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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 />

and ‘spears or arrows and incense bags’ in the left hands. 18 It didn’t seem<br />

to matter that the objects did not in any way resemble atl-atls, spears,<br />

arrows, or incense bags.<br />

Santha Faiia’s photographs will help the reader to form his or her own<br />

impression of these peculiar objects. As I studied the objects themselves I<br />

had the distinct sense that they were meant to represent devices which<br />

had originally been made out of metal. The right-hand device, which<br />

seemed to emerge from a sheath or hand-guard, was lozenge-shaped<br />

with a curved lower edge. The left-hand device could have been an<br />

instrument or weapon of some kind.<br />

I remembered legends which related that the gods of ancient Mexico<br />

had armed themselves with xiuhcoatl, ‘fire serpents’. 19 These apparently<br />

emitted burning rays capable of piercing and dismembering human<br />

bodies. 20 Was it ‘fire serpents’ that the Tula idols were holding? What, for<br />

that matter, were fire serpents?<br />

Whatever they were, both devices looked like pieces of technology. And<br />

both in certain ways resembled the equally mysterious objects in the<br />

hands of the idols in the Kalasasaya at Tiahuanaco.<br />

Serpent Sanctuary<br />

Santha and I had come to Tula/Tollan because it had been closely<br />

associated both with Quetzalcoatl and with his arch-enemy Tezcatilpoca,<br />

the Smoking Mirror. 21 Ever-young, omnipotent, omnipresent and<br />

omniscient, Tezcatilpoca was associated in the legends with night,<br />

darkness and the sacred jaguar. 22 He was ‘invisible and implacable,<br />

appearing to men sometimes as a flying shadow, sometimes as a<br />

dreadful monster’. 23 Often depicted as a glaring skull, he was said to have<br />

been the owner of a mysterious object, the Smoking Mirror after which he<br />

was named, which he made use of to observe from afar the activities of<br />

men and gods. Scholars quite reasonably suppose that it must have been<br />

a primitive obsidian scrying stone: ‘Obsidian had an especial sanctity for<br />

the Mexicans, as it provided the sacrificial knives employed by the priests<br />

... Bernal Diaz [Spanish chronicler] states that they called this stone<br />

“Tezcat”. From it mirrors were also manufactured as divinatory media to<br />

be used by wizards.’ 24<br />

Representing the forces of darkness and rapacious evil, Tezcatilpoca<br />

was said in the legends to have been locked in a conflict with<br />

18<br />

Mexico, pp. 194-5.<br />

19<br />

The Gods and Symbols of Ancient Mexico and the Maya, pp. 185, 188-9.<br />

20<br />

Ibid.<br />

21<br />

New Larousse Encyclopaedia of Mythology, p. 437.<br />

22<br />

The Feathered Serpent and the Cross, pp. 52-3.<br />

23<br />

New Larousse Encyclopaedia of Mythology, p. 436.<br />

24<br />

The Magic and Mysteries of Mexico, p. 51.<br />

112

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