Stone Vessels of the Pyramid of Djoser: The Original Finds of Galleries 6 &7



#saqqara #stonevases #ancientegypt
The stone vessels found under the Stepped Pyramid of Djoser and those like them have become the newest big thing in the Lost Civilization Lost Ancient High Technology industry.
The issue of provenance is an Achilles Heel in the selection of IMPOSSIBLE PRECISION therefore advanced ancient computers and machining argument.
Let’s look at those stone vessels that do have impeccable provenance. and how they were found.

Lauer, JP – La pyramide à degrés 3 Compléments (1939)
https://archive.org/details/Lauer_1939/page/n89/mode/2up

Vol 35: Annales du Service des Antiquités de l’Égypte (1935)
https://archive.org/details/ASAE-35-1935/page/n39/mode/2up

40,000 hard stone vases in Imhoteb museum
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xwOSIbQC8WM
Saqqara Part 5/5 – Imhotep (Em Hotep) museum
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wIFC13fnORE

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20 thoughts on “Stone Vessels of the Pyramid of Djoser: The Original Finds of Galleries 6 &7”

  1. C'mon mate, you still haven't explained the 0.001teenth radian's that were used to make these vases😉

    ( Just or everyone else that might see other videos on the vases, a "RADIAN" is a piece of the circumference of a circle that's length is equal to the radius of that circle. Every circle and curve anywhere ever has Radian's, a Pizza and a Doughnut both have measureable radians. )

    Another Cracker mate, keep em coming

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  2. With a detailed 3-D scan of all the shards and pieces put in a computer program, it should be possible to virtually reconstruct all these objects and make a detailed inventory of it. Wonder how so many of these things got in private hands though.

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  3. One point of the lost ancient camp (especially from Ben) is, that the design/structure of the granite vases is far superior to the alabaster ones (establishing a fictitious separation for their agenda). In the picture @7:54 one can clearly see, that both granite and alabaster vessels use the same art style / design.

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  4. As an observation I would remind people to view this debate for what it is = a business…. The LAHT just as say a fast food restaurant would do is "following their menu" which represents niche markets. So one LAHT'er focuses upon vases while another rambles endlessly about certain structures and so on much as one restaurant would hype their burgers with another their chicken sandwiches.

    This is why vase numbers is the latest soup du jour for LAHT as they proverbially "throw spaghetti" at the wall to see what sticks = and they run with it. In this case they are as always using "inferences" – specifically speaking in terms of large numbers – rather than directly addressing the nature of those vases – because that lends to their narrative.

    Say you found perhaps 50 well made vases and 900 so-so ones. That sounds normal consistent with different craftsmen of differing skill levels producing their wares. Instead speak only in terms of "thousands" – while leaving it hanging in the background as to actual quality and amounts = and the viewer's imagination will do the rest consistent with your telling them over and over about all this supposed lost LAHT…….. It is pure behavioral psychology folks. Ad men et al do it all the time to market trash.

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  5. Why would they fill those shafts with this? Broken pieces i get that, but some are still perfect.
    It seems such a waste.
    If these vases were ancient to them and far beyond what they could make, the question of why becomes even more bizarre.
    Why throw away a perfect ancient vase that can't be reproduced? It would be priceless!

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  6. I think those vases were bought to show off your status, the more expensive your decorative stone vessels the more money/power you had. Like how people spend tens of thousands on a wrist watch, it is a status symbol and at the same time you can genuinely appreciate the craftmanship and artistry. Like a super expensive Rolex takes a functional object beyond what is practical for status and artistry, similar to these stone vessels perhaps.

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  7. Odd the Egyptians just chucked the lost high technology vases in with their alleged crude ones. I thought they had immense reverence for the lost high technology precision Atlantian vases? But they just "stack them up like Tupperware" with the other ones? Amazing. It's almost like they didn't view them that way. How very peculiar indeed.

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