The Inherited Throne — A Restoration of the Hierophant

The Inherited Throne by ZT Tosha — front cover

About the Book

Published June 2026. The Inherited Throne: A Restoration of the Hierophant is a work of philosophical and historical inquiry by ZT Tosha. The book examines the material record of ancient civilisations and argues that the monuments and geometric systems attributed to early dynastic cultures are not original achievements but preserved remnants of a substantially older body of knowledge — one interrupted by catastrophic environmental collapse at the end of the last Ice Age.

Rather than treating the anomalies of the archaeological record as curiosities to be explained away, the book follows them as primary evidence. The precision of the Great Pyramid, the geological dating of the Sphinx, the sudden appearance of the Sumerian King List, and the function of Göbekli Tepe are read together as a coherent inheritance — not a progression.

“The transmission became a throne. The custodians of a pre-catastrophe knowledge system were replaced by the administrators of a political one.”

Structure

Part I — The Material Evidence: Anomalies of the Origin

The first part examines the physical record. Construction quality in Egypt declined across successive dynasties rather than improving — a pattern that inverts the standard developmental model. The book draws lines of connection between the architectural and astronomical alignment of the Giza plateau, the Sumerian King List’s account of rulers preceding a catastrophic flood, the water erosion patterns on the Sphinx enclosure, and the pre-agricultural complexity evident at Göbekli Tepe. The argument is not that these sites are connected by a single culture, but that they share a common inheritance transmitted through the catastrophe of rising sea levels at the end of the Pleistocene.

Part II — The Political Subversion: King versus Hierophant

The second part addresses what happened to that inheritance. Sacred custodians — figures responsible for transmitting cosmological and geometric knowledge — were gradually displaced by political administrators. The book traces this displacement through the symbolic architecture of kingship, showing how the formal transmission of knowledge was absorbed into, and ultimately subordinated to, the mechanisms of political authority. The Hierophant, as a figure, did not disappear; the role was inherited by the throne.

About the Author

ZT Tosha (b. 1961) is a Dutch-Yugoslavian writer, artist, and philosopher based in Amsterdam. His work spans philosophical literature, large-scale installation art, fine art prints, and electronic music. The Inherited Throne is his most sustained work of written philosophy, and forms part of a broader body of practice in which questions of structure, knowledge, and transmission are explored across multiple disciplines. His installations, published under the cycle Opus: The Assembler, and his fine art print series approach the same philosophical questions through physical and visual means. He releases music independently through Pencilbrain Records.

Obtain the Book

Amazon   |   Barnes & Noble   |   Books2Read

United Kingdom:
Waterstones   |   Blackwell’s   |   Alibris   |   Strand Books

Europe:
Thalia   |   FNAC

Nederland:
bol.com — paperback   |   bol.com — ebook

Companion Work

Concurrent with the publication, ZT Tosha has developed The Inherited Throne as a monumental sculpture proposal — a bronze-resin and steel structure of 450 × 225 × 240 cm, currently existing as a proportional clay maquette and completed technical design. The sculpture and the book are not illustrations of each other. They are companion works developing the same investigation through different means: one through language and historical argument, the other through material form and spatial presence. Further information on the sculpture is available at zttosha.com.

Publication

Title: The Inherited Throne: A Restoration of the Hierophant
Author: ZT Tosha
Publisher: Pencilbrain, LLC
Published: June 2026
Format: Print and eBook