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Harte:… are necessary in order for you to manufacture a "mystery" to write about - as you (and I) noted you are attempting to join the ranks of those who mischaracterize and flatly lie about the past in order to make a living selling books to ignorant persons (and there's certainly no shortage of those.)
Harte: The idea of the horizon had significant and specific meanings to the Egyptians. The Sun both died and was reborn on the horizon every day.
Harte: Again, I suggest readers here can make the connection between these ideas and the death (and subsequent resurrection) of the God-King. Hence "Khufu's Horizon." Of course, this sort logical reasoning is to be avoided at all costs among those that wish to profit from promulgating mischaracterizations of, and utter untruths about, the past - such as yourself.
Originally posted by Harte
Originally posted by HeliocentricThe 1984 radiocarbon dates averaged 374 years older than the dates of the kings with whom the presumed Old Kingdom pyramids are identified. If we rely on the scientific method used to date the construction, Khufu could not be the builder of the Great Pyramid.
So you simply rule out the old wood problem? And you rule out that pehaps the timeline is 300 years off? That is, why do you think Khufu's time is set yet his pyramid's time is not?
Originally posted by Harte
Regarding what Egyptology thinks, you may think about refraining from putting words in their mouths:
According to Egyptologists, the findings of both the 1984 and 1995 David H. Koch Pyramids Radiocarbon Projects[7][8] may suggest that Egypt had to strip its forest and scrap every bit of wood it had to build the pyramids of Giza and other even earlier 4th Dynasty pyramids. Carbon dating samples from core blocks and other materials revealed that dates from the 1984 study averaged 374 years earlier than currently accepted and the 1995 dating averaging 100–200 years. As suggested by team members, "We thought that it was unlikely that the pyramid builders consistently used centuries-old wood as fuel in preparing mortar. The 1984 results left us with too little data to conclude that the historical chronology of the Old Kingdom was wrong by nearly 400 years, but we considered this at least a possibility".
Originally posted by Scott Creighton
Harte:… are necessary in order for you to manufacture a "mystery" to write about - as you (and I) noted you are attempting to join the ranks of those who mischaracterize and flatly lie about the past in order to make a living selling books to ignorant persons (and there's certainly no shortage of those.)
SC: “…micharacterize and lie…”? Oh my! I really have touched a raw nerve, haven’t I. Why are you feeling so threatened, Harte? You should be welcoming these new interpretations. And rather than libelling yourself, you should simply be trying to counter my argument with a better one of your own. That would be eminently more constructive, don’t you think?
SC: Except—and I’ll say again—‘Akhet Khufu’ does not mean ‘Horizon of Khufu’. The sun setting between two mounds is not testified until the end of the 5th dynasty, long after the GP was built. The phonetic 'Akhet' with Ibis bird logogram and Pyramid determinative that Consensus Egyptologists believe should be interpreted also as 'horizon' is, according to Lehner, something to do with the ‘soul of Khufu’ and has nothing to do with 'horizon'. Thus, if Lehner is to be believed, the entire premise of Consensus Egyptology of this meaning being 'horizon' with regard to the Great Pyramid is entirely flawed.
Originally posted by Heliocentric
Originally posted by Harte
Originally posted by HeliocentricThe 1984 radiocarbon dates averaged 374 years older than the dates of the kings with whom the presumed Old Kingdom pyramids are identified. If we rely on the scientific method used to date the construction, Khufu could not be the builder of the Great Pyramid.
So you simply rule out the old wood problem? And you rule out that pehaps the timeline is 300 years off? That is, why do you think Khufu's time is set yet his pyramid's time is not?
If you look carefully at what I posted, it reads "Hawass/Lehner explained this by postulating that the builders used 'old wood' in the construction material. There's a possibility it is so, but it is speculation.¨
This answers your question. I still maintain that it is speculation, because the data does not fit with the theory. Instead of adapting the theory to the data, Hawass and Lehner have chosen to 'interpret' the data differently as to what it tells us so that it will fit with the theory. This is speculation at best and unscientific at worst.
I have not ruled out that the timeline of succeeding pharaos is wrong, but if so it undermines mainstream archaeology's interpretation of the various King's Lists. Either way you have a problem here, either the chronology mainstream archaeology has accepted of the pharaos is wrong, or the supposed age of the Great Pyramid. Hawass and Lehner have chosen to ignore the problem and pretend like it doesn't exist.
Harte:… are necessary in order for you to manufacture a "mystery" to write about - as you (and I) noted you are attempting to join the ranks of those who mischaracterize and flatly lie about the past in order to make a living selling books to ignorant persons (and there's certainly no shortage of those.)
SC: “…mischaracterize and lie…”? Oh my! I really have touched a raw nerve, haven’t I. Why are you feeling so threatened, Harte? You should be welcoming these new interpretations. And rather than libelling yourself, you should simply be trying to counter my argument with a better one of your own. That would be eminently more constructive, don’t you think?
Harte: It's perfectly clear to me. And not threatening in the least.
Have you never seen the claim that quartz cannot be cut "across the grain?"
Harte: Have you never seen the claim that Pacal's sarcophagus lid represents an astronaut operating some sort of ship?
Harte: Have you never seen the claim that hundreds of mammoths were "flash frozen" by some strange event in Siberia?
Harte: All of the above are complete lies promulgated by the very types of authors that you declare to be your collegues.
Harte: Should I go on? Because you know I can.
Harte: You are correct about one thing, though. I do not appreciate being lied to by a con man trying to stir up a mystery where none exists in order to sell books.
Originally posted by Kantzveldt
reply to post by Scott Creighton
SC: Except—and I’ll say again—‘Akhet Khufu’ does not mean ‘Horizon of Khufu’. The sun setting between two mounds is not testified until the end of the 5th dynasty, long after the GP was built. The phonetic 'Akhet' with Ibis bird logogram and Pyramid determinative that Consensus Egyptologists believe should be interpreted also as 'horizon' is, according to Lehner, something to do with the ‘soul of Khufu’ and has nothing to do with 'horizon'. Thus, if Lehner is to be believed, the entire premise of Consensus Egyptology of this meaning being 'horizon' with regard to the Great Pyramid is entirely flawed.
More properly, the Akhet is the place were an immortal Akh 'soul' of the King is created, this was understood as a chamber beneath the horizon within the subterranean cavern of the mountain of the horizon, which should be understood as the triangular zodiacal light along the ecliptic plane seen before dusk and dawn.
Thus the Akhet is not the horizon per se, but a specific locale of time and place, a magical transformation in the pre-dawn etheral light.
In the pyramid this was represented by a specific Akhet chamber were the King would be expected to transform in same manner at the particular hour.
Originally posted by Scott Creighton
SC: So the orthodox narrative goes. As far as 'Akhet Khufu' goes, I simply do not buy it. Such religious concepts may have emerged later with regard to later pyramids--but not the first, giant pyramids.
The Ibis glyph is symbolic of wisdom and, naturally, of the AE wisdom god, Thoth. This is to say that the Ibis bird did not symbolise "spirit" or "light" (as Lehner proposes) but rather "wisdom" (i.e. an 'enlightened one' or 'bright spark').
This bird heralded the Nile inundation and did so for thousands of years. It 'knew' when the flood was coming and its arrival before the inundation alerted the farmers to this.
Therefore, in 'Aket Khufu' the Ibis symbolises the Great Nile Inundation of Thoth that was foretold would drown the entire kingdom. IMO.
The pyramid determinative in 'Akhet Khufu' symbolises the means of the 're-creation' of the earth (kingdom) after the worst effects of Thoth's Flood had abated. The word 'akhet' with the sun between two mounds symbolises the re-creation of the sun. The word 'akhet' with the land glyph and growing plants symbolises the re-creation of the Nile. 'Akhet', imo, simply means 're-creation' or 'rebirth'.
Originally posted by Harte
Neither one ignores anything. They merely put forward an alternate explanation for the C14 date problem. As I quoted, the team doing the radiocarbon investigation theorized that the timeline might be off. Hawass and Lehner responded with an alternate possibility - that of the "old wood" problem.
Both fully explain the observed data. Is it your opinion that only one possibility should be considered? After all, at this point, both are equally possible are they not?
Originally posted by Harte
Regarding the iron plate, a single bit of evidence is simply not enough if it doesn't fit the rest of the data.
Originally posted by Harte
until iron artifacts are found that were created by the Egyptians of the Old Kingdom, it is just silly to claim they had iron technology while they were utilizing only copper and later bronze in their everyday activities.
If they knew how to make iron, why didn't they make and use iron?
Originally posted by Harte
Until more samples of Old Kingdom iron are found, the plate remains an anomaly that is best explained through contamination. Vyse's was not the first group to enter the G.P.
The Ibis glyph is symbolic of wisdom and, naturally, of the AE wisdom god, Thoth. This is to say that the Ibis bird did not symbolise "spirit" or "light" (as Lehner proposes) but rather "wisdom" (i.e. an 'enlightened one' or 'bright spark'). This bird heralded the Nile inundation and did so for thousands of years. It 'knew' when the flood was coming and its arrival before the inundation alerted the farmers to this. Therefore, in 'Aket Khufu' the Ibis symbolises the Great Nile Inundation of Thoth that was foretold would drown the entire kingdom. IMO. The pyramid determinative in 'Akhet Khufu' symbolises the means of the 're-creation' of the earth (kingdom) after the worst effects of Thoth's Flood had abated. The word 'akhet' with the sun between two mounds symbolises the re-creation of the sun. The word 'akhet' with the land glyph and growing plants symbolises the re-creation of the Nile. 'Akhet', imo, simply means 're-creation' or 'rebirth'.
The Akhet is more than a zone of passage, however: It is literally the "place of becoming an akh," where the deceased's ba and the sun together are transformed into a newly effective (akh) mode of existence (cf., for example, Pyr, 152 ff., cite above). In the antechamber the king "becomes an akh in the Akhet" (Pyr. 350c), just as the sun "becomes akh again" in the cosmic Akhet". 4 This process of transformation is reflected in the generic term often applied to spells such as those of the Pyramid Texts: s3hw, literally, "akhifiers". Although there is some question whether the term referred to the entire corpus, it does seem to reflect the central purpose of these texts, just as the place of becoming an akh, the Akhet/antechamber, is central to the pyramid substructure.
(3) Rising from the Akhet at dawn. The New Kingdom "Book of the Dead" describes the sun rising "from the mouth of the Akhet's door" into the day-sky at the first hour of daylight. The same image is reflected in PT 311, at the end of the antechamber sequences (s), which speaks of opening "the door of the Akhet for the emergence of the day-bark" (Pyr. 496 a). This doorway in each case is both the exit from the Akhet and the entrance to the day-sky. Architecturally it corresponds to the door from the antechamber to the corridor: the first spell of the corridor envisions the king standing at this door (see Pyr. 502 as cited above). Like the sun, the king's ultimate goal is to be in possession of your akh emergent from the Akhet, and emergent in this day in the proper form of a living akh. (Pyr. 455b).
Originally posted by NJoyZ
reply to post by punkinworks10
Is there a timeline to indicate that the burial pyramids came before the great pyramid and were not after-the-fact copycats? Records indicating worker compensation and things like that, do they specifically reference being related to the great pyramid or so we assume the great one because they reference the kind we assume it was built for (because his name is scrawled inside). what I'm asking is, how d owe know those records aren't in reference to a different tomb?
Originally posted by Byrd
Originally posted by Scott Creighton
SC: So the orthodox narrative goes. As far as 'Akhet Khufu' goes, I simply do not buy it. Such religious concepts may have emerged later with regard to later pyramids--but not the first, giant pyramids.
So, what evidence are you using to support this -- that the "Akhet" does NOT mean horizon?
The Ibis glyph is symbolic of wisdom and, naturally, of the AE wisdom god, Thoth. This is to say that the Ibis bird did not symbolise "spirit" or "light" (as Lehner proposes) but rather "wisdom" (i.e. an 'enlightened one' or 'bright spark').
I did a little digging, and it seems that the first representations of Thoth are as a member of the Ogdoad system where he is associated with the moon
This bird heralded the Nile inundation and did so for thousands of years. It 'knew' when the flood was coming and its arrival before the inundation alerted the farmers to this.
Do you have a source for this? It's my understanding that it was the rising of Sirius that they used to mark the beginning of the flood season.
Therefore, in 'Aket Khufu' the Ibis symbolises the Great Nile Inundation of Thoth that was foretold would drown the entire kingdom. IMO.
Can you point to something that talks about a Great Nile Inundation? I'm not finding anything in the sources I know of or in the many titles of Thoth that suggests anything about an inundation or prophecy. The AE's really weren't much into prophecies.
The pyramid determinative in 'Akhet Khufu' symbolises the means of the 're-creation' of the earth (kingdom) after the worst effects of Thoth's Flood had abated. The word 'akhet' with the sun between two mounds symbolises the re-creation of the sun. The word 'akhet' with the land glyph and growing plants symbolises the re-creation of the Nile. 'Akhet', imo, simply means 're-creation' or 'rebirth'.
Are you confusing the word for the season (which has the "land glyph and growing plants" hieroglyph with that of the Aket (sun between two mountains)? They really are different things.
Also unaccounted for by your theory is material known to scholars: the Aker and the various symbols that make up the sign -- they appear in a number of inscriptions and are referenced in many places (and aren't associated with Thoth at all.) If that page is correct (I note that it references some outdated books) then the actual "horizon" symbol did not appear until after the Old Kingdom ended. As supporting evidence that the symbol is not as old as the pyramids, I will mention that I saw in one of the threads you started, a link (perhaps by you... I can't remember) of hieroglyphs indicating the town of "Khufu's Ahket" where it's spelled out with bird and lined circle and t-loaf. -- as it is here on another site (where it's shown as part of an administrator's title).
So you may be confusing two things. They really are as different as a spring (season) and a spring (mechanical thing that goes 'sproing')
SC: The Ibis glyph is symbolic of wisdom and, naturally, of the AE wisdom god, Thoth. This is to say that the Ibis bird did not symbolise "spirit" or "light" (as Lehner proposes) but rather "wisdom" (i.e. an 'enlightened one' or 'bright spark'). This bird heralded the Nile inundation and did so for thousands of years. It 'knew' when the flood was coming and its arrival before the inundation alerted the farmers to this. Therefore, in 'Aket Khufu' the Ibis symbolises the Great Nile Inundation of Thoth that was foretold would drown the entire kingdom. IMO. The pyramid determinative in 'Akhet Khufu' symbolises the means of the 're-creation' of the earth (kingdom) after the worst effects of Thoth's Flood had abated. The word 'akhet' with the sun between two mounds symbolises the re-creation of the sun. The word 'akhet' with the land glyph and growing plants symbolises the re-creation of the Nile. 'Akhet', imo, simply means 're-creation' or 'rebirth'.
Kantveldt: The Ibis wasn't a symbol in that context it was a phonetic rendition hieroglyph…
Kantzveldt: …the symbol came later in the form of the sun between the two mountains of the horizon.
Kandztveldt: There was no such notion as 'the recreation of the Nile' …
Kandtveldt:… and a great inundation of Thoth flooding the entire Kingdom....only you appear to have been 'foretold' of such strange fantasies
“Then Thoth, being the tongue of the Great God declares that, acting for the Lord Tem, he is going to make a Flood. He says: ‘I am going to blot out everything that I have made. This Earth shall enter into (i.e. be absorbed in) the watery abyss of Nu (or Nunu) by means of a raging flood, and will become even as it was in primeval time. I myself shall remain together with Osiris, but I shall transform myself into a small serpent, which can be neither comprehended nor seen; one day the Nile will rise and cover all Egypt with water, and drown the whole country; then, as in the beginning, there will be nothing to be seen except water.’ - Budge W. E. A., 'From Fetish to God in Ancient Egypt', (Oxford University Press, 1934), p.198.
Originally posted by Scott CreightonOne thing that I haven't touched upon though is your question re the Thoth/Moon association. Thoth was, of course, the 'Keeper of Time', the God of wisdom. It is also said that the connection of Thoth as the Ibis depicting the moon is the crescent-shaped bill of the ibis being similar to a crescent moon.
SC: The crested ibis logogram is not, however, part of the AE phonetic alphabet and so does not require the vertical stroke.
Logograms (or ideograms) typically offer a single sign that represents a complete word or even an idea. In the example above it is my contention that the Ibis symbolises the god Thoth and also the idea of ‘harbinger of the flood’. Combine them and the idea of the Ibis in the term ‘Akhet Khufu’ is to convey the idea ’harbinger of the flood of Thoth’.
Even Lehner no longer believes that ‘Akhet’ with the Ibis bird means ‘horizon’ but something like ‘spirit’ or ‘light’.
It ‘knew’ when the Nile was about to flood, hence why the ancient Egyptians regarded this as a sacred bird that ‘heralded the Nile inundation’ i.e. the Akhet or rebirth of the Nile (hence the flood season of ‘Akhet’ or rebirth of the Nile).
“Then Thoth, being the tongue of the Great God declares that, acting for the Lord Tem, he is going to make a Flood. He says: ‘I am going to blot out everything that I have made. This Earth shall enter into (i.e. be absorbed in) the watery abyss of Nu (or Nunu) by means of a raging flood, and will become even as it was in primeval time. I myself shall remain together with Osiris, but I shall transform myself into a small serpent, which can be neither comprehended nor seen; one day the Nile will rise and cover all Egypt with water, and drown the whole country; then, as in the beginning, there will be nothing to be seen except water.’
It depends on the evidence and the context in which the evidence was revealed, but I basically agree with you. That said, it is not the rest of the data it does not fit with, but a theory constructed around the data.
Absence of proof is not proof of absence. We have no proof of iron deposits in Egypt (primarily found in Aswan) being worked before the Late or Greco-Roman periods, but it could have been. In the Bahariya Oasis, inhabited since the Neolithic age, the Iron ore is easily avaible and still extracted to this day.
So they knew what it was, knew its utility, and they had access to it. In the light of this, how 'silly' is it to hypothesize that the iron plate is a genuine Old Kingdom artifact?
A more recent analysis of the plate, however, has cast doubt on the findings and conclusions of the study by El Gayar and Jones. In their article "Gizeh Iron Revisited" (Journal of the Historical Metallurgy Society, Vol. 27 No. 2, 1993, pp. 57-59), Paul Craddock and Janet Lang of the British Museum reported that they were at first unable to obtain the section cut by El Gayar and Jones, consequently the initial study was confined to the larger portion of the plate. A new section was cut adjacent to the original section, and it was examined under a scanning electron microscope both at the British Museum and independently at the Ancient Monuments Laboratory, English Heritage (the work was carried out there by Dr. G. McDonnell). It was also analyzed by x-ray fluorescence. Surprisingly, no gold was detected in the metal or in the corrosion. Craddock and Lang further wrote:
Since the last report the original section has been returned to the Museum and we have been able to carry out a thorough investigation. Once again we must report that despite extensive searches no trace of gold could be detected, and it is our firm opinion that the original report of gold is incorrect. [p. 57]
The authors agreed with El Gayar and Jones regarding the structure of the iron plate, but they did not agree on the interpretation.
The unusual features are the absence of slag stringers and the very large number of other inclusions. These are unusual in that they contain large quantities of calcium (up to 60%), phosphorus (up to 15%), and some sodium, silicon and potassium. A number of chlorine-rich areas were also found. However, we do not agree with the view of El Gayar and Jones, that these inclusions indicate ancient primitive manufacture -- careless maybe, but not primitive. [p. 57-58]
They believe that the structure is unfamiliar because the iron plate is representative of the largely unstudied period of iron manufacture that falls between "traditional" solid state bloomery iron and "modern" iron and steel of the late 19th century. The structure of the plate is consistent with iron-making in the post-medieval Islamic era.
Craddock and Lang conclude:
Gold was neither observed nor detected anywhere on the plate. The composition and structure of the iron rules out any form of natural iron. Similarly iron smelted in the solid state is precluded as some form of molten slag would be essential, which could only be eradicated by melting the iron. A more mundane but tenable explanation of the observed features is that the iron ore was smelted to cast iron in a blast furnace, using charcoal as the fuel, resulting in a chemically much purer iron than smelted with coal or coke. This iron was then decarburized by the finery process to form solid wrought iron. The inclusions are likely to have originated either as deliberate additions during the fining, as specified in some European accounts, or inadvertently during the subsequent forging. The blast furnace process does not seem to have reached the Middle East until the post-medieval period, and this strongly suggests that the plate of iron from the Great Pyramid is of no great antiquity. [p. 58]
It would seem, then, that the iron plate found by J.R. Hill in 1837 is not contemporary with the construction of the pyramid, but rather dates to the post-medieval (Islamic) period sometime between the 16th and 18th centuries. It would be a matter for speculation just how such a plate might have found its way down a joint between the pyramid stones, but after the Arab conquest there was much activity at the Giza pyramids. Hill's report that the iron "was taken out by me from an inner joint, after having removed by blasting the two outer tiers of the stones" and "that no joint or opening of any sort was connected with the above-mentioned joint" was made ex post facto, and one may well wonder how closely he examined the joints before blasting considering he had no idea that he might find something there.