Thoth Hermes Trismegistus and His Ancient School of Mysteries

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14 February, 2015 - 12:39 Katrina Sisowath Thoth Hermes Trismegistus and his Ancient School of Mysteries Thoth Hermes Trismegistus is portrayed by the Egyptians as the moon god with the body of a man, head of an ibis, and a crescent moon over his head. His symbol was the winged serpent staff. He was the god of wisdom, letters, and time. But he was not only known to the Egyptians. To the Sumerians he was Ningizzida; he may have been Enoch to the Jews, Odin to the Scandinavians, Wotan to the Teutons, and some even suggest Buddha. Before he was revered as a god, he was the first great Egyptian philosopher and founder of the Ancient Mystery Schools, receiving his wisdom while in meditative trances, writing over 40 books including (allegedly) the Emerald Tablet, The Book of Thoth and The Divine Pymander, with the Book of Thoth only being given to his enlightened initiates of the Mysteries.

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Thoth Hermes Trismegistus is portrayed by the Egyptians as the moon god with the body of a man, head of an ibis, and a crescent moon over his head. His symbol was the winged serpent staff. He was the god of wisdom, letters, and time. But he was not only known to the Egyptians. To the Sumerians he was Ningizzida; he may have been Enoch to the Jews, Odin to the Scandinavians, Wotan to the Teutons, and some even suggest Buddha.

Transcript of Thoth Hermes Trismegistus and His Ancient School of Mysteries

Page 1: Thoth Hermes Trismegistus and His Ancient School of Mysteries

14 February, 2015 - 12:39 Katrina Sisowath

Thoth Hermes Trismegistus and his Ancient School of Mysteries

Thoth Hermes Trismegistus is portrayed by the Egyptians as the moon god with the body of a

man, head of an ibis, and a crescent moon over his head. His symbol was the winged serpent

staff. He was the god of wisdom, letters, and time. But he was not only known to the Egyptians.

To the Sumerians he was Ningizzida; he may have been Enoch to the Jews, Odin to the

Scandinavians, Wotan to the Teutons, and some even suggest Buddha.

Before he was revered as a god, he was the first great Egyptian philosopher and founder of the

Ancient Mystery Schools, receiving his wisdom while in meditative trances, writing over 40 books

including (allegedly) the Emerald Tablet, The Book of Thoth and The Divine Pymander, with the

Book of Thoth only being given to his enlightened initiates of the Mysteries.

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A reconstruction of what the Emerald Tablet is believed to have looked like by the International

Alchemy Guild.  (Image source).

The topics he covered ranged from medicine, chemistry, law, art, music, rhetoric, magic,

philosophy, geography, mathematics, anatomy, and oratory. To the Egyptians, his knowledge

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was so vast and all-encompassing that they first began to credit him as the communicator with

the gods, eventually inducting him into the Egyptian pantheon.

Whether or not one agrees his is the hand that penned the books attributed to him, a quick

perusal or in-depth study resounds in most readers, due to the similarity with Buddhism and

Christianity. Perhaps the clearest examples are his teachings on reincarnation and the creation

of the world.

Thoth, the ancient Egyptian god of wisdom, depicted with the body of a man, head of an ibis, and

a crescent moon over his head. (Vladimiraz / Dreamstime.com)

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Nothing is for certain about the Book of Thoth other than the fact that it was written in Egyptian

Hieroglyphics.  It was kept in a golden box in the inner sanctuary of the temple and only the

highest initiate of the Hermetic Arcanum Mystery School had the key to it. It is said the book

described the Key to Immortality, the process achieved through awakening certain areas of the

brain, similar to the Buddhist monks’ practices.  Gardner and other authors claimed the

awakening of the brain was achieved through meditation, the use of a white powder, and the

priestesses’ sacred essence.  

The most powerful of the Mystery Schools was known as the Royal School of the Master

Craftsmen at Karnak, founded by Pharaoh Thuthmosis III, though as with all the Mystery

Schools, it is commonly believed that the true founders resided in Sumeria, emigrating to Egypt,

which ties in to Sitchin’s claims that Enki and his sons (including Ningizzida) had Magan (Egypt)

as their domain.

This school was also known as the Great White Brotherhood due to the members choice of

raiment (white robes) and their dedication to producing the white powder known to the

Mesopotamians as Shem-an-na, the High-Ward Fire Stone, or ‘white bread’ to the Egyptians.

Pictures of it show it being offered to the Pharaohs, in the shape of a cone.

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Man holding the Shem-an-na, white powder (subtleenergies.com)

Petrie discovered on the top of Mount Sinai, an Egyptian Temple which contained a bewildering

discovery:  laying some inches deep beneath heavy flagstones in a storeroom was a

considerable supply of the finest pure white, unadulterated powder. Copper smelting and animal

sacrifice were quickly ruled out.

Some of the mysterious powder was taken back to Britain for analysis and examination, but no

results were ever published. The rest was left open to the elements after 3000 years to become a

victim of the desert winds. What has become apparent, however, is that this powder was

seemingly identical to the ancient Mesopotamian fire-stone or shem-an-na - the substance that

was made into bread-cakes and used to feed the Babylonian kings and the pharaohs of Egypt.

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This, of course, explains the temple inscriptions denoting the importance of bread and light, while

the white powder (the shem-an-na) has been identified with the sacred manna that Aaron placed

in the Ark of the Covenant.

Petrie discovered a large quantity of pure white powder in a temple on top of Mount Sinai.

‘Ascent of the lower ranges of Mount Sinai’. Coloured lithograph by Louis Haghe after David

Roberts, 1849. (Wikimedia Commons)

Eventually the Mystery Schools went into decline as new Dynasties emerged. The initiates left

Egypt and brought the Book of Thoth to another land. Where it is now, no one knows, though

supposedly the chain of succession of Grand Master since Thoth, has remained unbroken. The

Rosicrucians are said to be descended from his school while the Freemasons are descended

from the school founded by Solomon.

As for Thoth? He has remained revered by philosophers, occultists, alchemists and healers

through the ages, though many of the texts accredited to him were lost in the Great Fire of the

Library of Alexandria. Who know how different history might have been had the knowledge

contained in that library not been lost?

By Katrina Sisowath, Author of the Dragon Court series.