />

The belief was that if the numbers which lay beneath the manifestations<br />

could be properly understood, it would be possible to predict successfully<br />

the timing of the events themselves. 18 I felt disinclined to ignore the<br />

obvious implications of the recurrent destructions of humanity depicted<br />

so vividly in the Central American traditions. Coming complete with<br />

giants and floods, these traditions were eerily similar to those of the faroff<br />

Andean region.<br />

Meanwhile, however, I was keen to pursue another, related line of<br />

inquiry. This concerned the bearded white-skinned deity named<br />

Quetzalcoatl, who was believed to have sailed to Mexico from across the<br />

seas in remote antiquity. Quetzalcoatl was credited with the invention of<br />

the advanced mathematical and calendrical formulae that the Maya were<br />

later to use to calculate the date of doomsday. 19 He also bore a striking<br />

17 Professor Michael D. Coe, Breaking the Maya Code, Thames & Hudson, London, 1992,<br />

pp. 275-6. Herbert Joseph Spinden’s correlation gives a slightly earlier date of 24<br />

December, AD 2011. See Mysteries of the Mexican Pyramids, p. 286.<br />

18 Mysteries of the Mexican Pyramids, p. 286.<br />

19 World Mythology, p. 240. See also Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1991, 9:855, and Lewis<br />

Spence, The Magic and Mysteries of Mexico, Rider, London, 1922, pp. 49-50.<br />

105

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