Under The Pyramids Of Giza, Underground Cities? - Alternative View

Table of contents:

Under The Pyramids Of Giza, Underground Cities? - Alternative View
Under The Pyramids Of Giza, Underground Cities? - Alternative View

Video: Under The Pyramids Of Giza, Underground Cities? - Alternative View

Video: Under The Pyramids Of Giza, Underground Cities? - Alternative View
Video: Egyptologists Open a Newly-Discovered Pyramid 2024, May
Anonim

Under the Egyptian pyramids of the Giza plateau, researchers have long found traces of mysterious structures of unknown purpose. Chairman of the Supreme Council for Antiquities of Egypt Zahi HAVASS, who is engaged in the protection and study of historical monuments of his country, admitted that he would like to organize excavations. And finally find out what is under the pyramids. One of the most intriguing versions is this: there is a huge underground city, whose “streets”, “squares” and mines stretch for many square kilometers. In it, according to the Australian researcher Tony Bushby, everything that survived from a gigantic catastrophe that happened on Earth, possibly the Flood, is collected: blueprints of a prehistoric jet plane, healing crystals that cure all diseases, books on history 12 thousand years ago.

Lost history

Tony Bushby (Australian, publisher, researcher and entrepreneur) in a private library discovered unknown ancient manuscripts with information about the "system of underground living quarters" constructed by the "real creators of Memphis" (the ancient name of Giza). Who these builders were - gods or aliens - we can only guess. But the dungeons covered the entire area around the Sphinx and the pyramids.

The Greek philosopher Krantor (300 BC) argued that there were some columns on which were carved schemes of communication routes between the pyramids. In his writings, the Roman historian of the 4th century A. D. e. Ammianus Marcellinus wrote about the existence of an underground crypt leading into the inner chambers of the Great Pyramid: "The letters, as the ancients pointed out, were carved on the walls of some underground galleries and passages built deep in the darkness underground in order to preserve the wisdom of the ancients from a bloody flood." So, there was still a terrible catastrophe on Earth, as some researchers suggest?

Maybe the pyramids are the ground protection of the bunker

Ancient legends have recently received scientific confirmation. Seismographs, capturing underground voids, show: the Giza area is simply permeated with a mind-boggling number of tunnels and rooms that resemble a network and cross the territory along and across, intertwined like lace and spreading across the plateau.

Promotional video:

No characteristic footprints are visible on the surface - they are hidden by the sands. But they seem to be visible from space using a special program for analyzing images from orbit. And the location of the main underground structure, the likely entrance to it and the size of the premises prior to excavation. Egyptologists intend to pay special attention to three "suspicious" places: a site in the desert a few hundred meters west - southwest of the original location of the Black Pyramid (around this site with an area of eight square kilometers, Egyptian builders are currently erecting a colossal system of concrete walls seven meters); the ancient path that connected the Luxor temple with Karnak, and the "Mountain Road" passing through the north of the Sinai Peninsula.

Light bulbs of the ancient priests

But how were the vast underground areas illuminated? And the inscriptions in the pyramids themselves were hardly made in pitch darkness. Researchers assure: the lights were not torches. Otherwise, there would be traces of soot on the ceilings. And they are not. But in the "Book of the Dead" there are references to some "Creators of Light" - people who could well belong to the caste responsible for lighting.

The stone stairs are covered with little men in profile.

Iamblichus, in his writings, mentions an amazing account found on an ancient Egyptian papyrus kept in one of the mosques in Cairo. It was part of a report by an unknown author (circa 100 BC) on an underground expedition:

“When we entered the underground space, the lights came on by themselves: the light came from a thin tube the size of a human hand (about 6 inches, or 15.24 cm), standing vertically in the corner. As we approached the tube, it glowed brighter … the slaves got scared and ran in the direction we came from! When I touched it, the glow stopped. No matter what we did, it never caught fire again. In some rooms, the tubes provided light, in others they did not. We broke one tube and dripped from it beads of a silvery liquid, which rolled quickly on the floor until they disappeared into cracks (mercury?). After a while, the lighting pipes began to go out, and the priests collected them and put them in a specially built underground storage in the southeastern part of the plateau. They were convinced that their beloved Imhotep had created the lighting tubes,who will come back one day and turn on the light in them again."

So, so far, according to unofficial data (scientists have just begun to draw up a map), it looks like part of the underground structures under the Giza plateau.

Are the Egyptians hiding the truth?

But the most interesting thing is that the Egyptian authorities today persistently deny the existence of underground cities under the Giza plateau. And the discovered voids are explained simply: these are underground dried up river beds or mines, from where material was taken for the construction of the pyramids and the Sphinx.

But maybe this fear arose because the authorities themselves are afraid to admit the unknown? After all, there is still no single version of who and why built the pyramids, and all over the world. And then there are strange cities underfoot, it is not known by what "moles" dug. Maybe underground structures - bunkers in case of a universal catastrophe such as an atomic war or a worldwide flood. However, as we learned from unofficial sources, a group of local and foreign archaeologists began work on mapping the underground passages.