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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 />

disposal, he avoids the use of force wherever possible. 23<br />

We saw in Chapter Sixteen that Quetzalcoatl, the god-king of the<br />

Mexicans, was believed to have departed from Central America by sea,<br />

sailing away on a raft of serpents. It is therefore hard to avoid a sense of<br />

déjà vu when we read in the Egyptian Book of the Dead that the abode of<br />

Osiris also ‘rested on water’ and had walls made of ‘living serpents’. 24 At<br />

the very least, the convergence of symbolism linking these two gods and<br />

two far-flung regions is striking.<br />

There are other obvious parallels as well.<br />

The central details of the story of Osiris have been recounted in earlier<br />

chapters and we need not go over them again. The reader will not have<br />

forgotten that this god—once again like Quetzalcoatl and Viracocha—was<br />

remembered principally as a benefactor of mankind, as a bringer of<br />

enlightenment and as a great civilizing leader. 25 He was credited, for<br />

example, with having abolished cannibalism and was said to have<br />

introduced the Egyptians to agriculture—in particular to the cultivation of<br />

wheat and barley—and to have taught them the art of fashioning<br />

agricultural implements. Since he had an especial liking for fine wines<br />

(the myths do not say where he acquired this taste), he made a point of<br />

‘teaching mankind the culture of the vine, as well as the way to harvest<br />

the grape and to store the wine ...’ 26 In addition to the gifts of good living<br />

he brought to his subjects, Osiris helped to wean them ‘from their<br />

miserable and barbarous manners’ by providing them with a code of laws<br />

and inaugurating the cult of the gods in Egypt. 27<br />

When he had set everything in order, he handed over the control of the<br />

kingdom to Isis, quit Egypt for many years, and roamed about the world<br />

with the sole intention, Diodorus Siculus was told,<br />

of visiting all the inhabited earth and teaching the race of men how to cultivate the<br />

vine and sow wheat and barley; for he supposed that if he made men give up their<br />

savagery and adopt a gentle manner of life he would receive immortal honours<br />

because of the magnitude of his benefactions ... 28<br />

Osiris travelled first to Ethiopia, where he taught tillage and husbandry to<br />

the primitive hunter-gatherers he encountered. He also undertook a<br />

number of large-scale engineering and hydraulics works: ‘He built canals,<br />

with flood gates and regulators ... he raised the river banks and took<br />

precautions to prevent the Nile from overflowing ...’ 29 Later he made his<br />

Ancient Egypt, p. 190; Myth and Symbol in Ancient Egypt, p. 230.<br />

23<br />

Osiris and the Egyptian Resurrection, volume I, p. 2.<br />

24<br />

Chapter CXXV, cited in ibid., volume II, p. 81.<br />

25<br />

See Parts II and III for Quetzalcoatl and Viracocha. A good summary of Osiris’s<br />

civilizing attributes is the New Larousse Encyclopaedia of Mythology, p. 16. See also<br />

Diodorus Siculus, pp. 47-9; Osiris and the Egyptian Resurrection, volume I, pp. 1-12.<br />

26<br />

Diodorus Siculus, p. 53.<br />

27<br />

Ibid.; Osiris and the Egyptian Resurrection, volume I, p. 2.<br />

28<br />

Diodorus Siculus, p. 55.<br />

29<br />

Osiris and the Egyptian Resurrection, volume I, p. 11.<br />

379

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