Beautifully said. Perhaps that is why so many of these ancient sites continue to fascinate us. They are not merely monuments, but lessons carved into stone—teaching through geometry, symbolism, astronomy, and scale. Whether their purpose was practical, spiritual, or both, they seem designed to make us think, observe, and question our place in the world. Thousands of years later, the lesson is still working.
@Hall_of_Records Love it.. while studying these type of beautiful ancient works,.. invites a change of perception and perceptive..
I feel we looking at ancient pedagogy art built in stone that teaches…
The Sayhuite Stone — Peru.
A massive granite monolith covered with hundreds of carvings.
Terraces.
Channels.
Pools.
Stairways.
An entire miniature landscape carved into a single stone.
Water can still flow through many of its channels today.
Some researchers believe it may have been a hydraulic model.
Others see a symbolic map of a sacred landscape.
Whatever its purpose, the level of detail is astonishing.
A whole world...
carved into rock.
#AncientMysteries #LostCivilizations
The Unfinished Obelisk — Egypt.
Still anchored to the granite bedrock at Aswan.
More than 40 meters long.
Estimated weight:
over 1,100 tons.
The largest stone the ancient Egyptians are known to have attempted to carve.
A single block of granite.
Not assembled.
Not stacked.
One stone.
The crack running along its length ended the project before completion.
Had it survived, it would likely have become the largest obelisk ever erected.
Even unfinished, it remains one of the most extraordinary engineering projects of the ancient world.
#AncientEgypt #AncientMysteries
If the symmetry demonstration is accurate, it raises an interesting question:
How did Egyptian sculptors verify such precision on a monument of this scale?
Luxor Temple — Egypt.
One of the colossal granite statues of Ramesses II is said to be so symmetrical that if you mirror one half of the face...
it almost perfectly recreates the other.
Over 3,000 years old, and carved from hard granite.
Yet displaying a level of precision that still impresses modern observers.
So perfectly symmetrical to appear inhuman...
almost alien.
The ancient Egyptians associated symmetry with Ma’at — order, harmony, balance, and cosmic perfection.
What are we looking at here?
#AncientEgypt #AncientMysteries
@Associatio8486 Interesting, thanks. I once watched a documentary that hypothised it was built as an observation post for the night sky and stars, which I findfascinating. As you say, either way, it is outstanding.
Adding on to the facts you mentioned. Something lesser known about the Tower of Jericho is its purpose is debated by archaeologists today. Some say it was used for defensive or flood protection, others say it was built for a communal focal point. Either way, for its time, it was one of the greatest buildings ever made by the Sultanian culture.
@MarcoPrinzi1 Yes.
But hunter-gatherers were not really supposed to possess organized labor, engineering expertise, and monumental architecture on this scale.
Yet here we are.
The Tower of Jericho — West Bank.
One of the oldest surviving monumental structures on Earth.
Built around 8,000 BC, it was already ancient when the pyramids were built.
And when Göbekli Tepe was still standing...
this tower may have been among the very few large stone structures visible anywhere in the world.
Constructed by a society that had not yet invented metal or writing.
Yet, at over 8 meters tall, it demonstrates remarkable engineering and organizational skill.
Some researchers even believe it may have had astronomical significance.
Together with the remains of the Taş Tepeler culture in Turkey, the Tower of Jericho suggests that humanity possessed far more advanced capabilities than we often give our ancestors credit for.
Perhaps too advanced for mere hunter-gatherers to have seemingly developed such skills and knowledge out of nowhere?
#AncientMysteries #LostCivilizations
@my_9940054 Thank you so very much. I truly appreciate your kind words, and your engagement. I will do my utmost best to continue posting interesting material that stimulates responses like your own. Again, thanks for following!