2/6/2013 10:40:17

 

 

 

Sakkara Necropolis

 

 

The Sakkara Necropolis was a massive library. Courtesy of both the monotheistic cultures who took it as war booty circa 3500 b.c.e and the People of Kaern who actually wrote the library previous to 3800 bce.

 

The names and definitions derives from assumptions the Esua line descendants who helped form the base of western education and were able to control any and all information in Egypt from 2000-1330 (although Jacobs line was in charge between 1600-1330; Esau’s line was still present and influential.

 

Those large coffers; perfectly fitted were in fact not coffins but extremely well made containers for something with beyond current imagination value.

Point of reference; legend has it that when the forces of Ur attacked and conquered the city of Eridu, the city of Eridu’s ziggurat (a more than five story tabernacle/tent) contained the plates of destiny. Which to create said item would require some type of mathematics to indicate said type finding out what a destiny is. Which also references the character and or real person Medusa could turn people to stone(which is more likely the). Cycladic empire which medusa was a professional in their education system could turn your life’s story into stone, in effect carving your life’s story into stone, metaphorically speaking turning someone’s life to stone. After conquests; the conqueror decides what they will write about you. The more of a threat (Esau’s line has an almost unbroken MO of destroying any and all libraries) the worse an enemy’s story was twisted from the truth. So the monotheists possessed a library of sorts which they captured from the cities they conquered ziggurat in the middle east. Assuming that under almost constant threat of attack; a major culture of the Canaan in the middle east gathered one library they would make copies. Those copies would partly be in monotheistic hands and in the writers hands. Allowing for the monotheistic to build a seriously impressive library based solely on conquering a city and taking their library. Do this a few dozen times and you wind up with what would be left of a dozen libraries. All told one very impressive library.

Which those books/materials would then have to be placed somewhere; which would require beyond extremely careful safekeeping. An 80 ton red Granit box would be sufficient with a 20 ton lid. Most western cultures store their most valuable resources in vaults built into caves or man-made tunnels. The Sakkara necropolis would be metaphorically no different.