Easter Island: The Mysterious Deities of Rapa Nui. Maidans. Easter Island: Mysterious Rapa Nui

Strange rock on the island of Rapa

Someone didn't like the peaks local mountains and he just cut them off. Or maybe, on the contrary, he liked them too much, but he was used to living on a flat surface.

In the middle of the last century, Thor Heyerdahl visited Rapa-Iti during his expedition. On an island in the mountains, he excavated and, as he described in his book "Aku Aku", in the tenth chapter entitled "Moronga Uta, the city of ruins under the clouds", discovered ancient buildings, huge for such a small island lost in the ocean.

In the 20th century, it would be convenient to use such sites for placing radio equipment, for space navigation, for anti-aircraft missile systems. And why and who needed them many hundreds of years ago in the middle of the Pacific Ocean far from all civilizations? And most importantly, what kind of machinery and equipment was used for this and why it had to be pulled here for thousands of kilometers - well, they didn’t gouge it all out with a pick?

Someone did not like the tops of the local mountains, and he simply cut them off. Or maybe, on the contrary, he liked them too much, but he was used to living on a flat surface. Be that as it may, the deed was done - the landscape was significantly changed. But who did it, and when - is not known ...

Rapa Iti (fr. Rapa Iti) is the largest and only inhabited island of the Bass Islands in French Polynesia. In addition to Rapa Iti, the Bassa Islands include uninhabited islands Marothiri. Sometimes the island is considered as part of the Tubuai archipelago, but the Bassa Islands and the Austral (Tubuai) Islands have different geological, linguistic and cultural history, therefore it is more correct to single them out as an independent archipelago.

In European literature and in everyday communication, the island is simply called Rapa. historical name- Oparo. It is located 1240 km south of the island of Tahiti and 500 km southeast of the island of Raivavae. The island is actually isolated from the rest of Polynesia due to its remoteness both from other islands and from the main sea transport routes. The isolation of Rapa Iti is aggravated by the fact that the island is part of a military zone and it is impossible to visit it without special permission from the French military administration.

The first European to discover it was George Vancouver in 1791. The population of the island is 520 people, the nearest island is located more than 300 kilometers away.

Unfortunately, there are very few pictures of Rapa Island (not to be confused with Rapa Nui - Easter Island!) But thanks to a happy coincidence, the changed mountain peaks of this island ended up in Cousteau's film "Tahiti: land of fire", although Tahiti is already 1200 kilometers from here.

Stills from the film Cousteau:


Updated 26 Aug 2015. Created 25 Apr 2015

In November, it never drops below 23 ° (the table with the weather on Rapa-Iti in the article is from some other place), in reality, there is an unreal dubak around and we put on all the jackets and windbreakers prepared for returning to November Moscow. It's about 13° or 15° outside (the same temperature inside - we slept in clothes last night).

Aronga means "Welcome":

More toohitu banned the sale of alcohol on Rape (but you can bring it with you, so beer caps are lying around):


Pas de Credit "merci"

Aurei

Almost the entire population of the island lives in main village Aurei (450). The bay is also called Aurei:


License plates as in all French Polynesia:

The main micro-genre of this trip is a photo of Patrice with the mayor:

Morongo Uta

On the school project - a map of the island of Rapa - 12 prehistoric gigantic Polynesian forts pa (couple), needed to fight for the scarce resources of the island among themselves. Morongo Uta- apparently the oldest and thanks to the excavations and Thor Heyerdahl the most famous:

Now let's go to Morongo Utu!

These days, Morongo Utu has a steep but decent dirt road, and now you can easily spawn in a jeep as a boss where Turu needed a few hours to cross:

The road is surrounded by giant tree ferns:

When this red flower blooms, whales come and lobsters begin to breed:

Local raspberries, which, of course, are not raspberries:

From the end of the dirt road to Morongo Uta - a simple track for 20 minutes along the sharp edge of the volcano's mouth, in which Rapa fits entirely. Under the prominent, fang-like peak, visible at the top right couple(fort) Tevaitau - similar to Lenin's mausoleum, covered with slightly more yellow grass than the surrounding natural hills:

Here it is closer if you fly up on a quadrocopter:


Fort Tewaitau

The trail, without any help from people, tells about internecine wars between 12 fortresses, about formidable kings and warriors thrown into the abyss:

Million dollar views around:

A day by plane from Moscow, 6 days by sea, 15 minutes by jeep, 20 minutes on foot and here we have Morongo Uta:


Morongo-Uta gives a mixed impression: it is not very big. Against the background of the surrounding sharp natural mountains, partially overgrown - the trees are cut down and thrown down, but the bushes are in place and well mask the artificial relief - at first it seems like just another top of Rapa. So familiar to us from Cousteau's film are numerous platforms descending in steps from main tower forts on the ground, in fact, are indistinguishable.

There is very little artificial masonry, and the excavation work during the construction of the fortress consisted, with all obviousness, in cutting off everything superfluous from the volcanic peak that used to stand here and forming regular defensive platforms and ditches (in the background you can again find Fort Tevaitau):

There are very few clutches:

A typical wall of Morongo-Uta looks more like this (in the background - Aurea Bay with motu(island) Tapui; Tapui - a new volcanic cone inside the large volcano Rapa):

I raise the drone up to 500 meters, as far as the non-hacked firmware allows, point the sensors exactly down and take a picture of Morongo-Uta, in order to once again be convinced of the hypothesis, the confirmation of which our permanent expedition has been finding for many years in a row - of course, this is the point not in Race III, ancient giants, Lemuria or ancient Lemurians. Morongo-Uta was built by the ancient Rus and it has the shape of a balalaika in plan:

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The position of the island of Rapa-Iti on the world map (the figure was created using the Google Earth program)

Rapa Iti Island - an ancient mystery


The island of Rapa Iti (Rapa Iti) is located in the Tubuai archipelago in French Polynesia, is of volcanic origin and is an ancient dormant volcano. The highest point of the island reaches a height of 650 m. The land area is about 40 square meters. km. Rapa Iti was discovered in 1791 by the Englishman George Vancouver. In 2002, the island's population was 497. The main occupation of the inhabitants is the cultivation of coconut palms. The island would have remained unknown if in the middle of the last century Thor Heyerdahl had not hit it with his expedition.


The position of the island of Rapa Iti on the mainland of Lemuria

Quite unexpectedly, Thor Heyerdahl stumbled upon unusual colossal buildings in the mountains of this island. In Aku Aku's book, in a chapter called "Moronga Uta, the City of Undercloud Ruins", these structures are described as follows:

"The village was thoroughly fortified. From the south, the path to it was blocked by a wide moat with a wall. So that stormy downpours would not wash away the huts into the abyss, the builders patiently moved them from the valley up hundreds of thousands of fragments of solid basalt, which supported the terraces. Stones are extremely skillfully driven to each other without any binding solution.. Drainage channels ran through the masonry here and there: oblong stones protruded, forming ladders with their ledges that connected the cornices. In total, there were more than eighty terraces on Morongo Uta. Overall Height structures - fifty meters with a diameter of four hundred meters; in other words, it is the largest structure known to us in Polynesia."



View of the island of Rapa Iti near the village of Moronga Uta. The arrow shows the position of the ruins excavated by Thor Heyerdahl's expedition.

View of coastal zone Rapa Iti islands from the height of the ruins near the village of Moronga Uta (photo from Thor Heyerdahl's book "Aku Aku")

locals the islands of Rapa Iti are sent to excavate the ruins near the village of Moronga Uta under the guidance of members of the expedition of Thor Heyerdahl (photo from Thor Heyerdahl's book "Aku Aku")

Excavations of one of the gigantic structures located on the island of Rapa-Iti near the village of Morong Uta (photo from Thor Heyerdahl's book "Aku Aku")

Hundreds of thousands of huge fragments of solid basalt, raised from the valley to the tops of the mountains - are the Papuans capable of such work? And the laying of huge walls and fitting blocks to each other without any binder solution - does it not resemble the walls of Saxahuaman or Cuzco? And why would the natives climb the tops of the mountains and build huge structures there, if fertile valleys lie nearby? - The answer to all these questions can be given only if we assume that after the flood of Lemuria there were some islands on which the remaining Lemurians survived - they then built these gigantic structures.

Unfortunately, the ruins on the island of Rapa Iti have not been thoroughly excavated and explored to this day. There remains only one oral testimony of Thor Heyerdahl, cited by him in his book, excerpts from which we give in the appendix below. Unfortunately, the description of Thor Heyerdahl is tendentious, who, as is known, attributed all the gigantic structures to the work of the local Papuans.

There are very few pictures of Rapa Island (not to be confused with Rapa Nui - Easter Island!) But thanks to a happy coincidence, the altered peaks of the mountains of this island ended up in Cousteau's film "Tahiti: Tierra del Fuego", although Tahiti is already 1200 kilometers from here.

Stills from the film Cousteau:


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Thor Heyerdahl book "Aku Aku".
Chapter Ten Moronga Uta, the City of Undercloud Ruins

The tale says: in a faraway kingdom, in a faraway state, behind high mountains stands a golden castle on top. But who believes in fairy tales today? We believed when we crossed a high mountain and saw Morongo Uta in front of us.

The ocean stretched all around the world. The boundless ocean that we crossed with our boat from the other side of the globe. Below us were deep green valleys, the mirror-like surface of the bay, and the same boat that brought us here from Easter Island. And on the next peak, at hand, - magic castle. An enchanted castle, a sleeping kingdom, walls and towers woven with a green forest carpet from the very time the king and all his retinue left him. And it happened when the world still believed in fairy tales...

I was breathless with excitement when we stepped on the last ridge and began to approach the foot of the fairy-tale castle. Mighty and majestic, it towered before us against a fantastic background of floating clouds, blue peaks and spiers ... And although the castle was elevated high into the air, to the very sky, there was something from a dungeon ancient building with a dense green fleece of virgin thickets over turf-covered walls.

A beautiful blue bird rushed into the abyss with a cry. And when we approached the castle, three white wild goats suddenly emerged from the bushes on the wall, jumped into the moat and disappeared from sight. Considering that Easter Island is the most secluded in the world, it is not so strange to call Rapaiti one of its closest neighbors, although they are separated by the same distance as Spain from Canada. In these green mountains, we were somehow especially far from worldly fuss. That's right, this is the most forgotten corner of the Pacific Ocean,

Who heard about Rapaiti? A small island, almost torn into two parts by the mighty fangs of the surrounding ocean ... To the right and left of us are steep, steep slopes and two bays, which alternately, depending on the wind, served as a mirror of the magic castle. And if you turn around, you can count twelve equally outlandish castles on other peaks overgrown with greenery. And just as lifeless. Only on the shore of the bay, where our boat was moored, was smoke visible over the village: a handful of white huts and bamboo huts with reed roofs. The entire population of Rapaiti lived here - two hundred and seventy-eight Polynesians.

But who erected the magic castle in front of us - and the rest, on other peaks? And what were these structures really intended for? Nobody knew this. When Captain Vancouver accidentally discovered this secluded island in 1791, it seemed to him that people were swarming on one of the peaks. On the slope, he seemed to make out a blockhouse and palisades in several rows and concluded that this was an artificial fortification. True, he did not climb the mountain and check. And the famous missionary Ellis, who arrived there a few years later, said that Vancouver was mistaken, he mistook purely natural formations for a fort. After Ellis, I visited Rapaiti famous traveler Murenhut. He admired the peculiar nature of the island, whose mountains resemble towers, castles and fortified Indian villages. But even he did not climb the peaks to take a closer look at the amazing phenomenon of nature.

In the early thirties, a book was published by Caio, who climbed mountains and made sure that masonry walls were visible between the bushes. Others climbed after him; most decided that there were ancient fortifications, but some interpreted the ruins as the remains of agricultural terraces. Of the ethnologists, only Stoke visited the island. He studied the locals, but his manuscript remained unpublished and was kept in the Bishop Museum.

We breathed a sigh of relief, dropping anchor in a mirrored bay near a picturesque village, from which tiny pirogues immediately came out to us.

... And here we are on the ridge itself; behind is a difficult ascent through steep gorges and ridges.

Morongo Uta, our guide said.

Who built it?

He shrugged.

Maybe some kind of king, who knows.

Parting the dense thickets, we saw here and there pieces of carefully laid out walls. I heard Ed exclaim. In one place, a ledge above a steep slope crumbled, and the earth was exposed, mixed with shells and fish bones. And a bell-shaped basalt mortar stuck out of the garbage, so elegant, so skillfully hewn and polished, that I have not seen better work in all Polynesia.

At this time, and Bill got out on the ridge.

Wow, - he said, looking as if spellbound at the mighty structure. - You have to dig here!

We put men and women at different ends of the huge structure, and a tournament unfolded - who will do their job better and faster. Each brigade sought to defend the honor of its sex, and it is unlikely that excavations have ever worked with such zeal. From the deck of our ship, it looked like locusts had attacked the mountain. The green veil of Morongo Uta was receding before our eyes; more brown every day. Terraces, walls appeared, and now the whole top is like a chocolate temple against a blue sky background.

And all around the green shaggy pyramids still rose - sort of castles of mountain trolls. In fact, Morongo Uta was not a castle. From the neighboring ridges, it was immediately clear that this was not a single building. We unearthed the abandoned ruins of an entire village. Calling it a fort is a misnomer. And agricultural terraces are not the right definition. Because the entire population of the island once lived here, on the tops of the mountains.

Those who first sailed to the island could well have settled in the valleys, out of the blue. Nevertheless, they climbed the steep cliffs to the tops of the mountains. Hooked on them and, so to speak, twisted their eagle's nests. Or rather, they began to chisel the mountain with stone axes and turned its top into an impregnable tower. Below the tower were large terraces, on which residential buildings huddled together. Hearths full of ashes and charcoal have survived to our time - stone stoves of a kind of masonry, which until now was known throughout Polynesia only on Easter Island.

Bill carefully packed the precious firebrands into bags: radioactive analysis would help determine the age of the amazing mountain village.

Around lay a lot of stone axes different kind, whole and broken. But even more often there was an indispensable tool for a housewife - stone pestles, with which women turned taro into drinking cups. Some of the pestles were so intricately made, the graceful lines and smooth polishing spoke of such perfection that our mechanics could not believe how such a thing could be made without a modern lathe. At one point, Bill carefully dug the blackened remains of an old fishing net out of the ground.

The village was heavily fortified. From the south, the path to it was blocked by a wide moat with a wall. To prevent the stormy downpours from washing the huts into the abyss, the builders patiently carried hundreds of thousands of fragments of hard basalt up from the valley, with which they propped up the terraces. The stones were extremely skilfully fitted together without any binding solution. Drainage channels ran through the masonry here and there: oblong stones protruded, forming ladders with their ledges that connected the cornices. In total, there were more than eighty terraces on Morongo Uta. The total height of the structure is fifty meters with a diameter of four hundred meters; in other words, it is the largest structure known to us in Polynesia. Bill estimated that more people lived in Morongo Uta alone than there are today on the entire island.

Thor Heyerdahl, his wife Yvonne, Bill, who led the excavations (photo from Thor Heyerdahl's book "Aku Aku")

Hearths, wells and cellars for storing taro - that's all that remains of the dwellings, except for tools and garbage. And before that there were (another feature reminiscent of Easter Island) oval huts made of branches stuck into the ground, which were tied together at the top and covered with reeds and dry grass. For big places of worship- the main element of building art on other islands - there was not enough space. And the inhabitants of Morongo Uta solved this problem in their own way, unknown in other parts of Polynesia: they cut down domed niches on the mountain behind the terraces and arranged miniature temples in them. On the smooth floor, like chess pieces, stood, forming rows and cages, small stones. And those rituals for which it was too crowded in front of the dwarf temple were performed on the upper platform of the pyramid, where the sky was the ceiling.

While Bill and his assistants led the excavation of Morongo Uta, Ed and Carl, along with members of the ship's crew, explored other parts of the island. All pyramid-like peaks turned out to be the ruins of the same fortified villages. The Rapaitians called them a couple. Along the sharp watershed ridge that connected the peaks, the foundations of former dwellings stretched in a continuous line. And in the valleys, the walls of ancient agricultural terraces have been preserved. Often they climbed steps on the slopes. And everywhere traces of an artificial irrigation network were visible - long channels took water from streams and carried it along the terraces. So, in the past, the people of this peculiar island community lived on the tops of the mountains and every day went down the paths carved into the cliffs to tend the taro crops in the valleys and catch fish and crayfish in the sea. The children of the mountain people lived higher than the eaglets in their nests.

I have never been to the islands in the Pacific Ocean. So far, such a trip remains only my dream. But the spirit of the explorer that lives in each of us made me pay close attention to the problem of how outlying islands in the Pacific Ocean, including Easter Island (everyone knows), were discovered.
Researchers, scientists, amateurs have proposed numerous options for how ancient sailors navigated among the gigantic water surface. "By the stars!" usually the most common answer. However, the answer to the question, is it? leads to amazing results.
For example, I took 2 islands in the Pacific Ocean: this is Rapa Nui (or Easter Island) and Rapa Iti, many hundreds of kilometers away from the first. The well-known researcher Thor Heirdal in his book "Aku, aku" almost entirely devoted to the research of Easter Island, asked about the same question "how was Easter Island discovered"? He approached the study of the problem more than professionally. He studied the Pacific currents and found out that a powerful Pacific current departs from the coasts of Chile and Peru in South America, through which ancient navigators at first could easily get to the island of Rapa Nui, and then to Rapa Iti.
After exploring Easter Island, Thor Heyerdahl arrived on the island of Rapa Iti, where he found powerful fortifications on the mountain of the island that had not yet been explored by anyone, which clearly could not be built by the local population. Moreover, now a little more than 400 people live on the island.
I think that there could have been several waves of settlement of the islands in the Pacific Ocean. However, in my opinion, the main wave still came from Australia and New Zealand, which is confirmed by numerous archaeological finds.
So what connects the island of Rapa Nui and Rapa Iti? It turned out that the names of their names are translated as Big and small island, given to them by sailors from the island of Tahiti. Both islands are of volcanic origin, the shape of Easter Island looks like a triangle, and the shape of Rapa Iti looks like a Russian letter C. But I managed to find the most interesting thing when I drew a line along the 27th parallel from one island to another. Both islands lie almost on the same latitude!
The legends about Hotu Matua (the leader and discoverer of Easter Island) say that he dreamed of Easter Island in a dream and he sent scouts to an unknown area of ​​​​the Pacific Ocean. Anakena Bay, where Hotu Matua landed, is located on the western part of the island, which can be considered another confirmation that he arrived from the West ...
Easter Island cannot be found in the Pacific Ocean; it is not for nothing that the islanders called it the Navel of the Earth. Apparently, they were familiar with the maps of the eastern part of the Pacific Ocean, because there is not a single habitable island within 3000 km around the island. It is also undetectable if the islanders knew of the existence of the Tropic of Capricorn (whether they knew or not, I do not know), a latitude at which no shadows are cast by objects at noon.
The island of Rapa Iti, meanwhile, is included in French Polynesia and can be easily discovered when exploring the islands of the archipelago.
The point is also that I discovered several more similar "strange" coincidences, when ancient navigators discovered new islands and entire continents. But more on that in another story.

Easter Island(Spanish: Isla de Pascua) - island volcanic origin, belonging, lying in the South Pacific Ocean, between Chile and the island of Tahiti (fr. Tahiti). Together with a small uninhabited about. Sala y Gomez (Spanish Isla Sala y Gómez) forms the commune and province of Isla de Pascua (Spanish Provincia de Isla de Pascua) within the region (Spanish Region de Valparaíso). Local name, given to the island Polynesian whalers: Rapa Nui(Rapa Nui).

The only city of Hanga Roa (Spanish: Hanga Roa) is the capital of the island.

About 6 thousand people live on the island, about 40% of them are Polynesians or Rapanui, indigenous people, the rest are mostly Chileans. Rapanui people speak the Rapanui language, believers profess Catholicism. On the territory of the island with an area of ​​​​about 165 km² there are 70 extinct volcanoes. They have not erupted even once in 1300 years from the date of its colonization. The island has the shape of a right-angled triangle with sides of 24.18 and 16 km., At the corners of which rise the cones of extinct volcanoes: Rano Kao (rap. Rano Kao; 324 m), Pua Katiki (rap. Puakatike; 377 m) and Terevaka ( rap Terevaka, 539 m - highest point islands). Between them lies a hilly plain formed by volcanic tuffs and basalts. Many underwater caves and a bizarre, steep coastline are formed by lava tubes and influxes.

There are no rivers on Rapa Nui, the main sources fresh water here are lakes that have arisen in the craters of volcanoes.

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The climate is subtropical, with an average monthly temperature of +18°С to +23°С. Mostly herbs grow here, as well as a few eucalyptus and banana plants.

Along with the Tristan da Cunha archipelago, Rapa Nui is considered the most remote inhabited island in the world: the distance to the continental Chilean coast is almost 3514 km, and to the nearest inhabited place, the Pitcairn Islands, UK-owned) - 2075 km.

Basically, Rapa Nui became famous for its stone giants, in which, according to the beliefs of the local population, the mystical power of the ancestors of Hotu Matu'a (Hotu Mato-a), the first king of the island, is contained.

Easter Island is undoubtedly the most Mysterious Island on the globe. With its curiosities and inexplicable mysteries, it attracts the attention of historians, geologists and culturologists like a magnet.

Story

In 1722, a squadron of 3 ships under the command of the Dutch traveler, Admiral Jacob Roggeveen (Dutch Jacob Roggeveen; 1659-1729), heading from South America in search of the riches of the Unknown Southern Land (lat.Terra Australis Incognita), on Sunday April 7, the day of Christian Easter, found in southern region Pacific Ocean small island. At the council, gathered by the admiral, the captains of the ships signed a resolution proclaiming the opening of a new island. Surprised travelers discovered that on Easter Island (as sailors immediately dubbed it) three different races coexist peacefully: redskins, blacks and whites. Local residents greeted the travelers differently: some waved their hands in a friendly manner, and some threw stones at uninvited guests.

The Polynesians, the inhabitants of Oceania, call the island "Rapa Nui" (rap. Rapa Nui - Big Rapa), however, the islanders themselves call their homeland "Te Pito-o-te-Khenua" (rap. Te-Pito-o -te-henua, which means " the center of the world»).

Formed by a series of large volcanic eruptions, the secluded island has served as a habitat for seabird colonies for millions of years. And its steep, steep banks marked the navigation path for the ships of the Polynesian navigators.

Legends say that about 1200 years ago on the sandy beach of Anakena (rap. Anakena) King Hotu Mato-a descended and set about colonizing the island. Then, for many centuries, a mysterious society existed on this island lost in the ocean. For unknown reasons, the islanders carved giant statues known as "moai". These idols are today considered one of the most inexplicable ancient artifacts on Earth. The islanders built villages from houses of an unusual, elliptical shape. Presumably, the newly arrived settlers adapted their boats for temporary housing by turning them upside down. Then houses began to be built in a similar way, most of the hundreds of such buildings were destroyed by missionaries.

By the time the island was discovered, its population was 3-4 thousand people. The first settlers found lush vegetation on the island. Giant palm trees (up to 25 m high) grew here in abundance, which were cut down for the construction of dwellings and boats. People brought various plants here, which perfectly took root in the soil enriched with volcanic ash. By 1500, the population of the island already amounted to 7 - 9 thousand people.

As the population grew, separate clans formed, concentrated in different parts of Easter Island, connected by the common construction of statues and the cult that arose around them.

In 1862, Peruvian slave traders took out most of the inhabitants of the island and destroyed their original culture. In 1888, Rapa Nui was annexed to Chile. Today, the islanders are engaged in fishing, farming - growing sugar cane, taro, sweet potatoes, bananas, and also work on cattle farms and make souvenirs for tourists.

Sights and mysteries of Rapa Nui

Despite its small size, Easter Island has many attractions, both natural and man-made. In 1995 national park Rapa Nui (Spanish: el Parque Nacional de Rapa Nui National) was included in the register world heritage UNESCO.

The entire territory of the island is an archaeological reserve, a single amazing open-air museum.

There are 2 sandy beaches on Easter Island: located in the northern part of the island, Anakena Beach (Spanish: Playa Anakena), one of the few beaches where swimming is officially allowed, perfect place for surfers. The second beautiful deserted beach located along south coast islands, this is a real gem called Ovahe (Spanish: Playa Ovahe). Ovahe surrounded picturesque rocks, he is much larger than Anaken.

The main attraction of the island and an unresolved mystery that has haunted the minds of scientists for centuries, of course, are the Moai sculptures. Huge ancient statues rise almost everywhere along the southern part of the island.

It is not known why the islanders began to massively create gigantic statues. Their incomprehensible obsession subsequently led to a catastrophic depletion of forest resources. The forest needed to transport the giant moai was mercilessly cut down. The first monolithic human-height sculptures were made from basalt. Then the islanders began to make huge statues(more than 10 m high, weighing up to 20 tons) from soft volcanic tuff (compressed volcanic ash), an ideal material for sculpture. Located a little inland of the island, the Rano Raraku crater (Spanish: Rano Raraku; a small extinct volcano up to 150 m high) is the place where the famous giants are carved. Hundreds of islanders worked on their creation from morning to evening. Today, here you can see all the stages of painstaking work, unfinished figures are scattered right there. Probably, the production of statues by skillful sculptors took place with the observance of numerous ceremonies and rituals. If a defect occurred during the manufacture of the statue, which was considered a sign of the devil, the carvers abandoned their work and took on another.

When the statue was carved and the bridge connecting it to the rock of the crater was cut off, the figure rolled down the slope. At the base of the crater, the statues were placed in a vertical position, and their final refinement was carried out here. How then were the massive moai transported to various places on the island? Statues weighed up to 82 tons at a height of up to 10 m. Sometimes they were moved and installed at distances of over 20 km!

As the Easter legends say, moai … went to their places on their own. Some researchers believed that they were dragged. Later they came to the conclusion that the figures moved in an upright position. What it really looked like remains one more unsolved mystery civilization of Easter Island.

In 1868, the British tried to take one of the statues home. However, they abandoned this idea, limiting themselves to a small bust (2.5 m high). It was installed in London's British Museum. Hundreds of natives and the entire crew of the ship took part in the process of transporting and loading the "baby".

At the location of the statue, they were installed on ahu (rap. Ahu) - polished stone platforms of various sizes, slightly inclined towards the sea. Then the final stage of the creation of cult figures took place - the installation of eyes made of volcanic glass or corals. The heads of many stone idols were decorated with “hats” (rap. Pukao) made of reddish rock.

Moai pedestals have a height of more than 3 m, a length of up to 150 m, and the weight of their stone slabs is up to 10 tons. About 200 unfinished figures were found near the crater of the volcano, among which there are giants over 20 meters in length.

Over time, the number of moai reached 1000, which made it possible to build an almost continuous line of monuments along the coast of Rapa Nui. The reason why residents tiny island spent time and energy on the creation of numerous giants, and today remains a mystery.

It is believed that the statues of Easter Island were images of noble representatives of the clans. The typical design of the statue - without legs, with an angular grim face, a protruding chin, tightly compressed lips and a low forehead - remains one of the the greatest mysteries Easter islands. All statues (except seven moai, located in the middle of the island) stand on the coast and "look" at the sky towards the island. Some experts consider them to be the guardians of the dead, who protected the deceased from natural elements with their powerful backs. Mysterious giants, silently lined up on the coast, turning their backs to the Pacific Ocean - like a powerful army guarding the peace of their possessions.

Despite some primitive moai, the statues are fascinating. The giants look especially impressive in the evening, in the rays of the setting sun, when only huge, chilling silhouettes loom against the sky ...

So the Rapa Nui civilization reached its peak, then something terrible happened.

An ominous story about the merciless use of natural resources and the ruin of the island. Europeans who first set foot on Easter Island were amazed at how people could survive in such a deserted place. It ceased to be a mystery when recent research showed that in ancient times the island was covered with dense forest, there was an abundant tropical paradise here.

Apparently, the resources of the island seemed inexhaustible, trees were cut down for the construction of dwellings and canoes, and giant palm trees were used to transport moai.

The destruction of the forest has led to soil erosion and depletion. Meager harvests, lack of food led to armed conflicts between the island clans, moai - symbols of power and success were overthrown. The fight intensified over time, according to legend, the winners ate their enemies to gain strength. In the southwestern part of Rapa Nui there is a cave "Ana Kai Tangata", the name of which is ambiguous: it can mean "a cave where people eat", or it can mean "a cave where people ate". The culture of Rapa Nui, which had been formed over the past 300 years, collapsed.

Due to the lack of a forest, the islanders found themselves cut off from the outside world even more than before. Even fishing was difficult for them. Easter Island turned into a devastated desolate piece of land with depleted soils, with about 750 inhabitants surviving. Under these conditions, the cult of the bird-man was born here. Over time, it acquired the status of the dominant religion on the island, which was practiced until 1866-1867.

Due to the lack of material for the construction of canoes and the possibility of sailing away from the island, the Rapanui people watched with envy the birds soaring in the sky.

On the edge of the Rano-Kao crater, the ritual village of Orongo (rap. Orongo) was founded, where the god of fertility Makemake (rap. MakeMake) was worshiped and peculiar competitions were held between men of different clans.

In the spring, each clan selected the most physically fit warriors who needed to descend from the steep slopes to the shark-infested sea, swim to one of the islets and bring back an unharmed egg of a sea bird, a dark mallard (lat. Onychoprion fuscatus). The warrior who managed to deliver the egg first was proclaimed the Bird-Man (the earthly incarnation of the deity Makemake). He was awarded an award and special privileges, and his tribe received the right to rule the island for a year, until the next competition.

Also unique to Orongo are the hundreds of centuries-old petroglyphs carved into the hard basalt rock by the Birdmen. There is an opinion that the petroglyphs depict the winners of the annual competitions. About 480 such petroglyphs have been found around Orongo.

The culture of the Rapanui began to revive, perhaps the inhabitants of the island would again be able to flourish, but in December 1862 ships of Peruvian slave traders moored to the island and took away all the able-bodied inhabitants of the island. At that time, the economy was booming and needed labor. Due to poor nutrition, unbearable working conditions and disease, no more than a hundred islanders survived. And only thanks to the intervention of France, the surviving residents of Rapa Nui were returned to the island. At the time of the annexation of the island to Chile in 1888, about 200 indigenous people lived here.

Missionaries who arrived on the island discovered a declining society here, and it did not take long for its inhabitants to convert to Christianity. Changes were immediately made to the clothing of the indigenous population, or rather, its complete absence. The inhabitants of the island were deprived of their original lands, they lived in a small part of the island, while the arrived farmers used the rest of the land for agriculture.

Tattoos were banned, houses and ritual shrines were destroyed, works of art of the Rapanui were destroyed. All wooden sculptures of the island, religious artifacts, and, most importantly, "" (rap. Rongo Rongo) were destroyed - wooden planks of the "talking tree", dotted with unique writing. Easter Island is the only island in Polynesia whose inhabitants developed their own writing system. Ancient legends, legends, religious chants were carved with a shark's tooth on planks of dark toromiro wood, only a few of which have survived to this day. Kohau tablets with images of a winged bird-man, frogs, turtles, lizards, stars, crosses and spirals inscribed on them are another mystery of the outlandish island that scientists have not been able to decipher for more than 130 years. Now only 25 left rongo-rongo scattered throughout the museums of the world.

In 1988, Rapa Nui gave scientists another surprise. During excavations in a small swamp in the depths of the island, Australian scientists found the remains of a medieval knight in full gear, sitting on a war horse. In peat, which has preservative properties, the knight and horse are well preserved. Judging by his armor, the knight was a member of the German Catholic Livonian Order (1237-1562). In a belt purse, gold Hungarian ducats minted in 1326 were found; these coins were in circulation in Poland and Lithuania. Scientists could not explain how the rider ended up thousands of kilometers away in a remote pacific island. Before the discovery of America (1492), more than 150 years remained from 1326! Thoughts about the existence of the phenomenon of teleportation involuntarily arise. No more, more or less convincing arguments explaining the appearance of a medieval crusader knight on Easter Island have been found to this day.

A little sad digression

The phenomenal Easter Island, which is a small piece of land (only 165 m²), at the time of the construction of the mysterious giants, was 3-4 times larger than before. Some part of it, like Atlantis, disappeared under water. Into the quiet sunny weather areas of flooded land are visible through the water column. There is even such an incredible version: the mysterious Easter Island is a tiny surviving part of the progenitor of mankind, the mythical mainland of Lemuria, which sank about 4 million years ago.

And the pearl island, located in Oceania far from civilization, suggests certain thoughts and conclusions. The history of Easter Island is a miniature copy of the history of our time. She is able to teach an object lesson to us, the inhabitants of planet Earth. All of us, in essence, are the inhabitants of the island, floating in the endless ocean.

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