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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 />

historical record indicates little in its favour.<br />

For example, the upper end of the well-shaft was entered off the Grand<br />

Gallery by the Oxford astronomer John Greaves in 1638. He managed to<br />

descend to a depth of about sixty feet. In 1765 another Briton, Nathaniel<br />

Davison, penetrated to a depth of about 150 feet but found his way<br />

blocked by an impenetrable mass of sand and stones. Later, in the 1830s,<br />

Captain G.B. Caviglia, an Italian adventurer, reached the same depth and<br />

encountered the same obstacle. More enterprising than his predecessors,<br />

he hired Arab workers to start excavating the rubble in the hope that<br />

there might be something of interest beneath it. Several days of digging<br />

in claustrophobic conditions followed before the connection with the<br />

descending corridor was discovered. 17<br />

Is it likely that such a cramped, blocked-up shaft could have been a<br />

viable conduit for the treasures of Khufu, supposedly the greatest<br />

pharaoh of the magnificent Fourth Dynasty?<br />

Even if it hadn’t been choked with debris and sealed at the lower end, it<br />

could not have been used to bring out more than a tiny fraction of the<br />

treasures of a typical royal tomb. This is because the well-shaft is only<br />

three feet in diameter and incorporates several tricky vertical sections.<br />

At the very least, therefore, when Ma’mun and his men battered their<br />

way into the King’s Chamber around the year AD 820, one would have<br />

expected some of the bigger and heavier pieces from the original burial<br />

to be still in place—like the statues and shrines that bulked so large in<br />

Tutankhamen’s much later and presumably inferior tomb. 18 But nothing<br />

was found inside Khufu’s Pyramid, making this and the alleged looting of<br />

Khafre’s monument the only tomb robberies in the history of Egypt which<br />

achieved a clean sweep, leaving not a single trace behind—not a torn<br />

cloth, not a shard of broken pottery, not an unwanted figurine, not an<br />

overlooked piece of jewellery—just the bare floors and walls and the<br />

gaping mouths of empty sarcophagi.<br />

Not like other tombs<br />

It was now after six in the morning and the rising sun had bathed the<br />

summits of Khufu’s and Khafre’s Pyramids with a fleeting blush of pastelpink<br />

light. Menkaure’s Pyramid, being some 200 feet lower than the other<br />

two, was still in shadow as Santha and I skirted its north-western corner<br />

and continued our walk into the rolling sand dunes of the surrounding<br />

desert.<br />

I still had the tomb robbery theory on my mind. As far as I could see the<br />

only real ‘evidence’ in favour of it was the absence of grave goods and<br />

mummies that it had been invented to explain in the first place. All the<br />

17 Secrets of the Great Pyramid, pp. 56-8.<br />

18 See Nicholas Reeves, The Complete Tutankhamun, Thames & Hudson, London, 1990.<br />

291

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