The Cairo Museum has exhibited a new exhibit - the Djedkhonsuiefankh Burial Papyrus, which is estimated to be approximately three thousand years old. Ufologists immediately saw something unusual on him. The papyrus depicts the Sphinx, on the back of which there is a disc-shaped object emitting rays in all directions, which causes only one explanation for researchers - this is a UFO.
Let's clarify that the Egyptians used to draw all kinds of "heavenly boats", but they all looked like ordinary arks, and here - clearly a "flying saucer". Egyptian hieroglyphics, like Egyptian symbolism, have not shown anything like it to this day (or, at least, such things have not been put on public display so clearly).
Researchers have recalled only one single analogue of today's papyrus - The Tulli papyrus, which fell into the hands of Egyptologists (how - no one knows until now) from the secret Vatican Library.
It is enough, I think, to get acquainted with the translation of the fragment of The Tulli papyrus in order to understand its connection with the current exhibit of the Cairo Museum:
In the twenty-second year of the third month of winter, the sixth hour in the afternoon, panic broke out among the scribes of the House of Life when a Disc of Fire appeared from heaven. He had no head and no voice and gave off a terrible smell. The disc headed for the pharaoh's residence. The scribes fell down in horror, and only when the Disc of Fire disappeared did they come to inform the Pharaoh of what had happened. Pharaoh thought for a long time about the mysterious event, then ordered the scribes to draw up scrolls about this case and keep them forever in the House of Life.
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But here's what is surprising: the ancient Egyptians knew astronomy very well, perhaps even much better than modern scientists, were initiated into the great secrets of stars and planets and suddenly … they draw and write about "flying saucers" with almost the same awe and fear as American Indians. Something is not connected here. As some conspiracy theorists suggest, both the Tully papyrus and today's exhibit at the Cairo Museum may well be a false thrust to the general public. It is not clear yet only - for what?..