The first UFO sighting on Earth did not occur on a particular day. Many ancient murals may represent flying creatures and alien visitors. Egypt is considered the most mysterious historical area due to its enormous pyramids, history, culture, and ancient texts. The “Tulli Papyrus,” as it is known, is believed to be the earliest evidence of ancient UFOs or flying saucers. This mysterious document is the earliest recorded account of a massive UFO encounter in Ancient Egypt about 1480 BC. The ancient literature recounts a fast-moving flying ship that illuminated Egypt’s sky before disappearing into space.
During the 18th dynasty, Egypt was at its most potent. With the advent of the New Kingdom, Egypt was revived, bringing a sophisticated mechanism for selecting new officials to the government. The new dynasty was also known as the Thutmosid Dynasty because of the four pharaohs named Thutmose. The Tulli Papyrus described the enormous UFO sightings under the reign of Thutmosis III, who ordered his scribes to record the event on Papyrus after seeing it personally.
The Tulli Papyrus is a hieroglyphics-based replica. (Lifting the Veil Forum)
Despite being centuries old, the poem was first popularized in the 1930s. In 1933, Alberto Tulli, director of the Vatican Museum’s Egyptian Section, was strolling around Cairo’s market when he allegedly discovered a fragment of ancient Papyrus dating from 1480 BC in an antique store. Because the artifact was too expensive for him, he built a copy and substituted the original hieratic writing with hieroglyphs.
Tulli’s reproduction of old Papyrus caused doubters to dispute its veracity, but it became famous among ancient astronaut theorists and UFOlogists. The book was translated by Italian nobleman Boris de Rachewiltz and anthropologist R. Cedric Leonard.
Rachewiltz was the first to mention the Papyrus in Thutmose III’s Annals. His translation is as follows:
“It was found among the scribes of the House of Life that a “circle of fire” was coming in the sky in the year 22, of the third month of winter, at the sixth hour of the day.” It was devoid of ahead. Its mouth emitted a horrible stench. It had a one-rod-long and one-rod-wide body. It was deafeningly silent. It got close to His Majesty’s home. As a consequence, their hearts were confused, and they fell onto their stomachs. They proceeded to tell the king of the situation. His Majesty ordered that the scrolls in the House of Life be consulted. His Majesty reflected on all that was going on at the moment.”
Prince Boris de Rachewiltz was one of the translators of the Tulli Papyrus. (An Unusual Point of View)
The Papyrus also described the construction of the UFO as well as its enormous effect on the environment. The item, according to the translation, shined brighter than the Sun in the sky. When the event happened in the early evening, the king and his soldiers were there. The item was labeled as a “circle of fire.”
“As a consequence, they (the fire rings) climbed higher and became more southerly.” From the skies, fish and volatiles fell. It was a wonder never before seen in the history of our Land! Caused incense to be given to His Majesty to soothe the hearth so that what happened in the House of Life book would be remembered for all time.”
Tulli Papyrus has a slew of problems, all of which point to a lack of conviction. If this remarkable aerial occurrence is correct, ancient Egyptian astronomers would never mistake a meteor or a shooting star for a “circle of fire.”
Later in the 1950s, Rachewiltz claimed to have found the tone version of Papyrus (untranslated and unpublished) among Alberto Tulli’s archives. Although it is improbable that ancient Egyptians misunderstood “fiery discs” or “circles of fire,” the book asserts that they did.
The US Air Force sponsored the “Condon Committee” UFO research in 1968. While writing the Condon report, Samuel Rosenberg and Edward Condon conducted a study on the Tulli Papyrus. They asked the Vatican for the original document but were informed that “the Papyrus Tulli is not the property of the Vatican Museum.” It is gone and cannot be located.”
According to further inquiry, Alberto Tully entrusted all of his possessions to his brother, a priest at the Lateran Palace. The Papyrus was most likely also handed down to the priest. Unfortunately, the priest died shortly after, and his belongings were handed down to his family, who may or may not have appreciated the Tully papyrus.
There is no conclusion since there is no original papyrus (which might be lost or concealed). The Tulli Papyrus translates a modern transcription of a purported Egyptian text, not an actual papyrus.