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Ancient Civilizations Season 6 Episode 5
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00:0022 miles south of Giza, this southern region of the pyramid field has long been known as a major
00:06piece of the Memphite necropolis and is a royal burial ground for several Egyptian kings
00:13dating back to the first dynasty. As the dilapidating pyramids and mestavas protrude
00:21above the sacred sands of Saqqara, the true power and purpose of this region has puzzled
00:27alternative and mainstream researchers. As more relics are revealed, what lies beneath the sands
00:36of Saqqara offers a glimpse into a potential pre-Diluvian underworld that defies all understanding.
00:45If you were to pick a particular dot of real estate on the planet, this massive planet that we live on,
00:51let's pick a dot that is the strangest, most enigmatic, most powerful. You're talking about
00:58the west bank of the Nile near Cairo, present-day Cairo, encompassing the Great Pyramid Complex,
01:05encompassing Dashur, the Pyramid of Sozer, and Saqqara, Abu Sir, Abu Ghurab, this massive field of
01:13energy and focused intention that we can't even duplicate today. And you have to ask,
01:20why was it built? Who built it? What is going on here? And as I look at it, the answer has to involve
01:28Orion. It has to involve resurrection. And ultimately, it likely involves the earth itself
01:37and this concept of the earth as a generator of resonance and earth energy.
01:45Arguably, the biggest and most important cemetery, multry area, and necropolis is that of Saqqara,
01:56which served specifically Memphis. In fact, they're both on exactly the same latitude. So Saqqara
02:04is where the demarcation is between North and South Egypt, or Upper and Lower Egypt. And it's a massive,
02:14sprawling area of tombs, of mastibas, of pyramids, and other much stranger structures.
02:24And when it comes to trying to understand Saqqara, it's very, very confusing and, you know,
02:29disorienting, because there's so much going on underground. That's what's so bizarre about this
02:34place. Some people have suggested that there's some kind of magic there, some kind of power that's
02:41in the land. So we've got this real mystical world going on beneath the surface. As of 2020,
02:49only about 1% of the known archaeological field has been excavated in Saqqara. And this is what makes
02:59so much of the mystery so fascinating for this generation and future generations, for so many
03:06people, young people. The idea is that everything has already been found, everything's already been
03:11excavated. That is not the case with Saqqara. We have generations of mystery and exploration that lie
03:19ahead of us. The Step Pyramid of Djoser, referred to by most scholars as being the first Egyptian
03:27pyramid, is the most famous monument in this region. According to Mainstream, this pyramid was built for
03:35Djoser, an Egyptian pharaoh and first king of the third dynasty. The purpose and influence of this
03:43stairway to heaven has many more questions than answers. If Saqqara truly dates to the time that
03:52we believe that it dates between 12,000 and 13,000 years before present as part of the Giza complex,
04:00the Djoser pyramid probably was not built at the same time. It came later. The pyramid is not in its
04:08original form. It is believed that the outer casing has been stripped away and what we're looking at
04:13was never meant to be seen by the naked eye. The six levels of the stonework that we see now was never
04:20meant to be seen. When we look at the Step Pyramid, not only is it iconic because of the steps that it has,
04:28but beneath it is an even bigger mystery. Because to start off with, a massive gigantic area was cut out
04:40of the bedrock, going down hundreds of feet. And into this was placed a huge sarcophagus chamber.
04:50And, of course, within this, the sarcophagus of Djoser was contained. But leading away from this massive
05:01sarcophagus chamber were a series of tunnels that went off towards the west, the east, and the south.
05:12And these went on for nearly hundreds of yards. And when they were explored, it was found that they
05:22contained arguably as many as 40,000 bowls and jars that were beautifully worked in hard stone. Many of
05:33these jars were from the pre-dynastic period, so that's beyond 3000 BC. What the hell were they doing there?
05:40What was 40,000 jars and bowls doing in these tunnels?
05:49When you're looking at the Step Pyramid, Saqqara, which was built by Imhotep, the son of Pata,
05:57for his king, Zozer, you're looking at a legacy that points directly to Sirius. Because as the son of
06:08Pata, Imhotep, is considered the first polymath on earth. He's the da Vinci of his time.
06:16Imhotep was skilled in architecture, philosophy, and medicine. He was also a student of Toph.
06:24We know him better as Asclepius, the god of medicine, holding his rod of Asclepius,
06:30which we see as a common symbol for medicine and healing arts.
06:36Asclepius was known as a great healer. And in fact, in mythology, where Orion was stung by a
06:43scorpion at his foot, he experienced something that took him to the brink of death. In fact,
06:50one would say in many of the stories that actually he died. But he was saved by Asclepius and his rod,
06:57the rod of Asclepius being the same as a Caduceus symbol, sometimes depicted with only one snake.
07:03Asclepius today would be referenced as the constellation Ophiuchus.
07:09Imhotep was an initiate of the mystery tradition, especially the hermetic wisdom,
07:17the tradition that extends all the way back to the Egyptian god Toth, which brought in alchemy,
07:22which brought in study of the stars, which brought in understanding of, you know, alignments with the
07:27cardinal directions, the magnetics, how to harness it. All of this wisdom, this ancient wisdom, both
07:33alchemical wisdom as well as architectural wisdom, was brought through that mystery school tradition
07:39into Imhotep.
07:41All of that comes together at Zoser's pyramid. When you're standing before it, on the outside,
07:49you're looking at the step pyramid, the stairway to heaven, then when you're privileged to go
07:54into it, as we can today, and you drop down 90 feet down this shaft, drilled exactly into the
08:01center of the pyramid, and there you see his granite sarcophagus, you realize that you're dealing with a
08:09multifaceted device or technology. This is all working together.
08:15And you recognize that this has extraterrestrial connections as well. This was important to Earth.
08:24And this is the start in the modern era, just 5,700 years ago, of the reinvigoration of this
08:32knowledge that came from the stars.
08:34Roughly one mile northwest of Zoser's pyramid, a network of subterranean chambers known as the
08:45Serapium defies all understanding.
08:50When we go into Saqqara, and a very unassuming staircase that leads underground, what we find
08:57is something that looks like it comes from a science fiction Hollywood movie. It is a high-tech,
09:04corridor, with a series of chambers offset as we walk along this highly polished limestone and granite
09:15structure. The ceilings are high. The stonework is perfection.
09:21The Serapium are underground galleries in Saqqara. And underground, I mean gigantic tunnels. They are
09:32maybe a large two and a half meter, and right and left of these tunnels are niches. And in every niche is a sarcophagus.
09:40And this sarcophagus is gigantic. Only the lid has a weight of 20 to 40 tons. Only the lid.
09:48When we come to the Serapium near Saqqara, we find a place of just immense mystery, more than perhaps
10:02most can even contemplate. Discovered in 1851 by the Frenchman Auguste Marriott, he was in the Cairo area
10:11looking for early Christian manuscripts on behalf of the Louvre. He's told a legend by the local
10:17Bedouins of this avenue of Sphinxes that leads to this subterranean complex. He goes over to Saqqara.
10:24He finds the head of a Sphinx. And he finds another and another. And he follows the trail, digs down 30,
10:3260 feet, 60 feet, and enters into this gallery where he finds these 24 granite boxes all lined up in a row
10:43in individual galleries. He sees salt calcified on the walls as he enters. And he's confused by all
10:51this. He's told the legend that these are sarcophagi for the sacred Apis bulls. And he must have had the
10:59same reaction that a contemporary visitor to the Serapium has. That doesn't make any sense. This
11:06doesn't add up. These are massive boxes that are so perfectly constructed that it's a way over-the-top
11:15misfit to say that this is the sarcophagi for the sacred Apis bull. So what are these boxes? What are these
11:25coffers? In 2001, I gained permission from Zai Hawass, who was the director of the Giza Plateau at that
11:33time. We went down to Saqqara and to a mysterious place called the Serapium. I had a flashlight with
11:43me. I had a square that was calibrated to within 50 millionths of an inch. A straight edge that was
11:53calibrated to within one ten-thousandths of an inch. And it was 12 inches long. I went inside this one
11:59box. It had the corner blown off of it. And I put the square on the underside of the lid. Then I went to
12:07the opposite side, did the same thing. With those two photographs, what you see is flat surfaces, a reflection
12:16of my hand and the gauges with no aberrations. And the condition that exists there is that you have two
12:24vertical surfaces opposite each other that are perfectly parallel. I don't think people really understand
12:31what it takes to perform that kind of work and achieve those kind of results. I have been through
12:41the place since then with engineers, with craftspeople, and everybody is absolutely blown away and amazed at it.
12:52And they know that these artifacts are a smoking gun from a very advanced civilization.
12:58When we look at the sarcophagus, what we find is that these are not made of the red granite that we see in
13:09Aswan. Because the granite is made of three primary minerals, quartz, feldspar, and mica. In the case of
13:18Aswan granite, we have rose quartz, and we have a pink feldspar. This is not the case. When in Saqqara, what we find
13:26is something called black granite is something called black granite. And this is fascinating to me,
13:31because it is a lower quartz, only about 20% quartz, rather than the 84% that we find in Aswan.
13:39Lower quartz granite, high, high percentage of biotite mica. Geologically, what does this tell us?
13:48The mica itself, the biotite, is a powerful insulator. Whatever was happening inside of that sarcophagus,
13:57these devices were built to contain whatever was happening, to contain the energy, to protect
14:04whatever was happening inside, and also to protect whatever was happening inside from an external
14:11environment. These structures were so large, these granite sarcophagi, so large, it would be
14:18impossibly difficult to get them into the structure. We also see the remnants of what looks like there was
14:25a calamity or a mistake, because one of the sarcophagi was left near the entrance and abandoned.
14:32We don't know why. It's as if they took it in, or were trying to rapidly take it out,
14:38right before a cataclysm, and they just left it right in the center of the entryway.
14:44The enigma of this place, and the energetic that comes off of these particular sarcophagi,
14:51is beyond description. It's not stranger than we imagined. It's stranger, frankly, than can be imagined.
14:59The question had always been, well, what were they doing? What were they using these boxes for?
15:11Why are they so precise? Obviously, to the expense that it would take to create them,
15:20they had to be extremely important. Those kind of tolerances and precision are not crafted into a
15:26product for no reason at all. There is a very specific and precise reason for it.
15:33As the mysteries mount in Saqqara, recent experiments raise new questions about this region of the
15:40necropolis. Inspired by Kirlian photography, BioWell is a gas discharge visualization device
15:48with a special sensor that reads the energies of the quantum field, and helps alternative researchers
15:54understand how this field reacts in and around humans and monuments.
16:01We came to Saqqara area, and when I started doing measurements, I came to understanding it is a very,
16:08very special place. I've done measurements nearby Josser pyramid, and we were able to come inside Josser
16:17pyramid, and they did measurements inside as well. Energy was very high. Then, of course, inside Josser pyramid,
16:26you have big area, empty area, very high, deep on the ground, about 40, 35, 40 meters. And there, at the bottom,
16:38bottom, we have a huge cube. It's not a tom. And you can go down there, energy there was very high.
16:49So, at the top, some level of energy, but when you go down, it's much higher. So, it is absolutely clear that it is something special.
17:01And, even more than that, they have Serapium. They have 24 granite boxes.
17:10Our device, we have little BioWell Mini. It operates on Bluetooth through its mobile phone. And it works very well. I did many, many measurements.
17:20I did many, many measurements. When we came to Serapium, I was trying to do measurements. Impossible. No Bluetooth signal.
17:29So, device shows it is Bluetooth connected. On the phone, I don't see connection. So, it means that it was some electromagnetic field
17:40that totally suppressed this Bluetooth connection. We know this very well in our technology, because all military sites and governmental sites, they use it.
17:51Why in this underground tunnel, with these granite boxes, they have this electromagnetic field? Why?
17:59We think that all these pyramids, this Serapium, all these shafts, it was a type of communication technology. And it was designed to communicate with, maybe, some other civilizations.
18:15Because all this indicates us that these pyramids and other subjects was created by some high, very high technology.
18:28Millions of people visit the Step Pyramid at Saqqara. They visit the Giza Plateau.
18:34But most don't have a fundamental understanding of what they're looking at, in terms of the purpose of these pyramids.
18:41Nor do they appreciate what is going on underground.
18:45We know for an absolute fact that eight miles of tunnels fan out from the Step Pyramid at Saqqara, from the stairway to heaven.
18:53We have photos of the galleries. These are all painted, and there were store rooms where there was treasure for Zoser and other kings as well.
19:04The entire Giza Plateau is believed to be honeycombed with these tunnels. We've actually found them today.
19:11We don't know how deep they go, in other words, how many levels deep they go, or how far they fan out.
19:18This is a closely guarded secret in Egypt, even today. It's off limits to the general public.
19:24Because it raises these questions. If what we're seeing on the surface is only a fraction of what actually the entire complex must have been,
19:35what exactly is going on underneath the Giza Plateau? Underneath Saqqara? Underneath Abusir?
19:41All these other locations most clearly connect with one another.
19:46Everything that we see under Saqqara is actually part of the Giza Plateau.
19:52It's about 22 miles away.
19:554,000 square acres is what we're looking at.
19:59It's a huge, it's a massive place.
20:02But rather than thinking of it as separate from Giza, if we can think of this as a continuous subterranean complex,
20:09now it begins to make sense.
20:11From an archeological perspective, it looks like we are viewing one massive complex.
20:18There's a whole connection between these pyramids.
20:22Some people have suggested there's underground networks associated with them.
20:26We certainly have that at the Giza Plateau and at Saqqara, for instance.
20:30Some people have suggested there's some kind of energy source that's being manipulated along this length of pyramids going all the way down south.
20:40And the energy is then brought up and the pyramids are then used as these kind of power plants,
20:46according to authors like Chris Dunn and others.
20:49And so there's something really profound about this because there's even the work of like John Burke,
20:55who believes that they were using certain materials and certain locations in the geology and the magnetism of the earth to actually release ions.
21:05So you have this fertilizing presence, this movement across this particular alignment of pyramids.
21:11And this has been like scientifically tested as well.
21:14So there's definitely something in this.
21:16Nikola Tesla was very fascinated with the ancient Egyptian pyramids and he felt that they were more than just places of ceremony or sacred burials.
21:29He believed that these pyramids were energy devices.
21:34He saw the whole earth as a generator of this great magnetic field in the core of the earth was where the generator was within the magma.
21:44And he felt that there was something about both the construction of the pyramids and their pyramidal shape, the triangular shape, creating a cone,
21:57creating a way of directing the energy that came up from the earth and then amplifying it somehow through the maybe through the quartz that's in the stone that was used.
22:09And he felt that you could have wireless transmission of energy.
22:13And this inspired his Tesla towers.
22:16And he made them somewhat pyramidal in shape and felt that if we can harness the natural energy between the earth and the ionosphere,
22:25that we can generate electricity and then wirelessly transmit it from one place to another place.
22:32As the underworld of the Memphite necropolis is slowly revealed, there is little doubt that the pyramids along the west bank of the Nile were using the properties of specific stones to enhance their function and design.
22:51But the question remains, was the purpose strictly for energetic production or was this spiritual transformation technology left to us from our pre-Diluvian ancestors?
23:05As with most ancient mysteries in Egypt, the search for clues returns to Giza to discover the strongest evidence of ancient energetic production.
23:16Inspired by the work of Nikola Tesla, the 1998 release of the Giza Power Plant used an engineering perspective of the Great Pyramid of Giza to explain how this mysterious monument could function as a free energy device.
23:35I came to the conclusion and presented evidence that all the features inside the Great Pyramid support the idea it functioned as a power plant.
23:44And it was used to draw vibrations from the earth and convert those vibrations to electromagnetic energy and then convey that energy to the outside via the shafts of the King's Chamber.
23:58The most important aspect in my new book, the Giza, the Tesla connection, is the discovery by NASA physicist Dr. Friedman Freund, who discovered the physics behind earthquake lights.
24:15And the collection of evidence that he gathered shows that there is a process that happens in the lithosphere, in the igneous rock, where when the rock is stressed, it releases electrons that shoot to the surface to the highest point in the surrounding area.
24:36That really expanded the whole power plant theory, considering that the Great Pyramid is on a high plateau, and it certainly is the highest point on the surface.
24:49And that if you could stimulate rocks underneath the earth to release electrons, the lithosphere is like a huge battery.
25:01And it's like 100 kilometers thick, though.
25:04So you have a huge potential battery, where all you have to do is shake the electrons loose, and they will come rushing to the surface.
25:14So basically, my concept originally was a power plant, but now I describe it as an electron harvester, because what you are doing is you're harvesting electrons from the lithosphere.
25:27And the other part to that is that the stimulation of the release of electrons in the lithosphere can't be limited to just one pyramid, so it has to serve all the pyramids.
25:41As the shroud over this vast tunnel system beneath the pyramid field is lifted, what other relics will be brought to the surface to help alternative researchers connect the pieces of this ancient puzzle and challenge the mainstream theories around the pre-dynastic power and purpose of this mysterious necropolis?
26:06The more we keep digging, the more we entertain different ideas and use our imaginations, we can arrive at the truth.
26:18Because just to say right now that we know all that there is to know about the life on this planet in prehistory is a crime.
26:30I think the young people today have been energized by a new understanding of their ancient ancestors.
26:40They will continue to rewrite history because I think that's what we need to do.
26:46We can't be stuck in the past and not be willing to rewrite history.
26:51Everything belongs to the future right now.
26:54Everything belongs to the future right now.
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