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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 />

of seafaring had been present in Egypt from the very beginning of its<br />

3000 year history. Moreover I knew that the earliest wall paintings found<br />

in the Nile Valley, dating back perhaps as much as 1500 years before the<br />

burial of the Abydos fleet (to around 4500 BC) showed the same long,<br />

sleek, high-prowed vessels in action. 34<br />

Could an experienced race of ancient seafarers have become involved<br />

with the indigenous inhabitants of the Nile Valley at some indeterminate<br />

period before the official beginning of history at around 3000 BC?<br />

Wouldn’t this explain Egypt’s curious and paradoxical—but nonetheless<br />

enduring—obsession with ships in the desert (and references to what<br />

sounded like sophisticated ships in the Pyramid Texts, including one said<br />

to have been more than 2000 feet long)? 35<br />

In raising these conjectures, I did not doubt that religious symbolism<br />

had existed in Ancient Egypt in which, as scholars endlessly pointed out,<br />

ships had been designated as vessels for the pharaoh’s soul.<br />

Nevertheless that symbolism did not solve the problem posed by the high<br />

level of technological achievement of the buried ships; such evolved and<br />

sophisticated designs called for a long period of development. Wasn’t it<br />

worth looking into the possibility—even if only to rule it out—that the<br />

Giza and Abydos vessels could have been parts of a cultural legacy, not<br />

of a land-loving, riverside-dwelling, agricultural people like the<br />

indigenous Ancient Egyptians but of an advanced seafaring nation?<br />

Such seafarers could have been expected to be navigators who would<br />

have known how to set a course by the stars and who would perhaps also<br />

have developed the skills necessary to draw up accurate maps and charts<br />

of the oceans they had traversed.<br />

Might they also have been architects and stonemasons whose<br />

characteristic medium had been polygonal, megalithic blocks like those<br />

of the Valley Temple and the Osireion?<br />

And might they have been associated in some way with the legendary<br />

gods of the First Time, said to have brought to Egypt not only civilization<br />

and astronomy and architecture, and the knowledge of mathematics and<br />

writing, but a host of other useful skills and gifts, by far the most notable<br />

and the most significant of which had been the gift of agriculture?<br />

There is evidence of an astonishingly early period of agricultural<br />

advance and experimentation in the Nile Valley at about the end of the<br />

last Ice Age in the northern hemisphere. The characteristics of this great<br />

34 See Cairo Museum, Gallery 54, wall-painting of ships from Badarian period c. 4500 BC.<br />

35 The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts, p. 192, Utt. 519: ‘O Morning Star, Horus of the<br />

Netherworld ... you having a soul and appearing in front of your boat of 770 cubits ...<br />

Take me with you in the cabin of your boat.’<br />

395

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