Aramu Muru
Aramu Muru
Aramu Muru
Doorway in Peru
Kanook Nov, 2009
Located within the Hayu Marca mountain region some 35 kMs [21.75 miles] from
the city of Puno [west side of Lake Titicaca] and a bit northwest of Chucuito, Peru a
mysterious giant stone sculpture is located. Cut into this stone sculpture is a
doorway, cut out of a squarish flat cliff outcropping, the locals call the entire
assembly the “Place of the Gods” internationally it is known as the “Doorway of
Aramu Muru”. Inca legends speak of it as the place that “life” was first created on
Earth.
Legends run strong today in the remote regions of our Blue Marble, the local
inhabitants of this area claim that people have disappeared and reappeared near
the door, while even today many refuse to get close to the door claiming it is a
portal for the ancient gods. Some of the older inhabitants have told stories of tall
men accompanied by glowing balls of light walking through the portal.
The door labeled the “Puerta de Hayu Marca” [Gate of the gods/spirits] appears
to have been carved out of the natural rock face, the face is measured at 7 meters
[23 feet] in height by 7 meters in width with a small alcove in the center of the base
which measures just under 2 meters [6’ 6”] in height.
In the early 1990s, a local mountaineering guide Jose Luis Delgado Mamani
stumbled across the structure while searching for new locations to take his paying
tourists.
Inca legends state that in the distant past great heroes have gone to join their
gods through the doorway, and that some have returned from time-to-time to
inspect the progress of the population they left behind. One legend repeated over
and over again is that when the Spanish Conquistadors arrived in Peru, looting the
gold and precious stones, one Inca priest of the “Temple of Seven Rays” or “Aramu
Maru” fled into the mountains with a sacred disk known as the “Key of the Gods of
the Seven Rays”. Hiding in the mountains of Hayu Marca he eventually came upon
the doorway, which was guarded by some shaman priests. Handing them the “Key
of the Gods” they performed a ritual, and when they had finished they took the
“Key of the Gods” and opened the portal – in the glow of a blue light the priest
passed through the portal and was never seen again.
Archeologists, it is written, have discovered a small circular depression on the
right hand side of the small entrance, postulating that a small disk could be placed
and secured by the rock.
The Doorway of Aramu Muru is just one small part of the Inca Empire, a mystery
in itself with fragments, albeit they are impressive are scattered throughout the
Peruvian Andes. It is written that Lake Titicaca is the cradle of the Inca Civilization.
The lake itself is over 12,500 feet above sea level and is reported as the highest
navigable lake in the world, it is 122 miles long with an average width of 35 miles
and extends from southeastern Peru to western Bolivia and due to its size during
the seasonal storms waves of pretty good height smash against its shoreline, and
the waters are pretty cold, understantable at its height above sea-level.
Most access the lake through Puno, the capital of Peru’s altiplano1 which is the
“folklore” center and the established gateway to the lake.
According to Inca mysthology, Manco Capac and Mama Ocllo (Mama Huaca)
emerged from the depths of the lake on the sacred rock gate on Isla Del Sol and
founded the Inca Empire, a neighboring sister island “Isla de la Luna” is another
holy place where a convent “Virgins of the Sun” is located. As a matter of record,
the entire lake was/is a holy place, which again according to legend when the
Spanish reached Cuzco, the Inca took a two-ton gold chain of Inca Huascar from the
temple at Koricancha and threw it into the lake – it has never been found. Jacques
Cousteau mounted an expedition some years back and surveyed the lakes bottom
in a mini-submarine. In 2000 an international scientific expedition discovered a
possible city under the waters of the lake.
1
The Altiplano is an area of inland drainage lying in the central Andes, occupying parts of Chile,
Argentina, Bolivia, Peru and Ecuador. Its height averages about 3,750 meters (12,300 feet) [1],
slightly less than that of Tibet. Unlike the Tibetan Plateau, however, the Altiplano is dominated
by massive active volcanoes of the Central Volcanic Zone to the west. The Atacama Desert, one
of the driest areas on the whole planet, lies to the southwest of the Altiplano. In contrast, to the
east lies the humid Amazon Rainforest.
Lake Titicaca from the Bolivian Side
The underwater ruins were found near the Holy City of Copacabana
As a student of history, myths and all, I find this evidence of an underwater ruin
supporting the myths of Atlantic, Mu and Lemuria – supposedly great island
civilizations that once existed before disappearing under the sea after some pretty
cataclysmic events. Contemporary historical records and our religious beliefs shun
any such myths, but as I have mentioned a time or two previous myths are more
often than not a record of our pre-history. As for finding no evidence beneath the
soil or carved on rock in some remote location, I watched last summer a series on
the Discovery Channel that time-lapsed our civilization forward to give us a look at
the world that might be if no humans were around, as if a great cataclysmic event
had befallen our civilization..in less than 10,000 years hardly a trace of our
freeways, great steel structures or concrete monuments would be found. The Blue
Marble we live on had reclaimed the surface – and if anyone was wandering around
they would begin all over again.
Lake Titicaca, we see, hides a submerged stone causeway and a few other relics
that provides us with evidence that “port” city once existed there and in the
surround area is found ancient terraced corn fields that are a bit high in elevation to
support corn.
In 2000, again, a discovery off the coast of Cuba was found the remains of what
appears to have been a great city, with roads, bridges, buildings and even pyramids
all located about 2,100 feet under the Atlantic Ocean – verified by a Canadian
exploration company in 2001 the city is believed to be older than the great
pyramids of Giza. In 1995, another submerged city was found in 100 feet of water
off the south shore of Okinawa – where at the time five large stone structures were
found, linked by paved streets and crossroads, huge altar-like formations, grand
staircases leading to broad plazas and large as 240 feet in length. Not
entranceways or chambers have yet been found.
Another “mythical” city has been discovered off the coast of Mamallapuram,
India2 under about 7-meters [23 feet] under the Indian Ocean – the people of India
share a “myth” about large areas of the country, including a great city that was
inundated by the sea. Albeit the ruins are eroded, it is clear thea the walls, steps
and stone blocks were placed by man.
In addition, a team of archaeologists, geologists and engineers discovered a land
mass3, now under the North Sea than once linked Britain to Northern Europe,
complete with a river as wide as the Thames, it is surmised that it slipped beneath
the waves some 8,000 to 10,000 years ago.
Thank you Conquistadors, in the name of gold and Christianity they effectively
wiped out the Inca civilization. As the
Inca Empire slowly crumbled survivors
from Cuzco took what they could carry
and headed south into the rainforests
where they existed until 35 years later
the Spanish finally found them and
finished their handiwork – death and
destruction.
They fled to the “Lost City of the Incas”
Vilcabamba la Vieja, which was found in
1892 by Manuel Ugarte, Manuel Lopez
Torres and Juan Cancio Saavedra deep in
a remote rainforest some 81 miles west of Cuzco in an area labeled Espiritu
Pampa, after the Empire fell the city was burned and the region quickly returned to
its natural state.
Until recently, Vilcabamba played 2nd fiddle to Machu Picchu, which was believed
to be the last refuge of the Inca…not so, it has been established over the years that
Vilcabamba has the honors of being the last refuge of the once proud and
progressive Inca.
2
According to descriptions by early travel writers from Britain, the area near Mahabalipuram had
seven pagodas by the sea. Accounts of Mahabalipuram were first written down by British traveller John
Goldingham who was told of the "Seven Pagodas" when he visited in 1798.
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mamallapuram)
An ancient port city and parts of a temple built in the 7th century may have been uncovered by the
tsunami that resulted from the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake. As the waves gradually receded, the
force of the water removed sand deposits that had covered various rocky structures and revealed
carvings of animals, which included an elaborately carved head of an elephant and a horse in flight. A
small square-shaped niche with a carved statue of a deity could be seen above the head of the
elephant. In another structure, there was a sculpture of a reclining lion. The use of these animal
sculptures as decorations is consistent with other decorated walls and temples from the Pallava period
in the 7th and 8th centuries.
The Archaeological Survey of India sent divers to begin underwater excavations of the area on 17
February 2005.
3
http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2004/02/16/1076779866928.html
99% of the modern world scoffs North and South America reference and use of
Shamans, whereas the European when he invaded the Pacific Northwest banned
their practice and made the Native Medicine man shave his face and cut his hair, an
act of reducing his power, kind of like Samson cutting his hair.
The Inca are reported to have had some pretty powerful shamans, back in 1949
Dr Alberto Villoldo after a powerful earthquake discovered under monastery near
Cuzco an ancient temple of god, which was foretold by the prophecies of “Mosoq” a
shaman of previous times.