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Correlation between Tutankhamun and Pacal

The Tutankhamun Prophecies by Maurice M. Cotterell

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Published in 
Egypt
 · 1 week ago
Correlation between Tutankhamun and Pacal
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Since the opening of Tutankhamun's tomb, scholars have unsuccessfully tried to explain the legacy of the enigmatic pharaoh. Maurice Cotterel, who has long studied the hidden meanings of Mayan carvings, sheds new light on the mysteries of ancient Egypt. Using a key discovered in the pyramids of Mexico, Cotterel has decoded the treasures of the boy king's tomb and revealed the profound meanings of sacred secrets buried along the Nile more than three thousand years ago.

Was Akhenaten really Tutankhamun's father? Was Tutankhamun's tomb truly looted? What is the connection between the Mayan leader, Lord Pacal, and the Egyptian ruler, Tutankhamun?

In solving these and other enigmas, Cotterel uncovers an ancient wisdom that still lives today, hidden in sacred geometry and safeguarded as a treasure by the Church, Freemasonry, and other secret societies. For the first time, Cotterel reveals the reasons behind such secrecy—reasons that affect the future of every one of us and weigh heavily upon it. Here they are:

Once upon a time, there was a boy king, born of immaculate conception on the banks of the Nile more than 3,000 years ago. He taught his people the supreme science of the sun, worshiped it as a god of fertility, and performed miracles. It is said that upon his death, he ascended to the heavens. They called him the Feathered Serpent (He was the noble Pacal.)

Pacal
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Pacal

According to legend, a bearded white man with blond hair and blue eyes brought supreme knowledge to the Maya. He taught them the mysteries of the heavens, the laws of mathematics and astronomy, and artisanal techniques. He showed them how to build pyramids and stone palaces, but most importantly, he taught them wisdom. He proclaimed that purification would come through sacrifice, and purified souls would be granted the gift of immortality.

It was said that upon his death, he became the morning star, Venus—the brightest celestial body of the night sky—and lived in a precious house of jade, silver feathers, and shells. He appeared among the Olmecs, Teotihuacanos, Maya, Toltecs, and Aztecs. They called him the Feathered Serpent, Quetzalcoatl, or Kukulkan, the god of goodness and wisdom.

Others also spoke of the bearded white man. The Inca in Peru called him Viracocha, while their neighbors, the Aymara, referred to him as Hyustus. In Bolivia, he was known as the "god of wind," and to the Polynesians, he was Kon-Tiki, the sun god. Wherever he went, his promise was always the same: one day, he would return.

The decoded treasures of the Maya tell us that the noble Pacal, priest and king, leader of the Maya, lived and ruled in Palenque from the age of nine. He was known as Quetzalcoatl, the Feathered Serpent, the supreme god of the Maya. He was buried in the Temple of the Inscriptions, and his tomb, discovered in 1952, contained jade artifacts, feathered serpents, and shells.

The Maya had learned from their master that the sun influences fertility, that its rays bring joy to some and pain to others. Out of reverence, they named their children based on their birth date within an astrological cycle.

Tutankhamun
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Tutankhamun

They also believed that the world had been created four times and each time was destroyed catastrophically. They blamed the sun for these destructions, as it was their god. Le Plongeon, a sea captain and explorer of Mayan civilization in the late 19th century, theorized that the Maya practiced hypnosis, induced clairvoyance, and used "magic mirrors" to predict the future. He was convinced they had sailed westward from Central America to establish civilizations in the Pacific, then advanced across the Indian Ocean and the Persian Gulf to Egypt.

To support his theory, he compared numerous examples of Mayan and Egyptian architecture, writings, and beliefs, particularly their shared solar worship. In the book The Supergods, it is said that spiritual masters such as Krishna, Buddha, Jesus, and the noble Pacal periodically brought super-knowledge to Earth, enabling miracles and deep understanding of astronomy, while also recognizing the value of spirituality. These masters taught humanity science and religion at the highest levels.

These "supergods" left their mark between periods of catastrophe, encoded in their treasures and monuments. This is how knowledge has been passed down through 5,000-year periods. Different supergods, like Tutankhamun, brought the same knowledge across history during endless cycles of Earth's progress and destruction. Each of them, like the sun, was associated with light.

Le Plongeon was one of the first to believe that the cultures of Egypt and Mexico evolved from the same source. Both peoples worshiped the sun, built pyramids, revered a pantheon of gods, and depicted the lotus flower in their treasures as a sacred symbol of the sun. Both civilizations shared a similar 5,000-year epoch.

In Mexico, the Feathered Serpent was venerated as the supreme god. In Egypt, the serpent and the vulture (feathers) were symbols of royalty, representing the divine blood of kings. However, only one king in Egypt wore both the serpent and feathers on his forehead: the boy king Tutankhamun, who, like the noble Pacal, ascended to the throne at the age of nine.

  1. Was Tutankhamun, who bore the serpent and feathers on his forehead, the fifth supergod?
  2. Did he bring the supreme solar science to the Egyptians?
  3. Did he encode knowledge, like the Maya, in the treasures of his people?
  4. Was he associated with the bearded white man?

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