Page 80 - Brugger Karl The chronicle of Akakor
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The Chronicle of Akakor
shaped it in their image. They gave mankind names, language, and script. They taught them elementary
agriculture and political laws that have remained at least partly operative to this day. They also passed on to
them the underground dwellings as protection against an imminent catastrophe. This is how the chronicle
records state it. The oral and written traditions of the oldest peoples are invariably comparable. At a time
more than 10,000 years ago, one or more highly civilized nations inhabited the earth. They were the leaders
of the indigenous populations and performed tasks dependent upon astonishing arithmetic calculations.
According to the Book of the Dead of the Egyptians, the Vedda of the Celts, and the Indian secret book
Mahabhdrata, they even transferred men from one planet to another. They were also responsible for the rise
of the first centers of civilization, out of which the high cultures later developed.
The Thirteen Underground Dwellings
In whatever way the mythic memories and traditions may be regarded, they certainly solve the mysteries of
terrestrial and human prehistory, and explain problematical archaeological evidence in their own way. The
coastal desert of Nazca in Peru is scattered with giant pictures measuring kilometers, crisscrossed with
dashes and lines of geometric figures. In his detailed examination of the ancient temple city of Tiahuanaco,
Posnansky found strange subterranean chambers throughout the whole city with thick, closely fitted walls.
Stone slabs weighing tons have been fitted, to the exact millimeter, in the strong mountain fortress of
Sacsayhuaman in the neighborhood of Cuzco. The Spanish chronicler Montesinos ascribes this building to a
powerful nation that perished ages ago. According to the majority of Amencanists, the fortress is built in the
so-called Inca-Imperial style, dominant from about 1480 to 1530. According to the Chronicle of Akakor, the
Ancient Fathers constructed gigantic stone cities more than 10,000 years ago, and among them were the
thirteen underground dwellings and the trapezoid-shaped tunnels crossing the Amazon region. Up to this
time, subterranean cities only appeared in myths and legends. Tibetan tradition speaks of the subterranean
kingdom of Agarthie. The North American Indians know about extensive caves where the thunderbirds of
the Gods were sheltered and cared for. Subterranean tunnels have been discovered all over the world.
In Peru and Bolivia, scholars and explorers found extensive stone passages that would be hard to construct
even with today’s technical equipment. The Peruvian Seria Documental del Peru even describes an
expedition that members of the Lima university undertook in 1923. Accompanied by experienced
speleologists, the scientists penetrated the trapezoid-shaped tunnels from Cuzco. They took measurements
of the subterranean aperture and advanced in the direction of the coast. Then communications to the point of
entry broke off. After twelve days, only one solitary member of the expedition returned to the surface,
almost starved. But his reports of an underground confusing labyrinth were so incredible that the
unfortunate explorer’s colleagues declared him mad. To prevent further loss of life, the police prohibited
entry to the mysterious passages and dynamited the entrance.
The big Lima earthquake in 1972 once again brought the Peruvian underground structures into the
headlines. During their salvage work, technicians found long passages no one had ever suspected were
there. The following systematic examination of Lima’s foundations led to the astonishing discovery that
large parts of the city were crossed by tunnels, all leading into the mountains. But their terminal points
could no longer be ascertained because they had collapsed in the course of centuries.
Who built these passages? And when were they constructed? Where do they lead? Only two of the many
theories offer a logical explanation. The first mentions Inca escape routes built after the arrival of the
Spanish conquerors. The second is based on Inca legends ascribing the tunnels to an ancient people. In his
Memorias Antiguas, Hjstorales, PolIticas del Peru, Montesinos writes: "Cuzco and the city of ruins
Tiahuanaco are connected by a gigantic subterranean road. The Incas do not know who built it. They also
know nothing about the inhabitants of Tiahuanaco. In their opinion it was built by a very ancient people
which later on retreated into the jungle of Amazonia."
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