The Chronicle of Akakor: “When the Gods came from space”
The Akakor Chronicle is a set of stories written by the Ugha Mongulala tribe that inhabits the Amazon jungle in Brazil and contains more than 15,000 years of History, from the arrival of their civilizing Gods to the 70’s. in our time.
They were originally written in the language of their Old Masters (Gods) on tree bark.
The stories were transmitted orally by the prince of the Ugha Mongulala tribe, Tatunca Nara, to the German journalist Karl Brugger who was working in Brazil, who recorded the entire story on tape and later wrote and published the book in 1976. .
The chronicle tells the millennial History of South America from the perspective of the Ugha Mongulala, the oldest civilization in the region, revealing many unknowns that History and archeology have not been able to explain with certainty to this day, such as the construction of Tiahuanaco and Macchu Picchu.
Even the location of the city of Akakor of the Ugha Mongulala has not been found due to the vastness of the Amazon jungle.
Chronologically, the first thing that the chronicle narrates is the arrival of the Gods or Old Masters in 13,000 B.C. from outer space, who selected the aboriginal tribes in the area of the Great River (Amazon) to transmit culture and end their savagery, teaching them to cultivate the land, to respect the laws of nature and the laws that they themselves bequeathed to preserve the common good.
They built great stone cities both on the surface and underground, with temples for the worship of the Sun, pyramids for spiritual purposes, and long tunnels that traverse underground from present-day areas of Peru and Bolivia to Brazil and Venezuela.
Three thousand years after their arrival, the Gods return to their world, a date that was set in the chronology of the Akakor Chronicle as Zero Hour (or year zero, which corresponds to 10,481 BC).
The History of the Ugha Mongulala is moving due to the amount of adversity they had to go through to survive for more than 15 thousand years, both natural catastrophes, wars against other tribes and against the “White Barbarians”, the conquerors who came from Europe in the 19th century. XV and that almost achieved their extinction.
If to date it has remained totally unknown, it is due to the special characteristics of the story and the complete isolation of the peoples whose history it refers to.
The latest discoveries caused by the systematic invasion of the Amazon corroborate the story of the chief Tatunca Nara about his people, thus giving credence to something that can no longer be ignored.
The Akakor Chronicle is divided into four parts and covers a period of just over ten thousand years in the life of the people of Mongulala:
– The Book of the Jaguar deals with the colonization of the Earth by the gods and the period until the second world catastrophe.
– The Book of the Eagle covers the period between 6000 and 11,000 (according to its own calendar) and describes the arrival of the Goths.
– The Book of the Ant, recounts the fight against the Spanish and Portuguese colonizers after they landed in Peru and Brazil.
– The Book of the Water Serpent, describes the arrival of 2,000 German soldiers in Akakor and their integration with the Ugha Mongulala people; it also predicts a third great catastrophe.
Karl Brugger was born in Munich and studied Contemporary History in his hometown and in Paris. He was a freelance correspondent for radio and television until 1974, and since then he has worked as a correspondent for German television in Rio de Janeiro.
After completing his studies in contemporary History and sociology, he left for South America as a journalist. There he heard from Akakor. Since 1974, Brugger was also a correspondent for various radio and television stations in the Federal Republic of Germany.
In 1972 he met Tatunca Nara, the son of a native caudillo, in Manaus. Manaus is located at the confluence of the Solimoes River and the Negro River, that is, in the first half of the Amazon. Tatunca Nara is the chief of the Ugha Mongulala, Dacca and Haisha tribes.
Brugger, a conscientious and skeptical investigator, listened to the truly incredible story that the native related to him. After having verified it point by point, in 1976 he decided to publish the chronicle he had recorded on tape under the title “Die Chronik von Akakor” (The Chronicle of Akakor).
Some paragraphs taken from The Chronicle of Akakor reported by Tatunca Nara:
«In the beginning everything was chaos. Man lived like animals, without reason and without knowledge, without laws and without cultivating the land, without dressing and without even covering his nakedness. He did not know the secrets of nature ».
«He lived in groups of two or three, when an accident had brought them together, in caves or in clefts of the rocks. Men walked in all directions until the Gods arrived. They brought the light.”
«They knew the course of the stars and the laws of nature. Truly, they were familiar with the deepest laws of the Universe. One hundred and thirty families of the Ancient Fathers came to Earth and brought light.”
“They led man from darkness to light. Before the strangers came, men wandered like children who cannot find their homes and whose hearts know no love. They gathered roots, bulbs, and fruits that grew wild; they lived in caves and in holes in the ground; they disputed with their neighbors over the loot they had hunted.
But then the Gods came and instituted a new order in the world. They taught men to cultivate the land and raise animals. They taught them to weave cloth and assigned permanent homes to families and clans. Thus the tribes were born. This was the beginning of light, of life and of the tribe.
«The Gods called men to come together. They deliberated, reflected, and held councils. And then they made decisions. And among all the people they chose their servants to live with them, and to those who transmitted their knowledge to them.
And the Gods ruled from Akakor. They ruled over men and over the Earth. They had ships faster than the flight of birds; ships that reached their destination without sails and without oars, both at night and during the day.
“They had magic stones to observe the farthest places, so that they could see cities, rivers, hills and lakes. Any event that occurred on Earth or in the sky was reflected in the stones. But most wonderful of all were the underground residences. And the Gods gave them to their Chosen Servants as their last gift.”
Coincidentally, the Chronicle of Akakor closely fits a picture that is familiar to mythologists the world over. The Gods came “from the sky,” instructed the first humans, left behind some mysterious devices, and disappeared again “into the sky.”
The devastating disasters that Tatunca Nara describes can be traced back to Immanuel Velikovsky’s “Worlds in Collision” in even the smallest details.
As a historical and cultural document, The Chronicle of Akakor gives a thorough idea of the intellectual work of one of the oldest peoples on Earth. Our knowledge about South America gains new perspectives through this book and questions arise that point to new paths for research.
It reveals to us a dimension that will make even skeptics see that the unthinkable is often imaginable.
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