Shocking ancient technology found in Bangalore temple | Underground secret to be revealed
(Praveen Mohan, Sept. 14, 2021) In the past three weeks, hundreds of archeologists have been quietly examining an ancient Indian temple after they realized that this temple is made of moving parts, like those of a machine. This is groundbreaking and changes everything we know about ancient Hindu temples.
This temple is found in the heart of the ancient Indian city of Bangalore. Today, the city is mostly known as a very modern, high tech place. But Bangalore has a very long history, and it has been hiding some very advanced ancient technology.
As we find, the temple in question is located in a crowded area, and at first sight one can see fresh paint on the tower. When going inside, we find polished tiles on the floor and painted recently walls. These are routine renovations.
Until last month archeologists thought this was a medieval temple built roughly 550 years ago, but now the Archeology Department of India has scanned every stone and doubled the temple’s estimated age. Archeologists now say it was built 1,263 years ago, and some experts are claiming it is even older than that.
What has made archeologists examine this ordinary-looking temple in the heart of a big city? In spite of the new tiles and freshly painted walls, the granite pillars look different. This is because they are very ancient. Not only that, every pillar is made of five different stone blocks. These tire-like blocks rotate individually.
One stone block can be rotated like a tire on the axle of a car. And these blocks are all at least 1,263 years old. Perhaps this is just a assembling error? How could all the pillars be designed with rotating stones? Look carefully. See the dark areas? This is modern concrete. It was patched recently to stop the blocks from rotating.
We can see that this was applied to all the pillars, except one, to prevent people from rotating them. Why? Why did they have to alter the original ancient design? Watch.
Long story short, recently when people started to realize that these blocks could rotate, they started coming to spin them, so much so that the authorities worried the temple might collapse. They therefore applied concrete on all but one pillar.
But the real question is, Why do they rotate?
Why would ancient builders make them this way? This is solid granite. To make it rotate is not easy. Even today, this would be difficult.
Revolving stone gate, Coral Castle |
So how could the so-called "primitive" builders of ancient India build an entire temple full of stone disks that could all be rotated? How are these blocks still rotating even after 1,200 years?
But let us get back to why.
Why were they built to rotate? Was it simply because they could? Why do we make car tires spin? Is it simply because we can, or is it because they have an important purpose in doing so? Tires are built on an axle and they rotate because that is their function to make the care move.
But we can see that these stone blocks are not connected by a single pillar that would serve as an axis. So what mechanism makes them individually rotate? A combination lock system, like one on a briefcase. Is it possible that these rock wheels can be set in a certain combination to make a secret chamber open? What else could it be? Why else would the builders make such a complex rotating mechanism?
#Hinduism #Ancienttechnology #PraveenMohan
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