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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 />

measurer of the earth’) was specifically empowered to grant a life of<br />

millions of years to the deceased pharaoh. 45 Osiris, ‘king of eternity, lord<br />

of everlasting’, was described as traversing millions of years in his life.’ 46<br />

And figures like ‘tens of millions of years’ (as well as the more mindboggling<br />

‘one million of millions of years’) 47 occurred often enough to<br />

suggest that some elements at least of Ancient Egyptian culture must<br />

have evolved for the convenience of scientifically minded people with<br />

more than passing insight into the immensity of time.<br />

Such a people would, of course, have required an excellent calendar—<br />

one that would have facilitated complex and accurate calculations. It was<br />

therefore not surprising to learn that the Ancient Egyptians, like the<br />

Maya, had possessed such a calendar and that their understanding of its<br />

workings seemed to have declined, rather than improved, as the ages<br />

went by. 48 It was tempting to see this as the gradual erosion of a corpus<br />

of knowledge inherited an extremely long time ago, an impression<br />

supported by the Ancient Egyptians themselves, who made no secret of<br />

their belief that their calendar was a legacy which they had received ‘from<br />

the gods’.<br />

We consider the possible identity of these gods in more detail in the<br />

following chapters. Whoever they were, they must have spent a great deal<br />

of their time observing the stars, and they had accumulated a fund of<br />

advanced and specialized knowledge concerning the star Sirius in<br />

particular. Further evidence for this came in the form of the most useful<br />

calendrical gift which the gods supposedly gave to the Egyptians: the<br />

Sothic (or Sirian) cycle. 49<br />

The Sothic cycle was based on what is referred to in technical jargon as<br />

‘the periodic return of the heliacal rising of Sirius’, which is the first<br />

appearance of this star after a seasonal absence, rising at dawn just<br />

ahead of the sun in the eastern portion of the sky. 50 In the case of Sirius<br />

the interval between one such rising and the next amounts to exactly<br />

365.25 days—a mathematically harmonious figure, uncomplicated by<br />

further decimal points, which is just twelve minutes longer than the<br />

duration of the solar year. 51<br />

The curious thing about Sirius is that out of an estimated 2000 stars in<br />

the heavens visible to the naked eye it is the only one to rise heliacally at<br />

this precise and nicely rounded interval of 365 and a quarter days—a<br />

unique product of its ‘proper motion’ (the speed of its own movement<br />

through space) combined with the effects of precession of the<br />

45<br />

Ibid., p. cxviii. See also The Gods of the Egyptians, volume I, p. 400.<br />

46<br />

The Egyptian Book of the Dead, p. 8.<br />

47<br />

Osiris and the Egyptian Resurrection, volume II, p. 248.<br />

48<br />

For a full discussion see Death of Gods in Ancient Egypt, particularly pp. 328-30.<br />

49<br />

Sacred Science, p. 27.<br />

50<br />

Death of Gods in Ancient Egypt, p. 27.<br />

51<br />

Sacred Science, p. 172.<br />

362

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