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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 />

boast themselves children of the Sun and from whom they derived their idolatrous<br />

worship of the Sun, they had an ample account of the deluge. They say that in it<br />

perished all races of men and created things insomuch that the waters rose above<br />

the highest mountain peaks in the world. No living thing survived except a man<br />

and a woman who remained in a box and, when the waters subsided, the wind<br />

carried them ... to Tiahuanaco [where] the creator began to raise up the people<br />

and the nations that are in that region ... 5<br />

Garcilaso de la Vega, the son of a Spanish nobleman and an Inca royal<br />

woman, was already familiar to me from his Royal Commentaries of the<br />

Incas. He was regarded as one of the most reliable chroniclers of the<br />

traditions of his mother’s people and had done his work in the sixteenth<br />

century, soon after the conquest, when those traditions had not yet been<br />

contaminated by foreign influences. He, too, confirmed what had<br />

obviously been a universal and deeply impressed belief: ‘After the waters<br />

of the deluge had subsided, a certain man appeared in the country of<br />

Tiahuanaco ...’ 6<br />

That man had been Viracocha. Wrapped in his cloak, he was strong and<br />

august of countenance’ and walked with unassailable confidence through<br />

the most dangerous badlands. He worked miracles of healing and could<br />

call down fire from heaven. To the Indians it must have seemed that he<br />

had materialized from nowhere.<br />

Ancient traditions<br />

We were now more than two hours into our journey to Machu Picchu and<br />

the panorama had changed. Huge black mountains, upon which not a<br />

trace of snow remained to reflect the sunlight, towered darkly above us<br />

and we seemed to be running through a rocky defile at the end of a<br />

narrow valley filled with sombre shadows. The air was cold and so were<br />

my feet. I shivered and resumed reading.<br />

One thing was obvious amid the confused web of legends I had<br />

reviewed, legends which supplemented one another but also at times<br />

conflicted. All the scholars agreed that the Incas had borrowed, absorbed<br />

and passed on the traditions of many of the different civilized peoples<br />

over whom they had extended their control during the centuries of<br />

expansion of their vast empire. In this sense, whatever the outcome of<br />

the historical debate over the antiquity of the Incas themselves, nobody<br />

could seriously dispute their role as transmitters of the ancient belief<br />

systems of all the great archaic cultures—coastal and highland, known<br />

and unknown—that had preceded them in this land.<br />

And who could say just what civilizations might have existed in Peru in<br />

the unexplored regions of the past? Every year archaeologists come up<br />

5<br />

Fr.. Molina, 'Relacion de las fabulas y ritos de los Yngas', in South American Mythology,<br />

p. 61.<br />

6<br />

Royal Commentaries of the Incas.<br />

62

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