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

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 />

precession and myths of catastrophe), was summarized by Diego De<br />

Landa in the sixteenth century:<br />

Among the multitude of gods worshipped by these people [the Maya] were four<br />

whom they called by the name Bacab. These were, they say, four brothers placed<br />

by God when he created the world at its four corners to sustain the heavens lest<br />

they fall. They also say that these Bacabs escaped when the world was destroyed<br />

by a deluge. 8<br />

It is the opinion of Santillana and von Dechend that the Mayan<br />

astronomer-priests did not subscribe for a moment to the simple-minded<br />

notion that the earth was flat with four corners. Instead, they say, the<br />

image of the four Bacabs is used as a technical allegory intended to shed<br />

light on the phenomenon of precession of the equinoxes. The Bacabs<br />

stand, in short, for the system of coordinates of an astrological age. They<br />

represent the equinoctial and solstitial colures, binding together the four<br />

constellations in which the sun continues to rise at the spring and<br />

autumn equinoxes and at the winter and summer solstices for epochs of<br />

just under 2200 years.<br />

Of course it is understood that when the gears of heaven change, the<br />

old age comes crashing down and a new age is born. All this, so far, is<br />

routine precessional imagery. What stands out, however, is the explicit<br />

linkage to an earthly disaster—in this case a flood—which the Bacabs<br />

survive. It may also be relevant that relief carvings at Chichen Itza<br />

unmistakably represent the Bacabs as being bearded and of European<br />

appearance. 9<br />

Be that as it may, the Bacab image (linked to a number of badly<br />

misunderstood references to ‘the four corners of heaven’, ‘the<br />

quadrangular earth’, and so on) is only one among many that seem to<br />

have been designed to serve as thought tools for precession. Archetypal<br />

among these is, of course, the ‘Mill’ of Santillana’s title—Hamlet’s Mill.<br />

It turns out that the Shakespearean character, ‘whom the poet made<br />

one of us, the first unhappy intellectual’, conceals a past as a legendary<br />

being, his features predetermined, preshaped by longstanding myth. 10 In<br />

all his many incarnations, this Hamlet remains strangely himself. The<br />

original Amlodhi (or sometimes Amleth) as his name was in Icelandic<br />

legend, ‘shows the same characteristics of melancholy and high intellect.<br />

He, too, is a son dedicated to avenge his father, a speaker of cryptic but<br />

inescapable truths, an elusive carrier of Fate who must yield once his<br />

mission is accomplished ...’ 11<br />

In the crude and vivid imagery of the Norse, Amlodhi was identified<br />

8 Yucatan before and after the Conquest, p. 82.<br />

9 See, for example, The God-Kings and the Titans, p. 64. It may also be relevant that<br />

other versions of ‘the Bacabs’ myth tell us that ‘their slightest movement produces an<br />

earth tremor or even an earthquake’ (Maya History and Religion, p. 346).<br />

10 Hamlet’s Mill, p. 2.<br />

11 Ibid.<br />

243

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