Melted Megaliths Of Europe: Saxon Switzerland And The Königstein Fortress - Alternative View

Melted Megaliths Of Europe: Saxon Switzerland And The Königstein Fortress - Alternative View
Melted Megaliths Of Europe: Saxon Switzerland And The Königstein Fortress - Alternative View

Video: Melted Megaliths Of Europe: Saxon Switzerland And The Königstein Fortress - Alternative View

Video: Melted Megaliths Of Europe: Saxon Switzerland And The Königstein Fortress - Alternative View
Video: Königstein : one of the most powerful fortresses in Europe 2024, September
Anonim

If you thought the Grand Canyon was the only place where there were traces of massive mining by machine method by other civilizations, I dare to upset you.

Meet. This place is called Bastei and is located in the center of Europe, a hundred kilometers east of Dresden.

As we saw earlier with the megaliths of North America and other parts of the world, traces of melting and processing are clearly visible on its mountains.

The synthesis of ancient megaliths and buildings, which are at least several hundred years old, is extremely interesting. The technology and scale of the work amaze the imagination and do not fit into any official version with their wide sides.

Before viewing, it is recommended to take off your old glasses and look at the photos through the eyes of a child's evidence.

To begin with, let's recall a few obvious examples from previous collections in order to understand that such surfaces do not form on their own ("naturally"), no matter how much one would like to believe official sources.

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Promotional video:

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Apparently, the megaliths here are more ancient, so we will not find such clear marks, as shown above, but traces of melting and flat surfaces speak for themselves:

Obviously, 2-3 rock layers were removed:

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Let me remind you of the arches of the North. America for comparison:

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And also stone forests.

Madagascar:

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China:

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North. America:

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Russia:

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Let's go back to Germany.

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Right angles are everywhere.

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Too flat for a natural waterfall.

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Of particular note is the Königstein Fortress (Königstein - Tsarskiy Kamen), located on the other bank of the Elbe south of the Bashtai megaliths, and is an excellent example of work with the residual megalithic stone.

The relatively new architecture of the fortress blends in perfectly with much older structures.

Or was it all formed overnight?

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Brick patches in monolith or vice versa?

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Did those who built such a colossus really need small cannons for defense? 0_o

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The filling track.

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The depth of the well is 152 meters.

I wonder how they dug it in the stone?

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Each of the owners of the fortress (dukes, margraves, electors, and so on) tried to "leave their mark" in its history, expanding, modernizing, reconstructing, both individual sites and the entire citadel at once. Known for his boastfulness, talkativeness and enormous extravagance, Elector Augustus the Strong I personally came up with a plan for the complete restructuring of Königstein. He wanted the gloomy medieval fortress to become a beautiful castle in the then newfangled Baroque style. So it would have been, but at the beginning of 1722 August postponed the implementation of the reconstruction plan, he was carried away by another idea - the "Barrel War", namely, one hundred percent victory in this war. The meaning of this "battle" was that the Electors of the Palatinate and Saxon argued over which of them could make the most capacious wine barrel? A serious dispute has flared up,at stake was the "Elector's honor" and Augustus won the "battle". By his order, in 1725, winemakers made a giant barrel in the Königstein cellars, it held two hundred and thirty-eight thousand liters of wine. And the plan to rebuild the military fortress into a peaceful castle remained unrealized.

Among the guests of honor who have visited the walls of the castle-fortress Königstein are such famous personalities as the Emperor Napoleon (in 1813) and the Russian Tsar Peter I, who visited the bastion twice (in 1698 and in 1706).

And already as a prisoner, the famous alchemist, Johann Friedrich Böttger, who is the inventor of European porcelain, spent a long time in prison. According to the verdict, Böttger was isolated from society "for his own safety." Although, in fact, the scientist was imprisoned so that other rulers of Germany could not use the outstanding creativity and extensive versatile knowledge of the great master. Other very famous and respected people also became prisoners of Koenigstein at different times, including the social democrat August Babel, the Russian anarchist Mikhail Bakunin and the world-famous author of short stories Frank Wedekind.

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Note the jagged foundations of the walls.

Obviously, all this was not processed with copper axes.

And calling it "natural education" is also unlikely to work with open eyes.

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Pay attention to the monoliths that have grown into the walls.

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A completely flat monolith stone.

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Burnt rear.

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Let's pay attention to the general landscape:

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… it looks very much like the Grand Canyon, USA:

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Germany:

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USA:

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Germany:

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USA:

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Waste heaps everywhere … or careers?

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USA:

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Germany:

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USA:

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Germany:

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Interesting similarities with Austria:

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Attention to the rays of the star:

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An interesting architectural solution from above. We saw something similar earlier in the Middle East.

Pay attention to the "bricks" carved from the rock:

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Arizona. Slice of rock layers:

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Bastei:

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USA:

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Bastei:

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Something like a huge lens was originally conceived here:

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The same principle in the USA:

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And here too:

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And then the lens.

And the descendants did not just put the elevator.

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There is no feeling that the mountain monolith and the brick fortress were originally formed here at the same time, and then they were only repaired?

Given the similarities shown to the Grand Canyon, don't you have a copy-paste feel of the scenery?

On the subject: Remains of ancient civilizations: polished mountains with traces of machining.

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