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Know_files/FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS.pdf - D Ank Unlimited

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Chapter 41<br />

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

City of the Sun, Chamber of the Jackal<br />

Mohamed picked us up at our hotel in Heliopolis at 6 a. m. when it was<br />

still half dark.<br />

We drank small cups of thick black coffee at a roadside stall and then<br />

drove west, along dusty streets still almost deserted, towards the River<br />

Nile. I had asked Mohamed to take us through Maydan al-Massallah<br />

Square, which was dominated by one of the world’s oldest intact Egyptian<br />

obelisks. 1 Weighing an estimated 350 tons, this was a pink granite<br />

monolith, 107 feet high, erected by Pharaoh Senuseret I (1971-1928 BC).<br />

It had originally been one of a pair at the gateway of the great<br />

Heliopolitan Temple of the Sun. In the 4000 years since then the temple<br />

itself had entirely vanished, as had the second obelisk. Indeed, almost all<br />

of ancient Heliopolis had now been obliterated, cannibalized for its<br />

handsome dressed stones and ready-made building materials by<br />

countless generations of the citizens of Cairo. 2<br />

Heliopolis (City of the Sun) was referred to in the Bible as On but was<br />

originally known in the Egyptian language as Innu, or Innu Mehret—<br />

meaning ‘the pillar’ or ‘the northern pillar’. 3 It was a district of immense<br />

sanctity, associated with a strange group of nine solar and stellar deities,<br />

and was old beyond reckoning when Senuseret chose it as the site for his<br />

obelisk. Indeed, together with Giza (and the distant southern city of<br />

Abydos) Innu/Heliopolis was believed to have been part of the first land<br />

that emerged from the primeval waters at the moment of creation, the<br />

land of the ‘First Time’, where the gods had commenced their rule on<br />

earth. 4<br />

Heliopolitan theology rested on a creation-myth distinguished by a<br />

number of unique and curious features. It taught that in the beginning<br />

the universe had been filled with a dark, watery nothingness, called the<br />

Nun. Out of this inert cosmic ocean (described as ‘shapeless, black with<br />

the blackness of the blackest night’) rose a mound of dry land on which<br />

Ra, the Sun God, materialized in his self-created form as Atum<br />

(sometimes depicted as an old bearded man leaning on a staff): 5<br />

1 ‘Saqqara, Egypt: Archaeologists have discovered a green limestone obelisk, the world’s<br />

oldest-known complete obelisk, dedicated to Inty, a wife of Pharaoh Pepi I, Egypt’s ruler<br />

almost 4300 years ago, who was regarded as a goddess after her death.’ Times, London,<br />

9 May 1992; see also Daily Telegraph, London, 9 May 1992.<br />

2 Atlas of Ancient Egypt, pp. 173-4; Rosalie and Anthony E. David, A Biographical<br />

Dictionary of Ancient Egypt, Seaby, London, 1992, pp. 133-4; Blue Guide, Egypt, p. 413.<br />

3 The Encyclopaedia of Ancient Egypt, p. 110.<br />

4 George Hart, Egyptian Myths, British Museum Publications, 1990, p. 11.<br />

5 The Encyclopaedia of Ancient Egypt, p. 110; Traveller’s Key to Ancient Egypt, p. 66;<br />

347

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