Karl Brugger - The chronicle of Akakor, Ksiazki,Ksiegi,Ksiazeczki

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//-->The Chronicle of AkakorCONTENTSPREFACE BY ERICH VON DANIKENINTRODUCTIONThe Book of the Jaguar1 The Realm of the Gods2 The Hour Zero3 The Era of DarknessThe Book of the Eagle1 The Return of the Gods2 The Empire of Lhasa3 Apotheosis and Decline of the Empire4 The Warriors from the EastThe Book of the Ant1 The White Barbarians in the Empire of the Incas2 The War in the East3 The White Barbarian Empires4 The Wisdom of the Ugha MongulalaThe Book of the Water Serpent1 The German Soldiers2 The New People3 Tatunca Nara4 The Return of the GodsThe Chronicle of AkakorAPPENDIXSupplementary Explanations, Examples, and ReferencesChronological TableTribes in the Akakor RegionPREFACE BY ERICH VON DANIKENScientists are not the only ones to strike it rich in exploring the unknown. Karl Brugger (born 1942),after completing his studies in contemporary history and sociology, went to South America as ajournalist and learned about Akakor. Since 1974 Brugger has also been the correspondent of WestGerman radio and television stations. He is now regarded as a specialist in Indian affairs.In 1972, Brugger met Tatunca Nara, the son of an Indian chieftain, in Manaus at the meeting of the RioSolimôes and the Rio Negro, that is, at the beginning of the Amazon. Tatunca Nara is the chief of theUgha Mongulala, Dacca, and Haisha Indians.Brugger, a skeptic and a conscientious researcher, listened to the truly incredible story the mestizo toldhim. After having checked it thoroughly, he decided to publish the chronicle he had recorded on tape.As I myself am used to the fantastic and always prepared for the extraordinary, I am not easily startled,but I must confess that I felt uncommonly moved by Brugger’sChronicle of Akakor.It opens up adimension that must make even skeptics see that the unthinkable is often imaginable.Incidentally,The Chronicle of Akakorfits accurately into the picture that is familiar to mythologists allaround the world. Gods came from "the sky," instructed the first humans, left some mysteriousapparatus behind, and disappeared again "into the sky." The devastating disasters described by TatuncaNara can be linked in the most minute detail to Immanuel Velikovsky’sWorlds in Collision.The storyof the Indian prince who had never seen Velikovsky’s works, his extraordinary descriptions about thecourse of a global world catastrophe, and even the exact dating are simply astounding. Also, theassertion that certain parts of South America are riddled with artificial subterranean passages cannotshock the expert. In a former book, I have reported seeing such underground structures with my owneyes.The Chronicle of Akakorprovides answers to much that is only assumed in other works on similarsubjects.The Chronicle of AkakorStill unexplored regions in AmazoniaThe Chronicle of AkakorKarl Brugger is a German journalist who lives in BrazilINTRODUCTIONAmazonia begins in Santa Maria de Belém, 120 kilometers from the shores of the Atlantic. In 1616,when 200 Portuguese under the leadership of Francisco Castello Branco took possession of this territoryin the name of His Majesty, the King of Portugal and Spain, their chronicler described it as a friendlyand inviting piece of land with giant trees. Nowadays, Belém is a large city with skyscrapers, trafficjams, and a population of 633,000. It is the point of departure for white civilization in its conquest ofAmazonia’s virgin forests. But throughout 400 years, the city has managed to preserve traces of itsheroic and mystic past. Dilapidated palaces in colonial style and tiled houses with enormous iron portalsbear witness to the notorious era when the discovery of the vulcanization process for rubber had raisedBelém to the level of a European metropolis. The two-story market at the port also dates from thisperiod, and just about everything can be bought here: fish from the Amazon River or the ocean;sweet-smelling tropical fruit; medicinal herbs, roots, bulbs, and flowers; crocodile teeth, which arethought to have aphrodisiac properties, and rosaries made of terra cotta.Santa Maria de Belém is a city of contrasts. Noisy business streets in the center, but the jungle world ofMarajó Island, once upon a time settled by one of the great civilized populations that tried to conquerAmazonia, is a mere two-hour journey upriver, on the opposite bank. According to traditional history,the Marajoaras reached the island around A.D. 1100, when their civilization was at its height, but by thetime the European explorers arrived, the people had already vanished. All that remains are beautifulceramics, stylized figures clearly expressing grief, joy, dreams. They seem to tell a story, but what is it? [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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