The Great Pyramid Hoax: The Conspiracy to Conceal the True History of Ancient Egypt
by Scott Creighton
Foreword by Laird
Scranton
Despite millennia of fame, the origins of the Great
Pyramid of Giza are shrouded in mystery. Believed to be the tomb of an Egyptian
king, even though no remains have ever been found, its construction date of
roughly 2550 BCE is tied to only one piece of evidence: the crudely painted
marks within the pyramid’s hidden chambers that refer to the 4th Dynasty king
Khufu, discovered in 1837 by Colonel Howard Vyse and his team.
Using evidence from the time of the discovery of these “quarry
marks”–including surveys, facsimile drawings and Vyse’s private field
notes–along with high definition photos of the actual marks, Scott Creighton
reveals how and why the marks were faked. He investigates the anomalous and
contradictory orthography of the quarry marks through more than 75 photos and
illustrations, showing how they radically depart from the established canon of
quarry marks from this period. He explains how the orientation of the Khufu
cartouche contradicts ancient Egyptian writing convention and how one of the
signs is from a later period. Analyzing Vyse’s private diary, he reveals Vyse’s
forgery instructions to his two assistants, Raven and Hill, and what the
anachronistic sign should have been. He examines recent chemical analysis of the
marks along with the eye-witness testimony of Humphries Brewer, who worked with
Vyse at Giza in 1837 and saw forgery take place. Exploring Vyse’s background,
including his electoral fraud to become a member of the British Parliament, he
explains why he was driven to perpetrate a fraud inside the Great Pyramid.
Proving Zecharia Sitchin’s claim that the quarry marks
are forgeries and removing the only physical evidence that dates the Great
Pyramid’s construction to the reign of Khufu, Creighton’s study strikes down one
of the most fundamental assertions of orthodox Egyptologists and reopens
long-standing questions about the Great Pyramid’s true age, who really built it,
and why.