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

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Civilizing mission<br />

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

Above all else, Viracocha was remembered in the legends as a teacher.<br />

Before his coming, it was said, ‘men lived in a condition of disorder,<br />

many went naked like savages; they had no houses or other dwellings<br />

than caves, and from these they went forth to gather whatever they could<br />

find to eat in the countryside.’ 11<br />

Viracocha was credited with changing all this and with initiating the<br />

long-lost golden age which later generations looked back on with<br />

nostalgia. All the legends agreed, furthermore, that he had carried out his<br />

civilizing mission with great kindness and as far as possible had abjured<br />

the use of force: careful instruction and personal example had been the<br />

main methods used to equip the people with the techniques and<br />

knowledge necessary for a cultured and productive life. In particular, he<br />

was remembered for bringing to Peru such varied skills as medicine,<br />

metallurgy, farming, animal husbandry, the art of writing (said by the<br />

Incas to have been introduced by Viracocha but later forgotten), and a<br />

sophisticated understanding of the principles of engineering and<br />

architecture.<br />

I had already been impressed by the quality of Inca stonework in Cuzco.<br />

As my research in the old town continued, however, I was surprised to<br />

discover that by no means all the so-called Inca masonry could be<br />

attributed with any degree of archaeological certainty to the Incas. It was<br />

true that they had been masters in the manipulation of stone, and many<br />

monuments in the Cuzco area were indisputably their work. It seemed,<br />

however, that some of the more remarkable structures routinely<br />

attributed to them could have been erected by earlier civilizations; the<br />

evidence suggested that the Incas had often functioned as the restorers<br />

of these structures rather than their original builders.<br />

The same appeared to be true of the highly developed system of roads<br />

connecting the far-flung parts of the Inca empire. The reader will recall<br />

that these roads took the form of parallel highways running north to<br />

south, one along the coast and the other through the Andes. All in all<br />

more than 15,000 miles of surfaced tracks had been in regular and<br />

efficient use before the time of the Spanish conquest, and I had assumed<br />

that the Incas had been responsible for all of them. I now learned that it<br />

was much more likely that they had inherited the system. Their role had<br />

been to restore, maintain and unify a pre-existing network. Indeed,<br />

though it was not often admitted, no expert could safely estimate how<br />

old these incredible highways were or who had built them. 12<br />

The mystery was deepened by local traditions which stated not only<br />

that the road system and the sophisticated architecture had been ‘ancient<br />

in the time of the Incas’, but that both ‘were the work of white, auburn-<br />

11 Ibid., p. 72.<br />

12 Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1991, 26:42.<br />

56

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