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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 />

as painters represent the apostle Saint Bartholomew’. 10 Other accounts of<br />

Viracocha likened his appearance to that of the Saint Thomas. 11 I<br />

examined a number of illustrated ecclesiastical manuscripts in which<br />

these two saints appeared; both were routinely depicted as lean, bearded<br />

white men, past middle age, wearing sandals and dressed in long, flowing<br />

cloaks. As we shall see, the records confirmed this was exactly the<br />

appearance ascribed to Viracocha by those who worshipped him. Whoever<br />

he was, therefore, he could not have been an American Indian: they are<br />

relatively dark-skinned people with sparse facial hair. 12 Viracocha’s bushy<br />

beard and pale complexion made him sound like a Caucasian.<br />

Back in the sixteenth century the Incas had thought so too. Indeed their<br />

legends and religious beliefs made them so certain of his physical type<br />

that they initially mistook the white and bearded Spaniards who arrived<br />

on their shores for the returning Viracocha and his demigods, 13 an event<br />

long prophesied and which Viracocha was said in all the legends to have<br />

promised. This happy coincidence gave Pizarro’s conquistadores the<br />

decisive strategic and psychological edge that they needed to overcome<br />

the numerically superior Inca forces in the battles that followed.<br />

Who had provided the model for the Viracochas?<br />

10<br />

The Facts on File Encyclopaedia ..., p. 658.<br />

11<br />

See, for example, H. Osborne, South American Mythology, Paul Hamlyn, London, 1968,<br />

p. 81.<br />

12<br />

For further evidence and argument in this regard, see Constance Irwin, Fair Gods and<br />

Stone Faces, W. H. Allen, London, 1964, pp. 31-2.<br />

13<br />

J. Alden Mason, The Ancient Civilizations of Peru, Penguin Books, London, 1991, p.<br />

135. See also Garcilaso de la Vega, The Royal Commentaries of the Incas, Orion Press,<br />

New York, 1961, pp. 132-3, 147-8.<br />

53

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