Unravelling the Mysteries of Ancient Places - One Year Anniversary Edn (2014) - www.Ancient-Origins.net.pdf
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Unravelling the Mysteries
of Ancient Places
www.Ancient-Origins.net
One Year Anniversary Edition
2014
c
Published on 22
nd
of February 2014 to celebrate the One Year
Anniversary of
www.Ancient-Origins.net.
This eBook wouldn’t have been possible without the
contribution of the authors and writers that have supported
Ancient Origins from the beginning.
Many thanks to:
Brien Foerster
Maria Wheatley
Steven and Evan Strong
Dr Rita Louise
Gregory Sams
Hugh Newman
Lucy Wyatt
Margaret Moose
Dr Derek Cunningham
April Holloway
www.Ancient-Origins.net
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Table of Contents
Were the Ancient Funerary Towers of Sillustani Peru
Originally Part Of an Energy System? – By
Brien
Foerster
Harran – city of Abraham – By
Lucy Wyatt
The Stonehenge Landscape – a wider perspective – By
Maria Wheatley
The greatest discovery never made – By
Gregory Sams
Megalithic Origins: Göbekli Tepe and Ancient Peru - The
Same Architects? – By
Hugh Newman
Before Antibiotics: Ancient Medical Procedures That
Still Baffle Scientists – By
Dr Rita Louise
Jezebel Virgin of Baal, Princess of Tyre, Queen of Israel –
By
Margaret Moose
A series of Rock Arrangements and placements the defy
conventional Historical accounts – By
Steven and Evan
Strong
The Ancient Stone Labyrinths of Bolshoi Zayatsky – By
April Holloway
Lascaux Cave Speaks – By
Derek Cunningham
1
12
19
34
40
56
63
75
84
92
i
Were the Ancient Funerary Towers of
Sillustani Peru Originally Part Of an
Energy System?
By Brien Foerster
Sillustani
is a pre-Incan burial ground on the shores of Lake
Umayo, about an hour’s drive from Puno in Peru, which is a
large city on the shore of Lake Titicaca. The tombs, which are
built above ground in tower-like structures called
chullpa,
are
the vestiges of the Colla people, Aymara speaking people who
were conquered by the Inca in the 15th century. The structures
housed the remains of complete family groups, although they
were probably limited to nobility. Many of the tombs have been
dynamited by grave robbers, while others were left unfinished.
The above is the conventional rhetoric espoused by academics,
and is the information which most guides to the Sillustani site
give visitors. What they generally believe is that the smaller and
cruder
chullpa
were created first, by the Colla people between
1200 and 1400 AD and that the Inca, who conquered the Colla
during the 15
th
century constructed the larger and more
precise ones afterwards.
Prior to the Colla, the great Tiwanku civilization, whose name
sake is a prominent archaeological site just south of the shore
of Lake Titicaca in Bolivia, held sway to some extent in the area.
The Colla, or Hatun Colla was one of many tribes that had
organised themselves in communities after the Tiwanaku
culture had faded. Together with the Lupaca kingdom, the Colla
had control over more or less the whole region of Lake Titicaca.
1
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