It is a real head scratcher, you look at the pics, you consider when they were built, some of the places they were built, and a logical person says they did not do that with horses and buggies.
The One World Tartarians
The Greatest Civilization
Ever to Be Erased From History
James W. Lee
Chapter 7
Love & Healing Centers
Tiergarten, Germany. Animal Healing Center for the World
(This excellent analysis provided by Marcia Ramalho at The Blue)
The Berlin Zoo gathers the most expressive collection of animal and vegetable
species from around the world. There are
1,380 species, 20,200 animals and an Aquarium,
surrounded by 35 hectares of vegetation.
The Zoo is within the Tiergarten park, situated opposite the Reichstag dome and has in its
center the Victory Column, in granite studded
with bronze ornaments. Large domes, towers
and columns are always associated with ether energy production.
It is likely that Tartaria has designated Berlin Tiergarten to save almost extinct species,
in a world that slowly came out of total chaos and sudden climate change. Janey Benson’s
observation of the numbered trees in Berlin Tiergarten ark fits into this hypothesis.
Tiergarten may have been a magnificent Noah’s Ark endowed with atmospheric energy, where
all species were classified to be saved.
The building surrounded by eight minarets that Natasha
saw in the Tiergarten and to which she ascribes the secret of such happiness, continues to secretly
store atmospheric energy produced by Victory Column, associated with the Reichstag dome.
And
what happens today in the central park of Berlin for the benefit of humans and animals, was
carried out in the past throughout the world from the beginning of our Real History.
The carillon history dates back to the first kings of Prussia, Frederick I and II, of the Hohenzollern dynasty. Wikipedia claims that the German zoo was “opened” in 1844 but on this date,
Germany did not exist and much less had central
government.
There was only one confederation
with 22 small monarchies and 17 other states that
spoke German. The Tiergarten park and its palace
belonged to the Tartary civilization. With the
defeat of Tartary and the creation of Germany, the
palace was demolished, and the Reichstag was
erected by the will of the character “Bismarck”.
But then I saw minarets of a mosque and I imagined that this was what you were talking about.
Is it atmospheric energy? It is in that building that giraffes currently live. If it generated energy, I
had no way of knowing, but I am a witness of the extraordinary happiness that was there.
There
is something in Berlin that is wonderful, and I want to go back there. I want to breathe that air
again”.
This is the surprising testimony of American Janey
Benson, who may be associated with the legendary
paradise of the Atlanteans (Titans) and their descendants of the lost Tartar Aryan (Tartary) civilization.
In this civilization of the past, magical properties of
atmospheric energy and resonances of the electromagnetic field harmonized, healed, prolonged life
and increased the stature of men and animals.
The
Tiergarten park is located opposite the Reichstag
dome and has in its center the Victory Column, in
red granite studded with bronze ornaments. Large
domes, towers and columns are always associated with the production of atmospheric energy.
The top of the coil inside the Reichstag dome and it is protected by mirrors. And
the tip of the coil is in the hall below the mirrored part. It seems to have been made
with the purest copper and its shape copies the top of the old power plants of the
East. This may explain the happiness that reigns in the park and in the whole city.
Berlin was one of the gigantic star fortress (bastion fort) of Tartary. With its walls and high
technology, Berlin was part of the world energy grid and the old magic may still be present in
the air. At the Berlin zoo, visitors and animals are also given the benefit of the magic sound of
bells. In the park there is a rare carillon installed at 42 meters high which houses 68 bells of 48
tons and is the fourth in the world in number of bells.
Concerts in the park with the historic
carillon take place every Sunday at 3 p.m., from May to September. The vibration of bronze,
associated with the ethereal electromagnetic current, has a high harmonizing and healing power.
Carillon Tower Bells compromise 68 bells weighing a total of 48 metric tonnes (almost 106,000 lbs.)
connected to a keyboard spanning 5½ fully chromatic octaves; the largest bell weighs 7.8 tonnes
(almost 17,200 lbs.)
The carillon history dates back to the first king of Prussia, Frederick I, of
the Hohenzollern dynasty. Wikipedia claims that the German zoo was
inaugurated in 1844 but on this date Germany did not exist and much
less had a central government.
There was only one confederation with
22 small monarchies and 17 other states that spoke German. The Tiergarten garden and its palace belonged to a Tartar aristocrat. With the
defeat and unification of Germany in 1870, the palace was demolished,
and the Reichstag was erected by Bismarck’s will.
In 1844 the world was
recovering from the catastrophe that killed billions of humans, animals,
and plants between the years 1812 and 1840. It is likely that the tartar
aristocrat assigned his garden to save almost extinct species in a world
that was slowly emerging from a “nuclear” winter and total chaos.
Janey Benson’s observation of the numbered trees in Berlin fits into this
hypothesis.
Tiergarten may have been a Noah’s Ark endowed with atmospheric energy, where all species
were classified to be saved. The building surrounded by eight slender spires, which Janey photographed in the Tiergarten and to which she ascribes the secret of such happiness, continues to
Chapter 7: Love & Healing Centers 99
secretly store atmospheric energy produced by the Victory Column, associated with the transparent Reichstag dome. And what happens today in the central park of Berlin for the benefit of
humans and animals, was carried out throughout the world by the pre-Tartary civilization from
the beginning of our Real History.
Cymatic Gardens to Heal the Soul!
Would certain high or low frequencies help plants and medicinal herbs grow? Are castles
really the hospitals of the star civilization? Mind, body, soul? I think the gardens were not for
elites, they were for the public originally. Hexagons, octagons, pentagons, polygons, rectangles,
triangles...a whole lot of sacred geometry going on, folks.
The Healing Resonance of Churches
Using Cymatics in Sacred Spaces
There is ample evidence that points to the architects of these cathedrals having knowledge of
cymatics, and possibly the healing power of sound long before modern scientists did. Choirs, pipe
organs, and the architecture itself may have literally been healing church attendees for centuries.
The subtle energy of spaces is not limited to churches either, every natural and man-made structure emits its own subtle energetic frequency that we are inadvertently influenced by.
“Cymatics?” you ask. Simply put, the term “cymatics” was coined by Hans Jenny in the 1970’s
as a way of describing how to visualize sound. Up until recently, the only method of “seeing”
sound was by taking a violin bow and rubbing it along a metal plate that was covered in sand.
The sand (or salt) moves around on the plate, eventually settling into a shape that’s representative of a resonating frequency.
Ms. Tanya Harris visited various churches around Europe and recorded the silence of each
church for seven or so minutes, and then played the recordings back while recording the sound
again to gain an amplified recording. Once she attained an audible
sample, she created her own cymatic device and played the sound
through light and water to observe the patterns created by the frequency
of each church. The results were nothing less than astonishing. The
patterns produced resembled the classic stained-glass rose windows
typically found in cathedrals. The resonant frequency of one church
even displayed a five-pointed star that was in proportion with the
golden ratio.
Scientific research is verifying the cymatics healing power of sonic
frequencies. Professor Sungchil Ji of Rutgers University conducted
an experiment that concluded that red blood cells exposed to classical music had a significantly
improved lifespan, in comparison with blood cells that sat in silence. Because our bodies are made of
liquid, the beautiful patterns made through the resonance of music and sound create healing patterns
within us. As evidenced by Tanya Harris’ experiments, not all sounds need even be audible, simply
by being near spaces or objects of noble resonance is enough to receive the
amazing properties of subtle waves that contribute to the body’s well-being.
The power of subtle frequencies is part of the inspiration behind our
technologies, and many Subtle Energy programs come with audio files
for maximum efficacy. Have you ever felt healed by music? Let us know
in the official Subtle Energy Sciences online community. Sound creates
wave-like patterns around us. We see that in crop circles, stone circles in
South Africa, in nature, and in art (all the way back to the Egyptians).
Nature itself. This is a stone tablet which engraves the frozen music of a
church and reflects its very vibration. The result is really amazing: sound
excites matter into geometric forms, which coincide with the golden ratio.
“Today, a young man on acid realized that all matter is merely energy condensed to a slow
vibration—that we are all one consciousness experiencing itself subjectively. There is no such
thing as death, life is only a dream, and we’re the imagination of ourselves. Here’s Tom with
the weather.” Comedian Bill Hicks
Sacred geometry involves sacred universal patterns used
in the design of everything in our reality, most often seen in
architecture, art, and nature. The basic belief is that geometry
and mathematical ratios, harmonics and proportion are also
found in music, light, cosmology.
It is the invisible patterns that animate our physical world
much as spiritual traditions believe that the soul animates
the body. Shapes, patterns, and visual compositions have the capacity to seduce our eyes while
captivating our imagination. Whether from masterful works of art or in nature, this entrancement can be so emotionally moving and awe-inspiring that people naturally associate it with
transcendence, the super-natural, or spiritual. Beneath these patterns are relationships that can
be measured, numbered, replicated, and defined. This mathematical yet esoteric realm of inquiry
and observation known as sacred geometry will enlighten and mystify you while inviting you
to change the way you look at the world.
The Magnificent Opus Healing Pipe Organs
Once upon a time when the temples of free energy architecture were used to rise man, the organs
were used as a harmony bomb. The songs were tuned and played at sacred healing tone of 528
Mhz. It was not allowed to change the frequency of the earth using for example 440 Mhz, which
divided by 12 equals 36.666, this frequency disharmonizes humanity leaving beings agitated,
angry and sick and that was not allowed. So, at the correct frequency there were regenerating
concert halls, where people recharged themselves with pleasant music while buildings collected
the energy of the ether. 🎶✨🕌✨🎶 🎶✨🕌✨🎶 🎶✨🕌✨🎶
Chapter 8
The Magnificent Worldwide
Tartarian Architecture
Said to Have Been All Built in the 13th Century…With Horse n’ Buggy....See pages 115- 132 on the scroll at the link at the bottom for many more pics.
Chapter 9
Impossible Engineering
The USA Canal System
The Intracoastal Waterway
is a 3,000-mile (4,800 km)
inland waterway along the
Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico coasts
of the United States, running from
Boston, Massachusetts, southward
along the Atlantic Seaboard and
around the southern tip of Florida,
then following the Gulf Coast to
Brownsville, Texas.
Being a part of the Intracoastal
Waterway... The Chesapeake & Delaware Canal (C&D Canal) is a 14-mile
(22.5 km)-long, 450-foot (137.2 m)-wide and 35-foot (10.7 m)-deep ship canal that connects the
Delaware River with the Chesapeake Bay in the states of Delaware and Maryland.
• Baltimore to Philadelphia, Maryland to Pennsylvania, United States. Completed 1829.
• In the mid17th century, Augustine Herman, a mapmaker and Prague native who had served as an
envoy for the Dutch, observed that two great bodies of water, the Delaware River and Chesapeake
Bay, were separated only by a
narrow strip of land. Herman
proposed that a waterway be
built to connect the two.
• In 1802, following actions by
the legislatures of Maryland,
Delaware, and Pennsylvania,
the Chesapeake & Delaware
Canal Company was incorporated, with merchant and banker
Joseph Tatnall as president.
More surveys followed, and in
1804, construction of the canal
began under Benjamin Latrobe.
The work included 14 locks to
connect the Christina River in Delaware with the Elk River at Welch Point, Maryland, but the project
was halted two years later for lack of funds.
The Erie Canal
The original canal was 363 miles long and was supposedly built between 1817 - 1825 (or approximately 8 years). Quick math suggests they completed a mile every 8 days on average. 1 mile of
finished canal every 8 days (or 192 Hours) on average. The number of trees that had to be cut
down, the lack of machines, the numerous and massively complicated aqueducts, ~30 locks and
impossible Niagara escarpment excavation...and an oxen with an Irish work fleet. Organized by
two judges with no prior civil engineering experience (as there were no civil engineers in the
country at that time). Dynamite wasn’t even invented until 1867. So how did they build the canal?
The Great Loop is a system of waterways that encompasses the eastern portion of the United
States and part of Canada. It is made up of both natural and man-made waterways, including the
Atlantic and Gulf Intracoastal Waterways, the Great Lakes, the Rideau Canal, and the Mississippi
and Tennessee-Tombigbee Waterway. The entire loop is approximately 6,000 miles (9,700 km)
long. The first recorded instance of someone completing the Great Loop was three boys who did
it in a sailboat in the 1890s.
6,000 miles dredged with this equipment and labor???
Great Wall of China
No one knows why, or how, the Great Wall was built and for what purposes. The Tartarian
Mongols and Chinese were enemies, yet the Great Wall was easily scalable and penetrable, so
the argument that it was
built for defense does not
hold up to what we have
been sold as truth.
Marco Polo wrote an
extensive and detailed
account of Asia in the
13th and 14th centuries
and did not even mention
a wall. The Great Wall is
not seen on any maps
predating the late 1600’s.
So most of its construction occurred in 1700’s
and it was built to keep
the encroaching Chinese
out of Tartaria.
The openings on the
wall are on the north side towards the former Tartary not on the south China facing side.
It should be called the Great wall of Tartaria. The “official story” goes…it was for defensive
purposes. The Mongols were the Tartarians.
The Great Wall of China was built as a line of defense to protect the country from invaders. The
wall was begun in during the Qin dynasty between 221 and 207 B.C. Work continued during the
Han dynasty but ceased in A.D. 220, and construction languished for a thousand years. With the
threat of Genghis Khan, the project resumed in 1115. During the Ming dynasty (1368 to 1644), the
wall was reinforced with stone and brick. Despite the immense building and intimidating size of
the wall, it wasn’t enough to keep invaders away. The Mongols were able to ride right through
gaps in the wall, and later, the Manchus overtook the Ming dynasty by riding through the gates
that traitor Gen. Wu Sangui opened.
Around the same time as the Great Wall construction during the Han dynasty, Zhan Qian
opened the Silk Road route to trade with other countries such as India, Persia, Greece and Rome.
Routes were extended and trade flourished during the remainder of the Han dynasty. Wars with
the Huns were fought along the Silk Road to gain control and keep the trade route open during
the Han dynasty. After the Mongols gained power in 1271, the ruler Kublai Khan destroyed most
of the toll gates and allowed for easier travel. Khan welcomed Marco Polo, the great explorer
and gave him the right to travel the route whenever he liked.
Tartars have, even since Confucian times, ruled
more and longer than have Chinese over North
China; the Mongols (1260-1368) were the first Tartars
to rule over all China, and nominally over all West
Asia; the Manchus (1643-1908) are the first Tartars
to rule all China, all Manchuria, and all Mongolia,
at all effectively; and they have even added parts of
Turkestan, with Tibet, Nepaul, and other countries
over which the Peking imperial Mongol influence
was always very shadowy.
A comprehensive archaeological survey, using advanced technologies, has
concluded that the walls built by the Ming dynasty
measure 8,850 km (5,500 mi). This is made up of
6,259 km (3,889 mi) sections of actual wall, 359
km (223 mi) of trenches and 2,232 km (1,387 mi) of natural defensive barriers such as hills and
rivers. The construction of the Great Wall the construction materials encompass everything from
rammed earth to worked stone via brick, mud brick, rough stone.
The History of the Conquest of
China by the Tartars by Juan de Palafox Mendoza wrote in 1659 what he
found in Jefferson Library in Monticello regarding Tartary. The history of
the conquest of China by the Tartars
together with an account of several
remarkable things concerning the religion, manners, and customs of both
nations, but especially the latter/first
written in Spanish by Senõr Palafox.
Chapters 25-32 discuss their spiritualism, military strategies, clothing, affinity for the sciences,
and political structure. To give a very brief synopsis of those chapters, they had no organized
religion but believed in a single source or Creator. They did
not care for churches or polytheistic deities of Europe. They
did have a priest class, but they were not highly regarded.
They preferred to live in tents during military conquests rather
than settle in towns, but they did build Pagods (pagodas?)
for religious purposes.
Tartars were not big on scholarship
or learning (unlike the Chinese they conquered), but still
encouraged the Chinese to continue their own sciences. They
had red or black hair but tended to shave their heads while
maintaining bushy beards. Their women were free to walk
or ride on horseback even at night unescorted and were even
allowed into military roles. Tartars were all expert horsemen
and appeared to treat their horses in much the same way we would treat a family pet as part of the family.
Notably, the author says they were afraid of the
sea/water likely because they grew up in the steppes, but that those who did decide to learn
seafaring picked it up extremely quickly and were naturally gifted at it. I’m not sure what that
might mean for a global Tartarian Empire, but it would suggest that they had little experience in
seafaring prior to their conquest of China as the author suggests that’s when they first discovered
naval navigation. The author briefly mentions rumors that the Tartars were vicious warriors to
the point of cannibalism, but he seemed to dismiss it as the Tartars did not seem the type to be
savages, just very warlike and brutal in combat. In Chapter 14 he mentions that Tartary prepared
to fight China In a naval battle, but “were not yet masters of the Sea”. Could this be hinting that
they soon would become “masters of the Sea”?
The Inner City Walls of Beijing, China
Now these walls were defensible and clearly show that Beijing was trying to keep the Tartarians out of the city.
At the time that the map
was drawn, the Republic of
China had been founded and
the Qing Dynasty had ended.
The cartographer indicated
the Qing Dynasty names for
the sections of the city. The
upper brown section was called
the Tartar City because only
the Manchus, the rulers of China
during the Qing Dynasty. The
lower part of the brown section
was known as the Outer City.
Chinese were allowed to live there and build their business, most
of which were necessary to the running of the imperial households.
The wall stood for nearly 530 years, but in 1965, was removed to allow for construction of the
2nd Ring Road and Line 2 of the Beijing Subway.
Excerpt from A. Fomenko’s “History, Science of Fiction?”
WHEN AND WHY THE GREAT
WALL OF CHINA WAS BUILT
Today it is thought that construction started on the Great Wall of China in the III century
B.C. for the purpose of defence against the Northern nomads [5v1]. We would like to suggest
the following idea. The Great Wall of China was most likely built as a construction defining the
BORDER BETWEEN TWO COUNTRIES: China and Russia. It could have certainly been intended
as a military fortification, but it is hardly true that the wall was used in that particular capacity.
It is pointless to defend a 4000 kilometres wall [5v1], ch.6 from the attack of an enemy. Even if
it stretches over ‘just’ one or two thousand kilometres. The wall in its present form falls short of
four thousand kilometres.
The wall was built first of all to MARK THE BORDER BETWEEN TWO COUNTRIES, notably
when they came to an agreement about the border. Presumably, to eliminate any boundary disputes
in the future. And such disputes most likely did occur. The Northern border of China follows
approximately the 40th parallel. THE WALL OF CHINA PRECISELY FOLLOWS THIS BORDER.
Moreover, on the map the Wall is marked with a thick line and signed Muraille de la Chine, i.e.
the ‘tall wall of China’ - translated from French. It all means that the Great Wall of China was
built in XVI-XVII cc. as the political boundary between China and Russia = ‘Mongol Tartary’.
Some may object: on the contrary, the border between Russia and China in the XVII century was
drawn along the ancient Wall. However, in this case the Wall should have been referred to in the
written Russian-Chinese agreement. We haven’t found such references.
So when was the Wall=Border constructed? It appears as precisely in the XVII century. It is
for a reason considered that its construction ‘completed’ only in 1620 [544], v.6, p.121. And it
might be even later [5v]. Did the Wall exist earlier than the XVII century? Most likely not. The
historians tell us that China was conquered by the ‘Mongols’ in 1279. It became a part of the
Great Empire. According to the New Chronology this took place in the XIV century [4v1], ch.2.
In the Scaligerian chronology of China this event was marked in the XIV century as the MING
dynasty ascending to power in 1368, i.e. the very same MONGOLS.
As we understand it now in the XIV-XVI cc. RUSSIA AND CHINA STILL COMPRISED ONE
EMPIRE. Therefore there was no need to erect a Wall = Border. Such necessity emerged after the
Time of Troubles in Russia, the defeat of the Russian Horde dynasty and the seizure of power by
the Romanovs. They have changed the political course of Russia, subjecting the country to the
western influence. Such orientation of the new dynasty led to the break of the Empire. Turkey
broke off, the severe wars began with Turkey. In fact, control over a substantial part of America
was lost. In the very end even Alaska was lost, the last Hordian splinter in America.
China became independent. The relations between China and the Romanovs became tense
and the border conflicts began. It was necessary to erect the Wall, which was carried out, most
likely during the boundary disputes of the XVII century. The military conflicts flared up since the
middle of the XVII century. The wars proceeded with variable success [5v1], ch.6. The descriptions
of the wars survive in Khabarovsk letters. The beginning of the certain history of China (on its
present day territory) falls only in the epoch of the Manchurian dynasty coming to power. I.e. the
Mongol dynasty originated from Russia. The dynasty was either Russian or Tatar. As late as in the
XVIII century it was common to write MANZHOURY [5v1], ch.6, and not the ‘Manchu’ of today.
I.e. MANGURY or MANGULY, as in China the sounds ‘L’ and ‘R’ are often indistinguishable.
Thus the very name of MANZHOURY points to their origin. They were the ‘MONGOLS’ = the
magnificent. Incidentally, this border – the XVII century separating the epoch of the Manzhourian
domination in China from the ‘purely Chinese’ period preceding it – coincides with the dating
of the most ancient Chinese manuscripts which survive until the present day. To remind you,
they date to not earlier than the XVII century [544], v.6, p.119.
The Manzhourian = ‘Mongolian’ rulers of China are known to consider themselves the successors of the vast Empire, which according to them spanned the entire world. If their kingdom
was the splinter of the Golden Horde, then such a perception is understandable. But from the
Scaligerian point of view, that before conquering China, the Manchu was a savage peoples who
lived somewhere near the Northern Chinese border, the absurd pomposity of the Manchu sovereigns becomes not just strange, but without parallel in world history either.
The Grand Canal of China
The Grand Canal of China is not only the world’s oldest
canal, it is far longer than either Suez or Panama. At 1,795
kilometers (or 1,114 miles) it has 24 locks and 60 bridges, and
claim to the title of longest canal. Supposedly completed to
Beijing by 1633, China’s Grand Canal is over 1,100 miles
long and has an elevation difference of 138 feet. The Grand
Canal is said to have transformed China from a region with
separate languages and customs into a nation. A shared
central passage facilitated government, communications,
even China’s first standardized language and script.
Precision Cut Massive Stones Worldwide by Whom, With What Tools?
Deep In the Ground Cathedrals and Water Works
The story goes that the ancients carved out these water storages holding facilities using hand
tools! Does this make sense to anyone with any common sense? More likely they were water
reservoirs for harvesting energy and storing power.
Underground Travel Through Pneumatic Tubes
This is a 1928 cut out view of London’s Piccadilly tube station. This is an amazing feat with just
making the tunnels using the technology we are
told was available during that time frame. Even
the buildings above ground level are impressive
on their own. I am a firm believer that the farther
you go back in time the structures built are of
way higher quality than being built (or allowed
to be built) today. Bridges, buildings, waterways/
manmade lakes all of these are simply amazing in
the quality and the aesthetics of being beautiful
in appearance. Even the Panama Canal is just
mind-boggling to look at and think about how
it was built back then. I know I’m preaching to
the choir when I say this but the powers that
be, are literally dumbing the masses down with
not just education but with our surroundings/
environment as well.
The passengers had to descend a little more to
reach the platform and contemplate the entrance
to the tunnel, which was whitewashed and flanked by two twin statues of Mercury, symbolizing
the speed of the wind. Above the entrance one could read “Pneumatic (1870) Transit, beyond
which the tubular wagon awaited, which was equipped with comfortable seats and oxygen
lamps. When the passengers sat down and the door closed, a gust of air pushed the car into the
tunnel and accelerated it until it reached Murray Street, according to one witness, “like the wind
with a sailing boat”.
Washington D.C.’s Underground
Tunnel Systems ~ The Mole Way
(This is from an alleged April Fool’s day spoof in the Washington Times, yet is likely more
truth than fiction).
In 1865, tunnels were built to ventilate the Capitol Building’s sub-basement offices, and in 1896, tunnels were built to
connect the Capitol to the new Library of Congress building,
which opened a year later. The first 13 stations included stops
near the Capitol, the White House, each of the city’s markets
and an adults-only nude beach near the Tidal Basin. By 1873,
74 more stations had opened, for a total of 87, one more than
the current Metro system. There was a stop at what was then
called Tyson’s Farm in Fairfax County and another at a hot-air
balloon depot near Sterling. Train carriages were propelled
by compressed air.
The escalator wasn’t invented until the 1890s. Instead,
the Mole Way used spiral staircases that rotated like drill bits to carry passengers from street to
platform and vice versa. The “spinners,” as they were called, were plagued with glitches.
Quinta Da Regaleira, Portugual
Drilling Deep Down Through Bedrock
The Quinta de Regaleira estate, which is sometimes referred to as “The Palace of Monteiro the
Millionaire” after its latest owner, consists of a
palace and chapel with exquisite décor including
frescoes, stained glass windows, and lavish stuccoes. The estate grounds feature lakes, grottoes,
wells, benches, fountains, and an extensive and
enigmatic system of tunnels that connect to two
spiraling wells. The pair of wells, known as the
‘Initiation Wells’ or ‘Inverted Towers’, consist
of ‘winding stair’ architecture, which carries
symbolic meaning including the death/rebirth
allegory common to many hermetic traditions.
At the bottom of the well there is a compass over a Knights Templar cross,
which is said to have been Monteiro’s herald and a sign of his Rosicrucianism.
Very little is known about how the wells
were used and what exactly went on there,
though it is clear to see that great effort went
into their planning and construction. One
of the wells contains nine platforms, which
are said to be “reminiscent of the Divine
Comedy by Dante and the nine circles of Hell,
the nine sections of Purgatory and the nine
skies which constitute Paradise.” A smaller
well, called the “Unfinished Well,” contains
a set of straight staircases, connecting the ring-shaped floors to one
another. It is believed that the spacing of the landings, as well as the
number of steps in between were dictated by Masonic principles.
How Did They Build These Castles, Cathedrals and Shrines?
next
Grand Interiors of
Elegance and Beauty
source
No comments:
Post a Comment