Page 79 - Fingerprints of the Gods by Graham Hancock
P. 79

Graham Hancock – FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS





                   Chapter 10


                   The City at the Gate of the Sun


                   The early Spanish travellers who visited the ruined Bolivian city of
                   Tiahuanaco at around the time of the conquest were impressed by the
                   sheer size of its buildings and by the atmosphere of mystery that clung
                   to them. ‘I asked the natives whether these edifices were built in the time
                   of the Inca,’ wrote the chronicler Pedro Cieza de Leon, ‘They laughed at
                   the question, affirming that they were made long before the Inca reign
                   and ... that they had heard from their forebears that everything to be
                   seen there appeared suddenly in the course of a single night ...’
                                                                                                         1
                   Meanwhile another Spanish visitor  of the same period recorded a
                   tradition which said that the stones had been lifted miraculously off the
                   ground, ‘They were carried through the air to the sound of a trumpet.’
                                                                                                     2
                     Not long after the conquest a detailed description of the city was
                   written by the historian Garcilaso de la Vega. No looting for treasure or
                   for building materials had yet taken  place and, though ravaged by the
                   tooth of time, the site was still magnificent enough to take his breath
                   away:

                      We must now say something about the large and almost incredible buildings of
                      Tiahuanaco. There is an artificial hill, of great height, built on stone foundations
                      so that the earth will not slide. There are gigantic figures carved in stone ... these
                      are much worn which shows their great antiquity. There are walls, the stones of
                      which are so enormous it is difficult to imagine what human force could have put
                      them in place.  And  there are  the remains of strange buildings, the most
                      remarkable  being stone portals, hewn out of solid rock;  these stand  on  bases
                      anything up to 30 feet long, 15 feet wide and 6 feet thick, base and portal being
                      all of one piece ... How, and with the use of what tools or implements, massive
                      works of such size could be achieved are questions which we are unable to answer
                      ... Nor can it be imagined how such enormous stones could have been brought
                             3
                      here ...











                   1  Pedro Cieza de Leon, Chronicle of Peru, Hakluyt Society, London, 1864 and 1883, Part
                   I, Chapter 87.
                   2  Indians of the Andes: Aymaras and Quechuas, p. 64. See also Feats and Wisdom of the
                   Ancients, Time-Life Books, Alexandria, Virginia, 1990, p. 55.
                     Royal Commentaries of the Incas, Book Three, Chapter one. See, for example, version
                   3
                   published by Orion Press, New York, 1961 (translated by Maria  Jolas  from the critical
                   annotated French edition of Alain Gheerbrant), pp. 49-50.


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