THE
RAINBOW ARCH OF THE COVENANT
NINE 9 SEVEN 7 THREE 3
A MAZE IN
GRACE
AZAZAZAZAZAZAZAZAZ
KEEPER OF GENESIS
Robert Bauval Graham
Hancock 1996
Page 252
Chapter 16
Message in a
Bottle?
'We have reached this
fascinating point
in
our evolution. . . we
have reached the
time
when we know we can
talk to each
other
across the distances
between the stars. . .
'
Dr John Billingham,
NASA Ames Research Center, 1995
"Together with the
ancient texts and rituals that are linked to them, could the
vast monuments of the Giza necropolis have been designed to
transmit a message from one culture to another - a
message not across space, but across
time?
Egyptologists reply
to such questions by rolling their eyes and hooting
derisively, Indeed they would not be 'Egyptologists' (or at
any rate they could not long remain within that profession)
if they reacted with anything other than scorn and disbelief
to suggestions that the necropolis might be more than a
cemetery, that the Great Sphinx might significantly predate
the epoch of 2500 BC, and that the Pyramids might not be
just 'royal tombs'. By the same token, no self- respecting
Egyptologist would be prepared to consider, even for a
moment, the outlandish possibility that some sort of
mysterious 'message' might have been encoded into the
monuments.
So whom should we
turn to for advice when confronted by what we suspect may be
a message from a civilization so far distant from us in time
as to be almost unknowable?
Anti-cipher
The only scientists
actively working on such problems today are those involved
in the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence - SETI for
/ Page 253 /
short. They endlessly
sweep the heavens for messages from distant civilizations
and they have therefore naturally had to give some thought
to what might happen if they ever did identify such a
message. According to Dr Philip Morisson of the
Massachusetts Institute of
Technology:
To begin with we
would know very little about it. If we received it we would
not understand what we're getting. But we would have an
unmistakable signal, full of structure, full of challenge.
The best people would try to decode it, and it will be easy
to do because those who have constructed it would have made
it easy to decode, otherwise there's no point. This is
anti-cryptography: 'I want to make a message for you, who
never got in touch with any symbols of mine, no key no clue,
nevertheless you'll be able to read it . . .' I would have
to fill it full of clues and unmistakable clever devices. .
.1
In his book,
Cosmos, Professor Carl Sagan of Cornell University
makes much the same point - and does so, curiously enough,
with reference to the ancient Egyptian hieroglyphic system.
He explains that the 'Egyptian hieroglyphics are, in
significant part, a simple substitution cipher. But not
every hieroglyph is a letter or syllable. Some are
pictographs. . .' When it came to translation, this 'mix of
letters and pictographs caused some grief for interpreters.
. .' In the early nineteenth century, however, a
breakthrough was made by the French scholar Champollion who
deciphered the famous 'Rosetta Stone', a slab of black
basalt bearing identical inscriptions in Egyptian
hieroglyphics and in Greek. Since Champollion could read the
Greek, all he needed was some kind of 'key' to relate
specific hieroglyphs to specific Greek words or letters.
This key was provided by the constant repetition in the
Greek text of the name of Pharaoh Ptolemy V and an equal
number of repetitions in the Egyptian text of a distinctive
oblong enclosure - known as a cartouche - containing a
repeated group of hieroglyphs. As Sagan
comments:
The cartouches were
the key. . . almost as though the Pharaohs of Egypt had
circled their own names to make the going easier for
Egyptologists two thousand years in the future. . . What a
joy it must have been [for Champollion] to open this
one-way communication channel with another civilization, to
permit a culture that had been
/ Page 254 /
mute for millennia to
speak of its history, magic, medicine, religion, politics
and philosophy.2
Professor Sagan then
offers a comparison that is highly apposite to our present
inquiry. 'Today,' he
says:
we are again seeking
messages from an ancient and exotic civilization, this time
hidden from us not only in time, but in space. If we should
receive a radio message from an extraterrestrial
civilization, how could it possibly be understood?
Extraterrestrial intelligence will be elegant, complex,
internally consistent and utterly alien.
Extraterrestrials would, of course, wish to make a message
sent to us as comprehensible as possible. But how could
they? Is there in any sense an interstellar Rosetta Stone?
We believe there is a common language that all technical
civilizations, no matter how different, must have. That
common language is science and mathematics. The laws of
Nature are the same
everywhere.3
It seems to us that
if there is indeed a very ancient 'message' at Giza then it
is likely to be expressed in the language of science and
mathematics that Sagan identifies - and for the same reason.
Moreover, given its need to continue 'transmitting'
coherently across thousands of years (and chasms of cultural
change), we think that the composer of such a message would
be likely to make use of the Precession of the Equinoxes,
the one particular 'law of Nature' that can be said to
govern, and measure - and identify - long periods of
terrestrial time.
Durable
vehicles
The Pyramids and the
Great Sphinx at Giza are, above all else, as elegant, as
complex, as internally consistent and as utterly 'alien' as
the extraterrestrial intelligence that Sagan envisages
(alien in the sense of the tremendous, almost superhuman
scale of these structures and of their uncanny - and in our
terms apparently unnecessary -
precision).
Moreover, returning
briefly to Dr Philip Morisson's remarks quoted earlier, we
think that the Giza necropolis also qualifies rather well
for the description 'packed full of clues and unmistakable
clever devices'.4 Indeed, it seems to us that a
truly astonishing quantum of
/ Page 255 /
ingenuity was invested by
the Pyramid builders to ensure that the four fundamental
aspects of an 'unmistakable' message were thoroughly
elaborated here:
1 the
creation of durable, unequivocal markers which could serve
as beacons to inflame the curiosity and engage the
intelligence of future generations of
seekers;
2 the use of
the 'common language' of precessional
astronomy;
3 the use of
precessional co-ordinates to signal specific time- referents
linking past to present and present to
future;
4 Cunningly
concealed store-rooms, or 'Halls of Records' that could only
be found and entered by those who were fully initiated in
the 'silent language' and thus could read and follow its
clues.
In addition, though
the monuments are enabled to 'speak' from the moment that
their astronomical context is understood, we have also to
consider the amazing profusion of funerary texts that have
come down to us from all periods of Egyptian history - all
apparently emanating from the same very few common sources.5
As we have seen, these texts operate like 'software' to the
monuments' 'hardware', charting the route that the
Horus-King (and all other future seekers) must
follow.
We recall a remark
made by Giorgio de Santillana and Hertha von Dechend in
Hamlet's Mill to the effect that the great strength
of myths as vehicles for specific technical information is
that they are capable of transmitting that information
independently of the knowledge of individual story-tellers.6
In other words as long as a myth continues to be told true,
it will also continue to transmit any higher message that
may be concealed within its structure - even if neither the
teller nor the hearer understands that
message.
So, too, we suspect,
with the ancient Egyptian funerary texts. We would be
surprised if the owners of many of the coffins and tomb
walls onto which they were copied had even the faintest
inkling that specific astronomical observations and
directions were being dupli- cated at their expense. What
motivated them was precisely what the texts offered - the
lure of immortal life. Yet by taking that lure did they not
in fact guarantee a kind of immortality for the texts
themselves? Did they not ensure that so many faithful copies
would
/ Page 256 /
be made that some at
least would be bound to survive for many thousands of
years?
We think that there
were always people who understood the true 'science of
immortality' connected to the texts, and who were able to
read the astronomical allegories in which deeper secrets,
not granted to the common herd, lay concealed. We presume
that these people were once called the 'Followers of Horus',
that they operated as an invisible college behind the scenes
in Egyptian prehistory and history, that their primary cult
centre was at Giza-Heliopolis, and that they were
responsible for the initiation of kings and the realization
of blueprints. We also think that the timetables they worked
to - and almost everything of significance that they did -
was in one way or another written in the stars.
Hints and
memories
The powerfully
astronomical character of the Giza necropolis, although
ignored by Egyptologists, has been recognized by open-
minded and intuitive researchers throughout history. The
Hermetic Neoplatonists of Alexandria, for example, appear to
have been acutely sensitive to the possibility of a
'message' and were quick to discern the strong astral
qualities of the textual material and the monuments.' 7 The
scholar Proclus (fifth century AD) also acknowledged that
the Great Pyramid was astronomically designed - and with
certain specific stars in mind. Indeed, in his commentary on
Plato's Timaeus (which deals with the story of the
lost civilization of 'Atlantis'), Proclus reported strangely
that 'the Great Pyramid was used as an observation for
Sirius'.8
Vague memories of an
astronomically constructed 'message' at Giza appear to have
filtered down to the Middle Ages. At any rate the Arab
chroniclers in this period spoke of the Great Pyramid as 'a
temple to the stars' and frequently connected it to the
Biblical 'Flood' which they dated to circa 10,300 BC.9 Also
of relevance is a report written by the Arab geographer
Yakut al Hamawi (eleventh century AD) to the effect that the
star-worshippers of Harran, the Sabians (whose 'holy books'
were supposedly the writings ofThoth-Hermes) came at that
time on special pilgrimages to the Pyramids at Giza.10 It
/ Page 257 /
has also been pointed out
that the very name of the Sabians - in Arabic Sa' Ba
- almost certainly derived from the ancient Egyptian word
for star, i.e. Sba..11 And the reader will recall
from Part I that as far back as the early second millennium
BC - i.e. almost three thousand years before Yakut al Hamawi
left us his report connecting the Sabians to the Pyramids -
pilgrims from Harran are known to have visited the Sphinx
which they worshipped as a god under the name
Hwl.12
In the seventeenth
century, the British mathematician Sir Isaac Newton became
deeply interested in the Great Pyramid and wrote a
dissertation on its mathematical and geodetic qualities
based on data that had been gathered at Giza by Dr John
Greaves, the Savillian Professor of Astronomy at Oxford.13
Later, in 1865 the Astronomer Royal of Scotland, Charles
Piazzi Smyth, launched an investigation into the Great
Pyramid which he was convinced was an instrument of prophecy
that incorporated a Messianic 'message'. It was Piazzi Smyth
who first accurately measured and demonstrated the intense
polar and meridional alignments of the monument, the
precision of which he assigned to sightings of the ancient
Pole star, Alpha
Draconis.14
In the first half of
the twentieth century, a succession of eminent astronomers -
such as Richard Proctor, Eugene Antoniadi, Jean Baptiste
Biot and Norman Lockyer - made persistent attempts to draw
attention to the astronomical qualities of the Giza
monuments. Their efforts, however, had little impact on
professional Egyptolo-gists who by this time felt that they
had got the whole intellectual business of the necropolis
'wrapped up' (it was a cemetery), did not understand
astronomy at all (and claimed that the ancient Egyptians
didn't either), and routinely ganged up to debunk, deride or
simply ignore any astronomical 'theories' which diverged
from their
consensus.
Despite this hostile
intellectual climate, we are of the opinion at the end of
our own research that the big question is no longer
whether the monuments of Giza were designed to
express key astronomical and mathematical principles, but
why.
Once again, the clue
may lie in the narrow star-shafts of the Great
Pyramid.
Page 258
/

The language of the
stars
The first major
breakthrough in understanding the function of the Great
Pyramid's shafts was made in. the summer of 1963 by the
American astronomer Virginia Trimble and the
Egyptologist-archi-tect, Dr Alexander Badawy. It came about
because they decided to follow up Badawy's 'hunch' that the
shafts might not be 'ventilation channels' as Egyptologists
supposed, 15 but might instead prove to have a symbolic
function related to the astral rituals of the Pyramid
builders. Virginia Trimble was able to buttress her
colleague's intuition by showing that the shafts from the
King's Chamber had pointed, in the epoch of 2500 BC, to
major star systems that were of crucial importance to the
Pyramid builders. As readers will recall from Part I, the
northern shaft had been targeted on Alpha Draconis - the
Pole Star in the Pyramid Age - and the southern shaft had
been targeted on Orion's
belt.16
Today Virginia
Trimble is a senior professor of astronomy at UCLA and the
University of Maryland and is also the Vice-President of the
American Astronomical Society. Her views, as well as being
enlightened by a comprehensive grasp of astronomy, accord
fully with common
sense:
Which constellations
the Egyptians saw in the sky is still something of a
mystery. . . but they had one constellation that was an
erect standing man, Osiris, the god. And the one
constellation that looks like a standing man to everyone is
Orion, and the identification between a deceased Pharaoh and
the god Osiris made Orion immediately a candidate for a
shaft whose sole purpose was to enable the soul of the
Pharaoh to communicate between earth and sky. .
.17
When we met Virginia
Trimble we immediately realized we were in the presence of
an acute and formidable thinker. Alexander Badawy had passed
away in the late 1980s yet she remained undaunted. She had
concluded that the shafts were astronomically aligned, she
said, and that they had an astronomical function, because
logic and evidence dictated that this was the
case.
Trimble's views have
won general acceptance amongst senior astronomers. To give
one recent example, Dr Mary Bruck of Edinburgh, writing in
the Journal of the British Astronomical
/ Page 259 /
Association in
1995, had this to say about the shafts: 'Their alignments
are ... compatible with the hypothesis that they indicate
the culmination of certain important stars around the 25th
century BC . . . The addition of a Sirius shaft
[southern shaft of the Queen's Chamber] to the Orion
one strongly supports the claim that they have an
astronomical significance.' 18
Thought-tools
We suggest that one of
the major objectives of the unseen academy, whose members
were known as the 'Followers of Horus', was to 'fix' the
epoch of 2500 BC (i.e. 4500 years before the present) by
using the Great Pyramid, its precisely angled shafts, and
the stars of Orion's belt. We suggest that they envisaged
those stars rather like the gauge of a gigantic sliding
scale set across the south meridian. Once this
'thought-tool' was in place all they needed to do in order
to determine a date either in the past or in the future was
mentally to 'slide' the belt up or down the meridian from
the 'zero point' targeted by the southern shaft of the
King's Chamber.
We also suggest that
a second and somewhat similar 'thought-tool' was attached to
the ecliptic (the apparent annual path of the sun through
the twelve constellations of the zodiac). Here the gauge was
the vernal point. By mentally sliding it to the left (east)
or to the right (west) of a 'fixed' marker on the ecliptic
the 'Followers of Horus' would once again have been able to
determine and denominate either a past date or a date in the
future. . .
In our own epoch,
circa AD 2000, the vernal point is poised to enter
the sign or 'Age' of Aquarius. For a little over 2000 years
it has been passing through Pisces (160 BC to AD 2000) and
before that it was in Aries (2320 BC to 160 BC).ln the
Pyramid Age the vernal point slowly swept through Taurus
(4480 BC to 2320 BC). Going further back we reach the 'Ages'
of Gemini (6640 BC to 4480 BC) and then Cancer (8800 BC to
6640 BC). After six 'Great Months' we reach the Age of Leo
(10,960BC to 8800
BC).
Now imagine that we
find an ancient document at Giza which states that it was
composed when the vernal point was in the sign of the Ram -
i.e. when the sun on the spring equinox rose against the
/ Page 260 /
stellar background of the
constellation of Aries. Armed with this information all that
we can do is roughly bracket the document's date as
being somewhere between 2320 BC and 160 BC. What we need in
order to arrive at a more precise chronology is some means
to 'fine-tune' the vernal point. It is here that the
specific utility of the sliding scale at the meridian
becomes apparent because if the ancient document not only
stated which zodiacal sign housed the vernal point but also
advised that the lowest star of Orion's belt crossed the
meridian at an altitude of 50 degrees above the horizon then
we would be able, using precession, to calculate with great
accuracy that the date in question must be very near 1400
BC.19
The Pyramid Age
occurred when the vernal point was in Taurus and, as we have
seen, the fine-tuning permitted by the 45-degree angle of
the Great Pyramid's 'Orion shaft' draws particular attention
to the date of 2500 BC. With this date, 4500 years before
the present, we can use precession to calculate the exact
position of the vernal point - which, as the reader will
recall, was near the head of the Hyades-Taurus at that time,
close to the right (i.e. west) bank of the Milky
Way.
The reader will also
not have forgotten that this is the 'address' given in the
Pyramid Texts as the starting point for the cosmic journey
of the solar Horus-King. It is here that he receives his
instructions to board the solar-bark and 'sail' across the
Milky Way towards the 'horizon' to meet up with Horakhti.
His direction of travel is, therefore, eastwards, i.e. to
the left of the vernal point. In terms of the chronology of
the 'Great Year' of precession (as distinct from the solar
year), this means that the Horus-King is now poised to
travel back in time towards the age of Leo-Horakhti and to a
specific spot on the ecliptic path - 'The Splendid Place of
the "First Time" ', . . . 'the place more noble than any
place'.20
But where is that
place? How is the Horus-King (initiate, seeker) to find it
in the 2160-year, 30-degree swathe that the constellation of
Leo occupies on the
ecliptic?
The answer is that he
would have to use the gauge of Orion's belt at the meridian
to fine-tune the exact place of the vernal point and hence
also to arrive at an exact date. In his mind's eye he would
have to slide
/ Page 261 /
the belt 'down' the
meridian to its 'First Time' and then see how far to the
east that operation had 'pushed' the vernal point along the
ecliptic.
Wherever that place
was would be the celestial destination that the 'Followers
of Horus' were urging him to
reach.
And it would, of
course, have its counterpart on the ground at Giza, in the
vicinity of the lion-bodied Sphinx. "
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The Zed Aliz Zed
the scribe and attendant number of penumbraed shadows cross
the shortest distance between two points.
THE SPLENDOUR THAT WAS EGYPT
Margaret A. Murray
1951
Page 12
"... Manetho begins
his history with dynasties of gods and demi-gods who reigned
for a fabulous length of time. The copies of his history by
Syncellus and Eusebius give 86,525 years as the duration of
Egyptian history from the beginning of the first dynasty of
the gods till the end of the thirtieth historic dynasty;
"which number of years, resolved and divided into its
constituent parts, that is to say, 25 times 14-61 years,
shows that it is related to the fabled periodical revolution
of the Zodiac among the Egyptians and Greeks; that is, its
revolution from a particular point to the same again, which
point is the first minute of the first degree of that
equinoctial sign which they call the
Ram,
as it is explained in the Genesis of Hermes and in the
Cyrannian Books..."
WHY RAM, MARY ? MARY, Y RAM
Page 101
"In many countries
the Divine King was allowed to reign for a term of years
only, usually
seven or
nine
or multiples of those
numbers".
"WOMAN DONT YOU
KNOW WITH YOU I'M BORN
AGAIN"
Line from
song
FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS
Graham Hancock 1995
Page 382
Chapter
41
"Conscious of being
alone, this blessed and immortal being contrived to create
two divine offspring, Shu, god of the air and dryness, and
Tefnut the goddess of moisture: ' I thrust my phallus into
my closed hand. I made my seed to enter my hand. I poured it
into my own mouth. I evacuated under the form of Shu, I
passed water under the form of Tefnut.' 7
"
THE RIVER
GOD
Wilbur Smith
1993
Page 64
"...Out of the chaos and
darkness of Nun rose Ammon-Ra, He- Who- Creates-Himself. I
watched Ammon-Ra stroke his generative member, masturbating
and spurting out his seminal seed in mighty waves that left
the silver smear that we know as the Milky Way across the
dark void. From this seed were generated Geb and Nut, the
earth and the heaven.
'
'Bak-her!' a single
voice broke the tremulous silence of the temple. 'Bak-her!
Amen!' The old abbot had not been able to contain himself,
and now he endorsed my vision of the creation. I was so
astonished by his change of heart that I almost forgot my
next line. After all, he had been my sternest critic up to
that time. I had won him over completely, and my voice
soared in
triumph.
'Geb and Nut coupled
and copulated, as man and women do, and from their dreadful
union were born the gods Osiris and Seth, and the goddesses
Isis and Nephthys.'..."
Page 63
"...At the rear of the
stage, hanging from floor to ceiling, were tightly stretched
sheets of linen on which the artists from the necropolis had
painted marvellous landscapes. In the half-light of the dusk
and the flicker of the torches in their brackets the effect
was so realistic as to transport the beholder into a
different world in a distant
time.
There were other
delights that I had prepared for Pharaoh's amuse- ment, from
cages of animals, birds and butterflies that would be
released to simulate the creation of the world by the great
god Ammon-Ra, to flares and torches that I had doctored with
chemicals to bum with brilliant flames of crimson and green,
and flood the stage with eerie light and smoke-clouds, like
those of the underworld where the gods
live.
'Mamose, son of Ra,
may you be granted eternal life! We your loyal subjects, the
citizens of Thebes, beg you to draw nigh and give your
divine attention to this poor play that we dedicate to Your
Majesty.'
My Lord Intef
concluded his address of welcome and resumed his seat. To a
fanfare of hidden rams' horns, I stepped out from behind the
pillar and faced the audience. They had endured discomfort
and boredom on the hard flagstones, and by now were ripe for
the entertainment to begin. A raucous cheer greeted my
entrance and even Pharaoh smiled in
anticipation.
I held up both hands
for silence, and only when it was total did I begin to speak
my overture.
'While I walked in
the sunlight, young and filled with the vigour of youth, I
heard the fatal music the reeds by the bank of the Nile. I
did not recognize the sound of this harp, and I had no fear,
for I was in the full bloom of my manhood and secure in the
affection of my
beloved.
'The music was of
surpassing beauty. Joyously I went to find the musician, and
could not know that he was Death and that he played his harp
to summon me alone.' We Egyptians are fascinated by death,
and I had at once touched a deep chord within my audience.
They sighed and
shuddered.
'Death seized me and
bore me up in his skeletal arms towards Ammon-Ra, the sun
god, and I was become one with the white light of his being.
At a great distance I heard my beloved weep, but I could not
see her and all the days of my life were as though they had
never been.' This was the first public recitation of my
prose, and I knew almost at once that I had them, their
faces were fascinated and intent. There was not a sound in
the temple.
'Then Death set me
down in a high place from which I could see the world like a
shining round shield in the blue sea of the heavens. I saw
all
/ Page 64 /
men and all creatures who
have ever lived. Like a mighty river, time ran backwards
before mine eyes. For a hundred thousand years I watched
their strivings and their deaths. I watched all men go from
death and old age to infancy and birth. Time became more and
more remote, going back until the birth of the first man and
the first woman. I watched them at the moment of their birth
and then before. At last there were no men upon the earth
and only the gods
existed.
'Yet still the river
of time flowed back beyond the time of the gods into Nun,
into the time of darkness and primordial chaos. The river of
time could flow no further back and so reversed itself. Time
began to run forward in the manner that was familiar to me
from my days of life upon the earth, and I watched the
passion of the gods played out before me.' My audience were
all of them well versed in the theology of our pantheon, but
none of them had ever heard the mysteries presented in such
a novel fashion. They sat silent and enthralled as I went
on.
'Out of the chaos and
darkness of Nun rose Ammon-Ra, He- Who- Creates-Himself. I
watched Ammon-Ra stroke his generative member, masturbating
and spurting out his seminal seed in mighty waves that left
the silver smear that we know as the Milky Way across the
dark void. From this seed were generated Geb and Nut, the
earth and the heaven.
'
'Bak-her!' a single
voice broke the tremulous silence of the temple. 'Bak-her!
Amen!' The old abbot had not been able to contain himself,
and now he endorsed my vision of the creation. I was so
astonished by his change of heart that I almost forgot my
next line. After all, he had been my sternest critic up to
that time. I had won him over completely, and my voice
soared in
triumph.
'Geb and Nut coupled
and copulated, as man and women do, and from their dreadful
union were born the gods Osiris and Seth, and the goddesses
Isis and
Nephthys.'
I made a wide gesture
and the linen curtains were drawn slowly aside to reveal the
fantasy world that I had created. Nothing like this had ever
been seen in Egypt before and the audience gasped with
amazement. With measured tread I withdrew, and my place upon
the stage was taken by the god Osiris. The audience
recognized him instantly by the tall, bottle-shaped
head-dress, by his arms crossed over his chest and by the
crook and the flail he held before him. Every household kept
his statuette in the family
shrine.
A droning cry of
reverence went up from every throat, and indeed the sedative
that I had administered to Tod glittered weirdly in his eyes
and gave him a strange, unearthly presence that was
convincingly godlike. With the crook and the flail Osiris
made mystical gestures and declaimed in sonorous tones,
'Behold Atur, the river!'
..."
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