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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 />

Uxmal, I was confronted by crosses yet again.<br />

Bearded men ...<br />

Serpents ...<br />

Crosses ...<br />

How likely was it to be an accident that symbols as distinctive as these<br />

should repeat themselves in widely separated cultures and at different<br />

periods of history? Why were they so often built into the fabric of<br />

sophisticated works of art and architecture?<br />

A science of prophecy<br />

Not for the first time I suspected that I might be looking at signs and<br />

icons left behind by some cult or secret society which had sought to keep<br />

the light of civilization burning in Central America (and perhaps<br />

elsewhere) through long ages of darkness. I thought it notable that the<br />

motifs of the bearded man, the Plumed Serpent, and the cross all tended<br />

to crop up whenever and wherever there were hints that a technologically<br />

advanced and as yet unidentified civilization might once have been in<br />

contact with the native cultures. And there was a sense of great age<br />

about this contact, as though it took place at such an early date that it<br />

had been almost forgotten. I thought again about the sudden way the<br />

Olmecs had emerged, around the middle of the second millennium BC,<br />

out of the swirling mists of opaque prehistory. All the archaeological<br />

evidence indicated that from the beginning they had venerated huge<br />

stone heads and stele showing bearded men. I found myself increasingly<br />

drawn to the possibility that some of those remarkable pieces of<br />

sculpture could have been part of a vast inheritance of civilization handed<br />

down to the peoples of Central America many thousands of years before<br />

the second millennium BC, and thereafter entrusted to the safekeeping of<br />

a secret wisdom cult, perhaps the cult of Quetzalcoatl.<br />

Much had been lost. Nevertheless the tribes of this region—in particular<br />

the Maya, the builders of Palenque and Uxmal—had preserved something<br />

even more mysterious and wonderful than the enigmatic monoliths,<br />

something which declared itself even more persistently to be the legacy<br />

of an older and a higher civilization. We see in the next chapter that it<br />

was the mystical science of an ancient star-gazing folk, a science of time<br />

and measurement and prediction—a science of prophecy even—that the<br />

Maya had preserved most perfectly from the past. With it they inherited<br />

memories of a terrible, earth-destroying flood and an idiosyncratic legacy<br />

of empirical knowledge, knowledge of a high order which they shouldn’t<br />

really have possessed, knowledge that we have only reacquired very<br />

recently ...<br />

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