Chapter 167: Agarta
PS: At this time, all kinds of strange beings suddenly flew out of many places around the world where the legend of Agartha was born. Pen × fun × Pavilion www. biquge。 info
"Agarta" means "world underneath" in Sanskrit. Legend has it that the underground world has countless caves, tunnels, and winding underground corridors where the secrets of ancient civilizations and endless treasures are buried. Over the years, it has attracted many scientists and explorers to explore.
At this time, all kinds of strange life suddenly flew out of many places around the world where the legend of Agarta was legendary.
"Agarta" means "world underneath" in Sanskrit. Legend has it that the underground world has countless caves, tunnels, and winding underground corridors where the secrets of ancient civilizations and endless treasures are buried. Over the years, it has attracted many scientists and explorers to explore.
1. The Underground Kingdom
The legend of the underground kingdom has a long history, dating back to the early 16th century when the Spanish colonialist Pizarro led a group of soldiers to invade the Inca Empire in South America. Using the feast as bait, they took the Inca Emperor Atahualpa hostage and demanded a room full of gold for ransom of the emperor's height, to which the Inca queen agreed.
But when the Incas filled the room with gold ingots and ornaments, the greedy Pizarro asked to take him to see the location of the treasure. It turned out that Pizarro had heard out of nowhere that there was a huge hidden treasure trove of secrets in the corridors that stretched for dozens of kilometers under the Inca.
When the queen heard the news, she felt that her husband was unlucky, and immediately ordered that the Inca treasures be hidden in various places. As a result, Emperor Atahualpa was killed, and Pizarro ordered his men to search for the entrance to the treasure. But it never succeeded. Since then, explorers from all over the world have come to South America's untouched lands in search of treasure.
2. The ruins of the ancient Inca city
More than a hundred years later, at the end of the seventeenth century, the Spanish missionary priest Father Antonio; During Fantos' expedition to Guatemala. Discover many ruins that were once the Inca Empire. Each of these sites is underneath a tunnel, including an underground corridor that stretches for 50 kilometers and contains pointed arches reinforced with cement, from which it is said to lead to Mexico.
Unfortunately, Ventos did not find any Inca treasures in the Underground Promenade, which greatly dampened the enthusiasm for later exploration of the Underground Promenade.
3. Mysterious underground treasures
It wasn't until the middle of the nineteenth century that the Russian-born mystic Madame Blavaqui heard the secrets of the South American underground corridor from an Italian priest. Interest in underground treasures has been rekindled.
In her book Isis Lifted the Veil, she wrote: I traveled south by water from Lima, Peru, to a place near the border with Arica, Chile, where there was an Inca tribe surrounded by mountains. From here, I peered through my telescope at the rocky surface illuminated by the setting sun. What appears to be strange hieroglyphs lined up on a certain volcanic rock was found.
When Cusco was the Inca capital, the roof of the magnificent temple was made of thick gold plates, and the walls were also wrapped in gold, and the walls were connected by gold chains around the walls. The reflected light on it shone brightly on the idol on the slightly darker altar. Meanwhile. The switch of the chain seems to be a code to indicate the secret of the Incas.
It is only by successfully deciphering the hieroglyphs carved into the rock surface that the secret of the tunnel entrance is known. The entrance one is near Cusco, but it has now been closed by the Peruvian government and cannot be accessed into the depths.
This entrance connects the huge underground promenade from Cusco to Lima, from where it turns south towards Bolivia. The tunnel came across the royal tomb somewhere, but the door to the tomb was cleverly closed by two stone slabs of the same size with a mechanism. If you rotate the slab with a secret code, an entrance to another passage will appear.
On the map, the distance from Cusco to Lima is about 600 kilometers and to Tiahuanaco, on the border between Peru and Bolivia, about 450 kilometers. Combined, there are actually more than 1,000 kilometers of underground corridors running through the Andean underground.
4. The legend of the underground Agarta promenade
Before and after World War II, the United States and Nazi Germany sent expeditions to find Agarta. A secret battle ensued. The term "Agarta" refers to the idea of a global underground corridor that includes the underground world of South America. Legend has it that the underground world has countless caves, tunnels, and underground corridors that twist and turn, and that the secrets of ancient civilizations and countless gold treasures are buried.
"Agarta" refers to the idea of a global underground corridor that includes the underground world of South America.
Whoever uncovers the secrets of the underground corridor and finds the treasure will have a huge source of wealth, and it is possible to decide the outcome of the war. It is no wonder that one day in March 1942, US President Franklin D. Roosevelt, who had just been involved in the war, summoned the scientist DeWittram and his wife at the White House to discuss the search for Agarta. Ram reported to Roosevelt that before the war, his American expedition was searching for an entrance to the underground corridor in the dense forests of Chiapas, Mexico, and met the white-skinned Lacanton people of ancient Mayan descent, who were guarding the underground corridor.
Although the expedition was thwarted and they were unable to enter the depths of the forest, they were thankfully able to find a clue to the secret entrance, which strengthened their confidence in finding Agartha next.
On the other hand, Hitler was also particularly interested in the gold vaults of Agarta. Hitler's expedition to Brazil investigated the underground labyrinth of countless tunnels at the Rencatel base. Later, Hitler sent several successive expeditions from Brazil to Barak, Bolivia, and Argentina, and one of them, on the way from Peru to Ecuador, discovered a huge underground corridor in the Cuenca area, where the team members bound for Chile also found a network of tunnels.
It is said that Hitler's expedition to Asia found a book written in Sanskrit that contained an account of Agartha and mentioned that in ancient times there was a vehicle called the "Chariot of the Gods", which could be suspended through the tunnels.
Hitler was overjoyed when he received the report, wouldn't it be more convenient to explore treasures in the underground corridor if he had the "car of the gods"? Therefore, he organized a group of people to imitate the "car of the gods" introduced in Sanskrit texts, and later developed the world-famous V1 and V2 rockets on this basis. Directly for war.
Although the treasure was not found until the end of the war in the 50s of the 20th century, the discovery of underground corridors and tunnel networks in various places has gradually made the context of the concept of a global underground corridor clear.
5. Siberian underground promenade
Back hundreds of years ago. It is in the Kolyma River basin near the Chirsky Mountains in northeastern Siberia that many reticulated underground corridors have been found. At that time, it was only thought to be a huge labyrinth of caves, but further investigation confirmed that these labyrinthine corridors continued to the bottom of the Chirsky Mountains and continued southwestward through this mountain range.
The Soviet expedition had penetrated deep into this underground corridor, but there was no end in sight. This corridor is basically a natural formation, but there are also traces of artificial excavation in some sections, and the walls of the cave are completely vertical. It must have been formed by some mechanical cutting.
In the sixties of the twentieth century, underground corridors were also discovered in Azerbaijan in the USSR. In the past, it was said that there were "bottomless pits" in that area, and strange sounds and lights emanated from the caves from time to time. According to the survey of Soviet scientists. It has been identified as an exit from an underground corridor that stretches throughout the Caucasus, similar to the one in the Korema basin in Siberia.
Initially, the caves were thought to be relics of prehistoric times, with human remains and rock paintings found at the entrance, but later scientifically determined to be relatively recent. This underground promenade runs down a slow slope along the mountain range. Among them, there are some halls that are more than 20 meters high. Some halls have smooth walls. There are very narrow arched doors. Such underground corridors are very similar to those found in Central America.
According to a 1916 report by the Russian geographer Beroschinov, there were also underground corridors in the Altai Mountains, stretching from southern Mongolia to the Gobi Desert.
6. Dunhuang
Dunhuang: An entrance to the underground corridor?
Several evidences suggest the existence of tunnels in China at the southwestern end of the Gobi Desert, and that Dunhuang, near **, may be an entrance to an underground corridor.
As we all know, from the rocky plateau of about 16 kilometers to the north of Dunhuang city, there are a series of artificially excavated grottoes called "thousand-year-old Buddha caves". These caves were built as monuments to Buddhism from 357 ~ 384 AD.
Dunhuang near ** may be an entrance to the underground corridor.
But what interests us is the hidden staircase found in one of the grottoes. If you go down that staircase, you will encounter an underground tunnel, and from that tunnel you will go south to the Hades Palace. Then. Archaeologists have found that the earliest caves there were not built by monks, but by unknown people thousands of years ago, and various other structures were apparently designed to conceal the entrance to the tunnels that extended in the direction of Central Asia.
Another striking thing about the Dunhuang Grottoes is that archaeologists say that Grotto No. 58 has an altar, and that the clothes and physiognomy of the disciples are very similar to those of the Indians in the Americas. Obviously, this fact cannot be explained by a simple unanimity of the artist's ideas. Does it mean an extension of Agartha in China?
Seventh, the Great Western Continent
Many years ago, archaeologists believed that outside the Strait of Gibraltar in the South Atlantic, there was a continent in ancient times, which was left over from the division of the three continents of Europe, Africa, and the Americas, and was called the "Great Western Continent".
With an area of about 6.8 million square kilometers, it is slightly smaller than Australia, and was a land bridge connecting the Americas and Africa in ancient times, but later sank to the bottom of the sea in a catastrophic accident. The human beings living in Daxi Continent had a glorious history of civilization, they built palaces, monasteries, bridges, dug 1,600 kilometers of canals, and dug long corridors underground to lead to the United States and Africa. When the Great Western Continent sank, a part of the Great Western Continent people entered Africa and the Americas through an underground corridor.
According to the reports of British explorers Ribin Guston and Grant, huge underground corridors have also been found in places such as the Nile River in Africa, some of which are more than 400 meters wide and have obvious traces of artificial cutting. Legend has it that at the foot of the Egyptian Sphinx Colossus there is an entrance to the underground corridor, and the Sphinx is the "patron saint" of the underground corridor.
At the beginning of the twentieth century, the Russian explorer Konstantin; Nikolai; Relesi once led an expedition to China** in search of the underground kingdom. According to him, the Universal Underground Promenade does exist, and its end point is ** in China.
8. Find the Underground Kingdom
Starting from the American continent, whether it is taking the southern route through the Great Western Continent, Africa, Egypt into the Himalayas** of China, or taking the northern route through the Bering Strait, Siberia, Mongolia, and finally from the north of the Himalayas into China**. This imaginary underground corridor is the Underground Kingdom of Agarta.
When the Soviet army conquered Berlin, the bodies of hundreds of ** monks were found in the building. At the time, people were confused, but now they think that they were hired by Hitler to find the underground kingdom. (To be continued.) )
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