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The Chronicle of Akakor
high council summoned Viracocha to judgment. In the Great Hall of the Throne the elders of the people
considered his guilt. Their judgment pronounced the highest and hardest penalty, and they sent him into
exile.
Viracocha, the son of the sun, as he later called himself, is the only descendant of Lhasa’s kin who
broke the laws of the Gods and had to pay for his crime with exile. That was my people’s worst penalty
until the arrival of the German soldiers, who insisted on the introduction of the death penalty. For
smaller crimes like violence or disobedience, the guilty must publicly justify himself. Laziness is
considered a breach of the community laws and is punished by a term of service on dangerous frontiers.
Drunkenness is only a crime if the defendant has not fulfilled his tasks because of it. The most heinous
crime is theft since my people hold everything in common and personal property has no significance.
Like adulterers, murderers, and rebels, thieves are also sent into exile.
Viracocha the Degenerate did not only infringe on the bequest of the Gods; he also ignored the
judgment of the high council. Instead of living alone in the mountains as required by the laws of my
people, he fled to the Tribe that Lives on the Water. He led the tribe to a mountain valley in the Andes
and built Cuzco, the city of the four world corners, as he called it. A new sister nation was born, the
people of the Incas, the sons of the sun. Their empire rose quickly and mightily. Under the leadership of
Viracocha and his descendants, they conquered many countries and subdued numerous savage tribes.
Their warriors conquered the shores of the western ocean and advanced deep into the liana wilderness
of the Great River. They gathered enormous wealth in the capital of the empire and introduced new laws
that went against the bequest of the Gods. The Incas even developed their own script. It consists of
multicolored cords that are tied in knots. Each knot and each cord has a definite meaning. Several
knotted cords together make up a message. In this way they developed their empire founded on idolatry
and oppression, and it did not take long for them to mount a campaign of destruction against the Ugha
Mongulala.
But it was preordained that Viracocha’s descendants rejected the bequest of the Gods. When their power
was at its highest, our priests’ prediction was fulfilled. A cruel fraternal war broke out that shook the
empire to its very foundations. And destruction was completed with the arrival of the White Barbarians.
4. THE WARRIORS FROM THE EAST
1421 B.C.—A.D. 1400
With the collapse of the great empires, the old Oriental world disintegrated into smaller states. Israel
was founded around 1,000 B.C. At the same time, a great civilization arose in Greece, and later, another
flourished in the Roman city state on the Tiber. The birth of Jesus is assumed to have been in 7 B.C. in
Bethlehem. After the division of the Roman Empire, the Ostrogoths under their king, Theodoric the
Great, founded their own empire in Italy. In 552, in the battle at Mount Vesuvius, the East Roman
general Narses decisively defeated the last king of the Goths, Teja. Nothing is known about the fate of
the surviving Goths. The history of the Vikings was made in the same period. The bold seafaring people
occupied the western coasts of France and England and established a base in Greenland. According to
unconfirmed reports, they even reached the eastern shore of North America. The European Middle Ages
began in the year 900. At this time, the history of Aztecs, Mayas, and Incas started in America. The
tribes of Aztecs and Incas with their class structure developed a pure Neolithic civilization typified by
hieroglyphs and the Mayan calendar. The main emphasis of the Incas, however, was on the expansion of
their empire, which reached its height at the beginning of the fifteenth century under Huayana Capac.
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