Monday, September 27, 2021
Did a curse of "The Egyptian Crocodile Queen" attend the exhibition's arrival? (third in The Egyptian Mythology Murders series)
Did a curse of the Crocodile Queen come with the Egyptian exhibition?
In the unnerving footsteps of THE EGYPTIAN MYTHOLOGY MURDERS and THE OBELISK PROPHECY...
When a new blockbuster ancient Egyptian exhibition arrives, mysterious events and a string of killings soon follow.
The investigative team of Jennefer, a curator, and Jon a police antiquities detective, must track down the shocking truth in a hidden underworld beneath the city - and discover a shocking secret from ancient Egypt, linked to a modern day conspiracy that takes its impetus from the ancient past.
About Sobekneferu, the Crocodile Queen – ancient Egypt’s ‘Mother of Dragons’
Sobekneferu was a 12th Dynasty queen who worshipped the crocodile-headed god Sobek. Her name means ‘the beauty of Sobek’ and she rose to become Egypt’s first attested female pharaoh.
In an astonishing twist of history, though she is little known today, the influence of this one shadowy queen, out of all of Egypt’s many illustrious queens, has lived on through the royal houses of Europe in the form of an esoteric society, Societas Draconis. Sobekneferu is revered as Queen of The Dragon (Sacred Crocodile) Court, whose mystical rituals are still practiced to this day.
Some historians have also identified Sobekneferu as the adoptive mother of Moses. When Hebrew mothers wanted to spare their newborn males from pharaoh’s edict and the blades of his executioners, they turned to Mother Nile in their hour of desperation, just as Egyptian mothers of unwanted babies had done before. They set their babies loose on the river in baskets of reeds daubed with pitch to find their fate.
Many babies were taken by crocodiles.
One of them may have been taken by the Crocodile Queen-to-be, Princess Sobekneferu, who drew him from the reeds and named him Moses and brought him up as her son and a prince of the crocodile court.
(Opening excerpt)
Chapter 1
The British Museum, London
They moved in a slow motion dance, bearing precious gifts from ancient Egypt.
Cranes, stackers and palette trucks shifted hundreds of artefacts in orange crates into place in the British Museum’s Sainsbury Exhibition Gallery.
Banners of a crocodile-headed god and an Egyptian queen filled the space, emblazoned with the words.
TREASURES OF EGYPT’S
CROCODILE QUEEN
A new blockbuster exhibition from Cairo was just days away from opening...
Third in the series on Amazon Kindle: 'THE EGYPTIAN CROCODILE QUEEN'
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