TURK PİRAMİTLERİ

 



İngilizce kaynak siteleri

http://www.crystalinks.com/pyramidchina.html

http://www.earthquest.co.uk/china/china.html

http://www.lauralee.com/chi_pyr.htm

http://www.trilobia.com/pyramids.htm

http://webmongrel.com/dzone/chinapyramids/


1930 (Ahmet Hamdi Başar, Atatürk'le 3 ay, s. 122)
ORTA ASYADAKİ TÜRK PİRAMİTLERİ
Bugün Çin Halk Cumhuriyeti'nin sınırları içerisinde yer alan, Xian şehrine 100 km uzaklıkta Qin Ling Shan dağlarında Ön-Türk uygarlıklarından birisi tarafından inşa edilmiş, etrafında irili ufaklı 100 adet piramitle beraber, 300 metre yüksekliğinde bir piramit bulunmaktadır;
BEYAZ PİRAMİT
Beyaz Piramit'in ikinci dünya savaşı sırasında Çin'e yardım malzemesi götüren bir C-54 uçağından çekilen fotoğrafı 1957 yılında ilk kez Life dergisinde yayınlanmıştır.
Bu piramitleri araştırmak üzere1994 yılında Şensi bölgesinde bir araştırma gezisi yapan Alman bilim adamı Hartwig Hausdof kendi koleksiyonundan birkaç resmin halka açılmasına izin vermiştir. Hausdorf'a göre piramitlerin yapım tarihi en az M.Ö. 2500'ler civarındadır.
Bölge Çin Halk Cumhuriyeti tarafından yasak bölge ilan edilmiş olduğundan dolayı Piramitler içerisinde bulunan Mısır medeniyetinden çok ileri bir teknikle mumyalanmış olan cesetler ve Ön-Türkçe yazıtlar üzerinde araştırma yapılamamaktadır. Türk Bilim adamı Kazım MİRŞAN yaptığı araştırmalarda Ön-Türk uygarlıkları tarafından OT-OĞ olarak isimlendirilen Ön-Mısır'a M.Ö 3000 Yıllarında Doğu Anadolu'dan Isub-Ög yazısının gittiğini tespit etmiştir. Kazım MİRŞAN'ın bugüne kadar anlamı çözülemeyen 184 adet mısır hiyeroglifini Ön-Türkçe olarak okumuş olduğu ve mumyalama tekniklerinin yine M.Ö. 3000'li yıllarda Altaylarda geliştirildiği düşünülürse Piramit inşa teknolojisinin Eski Mısır'a Ön-Türk Uygarlıkları tarafından öğretildiği sonucuna ulaşılmaktadır.
Tüm İnsanlık tarihini değiştirerek; MEDENİYETİN ASIL YARATICISININ TÜRKLER OLDUĞU SONUCUNU DOĞURAN bu olağanüstü keşif batılı bilim adamları(!) tarafından ısrarla görmezlikten gelinmekte ve insanlığın bilgisinden daha uzun süre saklanması mümkün olmayan bu piramitleri başka bir uygarlığa mal etmeyi amaçlayan maksatlı çalışmalar yapılmaktadır.

The pyramids of China are approximately 100 ancient mounds, many of which were used for burial. Most of them are located within 100 kilometers of the city of Xi'an, on the Qin Chuan Plains in the Shaanxi Province, central China.

The existence of pyramids in China has come in two stages. Most early stories were focused on the existence of "Great White Pyramid." A photograph of this pyramid in the Qinling mountains was taken by Americans in 1945, but remained in military files for 45 years. US Air Force pilot James Gaussman is said to have seen a white jewel-topped pyramid during a flight between India and China during World War II, but there is scant evidence for a source on this story.

However, it is now believed that the Gaussman story was actually based on Colonel Maurice Sheahan, Far Eastern director of Trans World Airlines, who told an eyewitness account of his encounter with a pyramid in the March 28, 1947 edition of The New York Times. A photo of Sheahan's pyramid appeared in The New York Sunday News on March 30, 1947. It is this photograph that later became attributed to James Gaussman.

t is now known, thanks to efforts of Chris Maier, that the particular pyramid shown in the photo is the Maoling Mausoleum. This pyramid sits just outside of Xi'an. In 1994, German tour operator and author Hartwig Hausdorf was noted for photographing and studying several pyramids.

He drew attention to the structures' existence with his 1994 book Die Weisse Pyramide, the subject of an article in Nexus Magazine in 1995 by Philip Coppens, later translated into English under the revised title The Chinese Roswell (1998).

The pyramids of Xi'an can now be visited on trips from Xi'an and no longer are located in "forbidden zones". Several pyramids have small museums attached to them.

The Great White Pyramid itself (rather than the photograph), as described by Sheahan, remains unidentified.

List of Chinese pyramids

  • Inner Mongolian pyramid (1 kilometer north of Sijiazi Town, Aohan County)
  • Maoling Mausoleum
  • Pyramid of Gathering (Tibet)
  • Qin Shi Huang's mausoleum
  • Zangkunchong
  • Step Pyramid (Ziban)

Wikipedia

Earth Quest


The Burma Tibetian Pyramid

The Burma Tibetian Pyramid is called 'The Pyramid of Gathering'. It is allegedly a bright white pyramid that is well preserved in the Buhtan Province. The limestone is still preserved beyond imagination. It supposedly glows under light. This pyramid was spotted by U.S. pilots in China in WWll flying over the hump in Burma. It is mentioned much by an Irish author Mona Rolf. It same size as the Great Pyramid in Egypt.

These images were taken by Hartwig Hausdorf, a Germany researcher.



This step pyramid, 31.58 by 31.58 meters square and 12.4 meters high, is located at Ziban, now in China. It fronts on the KukNae castle (Ziban) to the westsouth, and 12 stone plates, the largest one of them measures 2.7m long and 4.5m high, leaned against the first step. There was four guardian stones, looks like a dolmen on the step, but survived just one which you can see below. It is called 'Paechong', means guardian tomb in korean. What a strange post looks like a sphinx in Egypt.

It was guessed having constructed in Kokuryo period, maybe before A.D. 500, but nobody know whose tomb. It was once known a stone tomb of the great Kwangkaeto, but now a destroyed stone pyramid, nearby the stone monument of the great Kwangkaeto, should be of the great, and so this pyramid might be a tomb of king Zangsu. 'Zangkunchong' means a tomb of general in korean.

By the last discovery, new fact that the head part of stone coffins in the inner chamber put towards Chonzi (crater lake) on Paektusan (Mt. PaekTu), to the northeast, is unearthed.


















In the News ...

Pyramids in China Google Earth - October 25, 2006
The "White Pyramid" is the Maoling Mausoleum.


3000-year-old "pyramid" discovered in NE China

China View - August 31, 2006

Chinese archaeologists have discovered a group of ancient tombs shaped like pyramids, dating back at least 3,000 years, in Jiaohe City of northeast China's Jilin Province. The tombs, covering an area of 500,000 square meters (1,000 meters long and 500 meters wide), were found after water erosion exposed part of a mountain, revealing two of the tombs. Six smaller tombs had eroded away leaving no indications of their original scale and appearance, but the biggest tomb, located on the south side of the mountain, could clearly be discerned as a pyramid shape with three layers from bottom to top.

The pyramid's square bottom is about 50 meters long and 30 meters wide, about the size of a basketball court, with an oval platform on the top, about 15 meters long and 10 meters wide. The tomb was made of stone and earth dug out from the hill.

A stone coffin, surrounded by four screen boards and covered by a granite top, was placed on the top platform. The coffin appeared to belong to the king of an early tribe based on the dimensions of the site, according to experts with the Jiaohe Archaeological Research Institute. The tombs are part of the Xituanshan cultural ruins site, which dates back 3,000 years to China's Bronze Age period. The ruins were excavated in Jilin in 1950.

A lot of ancient hunting and domestic tools, including a stone knife and axe, as well as bronzeware and earthenware, have been unearthed from the stone coffin and other six smaller graves. The discovery will provide valuable clues on study of ancient funeral customs and the tomb structure and culture of ethnic groups in the area.


Pyramid Built 5000 years ago Found in Inner Mongolia

People's Daily - July 7, 2001

A three-story pyramid dating 5000 years back has been discovered in north China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region. The pyramid, which looks like a trapezoidal hill from afar, is located on a hill one kilometer north of Sijiazi Town, Aohan County. The pyramid is about 30 meters long and 15 meters wide at its base. This is considered the best-preserved pyramid built during the Hongshan Culture period that has been found so far, said Guo Dasun, an archaeologist in charge of the excavation.

Seven tombs and one altar were also found on the top of the pyramid. Archaeologists also discovered a number of pottery pieces with the asterisk character inscribed on the inner wall. The asterisk character is believed to be related to the understanding of ancient people on astrology.

Among the culture relics excavated from one of the seven tombs are a bone flute and a stone ring and a full- sized stone statue of Goddess unearthed from another tomb. What astonished the archeologists is a one palm-sized stone genital found on the inner wall of a tomb with a small stone statue of Goddess below. Guo Dasun said that most of these relics are found for the first time and will shed light on studying the origin of Chinese civilization.

 









 
 
 






 
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