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  • May 1, 1878
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The Masonic Magazine, May 1, 1878: Page 6

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    Article PAPERS ON THE GREAT PYRAMID. Page 1 of 3 →
Page 6

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Papers On The Great Pyramid.

PAPERS ON THE GREAT PYRAMID .

BY BRO . AVJ [ . KOAVBOTTOM . ( Continued from page 196 . )

III . —THE BUILDERS . IN the enquiry to Avhich this chapter is devoted , Ave shall find the difficulties surrounding the problem considerably lessened by having a fixed date to Avork upon , and it Avas for this reason that I gave jirecedence to the subject of enquiry dealt Avith in the last chapter .

The 2170 n . c . elate , besides being accepted by many writers having so little in common as Professor Smyth , Mr . R . A . Proctor , and Sir Edmund Beckett , receives important confirmation from the Pyramid itself . At the distance of 2170 pyramid inches from the commencement of the Grand Gallery , measuring backAvards along the floor line of the first ascending passage , and so upAvards tOAvards the entrance of the pyramid , there occur on the side Avails , ancl nearly opposite to each other , and at right

angles ivith the floor , two exquisitely true and finely chiselled lines . The question of the existence of some mark at the 2170 inch distance from the Grand Gallery ' s commencement Avas put by Mr . Charles Casey , in 1872 , to Professor Smyth as the test of the chronological and at the same time prophetic character claimed for the passages . Professor Smyth , though he had commented on the ruled lines in the granite blocks in his book , " Life and Work at the Great Pyramid , " had not taken that particular measurement , and he accordingly wrote to Mr . Waynman Dixon , C . E ., then in . Cairo , who , Avith Dr . Grant , made the necessary measurements , the results being on the east Aval ] 2170-5 , and on ihe west Avail , 2170-4 . *

Before entering into more particular characteristics of the Great Pyramid builders , let us note the folloAving generalities . First we find that , Avhoever the builders Avere , they reached the central land of Egypt from the East , and after accomplishing their work became spread abroad throughout the earth . Hence Ave find the monuments of the pyramid builders completing the circle of the earth , and appearing in conjunction ivith other evidences of a common knoAvledge among the origines ol the nations . We may thus easily accept the claims of these earliest erections to be national monuments .

Both Marictte Bey aud Hckckyan Ilcy have contended for this ; the latter holdingvery reasonably—that " these pyramids Avure national undertakings ; their plan and execution were decided after mature deliberation ; laws Avere passed , aud revenues provided , to carry out the public decision by the executive authorities . " |

Mr . BoiiAvick further quotes Mr . Wilson , a learned writer on the astronomy of the ancients , the Rev . E . 13 . Zincke , and Mr . Gliddon , as favouring the idea that the pyramid builders Avere Avhite men . } It is indeed sonieivhat remarkable that they should have applied to them the name of Yoingees , Avhich , found in the early Hindoo Puranas , has within modern times become corrupted into Yankees—Yoingees being the name given to the English on their arrival by the North American Indians . I may mention here that in a footnote in my recent publication I have ventured to

suggest that the term " lepers , " Avhich occurs in Manetho ' s account of the expulsion of the Shepherds from Egypt , and also in the Harris papyrus in the British Museum , is most probably a reference to the occupation of , and final expulsion from , Egyp t of a Avhite-skinned race .

“The Masonic Magazine: 1878-05-01, Page 6” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01051878/page/6/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
In Memoriam. Article 1
"HIS END WAS PEACE." Article 1
AN HERMETIC WORK. Article 2
A BRIEFE OF THE GOLDEN CALF OR THEWORLDS IDOL. Article 4
THE EPISTLE OF W. C. TO THE READER. Article 4
PAPERS ON THE GREAT PYRAMID. Article 6
THE ADVENTURES OF DON PASQUALE. Article 9
BIDE A WEE, AND DINNA FRET. Article 11
THE WORK OF NATURE IN THE MONTHS. Article 12
AMABEL VAUGHAN. Article 18
MASONIC HYMN. Article 21
DE. MOON'S WORKS FOE THE BLIND. Article 22
IS IT A PROMISE, OR A DECLARATION ? Article 24
THE SCOT ABROAD. Article 26
"HAIL AND FAEEWELL." Article 28
THE OTIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 29
ON THE TESTING AND STRENGTH OF RAILWAY MATERIALS, &c Article 32
A FAREWELL ADDRESS Article 36
DISCOVERY OF ROMAN REMAINS AT TEMPLEBOROUGH. Article 37
I WISH HE WOULD MAKE UP HIS MIND. Article 39
LOST AND SAVED ; OR NELLIE POWERS THE MISSIONARY'S DAUGHTER. Article 40
PRAYER ON THE SEA. Article 46
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 46
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Papers On The Great Pyramid.

PAPERS ON THE GREAT PYRAMID .

BY BRO . AVJ [ . KOAVBOTTOM . ( Continued from page 196 . )

III . —THE BUILDERS . IN the enquiry to Avhich this chapter is devoted , Ave shall find the difficulties surrounding the problem considerably lessened by having a fixed date to Avork upon , and it Avas for this reason that I gave jirecedence to the subject of enquiry dealt Avith in the last chapter .

The 2170 n . c . elate , besides being accepted by many writers having so little in common as Professor Smyth , Mr . R . A . Proctor , and Sir Edmund Beckett , receives important confirmation from the Pyramid itself . At the distance of 2170 pyramid inches from the commencement of the Grand Gallery , measuring backAvards along the floor line of the first ascending passage , and so upAvards tOAvards the entrance of the pyramid , there occur on the side Avails , ancl nearly opposite to each other , and at right

angles ivith the floor , two exquisitely true and finely chiselled lines . The question of the existence of some mark at the 2170 inch distance from the Grand Gallery ' s commencement Avas put by Mr . Charles Casey , in 1872 , to Professor Smyth as the test of the chronological and at the same time prophetic character claimed for the passages . Professor Smyth , though he had commented on the ruled lines in the granite blocks in his book , " Life and Work at the Great Pyramid , " had not taken that particular measurement , and he accordingly wrote to Mr . Waynman Dixon , C . E ., then in . Cairo , who , Avith Dr . Grant , made the necessary measurements , the results being on the east Aval ] 2170-5 , and on ihe west Avail , 2170-4 . *

Before entering into more particular characteristics of the Great Pyramid builders , let us note the folloAving generalities . First we find that , Avhoever the builders Avere , they reached the central land of Egypt from the East , and after accomplishing their work became spread abroad throughout the earth . Hence Ave find the monuments of the pyramid builders completing the circle of the earth , and appearing in conjunction ivith other evidences of a common knoAvledge among the origines ol the nations . We may thus easily accept the claims of these earliest erections to be national monuments .

Both Marictte Bey aud Hckckyan Ilcy have contended for this ; the latter holdingvery reasonably—that " these pyramids Avure national undertakings ; their plan and execution were decided after mature deliberation ; laws Avere passed , aud revenues provided , to carry out the public decision by the executive authorities . " |

Mr . BoiiAvick further quotes Mr . Wilson , a learned writer on the astronomy of the ancients , the Rev . E . 13 . Zincke , and Mr . Gliddon , as favouring the idea that the pyramid builders Avere Avhite men . } It is indeed sonieivhat remarkable that they should have applied to them the name of Yoingees , Avhich , found in the early Hindoo Puranas , has within modern times become corrupted into Yankees—Yoingees being the name given to the English on their arrival by the North American Indians . I may mention here that in a footnote in my recent publication I have ventured to

suggest that the term " lepers , " Avhich occurs in Manetho ' s account of the expulsion of the Shepherds from Egypt , and also in the Harris papyrus in the British Museum , is most probably a reference to the occupation of , and final expulsion from , Egyp t of a Avhite-skinned race .

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