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 Obelisks Of Ancient Egypt, Land Of The Sun Worshipers May 29, 2007 
Serge Sauneron wrote a most informative book entitled, "Priests of Ancient Egypt." Being a conventional Egyptologist, however, his work mentions nothing about Ra Ta (who became Ra) as the most important of all of Egypt's priests -- assuming that one agrees with the story of an earlier ancient Egypt told via scores of Edgar Cayce's psychic readings. Indeed, the high priest in that earlier ancient Egypt was none other than the same soul known in the last century as Edgar Cayce (died in 1945).

To learn of the events of the Egypt of roughly 12,500 years ago, William Hutton chose to research what he could find about the obelisks left behind. He realized that the obelisks found to date might represent only those of conventional, more-recent Pharaonic historical times. But he felt that to learn of the types of rocks used to make obelisks would be useful to him, a geologist by profession. And he wanted to read about the Earth changes mentioned in Cayce's Egyptian readings. This article, then, is a recitation of what Hutton did to satisfy his interest in both the conventional and the non-conventional aspects of the history of Egypt, as divined through the obelisks of the two different historical periods. (Note that he has flagged a couple of places in the Cayce readings cited that might explain, however so tentatively, just why so little has been found of that earlier, undiscovered Egyptian civilization.)

 


 

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