door to the afterlife - Egypt and Malta
door of the dead - found in egyptian tombs
Egyptian tombs are famous for their "door to the afterlife also known as a false door, phantom door, door of the dead etc.
the "temples" of malta are said to be much older than the egyptian temples and the civilisation that built the maltese structures suddenly vanished. it has been suggested that some of them
moved to egypt and this is why egypts culture and temple building skills suddenly started and increased. i have no issue with this, i am not saying it is a fact but i dont see how you can argue that it can not be considered in the equation.
phantom door found in egypts tombs
if maltas temple builders did move to egypt then some of their culture and skills should appear in the old egyptian culture. i dont know much about the old egyptian culture but 1 thing i noticed was that some of the doorways in the malta temples look similar to the images of the door to the afterlife or door of the dead that are found in egyptian tombs. could they be images or memories of a previous important part of the process or knowledge that they had which came from the maltese temple builders?
if those that masterminded the building of the egyptian tombs were part of the maltese temple builders sect then they may have incorporated this design into the tombs, even though in theory they would not work the same as they would do in the old temples back in malta.
egyptian door to the afterlife and a false door found in egypts tombs
doorways and false door ways found in Maltas temples
"egyptian" door to the afterlife in mnajdra temple malta?
door of the dead or false door at mnajdra temple malta?
the image on the left is a real false door as it leads to the tiniest of spaces and is in a room beside the main entrance to the large temple on the left. you have to go in the roped off area to find it. it really is a false door that leads nowhere.
gateway to the afterlife - mnajdra temple malta?
when you look down the line of this temple at the mnajdra complex you can see a number of doorways and outlines as they get smaller in the distance
doorways of the dead? original egypt phantom door at mnajdra temple malta?
why are there so many doors leading into or out of this section of the mnajdra temple complex. why do you need so many doors?
doorway to the afterlife or the door of the dead at the mnajdra temple malta?
the entrance to the main temple at mnajdra is a huge affair for a maltese temple, one of the largest of this type on the island and its many temples. although not a doorway that leads nowhere it is still aligned with other doorways and "shelves" in the temple itself. giving itself a similar image to the layered egyptian door to the afterlife.
what is fascinating about the entrance is the floor slab with a massive quartz crystal line going through it. i have not yet found a mention of it in the books so it is either something new that was added or not been noted as significant or i have not read the right books.
i have found large amounts of quartz around the island but never anything like this in a temple. the only other bit of quartz i have found on a temple is the ggantija temple in gozo where it looks like the large wall block to the right of the 1 part they allow you in has been zapped and the material transformed or coated in quartz
mnajdra temple malta and massive quartz crystal in its entrace stone
if this quartz slab is original can it be explained in an Electric Universe? here are some thoughts on a possible explanation
* the temples were energy structures and not firstly and only temples to gods
* they used the increased natural energy/power flowing through the Electric Universe at that time
* they put the extra "temples" or apses into them to boost the power supply that started to dwindle
* the power current suddenly stopped and they got a massive amount of back emf (counter emf), this caused the fire damage and vitrification found in lots of "temples", structures, "hill forts" etc around the world
* this power surge transformed that quartz slab or the outside of the limestone block at ggantija temple in gozo