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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 />

that led up to the Second Pyramid.<br />

From the edge of the causeway I had an unimpeded view of the Sphinx<br />

immediately to my north. As long as a city block, as high as a six-storey<br />

building it was perfectly oriented due east and thus faced the rising sun<br />

on the two equinoctial days of the year. Man-headed, lion-bodied,<br />

crouched as though ready at last to move its slow thighs after millennia<br />

of stony sleep, it had been carved in one piece out of a single ridge of<br />

limestone on a site that must have been meticulously preselected. The<br />

exceptional characteristic of this site, as well as overlooking the Valley of<br />

the Nile, was that its geological make-up incorporated a knoll of hard<br />

rock jutting at least 30 feet above the general level of the limestone<br />

ridge. From this knoll the head and neck of the Sphinx had been carved,<br />

while beneath it the vast rectangle of limestone that would be shaped<br />

into the body had been isolated from the surrounding bedrock. The<br />

builders had done this by excavating an 18-foot wide, 25-foot deep<br />

trench all around it, creating a free-standing monolith.<br />

The first and lasting impression of the Sphinx, and of its enclosure, is<br />

that it is very, very old—not a mere handful of thousands of years, like<br />

the Fourth Dynasty of Egyptian pharaohs, but vastly, remotely, fabulously<br />

old. This was how the Ancient Egyptians in all periods of their history<br />

regarded the monument, which they believed guarded the ‘Splendid Place<br />

of The Beginning of all Time’ and which they revered as the focus of ‘a<br />

great magical power extending over the whole region’. 17<br />

This, as we have already seen, is the general message of the Inventory<br />

Stela. More specifically, it is also the message of the ‘Sphinx Stela’<br />

erected here in around 1400 BC by Thutmosis IV, an Eighteenth Dynasty<br />

pharaoh. Still standing between the paws of the Sphinx, this granite<br />

tablet records that prior to Thutmosis’s rule the monument had been<br />

covered up to its neck in sand. Thutmosis liberated it by clearing all the<br />

sand, and erected the stela to commemorate his work. 18<br />

There have been no significant changes in the climate of the Giza<br />

plateau over the last 5000 years. 19 It therefore follows that throughout<br />

this entire period the Sphinx enclosure must have been as susceptible to<br />

sand encroachment as when Thutmosis cleared it—and, indeed, as it still<br />

is today. Recent history proves that the enclosure can fill up rapidly if left<br />

unattended. In 1818 Captain Caviglia had it cleared of sand for the<br />

purposes of his excavations, and in 1886, when Gaston Maspero came to<br />

re-excavate the site, he was obliged to have it cleared of sand once again.<br />

Thirty-nine years later, in 1925, the sands had returned in full force and<br />

the Sphinx was buried to its neck when the Egyptian Service des<br />

17<br />

A History of Egypt, 1902, volume 4, p. 80ff, ‘Stela of the Sphinx’.<br />

18<br />

Ibid.<br />

19<br />

Karl W. Butzer, Early Hydraulic Civilization in Egypt: A Study in Cultural Ecology,<br />

University of Chicago Press, 1976.<br />

334

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