"Mc Carver was a six-foot-tall African American genius professor and inventor at the Tuskegee Institute of Technology. He named himself after one of his former and most influential mentor, and approached his late thirties.
Mc Carver was one of this practical academician who didn’t have any required school book for his classes, and taught chemistry and physics with real life implication. He didn’t merely transmit theoretical knowledge but rather taught students how to combine natural laws to solve real world problems...
In 1930, wearing a white smoking and a black bow tie, Mc Carver was invited at the coronation of His Imperial Majesty Haïlé Sélassié, the charismatic and proud ruler of Abyssinia also known as Ethiopia (different from the antique Ethiopia which is Sudan). The ceremony held in the royal castle was splendid. Eyes were astonished to witness the emperor’s entrance walking with a majestic domesticated lion. Dignitaries, emissaries, and renowned scientists from around the globe attended the spectacular event. The emperor, however, arranged a private meeting with Mc Carver during the ball that followed the ceremony.
Officially, Haïlé Sélassié needed Mc Carver’s expertise to engineer an ambitious agricultural plan to cope with the aftermath of the 1929 famine that plagued Ethiopia, yet behind closed doors, the emperor wanted the adventurer to track two extraordinary artifacts: The Pschent, the double crown (north and south, the snake and the vulture) worn by the Pharaohs of Egypt. The second artifact was the real Sacro Catino, the emerald hexagonal Egyptian chalice that the queen of Sheba brought to King Solomon.
Neither the Pschent nor other simpler Egyptian crowns (the Deshret and the Hedjet for instance) have ever been found in any tombs yet. It is only visible on paintings, Hieroglyphs, and Egyptian statues. Archeologists think that the original Pschent was passed from dynasty to dynasty and not buried with the kings. Since the crown was a combination of two separate pieces, they had to find their location. The Pschent was believed to have immense paranormal power in Egyptian mythology.
Mc Carver was one of this practical academician who didn’t have any required school book for his classes, and taught chemistry and physics with real life implication. He didn’t merely transmit theoretical knowledge but rather taught students how to combine natural laws to solve real world problems...
In 1930, wearing a white smoking and a black bow tie, Mc Carver was invited at the coronation of His Imperial Majesty Haïlé Sélassié, the charismatic and proud ruler of Abyssinia also known as Ethiopia (different from the antique Ethiopia which is Sudan). The ceremony held in the royal castle was splendid. Eyes were astonished to witness the emperor’s entrance walking with a majestic domesticated lion. Dignitaries, emissaries, and renowned scientists from around the globe attended the spectacular event. The emperor, however, arranged a private meeting with Mc Carver during the ball that followed the ceremony.
Officially, Haïlé Sélassié needed Mc Carver’s expertise to engineer an ambitious agricultural plan to cope with the aftermath of the 1929 famine that plagued Ethiopia, yet behind closed doors, the emperor wanted the adventurer to track two extraordinary artifacts: The Pschent, the double crown (north and south, the snake and the vulture) worn by the Pharaohs of Egypt. The second artifact was the real Sacro Catino, the emerald hexagonal Egyptian chalice that the queen of Sheba brought to King Solomon.
Neither the Pschent nor other simpler Egyptian crowns (the Deshret and the Hedjet for instance) have ever been found in any tombs yet. It is only visible on paintings, Hieroglyphs, and Egyptian statues. Archeologists think that the original Pschent was passed from dynasty to dynasty and not buried with the kings. Since the crown was a combination of two separate pieces, they had to find their location. The Pschent was believed to have immense paranormal power in Egyptian mythology.