Page 252 - Fingerprints of the Gods by Graham Hancock
P. 252

Graham Hancock – FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS





                   Chapter 31


                   The Osiris Numbers


                   Archaeo-astronomer Jane B. Sellers, who studied Egyptology at the
                   University of Chicago’s Oriental Institute, spends her winters in Portland,
                   Maine, and summers at Ripley Neck, a nineteenth-century enclave
                   ‘downcast’ on Maine’s rocky coast. ‘There,’ she says, ‘the night skies can
                   be as clear as the desert, and no one minds if you read the Pyramid Texts
                   out loud to the seagulls ...
                                                  1
                     One of the few serious scholars to have tested the theory advanced by
                   Santillana and von Dechend in Hamlet’s Mill, Sellers has been hailed for
                   having drawn attention to the need to use astronomy, and more
                   particularly precession, for the proper study of ancient Egypt and its
                   religion.  In her words: ‘Archaeologists by and large lack an
                             2
                   understanding of precession, and this affects their conclusions
                   concerning ancient myths, ancient gods and ancient temple alignments ...
                   For astronomers precession is a well-established fact; those working in
                   the field of ancient man have a responsibility to attain an understanding
                   of it.’
                         3
                     It is Sellers’s contention, eloquently expressed in her recent book, The
                   Death of Gods in Ancient Egypt,  that  the Osiris myth may have  been
                   deliberately encoded with a group of key numbers that are ‘excess
                   baggage’ as far as the narrative is concerned but that offer an eternal
                   calculus by which surprisingly exact values can be derived for the
                   following:
                   1  The time required for the earth’s slow precessional wobble to cause
                       the position of sunrise on the vernal equinox to complete a shift of
                       one degree along the ecliptic (in relation to the stellar background);
                   2  The time required for the sun to pass through one full zodiacal
                       segment of thirty degrees;
                   3  The time required for the sun to pass through two full zodiacal
                       segments (totalling sixty degrees);
                   4  The time required to bring about the ‘Great Return’ , i.e., for the sun
                                                                                    4
                       to shift  three hundred and sixty degrees  along the ecliptic, thus
                       fulfilling one complete precessional cycle or ‘Great Year’.





                   1  The Death of Gods in Ancient Egypt, author biography.
                   2  For example by Robert Bauval in The Orion Mystery, pp. 144-5.
                     The Death of Gods in Ancient Egypt, p. 174.
                   3
                   4  This phrase was coined by Jane Sellers, whom also detected  the precessional
                   calculations embedded in the Osiris myth.


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