Universitätsbibliothek HeidelbergUniversitätsbibliothek Heidelberg
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Proctor, Richard A.
The Great Pyramid: observatory, tomb, and temple — New York, 1883

DOI Page / Citation link:
https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.15#0055

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THE RELIGION OF THE GREAT PYRAMID. 45

who knew not its true use, until it was finally
placed as the chief stone of the corner. Whence
naturally, ' whosoever shall fall upon it '—that is,
upon the pyramid religion—' shall be broken ; but
on whomsoever it shall fall it will grind him to
powder,'

If we examine the relations actually presented
by the Great Pyramid—its geographical position,
dimensions, shape, and internal structure—without
hampering ourselves with the tenets of the new
faith on the one hand, or on the other with any
serious anxiety to disprove them, we shall find
much to suggest that the builders of the pyramid
were ingenious mathematicians, who had made
some progress in astronomy, though not so much
as they had made in the mastery of mechanical
and scientific difficulties.

The first point to be noticed is the geographical
position of the Great Pyramid, so far, at least, as
this position affects the aspect of the heavens,
viewed from the pyramid as from an observatory.
Little importance, I conceive, can be attached to
purely geographical relations in considering the
pyramid's position. Professor Smyth notes that the
pyramid is peculiarly placed with respect to the
mouth of the Nile, standing ' at the southern apex
of the Delta-land of Egypt.' This region being
 
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