EBOOK

The Inherited Throne

A Restoration of the Hierophant

Z. T. Tosha
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Year
2026
Language
English

About

The Inherited Throne: A Restoration of the Hierophant

The Great Pyramid is not merely large. It is precise. Its base is level to fifteen millimetres across two hundred and thirty metres-ten times more accurate than modern standards. The dimensions encode pi and phi. The tool marks on the granite show feed rates no copper implement can produce. No ramp has been found. No Egyptian text describes the construction. The knowledge appears at the Fourth Dynasty-fully formed, without precedent-and then declines.
The Inherited Throne follows the evidence without preconception. Tracing the Great Pyramid's anomalies through the Sumerian King List, the water erosion on the Sphinx, and Göbekli Tepe, this book builds a case for a civilization that preceded Egypt and Sumer-destroyed by the sea-level rise at the end of the last ice age. What appears in the pyramids is not the origin. It is the inheritance.
The second half follows that inheritance forward: through Pythagoras and Plato, through the Hermetic tradition, and into the Western esoteric tradition-where something went quietly wrong. Solomon entered. The Hierophant was displaced by the king.
The Inherited Throne is both an investigation and a restoration.

Author Bio
ZT Tosha (pseudonym of Zoran Tosic Tosha) is a Dutch-Yugoslavian multidisciplinary artist and author. Born in Mostar, 1961, he relocated to the Netherlands in 1989.
His work spans painting, sculpture, installation, digital media, and writing, investigating consciousness, identity, and the construction of reality. He believes art exists "at the junction of being and perception, seeking the invisible currents that shape understanding."
He studied at the Fine Art Academy of the University of Sarajevo and is the author of A Garden for Orpheus, The Invention of Andreas, The Assembler, Disassembled, and The Inherited Throne: A Restoration of the Hierophant.
"To behold reality is to meet absence; presence is always folded within disappearance." - ZT Tosha

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