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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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Chapter 35<br />

Tombs and Tombs Only?<br />

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

Climbing down the Great Pyramid was more nerve wracking than climbing<br />

up. We were no longer struggling against the force of gravity, so the<br />

physical effort was less. But the possibilities of a fatal fall seemed greatly<br />

magnified now that our attention was directed exclusively towards the<br />

ground rather than the heavens. We picked our way with exaggerated<br />

care towards the base of the enormous mountain of stone, sliding and<br />

slithering among the treacherous masonry blocks, feeling as though we<br />

had been reduced to ants.<br />

By the time we had completed the descent the night was over and the<br />

first wash of pale sunlight was filtering into the sky. We paid the 50<br />

Egyptian pounds promised to the guard of the pyramid’s western face<br />

and then, with a tremendous sense of release and exultation, we walked<br />

jauntily away from the monument in the direction of the Pyramid of<br />

Khafre, a few hundred metres to the south-west.<br />

Khufu, Khafre, Menkaure ... Cheops, Chephren, Mycerinus. Whether<br />

they were referred to by their Egyptian or their Greek names, the fact<br />

remained that these three pharaohs of the Fourth Dynasty (2575-2467 BC)<br />

were universally acclaimed as the builders of the Giza pyramids. This had<br />

been the case at least since Ancient Egyptian tour guides had told the<br />

Greek historian Herodotus that the Great Pyramid had been built by<br />

Khufu. Herodotus had incorporated this information into the oldest<br />

surviving written description of the monuments, which continued:<br />

Cheops, they said, reigned for fifty years, and on his death the kingship was taken<br />

over by his brother Chephren. He also made a pyramid ... it is forty feet lower than<br />

his brother’s pyramid, but otherwise of the same greatness ... Chephren reigned<br />

for fifty-six years ... then there succeeded Mycerinus, the son of Cheops ... This<br />

man left a pyramid much smaller than his father’s. 1<br />

1<br />

Herodotus, The History (translated by David Grene), University of Chicago Press, 1987,<br />

pp. 187-9.<br />

283

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