Egypt’s Secrets Revealed: Possibly a Second Sphinx and Mysterious Hidden Chambers?

According to Egyptologist Bassam El Shammaa’s 2007 study, there was a “second sphinx” on the Plateau of the Pyramids.
El Shammaa said that the famous half-lion, half-man statue was an Egyptian deity built near another sphinx that disappeared without a trace.

Today, our attention turns to the most recent attempt to uncover the true ancient history of an advanced civilization that left us great wonders above and below the sands of the Giza Plateau.
Ancient lost city discovered in Egypt

The first reports of a “Secret City” appeared in the World Press in the first week of March 1935. Many more were discovered in July of that year. The Sunday Express published an article by Edward Armytage. He had just returned from Egypt to England, where he had witnessed the excavation of an ancient Egyptian metropolis believed to date back 4,000 years.
Then he was quiet, as if all Egyptologists alive had lost interest in this fantastic underground metropolis. Throughout the years that followed, all of his articles focused on the tombs of the ɑп ɑггᴏⱳѕ queens. Surprisingly, at one point such a massive find of an entire underground metropolis dating back at least 4,000 years was completely ignored.
Denial of previous findings

That was some eighty years ago, and today we are faced with a similar “granite block wall” in the former Minister of State for Antiquities Affairs, Zahi Hawass. He held this position until the Egyptian revolution in 2011, which ousted Hosni Mubarak and ended Hawass’s controversial reign as supreme head of all antiquities in Egypt.
However, he retains the power of him, and he is not small. Much has been written about the Egyptian ‘Indiana Jones’ (Zahi Hawass), who smiles meaningfully one moment and turns crimson with rage the next when he is questioned. This aspect of his personality is extensively narrated in the book “Breaking the Mirror of Heaven” by Robert Bauval and Ahmed Osman.
However, such an attitude does not explain why Zahi Hawass has publicly said that there is nothing under the Sphinx, not a tunnel, not a single chamber, despite several photographs of him entering the lower pits of the Sphinx’s head. and another in the back of the body. . Should we ignore what we have seen several times before and accept such denials without question?
Statements Contradict Photographic Evidence

He seems to have ignored inquiries about the underground tunnels under the Giza Plateau and the chambers under the Sphinx, claiming that further investigation was impossible as the rooms were sealed or filled with water. This could be true. However, in one of the images of a trailing shaft running down the side of the Sphinx, we can see that the ground is parched.
A hole in the head of the Sphinx

Vivant Denon drew the Sphinx in 1798, although he did not replicate it perfectly. He must have known there was a hole in the top of his head since he had sketched a picture of a guy being dragged along.
A drawing is hardly evidence, but an aerial shot of the Sphinx taken from a hot air balloon in the 1920s revealed that there is such an opening at the top of its head.
The sphinx head puzzle
According to Tony Bushby in his “The Secret of the Bible,” a fragmented Sumerian cylinder tells a story that could easily be interpreted as having taken place at Giza.
A new study now indicates that the body of the Sphinx was carved from natural stone when there were frequent heavy rains, and this takes us back to the same time that Robert Bauval and Robert Schoch calculated the construction of the Pyramids of the ‘Belt of Orion’. ‘ that is, around 10,450 BC.
the second sphinx

The Giza complex (the ancient Egyptian term Gisa meaning “Hewn Stone”) has been sketched since 1665, with some depicting two heads “poking” out of the sand, one with female characters, possibly the second Sphinx.
It was an ancient Egyptian custom to recruit two lions, known as Akerw, outside their gates for divine protection, which would lead us directly to a mysterious mound near the Sphinx, which Gerry Cannon (Book: Secrets of the Giza Plateau and a second sphinx Revealed) identified and measured.
According to one source, one would have thought the Egyptian authorities would have warmly welcomed this mysterious, large, cloaked form so close to the Sphinx, but Hawass and Mark Lehner would not listen or pay attention to it.
Gerry had contacted someone at a reputable institute in Cairo who could detect objects under the sand. This person requested the Supreme Council of Antiquities to investigate the mound, but they did not respond. No one else was allowed to explore the specific area of ​​the pile where we think a Second Sphinx could be unearthed. They certainly had a reason for this!
Why the denial?
Why would these two Egyptologists be so worried about discovering something that had been lost for centuries? Is it conceivable that they don’t want to expose what’s behind that mound? It is illogical to oppose any kind of survey or even the taking of a simple aerial image, which may lead to the discovery of another great wonder of the world, attracting many thousands more tourists to Egypt.
They don’t even admit to inspecting the mystery mound, and if they had, they would have been the first to admit it. Zahi Hawass seems to have a plan to uphold the conventional view of ancient Egyptian history (let nothing stand in the way of traditional history), regardless of how many new finds contradict what is now considered true.
Gerry Cannon has previously hinted at a timeline for the construction of the three great pyramids, as well as the Sphinx, which is many thousands of years older than most of us assume. Based on ancient documents and data he presented, he also identified an undiscovered mound on the Giza plateau where another sphinx is most likely hiding.

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