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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 />

up and alight.’ 11<br />

Other passages also seemed to me worthy of more thorough<br />

investigation than they have received from scholars. Here are a few<br />

examples:<br />

O my father, great King, the aperture of the sky-window is opened for you. 12<br />

‘The door of the sky at the horizon opens to you, the gods are glad at meeting you<br />

... May you sit on this iron throne of yours, as the Great One who is in Heliopolis. 13<br />

O King, may you ascend ... The sky reels at you, the earth quakes at you, the<br />

Imperishable Stars are afraid of you. I have come to you, O you whose seats are<br />

hidden, that I may embrace you in the sky ... 14<br />

The earth speaks, the gate of the earth god is open, the doors of Geb are opened<br />

for you ... May you remove yourself to the sky upon your iron throne. 15<br />

O my father the King, such is your going when you have gone as a god, your<br />

travelling as a celestial being ... you stand in the Conclaves of the horizon ... and<br />

sit on this throne of iron at which the gods marvel ... 16<br />

The constant references to iron, though easy to overlook, were puzzling.<br />

Iron, I knew, had been a rare metal in Ancient Egypt, particularly in the<br />

Pyramid Age when it had supposedly only been available in meteoritic<br />

form. 17 Yet here, in the Pyramid Texts, there seemed to be an<br />

embarrassment of iron riches: iron plates in the sky, iron thrones, and<br />

elsewhere an iron sceptre (Utterance 665C) and even iron bones for the<br />

King (Utterances 325, 684 and 723). 18<br />

In the Ancient Egyptian language the name for iron had been bja, a<br />

word that meant literally ‘metal of heaven’ or ‘divine metal’. 19 The<br />

knowledge of iron was thus regarded as yet another gift from the gods ...<br />

Repositories of a lost science?<br />

What other fingerprints might these gods have left behind in the Pyramid<br />

Texts? 20<br />

11 Ibid., p. 284.<br />

12 Ibid., p. 249, Utt. 604.<br />

13 Ibid., pp. 253-4, Utt. 610.<br />

14 Ibid., p. 280, Utt. 667.<br />

15 Ibid., p. 170, Utt. 483.<br />

16 Ibid., p. 287, Utt. 673.<br />

17 B. Scheel, Egyptian Metalworking and Tools, Shire Egyptology, Aylesbury, 1989; G. A.<br />

Wainwright, ‘Iron in Egypt’, Journal of Egyptian Archaeology, vol. 18, 1931.<br />

18 The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts, pp. 276, 105, 294, 311.<br />

19 Egyptian Metalworking and Tools, p. 17; ‘Iron in Egypt’, p. 6ff.<br />

20 Among the many mysterious aspects of the Pyramid Texts it is perhaps inevitable that<br />

a fully qualified Opener of the Ways should put in an appearance. ‘The doors of the sky<br />

are opened to you, the starry sky is thrown open for you, the jackal of upper Egypt<br />

comes down to you as Anubis at your side.’ (The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts, pp.<br />

356

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