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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 />

believed to have died in 2528 BC. 5 Moreover it was assumed by Professor<br />

I.E.S Edwards, a leading authority on these matters, that the burial<br />

treasure had been removed from the famous inner sanctum now known<br />

as the King’s Chamber and that the empty ‘granite sarcophagus’ which<br />

stood at the western end of that sanctum had ‘once contained the King’s<br />

body, probably enclosed within an inner coffin made of wood’. 6<br />

All this is orthodox, mainstream, modern scholarship, which is<br />

unquestioningly accepted as historical fact and taught as such at<br />

universities everywhere. 7<br />

But suppose it isn’t fact.<br />

The cupboard was bare<br />

The mystery of the missing mummy of Khufu begins with the records of<br />

Caliph Al-Ma’mun, a Muslim governor of Cairo in the ninth century AD. He<br />

had engaged a team of quarriers to tunnel their way into the pyramid’s<br />

northern face, urging them on with promises that they would discover<br />

treasure. Through a series of lucky accidents ‘Ma’mun’s Hole’, as<br />

archaeologists now refer to it, had joined up with one of the monument’s<br />

several internal passageways, the ‘descending corridor’ leading<br />

downwards from the original concealed doorway in the northern face (the<br />

location of which, though known in classical times, had been forgotten by<br />

Ma’mun’s day). By a further lucky accident the vibrations that the Arabs<br />

had caused with their battering rams and drills dislodged a block of<br />

limestone from the ceiling of the descending corridor. When the socket<br />

from which it had fallen was examined it was found to conceal the<br />

opening to another corridor, this time ascending into the heart of the<br />

pyramid.<br />

There was a problem, however. The opening was blocked by a series of<br />

enormous plugs of solid granite, clearly contemporaneous with the<br />

construction of the monument, which were held in place by a narrowing<br />

of the lower end of the corridor. 8 The quarriers were unable either to<br />

break or to cut through the plugs. They therefore tunnelled into the<br />

slightly softer limestone surrounding them and, after several weeks of<br />

backbreaking toil, rejoined the ascending corridor higher up—having<br />

bypassed a formidable obstacle never before breached.<br />

The implications were obvious. Since no previous treasure-seekers had<br />

penetrated this far, the interior of the pyramid must still be virgin<br />

territory. The diggers must have licked their lips with anticipation at the<br />

5<br />

Atlas of Ancient Egypt, p. 36.<br />

6<br />

The Pyramids of Egypt, pp. 94-5.<br />

7<br />

The Pyramids of Egypt by Professor I. E. S. Edwards is the standard text on the<br />

pyramids.<br />

8<br />

W. M. Flinders Petrie, The Pyramids and Temples of Gizeh (New and Revised Edition),<br />

Histories and Mysteries of Man Ltd., London, 1990, p. 21.<br />

286

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