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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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Chapter 43<br />

Looking for the First Time<br />

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

Here is what the Ancient Egyptians said about the First Time, Zep Tepi,<br />

when the gods ruled in their country: they said it was a golden age 1<br />

during which the waters of the abyss receded, the primordial darkness<br />

was banished, and humanity, emerging into the light, was offered the<br />

gifts of civilization. 2 They spoke also of intermediaries between gods and<br />

men—the Urshu, a category of lesser divinities whose title meant ‘the<br />

Watchers’. 3 And they preserved particularly vivid recollections of the gods<br />

themselves, puissant and beautiful beings called the Neteru who lived on<br />

earth with humankind and exercised their sovereignty from Heliopolis<br />

and other sanctuaries up and down the Nile. Some of these Neteru were<br />

male and some female but all possessed a range of supernatural powers<br />

which included the ability to appear, at will, as men or women, or as<br />

animals, birds, reptiles, trees or plants. Paradoxically, their words and<br />

deeds seem to have reflected human passions and preoccupations.<br />

Likewise, although they were portrayed as stronger and more intelligent<br />

than humans, it was believed that they could grow sick—or even die, or<br />

be killed—under certain circumstances. 4<br />

Records of prehistory<br />

Archaeologists are adamant that the epoch of the gods, which the<br />

Ancient Egyptians, called the First Time, is nothing more than a myth.<br />

The Ancient Egyptians, however, who may have been better informed<br />

about their past than we are, did not share this view. The historical<br />

records they kept in their most venerable temples included<br />

comprehensive lists of all the kings of Egypt: lists naming every pharaoh<br />

of every dynasty recognized by scholars today. 5 Some of these lists went<br />

even further, reaching back beyond the historical horizon of the First<br />

Dynasty into the uncharted depths of a remote and profound antiquity.<br />

Two lists of kings in this category have survived the ravages of the ages<br />

and, having been exported from Egypt, are now preserved in European<br />

1<br />

Myth and Symbol in Ancient Egypt, pp. 263-4; see also Nicolas Grimal, A History of<br />

Ancient Egypt, Blackwell, Cambridge, 1992, p. 46.<br />

2<br />

New Larousse Encyclopaedia of Mythology, p. 16.<br />

3<br />

The Gods of the Egyptians, volume I, pp. 84, 161; The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts,<br />

pp. 124, 308.<br />

4<br />

Osiris And The Egyptian Resurrection, volume I, p. 352.<br />

5<br />

Michael Hoffman, Egypt before the Pharaohs, Michael O’Mara Books, 1991, pp. 12-13;<br />

Archaic Egypt, pp. 21-3; The Encyclopaedia of Ancient Egypt, pp. 138-9.<br />

367

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