Tuesday 15 March 2016

Well my book is out there! Prepare for sensation!

I have finally gotten my book In Search of the Origin of Pyramids, out there, and have gotten around to finally making a blog post about it! Working on many projects, including having designed three historical walking tours for a tourism enterprise, one does not have a lot of time for everything one needs to get done!




So, what's it about? Two things, worldwide pyramids, as well as the Giza Pyramid complex! I became obsessed with sorting out the Giza mess, trying to figure out what the Egyptians were thinking about when they designed it. There is a lot of material in the book, but if I could condense it into one point, it would be this:

Giza pyramids are the TRIPLE GODDESS.

What is the triple goddess? Also known as the Great Goddess, this is a primordial neolithic idea of a great woman who has three aspects, transcending all of creation. She has aspects of past, present and future, possibly represented by the three pyramids. This is essentially the Babel religion.

  • First piece of evidence: Giza is a hill location. Mounds are often found on hilltop locations, to be as close to heaven as possible, according with the biblical tradition. An ancient crescent-oriented Middle Eastern Religion of hilltop mounds reached ancient Ireland, where we find instances of the Babel religion. Fertility mounds are found all over Eurasia. It is difficult to make a fertility mound in a desert, so blocks were used. 


Notice the hilltop location? This observation is crucial.

  • Second piece of evidence: The dream stela was chipped away by peasants until modern times seeking fertility. There was ancient knowledge of a fertility goddess on the hill, worshipped in Roman times as Isis.
  • Third piece of evidence: It is becoming clear the sphinx was re-carved in Middle Kingdom times into a face. Before this it was likely Anubis, a dog, companion of the triple goddess. (For instance, Artemis and the Hounds). 



Diana (Artemis) a representation of the Triple Goddess which has survived into historical times. Her hound may well have been formerly represented in the Sphinx.

  • Fourth piece of evidence: The pyramid shafts are not consistent with Old Kingdom burial technique, which is evident at Giza as a vertical shaft underneath a mound-like mastaba, (another fertility-rebirth world-mound idea). The pyramid is therefore not a tomb, but is associated with tombs. The tombs might be underneath or elsewhere at Giza. 



This is what an Old-Kingdom burial actually looks like! Not a pyramid chamber!*
  • The Khufu pyramid contains a supposed Queen's chamber, but also Queens' pyramids. How many queens can one man have, and why were they supposedly buried differently? I suggest the two internal chambers were for male and female gods. The God needs his consort. 
  • I can go on and on, please read the book for more! 
Any more? 

That is essentially it.... for now! There is a great deal more, but it's in the book!



This is the triple goddess, as I photographed her at a small church in Soest, Germany, Westfalen. The amazing thing is that she is here presented looking down on the nativity of Jesus. Essentially a notion of fertility.




* (Citation, wikicommons, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Mastaba_schematics.svg)

No comments:

Post a Comment