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Know_files/FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS.pdf - D Ank Unlimited

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Graham Hancock – <strong>FINGERPRINTS</strong> <strong>OF</strong> <strong>THE</strong> <strong>GODS</strong><br />

with sheets of gold and a marvellous orchard of golden trees. 8<br />

Earthquakes in 1650 and again in 1950 had largely demolished the<br />

Spanish cathedral of Santo Domingo which stood on the site of the<br />

temple of Viracocha, and it had been necessary to rebuild it on both<br />

occasions. Its Inca foundations and lower walls survived these natural<br />

disasters intact, thanks to their characteristic design which made use of<br />

an elegant system of interlocking polygonal blocks. These blocks, and the<br />

general layout of the place, were almost all that was now left of the<br />

original structure, apart from an octagonal grey stone platform at the<br />

centre of the vast rectangular courtyard which had once been covered<br />

with 55 kilograms of solid gold. 9 On either side of the courtyard were<br />

ante-chambers, also from the Inca temple, with refined architectural<br />

features such as walls that tapered upwards and beautifully-carved niches<br />

hewn out of single pieces of granite.<br />

We took a walk through the narrow, cobbled streets of Cuzco. Looking<br />

around, I realized it was not just the cathedral that reflected Spanish<br />

imposition on top of an earlier culture: the whole town was slightly<br />

schizophrenic. Spacious, balconied, pastel-shaded colonial homes and<br />

palaces towered above me but almost all of them stood on Inca<br />

foundations or incorporated complete Inca structures of the same<br />

beautiful polygonal architecture used in the Coricancha. In one alleyway,<br />

known as Hatunrumiyoc, I paused to examine an intricate jigsaw puzzle<br />

of a wall made of countless drystone blocks all perfectly fitted together,<br />

all of different sizes and shapes, interlocking in a bewildering array of<br />

angles. The carving of the individual blocks, and their arrangement into<br />

so complicated a structure could only have been achieved by master<br />

craftsmen possessed of very high levels of skill, with untold centuries of<br />

architectural experimentation behind them. On one block I counted<br />

twelve angles and sides in a single plane, and I could not slip even the<br />

edge of a piece of thin paper into the joints that connected it to the<br />

surrounding blocks.<br />

The bearded stranger<br />

It seemed that in the early sixteenth century, before the Spanish began to<br />

demolish Peruvian culture in earnest, an idol of Viracocha had stood in<br />

the Holy of Holies of the Coricancha. According to a contemporary text,<br />

the Relacion anonyma de los costumbres antiguos de los naturales del<br />

Piru, this idol took the form of a marble statue of the god—a statue<br />

described ‘as to the hair, complexion, features, raiment and sandals, just<br />

8 Tan. Terumah, XI; also, with slight variations, Yoma 39b. Cited in The Jewish<br />

Encyclopaedia, Funk and Wagnell, New York, 1925, vol. II, p. 105.<br />

9 Peru, p. 182.<br />

52

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