Zept Tepi
The ancient Egyptians had a concept they called the Zep Tepi(First Time), meaning the primordial golden age of the gods. According to the Egyptians’ own legends, the dynastic Egyptians enjoyed the exceptionally advanced technologies and mystical systems , which were actually the legacy of that older culture, which ended by a fierce catatstrophe. So, the Egyptians never claimed to be the first peoples to inhabit Egypt, and moreover, they never claimed to of built the Great Pyramid, Sphinx, or the Osirion.
The Edfu building texts have the history of the Zep Tepi etched in heiroglyphs, as it was passed down among the ancient priesthood. The texts describe a temple surrounded by a possibly man-made channel of water with a nearby field of reeds. This is called the Island of the Egg, and it is associated with the point of First Creation, or the Island of the Twin Flames. It is most probable that, this island was actually Atlantis..the lost continent.
The Shemsu-Hor( “Followers of Horus”), semi-divine beings who ruled pre-dynastic Egypt and, eventually by the Horus-kings of the First Dynasty circa 3100 BC. The ancient historian Manetho described a period before the rise of Menes, first king of the First Dynastic period in Egypt. The first rulers were the gods themselves, particularly Horus. Herodotus records that 11,340 years have passed since the reign of the first Pharaoh, and it is likely that this first Pharaoh was included among the Shemsu-Hor, who were recognized as being demi-divine like the later Horus-kings. Circa 3100 BC, Hor-Aha (Menes), united the Upper and Lower Egypt initiating the First Dynastic Period.
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