1987 AD
At the end of November, on the archaeological site of an ancient city in southern Israel, a team of scientists discovered a carved tablet dating back to the Bronze Age. Surprisingly well-preserved, this marble slab, inscribed in Aramaic, tells the story of a previously unknown structure: the "Tomb of Zohar."
According to the inscriptions, this colossal monument, standing nearly 50 meters tall, housed the tomb of King Zohar. Little is known about this ruler, except that he is described as the "Great Divine Creator and Destroyer." The temple itself was said to have been constructed from a mysterious stone referred to as "divine" and protected by ten monumental statues, each over 20 meters high, representing guardian goddesses. These statues supported a massive sphere measuring 47 meters in diameter.
Finally, the text recounts that a fire weakened the structure, prompting the ancients to completely bury the temple in order to preserve it underground.
But one question remains: did this structure truly exist? Its location remains unknown, and the archaeological community largely agrees that it is merely a mythological tale, born from the imagination of our ancestors… unless the truth still lies buried beneath our feet.