04.04.2013 Views

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

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

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

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

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

Saqqara.<br />

We shall have more to say about the step-pyramid and its builder in a<br />

later chapter, but on this occasion I had not come to Saqqara to see it. My<br />

sole objective was to spend a few moments in the burial chamber of the<br />

nearby pyramid of Unas, a Fifth Dynasty pharaoh who had reigned from<br />

2356 to 2323 BC. 17 The walls of this chamber, which I had visited several<br />

times before, were inscribed from floor to ceiling with the most ancient of<br />

the Pyramid Texts, an extravaganza of hieroglyphic inscriptions giving<br />

voice to a range of remarkable ideas—in acute contrast to the mute and<br />

unadorned interiors of the Fourth Dynasty pyramids at Giza.<br />

A phenomenon exclusively of the Fifth and Sixth Dynasties (2465-2152<br />

BC), the Pyramid Texts were sacred writings, parts of which were thought<br />

to have been composed by the Heliopolitan priesthood in the late third<br />

millennium BC, and parts of which had been received and handed down<br />

by them from pre-dynastic times. 18 It was the latter parts of these Texts,<br />

dating to a remote and impenetrable antiquity, which had particularly<br />

aroused my curiosity when I had begun to research them a few months<br />

previously. I had also been amused—and a little intrigued—by the strange<br />

way that nineteenth century French archaeologists appeared almost to<br />

have been directed to the hidden chamber of the Pyramid Texts by a<br />

mythological ‘opener of the ways.’ According to reasonably welldocumented<br />

reports, an Egyptian foreman of the excavations at Saqqara<br />

had been up and about at dawn one morning and had found himself by<br />

the side of a ruined pyramid looking into the bright amber eyes of a lone<br />

desert jackal:<br />

It was as if the animal were taunting his human observer ... and inviting the<br />

puzzled man to chase him. Slowly the jackal sauntered towards the north face of<br />

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

18 From Fetish to God in Ancient Egypt, p. 147: ‘Judging by the Pyramid Texts, the priests<br />

of Heliopolis borrowed very largely from the religious beliefs of the predynastic<br />

Egyptians ...’ See also The Ancient Egyptian Book of the Dead, p. 11.<br />

351

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!