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

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

identities seemed to merge closely with those of Quetzalcoatl. One was<br />

Votan, a great civilizer, who was also described as pale-skinned, bearded<br />

and wearing a long robe. Scholars could offer no translation for his name<br />

but his principal symbol, like that of Quetzalcoatl, was a serpent. 5<br />

Another closely related figure was Itzamana, the Mayan god of healing,<br />

who was a robed and bearded individual; his symbol, too, was the<br />

rattlesnake. 6<br />

What emerged from all this, as the leading authorities agreed, was that<br />

the Mexican legends collected and passed on by Spanish chroniclers at<br />

the time of the conquest were often the confused and conflated products<br />

of extremely long oral traditions. Behind them all, however, it seemed<br />

that there must lie some solid historical reality. In the judgement of<br />

Sylvanus Griswold Morley, the doyen of Maya studies:<br />

The great god Kukulkan, or Feathered Serpent, was the Mayan counterpart of the<br />

Aztec Quetzalcoatl, the Mexican god of light, learning and culture. In the Maya<br />

pantheon he was regarded as having been the great organizer, the founder of<br />

cities, the former of laws and the teacher of the calendar. Indeed his attributes<br />

and life history are so human that it is not improbable that he may have been an<br />

actual historical character, some great lawgiver and organizer, the memory of<br />

whose benefactions lingered long after death, and whose personality was<br />

eventually deified. 7<br />

All the legends stated unambiguously that<br />

Quetzalcoatl/Kukulkan/Gucumatz/Votan/Itzamana had arrived in Central<br />

America from somewhere very far away (across the ‘Eastern Sea’) and that<br />

amid great sadness he had eventually sailed off again in the direction<br />

whence he had come. 8 The legends added that he had promised solemnly<br />

that he would return one day 9 —a clear echo of Viracocha it would be<br />

almost perverse to ascribe to coincidence. In addition, it will be recalled<br />

that Viracocha’s departure across the waves of the Pacific Ocean had<br />

been portrayed in the Andean traditions as a miraculous event.<br />

Quetzalcoatl’s departure from Mexico also had a strange feel about it: he<br />

was said to have sailed away ‘on a raft of serpents’. 10<br />

All in all, I felt Morley was right in looking for a factual historical<br />

background behind the Mayan and Mexican myths. What the traditions<br />

seemed to indicate was that the bearded pale-skinned foreigner called<br />

Quetzalcoatl (or Kukulkan or whatever) had been not just one person but<br />

probably several people who had come from the same place and had<br />

belonged to the same distinctively non-Indian ethnic type (bearded,<br />

white-skinned, etc.). This wasn’t only suggested by the existence of a<br />

5<br />

Fair Gods and Stone Faces, pp. 98-9.<br />

6<br />

Ibid, p. 100.<br />

7<br />

Sylvanus Griswold Morley, An Introduction to the Study of Maya Hieroglyphs<br />

(introduction by Eric S. Thompson), Dover Publications Inc., New York, 1975, pp. 16-17.<br />

8<br />

New Larousse Encyclopaedia of Mythology, Paul Hamlyn, London, 1989, pp. 437, 439.<br />

9 Ibid., p. 437.<br />

10 Fair Gods and Stone Faces, p. 62.<br />

108

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