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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 />

the counter of the stars, the enumerator of the earth and of what is<br />

therein, and the measurer of the earth.’ 17<br />

Normally depicted as a man wearing an ibis mask, Thoth was a leading<br />

member of the elite company of First Time deities who dominated<br />

religious life in Ancient Egypt from the beginning to the end of its<br />

civilization. These were the great gods, the Neteru. Although they were<br />

believed in one sense to be self-created, it was also openly acknowledged<br />

and understood that they had a special connection of some kind with<br />

another land—a fabulous and far-off country referred to in the ancient<br />

texts as Ta-Neteru, the ‘land of the gods’. 18<br />

Ta-Neteru was thought to have had a definite earthly location a very<br />

long way south of Ancient Egypt—seas and oceans away—farther even<br />

than the spice country of Punt (which probably lay along East Africa’s<br />

Somali coast). 19 To confuse matters, however, Punt was also spoken of<br />

sometimes as the ‘Divine Land’, or ‘God’s Land’, and was the source of<br />

the sweet-smelling frankincense and myrrh especially favoured by the<br />

gods. 20<br />

Another mythical paradise was also linked to the Neteru—an ‘abode of<br />

the blessed’, where the best of humans were sometimes taken—which<br />

was believed to be ‘situated away beyond a large expanse of water’. As<br />

Wallis Budge observed in his important study, Osiris and the Egyptian<br />

Resurrection, ‘the Egyptians believed that this land could only be reached<br />

by means of a boat, or by the personal help of the gods who were<br />

thought to transport their favourites thither ...’ 21 Those lucky enough to<br />

gain entry would find themselves in a magical garden consisting of<br />

‘islands, interconnected by canals filled with running water which caused<br />

them to be always green and fertile’. 22 On the islands in this garden, ‘the<br />

wheat grew to a height of five cubits, the ears being two cubits long and<br />

the stalks three, and the barley grew to a height of seven cubits, the ears<br />

being three cubits long and the stalks four.’ 23<br />

Was it from a land such as this,, superbly irrigated and scientifically<br />

farmed, that the agriculture bringer Osiris, whose title was ‘President of<br />

the Land of the South’, 24 had voyaged to Egypt at the dawn of the First<br />

17<br />

The Gods of the Egyptians, volume I, p. 400.<br />

18<br />

Ibid., volume I, p. 443; volume II, pp. 7, 287.<br />

19<br />

Ibid., volume II, p. 7, where the deity Amen-Ra is addressed in a hymn: ‘The gods love<br />

the smell of thee when thou comest from Punt, thou eldest-born of the dew, who comest<br />

from the Divine Land (Ta-Neteru).’ See also volume II, p. 287. Punt is thought by many<br />

scholars to have been located on the Somali coast of East Africa where the trees that<br />

produce frankincense and myrrh (‘the food of the gods’) are still grown today.<br />

20<br />

Ibid.<br />

21<br />

Osiris and the Egyptian Resurrection, volume I, p. 98; Pyramid Texts of Pepi I, Mer-en-<br />

Rah and Pepi II, translated in Ibid., volume II, p. 316, where the maritime connections of<br />

the land of the blessed are made clear.<br />

22<br />

Ibid., volume I, p. 97.<br />

23<br />

Ibid., pp. 97-8.<br />

24<br />

Ibid., volume II, p. 307.<br />

421

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