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  culture, tradition or genre. They seemed to be without antecedents either

  in the New World or in the Old.

  They seemed rootless ... and that, of course, was impossible, because

  all forms of artistic expression have roots somewhere.

  Hypothetical third party

  It occurred to me that one plausible explanation might lie in a variant of

  the ‘hypothetical third party’ theory originally put forward by a number of

  leading Egyptologists to explain one of the great puzzles of Egyptian

  history and chronology.

  The archaeological evidence suggested that rather than developing

  slowly and painfully, as is normal with human societies, the civilization of

  Ancient Egypt, like that of the Olmecs, emerged all at once and fully

  formed. Indeed, the period of transition from primitive to advanced

  society appears to have been so short that it makes no kind of historical

  sense. Technological skills that should have taken hundreds or even

  thousands of years to evolve were brought into use almost overnight—

  and with no apparent antecedents whatever.

  For example, remains from the pre-dynastic period around 3500 BC

  show no trace of writing. Soon after that date, quite suddenly and

  inexplicably, the hieroglyphs familiar from so many of the ruins of

  Ancient Egypt begin to appear in a complete and perfect state. Far from

  being mere pictures of objects or actions, this written language was

  complex and structured at the outset, with signs that represented sounds

  only and a detailed system of numerical symbols. Even the very earliest

  hieroglyphs were stylized and conventionalized; and it is clear that an

  advanced cursive script was it common usage by the dawn of the First

  Dynasty.6

  3 Fair Gods and Store Faces, passim. See also Cyrus H. Gordon, Before Columbus: Links

  Between the Old World and Ancient America, Crown Publishers Inc, New York, 1971.

  4 See, for example, (a) Maria Eugenia Aubet, The Phoenicians and the West, Cambridge

  University Press, 1993; (b) Gerhard Herm, The Phoenicians, BCA, London, 1975; (c)

  Sabatino Moscati, The World of the Phoenicians, Cardinal, London, 1973.

  5 This can be confirmed in any of the works cited in note 4.

  6 W. B. Emery, Archaic Egypt, Penguin Books, London, 1987, p. 192.

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  What is remarkable is that there are no traces of evolution from simple

  to sophisticated, and the same is true of mathematics, medicine,

  astronomy and architecture and of Egypt’s amazingly rich and convoluted

  religio-mythological system (even the central content of such refined

  works as the Book of the Dead existed right at the start of the dynastic

  period).7

  The majority of Egyptologists will not consider the implications of

  Egypt’s early sophistication. These implications are startling, according to

  a number of more daring thinkers. John Anthony West, an expert on the

  early dynastic period, asks:

  How does a complex civilization spring full-blown into being? Look at a 1905

  automobile and compare it to a modern one. There is no mistaking the process of

  ‘development’. But in Egypt there are no parallels. Everything is right there at the

  start.

  The answer to the mystery is of course obvious but, because it is repellent to the

  prevailing cast of modern thinking, it is seldom considered. Egyptian civilization

  was not a ‘development’, it was a legacy.8

  West has been a thorn in the flesh of the Egyptological establishment

  for many years. But other more mainstream figures have also confessed

  puzzlement at the suddenness with which Egyptian civilization appeared.

  Walter Emery, late Edwards Professor of Egyptology at the University of

  London, summed up the problem:

  At a period approximately 3400 years before Christ, a great change took place in

  Egypt, and the country passed rapidly from a state of neolithic culture with a

  complex tribal character to one of well-organized monarchy ...

  At the same time the art of writing appears, monumental architecture and the arts

  and crafts develop to an astonishing degree, and all the evidence points to the

  existence of a luxurious civilization. All this was achieved within a comparatively

  short period of time, for there appears to be little or no background to these

  fundamental developments in writing and architecture.9

  One explanation could simply be that Egypt received its sudden and

  decisive cultural boost from some other known civilization of the ancient

  world. Sumer, on the Lower Euphrates in Mesopotamia, is the most likely

  contender. Despite many basic differences, a variety of shared building

  techniques and architectural styles10 does suggest a link between the two

  regions. But none of these similarities is strong enough to infer that the

  connection could have been in any way causal, with one society directly

  influencing the other. On the contrary, as Professor Emery writes:

  The impression we get is of an indirect connection, and perhaps the existence of a

  third party, whose influence spread to both the Euphrates and the Nile ... Modern

  7 Ibid., p. 38. See also The Egyptian Book of the Dead (trans. E.A. Wallis Budge), British

  Museum, 1895, Introduction, pp. xii, xiii.

  8 John Anthony West, Serpent in the Sky, Harper and Row, New York, 1979, p. 13.

  9 Archaic Egypt, p. 38.

  10 Ibid., pp. 175-91.

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  scholars have tended to ignore the possibility of immigration to both regions from

  some hypothetical and as yet undiscovered area. [However] a third party whose

  cultural achievements were passed on independently to Egypt and Mesopotamia

  would best explain the common features and fundamental differences between

  the two civilizations.11

  Among other things, this theory sheds light on the mysterious fact that

  the Egyptians and Sumerian people of Mesopotamia appear to have

  worshipped virtually identical lunar deities who were among the oldest in

  their respective pantheons ( Thoth in the case of the Egyptians, Sin in the

  case of the Sumerians).12 According to the eminent Egyptologist Sir E.A.

  Wallis Budge, ‘The similarity between the two gods is too close to be

  accidental ... It would be wrong to say that the Egyptians borrowed from

  the Sumerians or the Sumerians from the Egyptians, but it may be

  submitted that the literati of both peoples borrowed their theological

  systems from some common but exceedingly ancient source.’13

  The question, therefore, is this: what was that ‘common but

  exceedingly ancient source’, that ‘hypothetical and as yet undiscovered

  area’, that advanced ‘third party’ to which both Budge and Emery refer?

  And if it left a legacy of high culture in Egypt and in Mesopotamia, why

  shouldn’t it have done so in Central America?

  It’s not good enough to argue that civilization ‘took off’ much later in

  Mexico than it had in the Middle East. It is possible that the initial

  impulse could have been felt at the same time in both places but that the

  subsequent outcome could have been completely different.

/>   On this scenario, the civilizers would have succeeded brilliantly in Egypt

  and in Sumer, creating lasting and remarkable cultures there. In Mexico,

  on the other hand (as also seems to have been the case in Peru), they

  suffered some serious setback—perhaps getting off to a good start, when

  the gigantic stone heads and reliefs of bearded men were made, but

  going rapidly downhill. The light of civilization would never quite have

  been lost, but perhaps things didn’t pick up again until around 1500 BC,

  the so-called ‘Olmec horizon’. By then the great sculptures would have

  been hoary with age, ancient relics of immense spiritual power, their allbut-forgotten origins wrapped in myths of giants and bearded civilizers.

  If so, we may be gazing at faces from a much more remote past than

  we imagine when we stare into the almond eyes of one of the negro

  heads or into the angular, chiselled Caucasian features of ‘Uncle Sam’. It

  is by no means impossible that these great works preserve the images of

  peoples from a vanished civilization which embraced several different

  ethnic groups.

  That, in a nutshell, is the ‘hypothetical third party’ theory as applied to

  11 Ibid., pp. 31, 177.

  12 Ibid., p. 126.

  13 E. A. Wallis Budge, From Fetish to God in Ancient Egypt, Oxford University Press, 1934,

  p. 155.

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  Central America: the civilization of Ancient Mexico did not emerge

  without external influence, and it did not emerge as a result of influence

  from the Old World; instead certain cultures in the Old World and in the

  New World may both have received a legacy of influence and ideas from a

  third party at some exceedingly remote date.

  Villahermosa to Oaxaca

  Before leaving Villahermosa I visited CICOM, the Centre for Investigation

  of the Cultures of the Olmecs and Maya. I wanted to find out from the

  scholars there whether there were any other significant Olmec sites in the

  region. To my surprise, they suggested that I should look farther afield.

  At Monte Alban, in Oaxaca province hundreds of kilometres to the

  southwest, archaeologists had apparently unearthed ‘Olmecoid’ artefacts

  and a number of reliefs thought to represent the Olmecs themselves.

  Santha and I had intended to drive straight on from Villahermosa into

  the Yucatan Peninsula, which lay north-east. The journey to Monte Alban

  would involve a huge detour, but we decided to make it, in the hope that

  it might shed further light on the Olmecs. Besides, it promised to be a

  spectacular drive over immense mountains and into the heart of the

  hidden valley where the city of Oaxaca lies.

  We drove almost due west past the lost site of La Venta, past

  Coatzecoalcos once again, and on past Sayula and Loma Bonita to the

  road-junction town of Tuxtepec. In so doing, by degrees we left behind

  countryside scarred and blackened by the oil industry, crossed long

  gentle hillsides carpeted in lush green grass, and ran between fields ripe

  with crops.

  At Tuxtepec, where the sierras really began, we turned sharply south

  following Highway 175 to Oaxaca. On the map it looked barely half the

  distance that we had driven from Villahermosa. The road, however,

  proved to be a complicated, nerve-racking, muscle-wrenching, apparently

  endless zig-zag of hairpin bends—narrow, winding and precipitous—

  which went up into the clouds like a stairway to heaven. It took us

  through many different layers of alpine vegetation, each occupying a

  specialized climatological niche, until it brought us out above the clouds

  in a place where familiar plants flourished in giant forms, like John

  Wyndham’s triffids, creating a surreal and alien landscape. It took twelve

  hours to drive the 700 kilometres from Villahermosa to Oaxaca. By the

  time the journey was over, my hands were blistered from gripping the

  steering-wheel too tight for too long around too many hairpin bends. My

  eyes were blurred and I kept having mental retrospectives of the

  vertiginous chasms we had skirted on Highway 175, in the mountains,

  where the triffids grew.

  The city of Oaxaca is famous for magic mushrooms, marijuana and D.H.

  Lawrence (who wrote and set part of his novel The Plumed Serpent here in

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  the 1920s). There is still a bohemian feel about the place and until late at

  night a current of excitement seems to ripple among the crowds filling its

  bars and cafés, narrow cobbled streets, old buildings and spacious

  plazas.

  We checked into a room overlooking one of the three open courtyards

  in the Hotel Las Golondrinas. The bed was comfortable. There were starry

  skies overhead. But, tired as I was, I couldn’t sleep.

  What kept me awake was the idea of the civilizers ... the bearded gods

  and their companions. In Mexico, as in Peru, they seemed to have

  confronted failure. That was what the legends implied, and not only the

  legends, as I discovered when we reached Monte Alban the next morning.

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  Chapter 19

  Adventures in the Underworld, Journeys to the Stars

  The ‘hypothetical third party’ theory explains the similarities and

  fundamental differences between Ancient Egypt and Ancient

  Mesopotamia by proposing that both received a common legacy of

  civilization from the same remote ancestor. No serious suggestions have

  been made as to where that ancestral civilization might have been

  located, its nature, or when it flourished. Like a black hole in space, it

  cannot be seen. Yet its presence can be deduced from its effects on

  things that can be seen—in this case the civilizations of Sumer and Egypt.

  Is it possible that the same mysterious ancestor, the same invisible

  source of influence, could also have left its mark in Mexico? If so, we

  would expect to find certain cultural similarities between Mexico’s

  ancient civilizations and those of Sumer and Egypt. We would also expect

  to be confronted by immense differences resulting from the long period

  of divergent evolution which separated all these areas in historical times.

  We would, however, expect the differences to be less between Sumer and

  Egypt, which were in regular contact with each other during the historical

  period, than between the two Middle Eastern cultures and the cultures of

  far-off Central America, which enjoyed at most only haphazard, slight and

  intermittent contacts prior to the ‘discovery’ of the New World by

  Columbus in AD 1492.

  Eaters of the dead, earth monsters,

  star kings, dwarves and other relatives

  For some curious reason that has not been explained, the Ancient

  Egyptians had a special liking and reverence for dwarves.1 So, too, did the

  civilized peoples of ancient Central America, right back to Olmec times.2

  In both cases it was believed that dwarves were directly connected to the

  gods.3 And in both cases dwarves were favoured as dancers and were

  shown as such in works of art.4

  In Egypt??
?s early dynastic period, more than 4500 years ago, an ‘Ennead’

  of nine omnipotent deities was particularly adored by the priesthood at

  Heliopolis.5 Likewise, in Central America, both the Aztecs and the Mayas

  1 See, for example, The Encyclopaedia of Ancient Egypt, pp. 69-70; also Jean-Pierre

  Hallet, Pygmy Kitabu, BCA, London, 1974, pp. 84-106.

  2 The Gods and Symbols of Ancient Mexico and the Maya, p. 82.

  3 Ibid., The Encyclopaedia of Ancient Egypt, pp. 69-70, and Pygmy Kitabu, pp. 84-106.

  4 Ibid.

  5 The Encyclopaedia of Ancient Egypt, p. 85.

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  believed in an all-powerful system of nine deities.6

  The Popol Vuh, the sacred book of the ancient Quiche Maya of Mexico

  and Guatemala, contains several passages which clearly indicate a belief

  in ‘stellar rebirth’—the reincarnation of the dead as stars. After they had

  been killed, for example, the Hero Twins named Hunahpu and Xbalanque

  ‘rose up in the midst of the light, and instantly they were lifted into the

  sky ... Then the arch of heaven and the face of the earth were lighted.

  And they dwelt in heaven.’7 At the same time ascended the Twins’ 400

  companions who had also been killed, ‘and so they again became the

  companions of Hunahpu and Xbalanque and were changed into stars in

  the sky.’8

  The majority of the traditions of the God-King Quetzalcoatl, as we have

  seen, focus on his deeds and teachings as a civilizer. His followers in

  ancient Mexico, however, also believed that his human manifestation had

  experienced death and that afterwards he was reborn as a star.9

  It is therefore curious, at the very least, to discover that in Egypt, in the

  Pyramid Age, more than 4000 years ago, the state religion revolved

  around the belief that the deceased pharaoh was reborn as a star.10 Ritual

  incantantations were chanted, the purpose of which was to facilitate the

  dead monarch’s rapid rebirth in the heavens: ‘Oh king, you are this Great

  Star, the Companion of Orion, who traverses the sky with Orion ... you

  ascend from the east of the sky, being renewed in your due season, and

  rejuvenated in your due time ...’11 We have encountered the Orion

  constellation before, on the plains of Nazca, and we shall encounter it

  again ...