Post by Indilwen on Nov 7, 2011 15:12:41 GMT 12
EGYPT'S UNDERGROUND LABYRINTH
The Fayum Oasis district in Egypt was once a lush, fertile valley
that Pharaohs fished and hunted with the boomerang.
Lake Moeris once bordered the Fayum Oasis and on its shores was the
famous Labyrinth, described by Herodotus as "an endless wonder to
me".
The Labyrinth contained 1,500 rooms and an equal number of
underground chambers that the Greek historian was not permitted to
inspect.
According to Labyrinth priests, "the passages were baffling and
intricate", designed to provide safety for the numerous scrolls
they said were hidden in subterranean apartments.
That massive complex particularly impressed Herodotus and he spoke
in awe of the structure:
"There I saw twelve palaces regularly disposed, which had
communication with each other, interspersed with terraces and
arranged around twelve halls. It is hard to believe they are the
work of man. The walls are covered with carved figures, and each
court is exquisitely built of white marble and surrounded by a
colonnade.
“Near the corner where the labyrinth ends, there is a pyramid,
240 feet in height, with great carved figures of animals on it and
an underground passage by which it can be entered.
"I was told very credibly that underground chambers and passages
connected this pyramid with the pyramids at Memphis."
TODAY'S MAINSTREAM HISTORY IS INACCURATE
Many ancient writers supported Herodotus' record of underground
passages connecting major pyramids, and their evidence casts doubt
on the reliability of traditionally presented Egyptian history.
Crantor (300 BC) stated that there were certain underground pillars
in Egypt that contained a written stone record of the earliest
history, and they lined accessways connecting the pyramids.
In his celebrated study, in the fourth century, Iamblichus recorded
this information about an entranceway through the body of the Sphinx
into the Great Pyramid:
"This entrance, obstructed in our day by sands and rubbish, may still
be traced between the forelegs of the crouched colossus. It was
formerly closed by a bronze gate whose secret spring could be operated
only by the Magi. It was guarded by public respect, and a sort of
religious fear maintained its inviolability better than armed protection
would have done.
“In the belly of the Sphinx were cut out galleries leading to the
subterranean part of the Great Pyramid. These galleries were so
artfully crisscrossed along their course to the Pyramid that, in
setting forth into the passage without a guide throughout this network,
one unceasingly and inevitably returned to the starting point."
Well, that's not all. There is so much information now surfacing
concerning our past that is frankly quite embarrassing for the
purveyors of traditional history as taught in our schools.
Source: Thanks again for being on my list.
Sincere best wishes,
Jonathan Gray
info@archaeologyanswers.com