Just released: The Sphinx Hypothesis — Mehit: She Who Restores the Wedjat
This new paper explores the astronomical and cultural connection between Nabta Playa’s ancient stellar knowledge, the Shemsu Hor tradition, and the Great Sphinx — proposing that the Sphinx was part of a deliberate astronomical program to “restore the Wedjat”.
Full paper (open access):
https://zenodo.org/records/20727854
Part of the ongoing Zep Tepi Series.
#Sphinx #AncientEgypt #Archaeoastronomy #NabtaPlaya #ShemsuHor
The Sphinx Hypothesis - Mehit: She Who Restores The Wedjat
The Great Sphinx of Giza bears no builder’s inscription and, until recently, no recovered Egyptian name. This paper proposes a Predynastic origin framework and identifies Mehit — a reclining lioness independently documented in mainstream Egyptology through her cult geography at Hierakonpolis and Thinis, Wedjat-restoration mythology, and Early Dynastic seal-impression attestations — as the best-supported candidate for the Sphinx’s original name. Mehit’s name derives from the Egyptian root mḥ (‘to fill’ or ‘to restore’; Erman and Grapow, Wb II: 119–120), the technical term for restoration of the Wedjat, the Eye of Horus — whose equinoctial 1/4 fraction is the azimuth the Sphinx faces. The conventional attribution to Khafre rests entirely on circumstantial evidence — acknowledged by Selim Hassan, who excavated the enclosure. The Sphinx Temple was abandoned before completion; no Sphinx priesthood appears in any Old Kingdom tombs at Giza (Junker 1929–1955; Reisner 1942) — the only monument at Giza without a documented Old Kingdom cult. Mehit’s cult centres were Hierakonpolis and Thinis, not Giza: the builders had a cult at their origin sites but left no institutional apparatus at the plateau. Multiple subsequent civilisations renamed the Sphinx because no founding name survived — but a candidate name has been identified. The Egyptologist William Stevenson Smith (1963) translated a dual administrative title on Hemiunu’s pedestal as referencing Mehit, an identification independently confirmed by Der Manuelian (2003) on the parallel Wepemnefret title. The framework connects the Sphinx to the 3800–3100 BCE Shemsu Hor horizon documented in the Zep Tepi Series (Papers I–III, Levy 2026). Seven predictions derived from that framework are tested against the monument. Evidence draws on Egyptology, geology, archaeology, palaeoclimatology, and archaeoastronomy: a candidate population with Giza-corridor presence; compound terminal African Humid Period erosion grounded in near-Giza proxies (Lake Hamra 2020; Welc and Marks 2014); a logistical argument derived from the Diary of Merer; and a multi-millennium burial cycle consistent with a monument whose original custodians left no institutional successors. The nemes headdress establishes a terminus post quem of c. 3100 BCE for the face, yielding a two-event model: Predynastic body, dynastic face. Falsification conditions are stated explicitly. The convergence of independent evidence — including the monument’s own recovered name — makes the Predynastic framework the more coherent account of the known anomalies.









