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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 />

41 inches square. A row of six further columns, also supporting beams,<br />

ran along the north-south axis of the T; the overall effect was of massive<br />

but refined simplicity.<br />

What was this building for? According to the Egyptologists who<br />

attributed it to Khafre its purpose was obvious. It had been designed,<br />

they said, as a venue for certain of the purification and rebirth rituals<br />

required for the funeral of the pharaoh. The Ancient Egyptians<br />

themselves, however, had left no inscriptions confirming this. On the<br />

contrary, the only written evidence that has come down to us indicated<br />

that the Valley Temple could not (originally at any rate) have had anything<br />

to do with Khafre, for the simple reason that it was built before his reign.<br />

This written evidence is the Inventory Stela, (referred to in Chapter Thirtyfive),<br />

which also indicated a much greater age for the Great Pyramid and<br />

the Sphinx.<br />

What the Inventory Stela had to say about the Valley Temple was that it<br />

had been standing during the reign of Khafre’s predecessor Khufu, when<br />

it had been regarded not as a recent but as a remotely ancient building.<br />

Moreover, it was clear from the context that it was not thought to have<br />

been the work of any earlier pharaoh. Instead, it was believed to have<br />

come down from the ‘First Time’ and to have been built by the ‘gods’<br />

who had settled in the Nile Valley in that remote epoch. It was referred to<br />

quite explicitly as the ‘House of Osiris, Lord of Rostau 14 (Rostau being an<br />

archaic name for the Giza necropolis). 15<br />

As we shall see in Part VII, Osiris was in many respects the Egyptian<br />

counterpart of Viracocha and Quetzalcoatl, the civilizing deities of the<br />

Andes and of Central America. With them he shared not only a common<br />

mission but a vast heritage of common symbolism. It seemed<br />

appropriate, therefore, that the ‘House’ (or sanctuary, or temple) of such<br />

a wise teacher and lawgiver should have been established at Giza within<br />

sight of the Great Pyramid and in the immediate vicinity of the Great<br />

Sphinx.<br />

Vastly, remotely, fabulously ancient<br />

Following the directions given in the Inventory Stela—which stated that<br />

the Sphinx lay ‘on the north-west of the House of Osiris’ 16 —I made my<br />

way to the north end of the western wall that enclosed the Valley<br />

Temple’s T-shaped hall. I passed through a monolithic doorway and<br />

entered a long, sloping, alabaster floored corridor (also oriented northwest)<br />

which eventually opened out on to the lower end of the causeway<br />

14 Ancient Records of Egypt, volume I, p. 85.<br />

15 See, for example, Miriam Lichtheim, Ancient Egyptian Literature, University of<br />

California Press, 1976, volume II, pp. 85-6.<br />

16 Ancient Records of Egypt, volume I, p. 85.<br />

333

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