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Know_files/FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS.pdf - D Ank Unlimited

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Fish-garbed figures<br />

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

There were two massive pieces of statuary inside the Kalasasaya. One, a<br />

figure nicknamed El Fraile (The Friar) stood in the south-west corner; the<br />

other, towards the centre of the eastern end of the enclosure, was the<br />

giant that I had observed from the sunken temple.<br />

Carved in red sandstone, worn and ancient beyond reckoning, El Fraile<br />

stood about six feet high, and portrayed a humanoid, androgenous being<br />

with massive eyes and lips. In its right hand it clutched something<br />

resembling a knife with a wavy blade like an Indonesian kris. In its left<br />

hand was an object like a hinged and case-bound book. From the top of<br />

this ‘book’, however, protruded a device which had been inserted into it<br />

as though into a sheath.<br />

From the waist down the figure appeared to be clad in a garment of fish<br />

scales, and, as though to confirm this perception, the sculptor had<br />

formed the individual scales out of rows and rows of small, highlystylized<br />

fish-heads. This sign had been persuasively interpreted by<br />

Posnansky as meaning fish in general. 8 It seemed, therefore, that El Fraile<br />

was a portrayal of an imaginary or symbolic ‘fish man’. The figure was<br />

also equipped with a belt sculpted with the images of several large<br />

crustaceans, so this notion seemed all the more probable. What had been<br />

intended?<br />

I had learned of one local tradition I thought might shed light on the<br />

matter. It was very ancient and spoke of ‘gods of the lake, with fish tails,<br />

called Chullua and Umantua’. 9 In this, and in the fish-garbed figures, it<br />

seemed that there was a curious out-of-place echo of Mesopotamian<br />

myths, which spoke strangely, and at length, about amphibious beings,<br />

‘endowed with reason’ who had visited the land of Sumer in remote<br />

prehistory. The leader of these beings was named Oannes (or Uan). 10<br />

According to the Chaldean scribe, Berosus:<br />

The whole body of [Oannes] was like that of a fish; and had under a fish’s head<br />

another head, and also feet below, similar to those of a man, subjoined to the<br />

fish’s tail. His voice too, and language, was articulate and human; and a<br />

representation of him is preserved even to this day ... When the sun set, it was the<br />

custom of this Being to plunge again into the sea, and abide all night in the deep;<br />

for he was amphibious. 11<br />

According to the traditions reported by Berosus, Oannes was, above all, a<br />

civilizer:<br />

In the day-time he used to converse with men; but took no food at that season;<br />

8<br />

Ibid., I, p. 119.<br />

9<br />

Ibid., II, p. 183.<br />

10<br />

Myths from Mesopotamia, (trans, and ed. Stephanie Dalley), Oxford University Press,<br />

1990, p. 326.<br />

11<br />

Fragments of Berossus, from Alexander Polyhistor, reprinted as Appendix 2 in Robert<br />

K. G. Temple, The Sirius Mystery, Destiny Books, Rochester, Vermont, 1987, pp. 250-1.<br />

85

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