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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 />

masonry and architecture. He was the father of mathematics, metallurgy,<br />

and astronomy and was said to have ‘measured the earth’. He also<br />

founded productive agriculture, and was reported to have discovered and<br />

introduced corn—literally the staff of life in these ancient lands. A great<br />

doctor and master of medicines, he was the patron of healers and<br />

diviners ‘and disclosed to the people the mysteries of the properties of<br />

plants’. In addition, he was revered as a lawgiver, as a protector of<br />

craftsmen, and as a patron of all the arts.<br />

As might be expected of such a refined and cultured individual he<br />

forbade the grisly practice of human sacrifice during the period of his<br />

ascendancy in Mexico. After his departure the blood-spattered rituals<br />

were reintroduced with a vengeance. Nevertheless, even the Aztecs, the<br />

most vehement sacrificers ever to have existed in the long history of<br />

Central America, remembered ‘the time of Quetzalcoatl’ with a kind of<br />

nostalgia. ‘He was a teacher,’ recalled one legend, ‘who taught that no<br />

living thing was to be harmed and that sacrifices were to be made not of<br />

human beings but of birds and butterflies. 17<br />

Cosmic struggle<br />

Why did Quetzalcoatl go away? What went wrong?<br />

Mexican legends provided answers to these questions. They said that<br />

the enlightened and benevolent rule of the Plumed Serpent had been<br />

brought to an end by Tezcatilpoca, a malevolent god whose name meant<br />

‘Smoking Mirror’ and whose cult demanded human sacrifice. It seemed<br />

that a near-cosmic struggle between the forces of light and darkness had<br />

taken place in Ancient Mexico, and that the forces of darkness had<br />

triumphed ...<br />

The supposed stage for these events, now known as Tula, was not<br />

believed to be particularly old—not much more than 1000 years anyway—<br />

but the legends surrounding it linked it to an infinitely more distant<br />

epoch. In those times, outside history, it had been known as Tollan. All<br />

the traditions agreed that it had been at Tollan that Tezcatilpoca had<br />

vanquished Quetzalcoatl and forced him to quit Mexico.<br />

17 The God-Kings and the Titans, p. 57.<br />

110

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