Traces Of The Mid-19th Century Disaster In India? - Alternative View

Traces Of The Mid-19th Century Disaster In India? - Alternative View
Traces Of The Mid-19th Century Disaster In India? - Alternative View

Video: Traces Of The Mid-19th Century Disaster In India? - Alternative View

Video: Traces Of The Mid-19th Century Disaster In India? - Alternative View
Video: Rare Unseen Photos of India in the 19th Century - Part 1 [AI Colorized] 2024, May
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I have already talked about the amazing leaning tower located in the Ural city of Nevyansk, the construction of which is attributed to the industrialists Demidov. However, a careful study of historical documents revealed many obvious "inconsistencies" in the official version, indicating that this unique engineering structure was built not only long before the Demidovs, but also before the cataclysm that destroyed ancient civilization according to the hypotheses of various alternative researchers around the XVI period. -XVII centuries.

By the way, my friend and colleague, the Russian traveler, writer, researcher of the Arctic northern tradition G. Tymnetagin, who visited this city in April 2020 and examined the structures of this tower, also came to a completely similar conclusion. The details he found clearly indicate that the tilt of this tower was the result of a wave of megatsunami that came from the direction of the Arctic Ocean. At the same time, the technologies used in the construction of the tower allowed it to withstand the onslaught of this wave.

It was in this oblique form that it was inherited by the Demidovs, who, of course, did not build it from scratch, but with the help of the engineers at their disposal, they carried out its reconstruction and repair, in order to create a counterweight and prevent its fall. And, as we can see, this tower has safely survived to this day. But today the story will not be about her, but about the strange "leaning towers" captured on the territory of India by English colonial artists in the middle of the 19th century.

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For example, there is a rather little-known drawing by an unknown artist from the book of the British Empire official Robert Montgomery Martin (1801-1868) "The Indian Empire", published in 5 volumes in 1854. In this picture, two such towers are very clearly visible on the banks of an Indian river, presumably the Ganges, in one of the Indian cities. We see this city fairly flooded, and in the background we can see two not only flooded, but also leaning "towers".

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Another similar drawing by an unknown author is an illustration for one of the books of the French traveler and writer Louis Jacolliot (1837-1890), who lived in India for several years from 1865 to 1869. This painting is called "The Leaning Tower on the Bank of the Ganges." And one such tower, similar to the two towers in the previous picture, we really see in the background.

It is very likely that both drawings depict the same area. But on one of them - in a mirror image. Moreover, the second drawing clearly belongs to a later period, since only one of these inclined towers has survived on it. And this proves once again that these towers were not originally built like that, and their slope is the result of some catastrophic event in the middle of the 19th century.

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Well, how approximately these towers looked before this disaster can be seen in the drawing of the Indian city of Benares, drawn by the English artist Robert Melville in 1816. Judging by this figure, such towers were built at some distance from the coast and at a level at least ten meters higher. And in order to wash and tilt such towers, protected by stone embankments, some catastrophic phenomenon really had to occur, much stronger and more powerful than the usual seasonal floods, which were clearly taken into account when building such structures.

Of course, the version that these inclined towers of India are evidence of a mid-19th century catastrophe is only a hypothesis, not a proven fact. However, the little-knownness of these drawings makes one seriously think about their intentional suppression by official historians, because such "leaning towers" can raise quite logical questions about the reasons for this anomalous tilt. But the official history denies the existence of global catastrophic events on Earth in the past centuries. And he does so clearly at the behest of the forces that control access to "forbidden knowledge."

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