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The Buddhist kingdom of Agharta

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What I always liked about the book The Hollow Earth were the two

chapters which brought together the Arctic evidence from the previous

books of Reed and Gardner.

 

I always had doubts about the latter half of the book where the

author talks about the nature of the underground worlds. One

impression that I had was that the author confused the hollow

portion, the cavity, with the inner shell. But I have recently gone

back and I am finding several things which correspond very well to

other accounts. For example, in the chapter on Agharta, the author

does differentiate between the cavity and the cavern worlds of the

inner shell, althought he seems to run the Buddhist concept of the

kingdom of Agharta all through the cavern worlds. That, I believe, is

beyond his purview.

 

Here is the pertinent part of that section:

 

 

 

"The Empire of Agharta," wrote Ossendowski in his book "Beasts, Men

and Gods,extends through subterranean tunnels to all parts of the

world." In this book he speaks of a vast network of tunnels

constructed by a prehistoric race of remotest antiquity, which passed

under both oceans and continents, through which swift-moving vehicles

traveled. The empire of which Ossendowski speaks and concerning which

he learned about from lamas in the Far East, during his travels in

Mongolia, obviously consists of subterranean cities inside the

earth's crust, which should be differentiated from those existing in

its hollow center. Thus there are two subterranean worlds, one more

superficial and one in the center of the earth.

 

Huguenin, whose book on flying saucers and the subterranean world we

previously mentioned, believes that there exist many subterranean

cities at various depths, between the earth's crust and its hollow

interior. Concerning the inhabitants of these subterranean cities, he

writes:

 

"This other humanity has reached an elevated grade of civilization,

economic and social organization and cultural and scientific

progress, in comparison with which the humanity which lives on the

earth's surface are a race of barbarians."

 

In his book, Huguenin shows a diagram of the earth's interior,

showing various subterranean cities at various depths, connected with

each other by tunnels. He describes these cities as existing in

immense cavities in the earth. The city of Shamballah, the capital of

the subterranean empire, he portrays as existing at the center of the

earth, in its hollow interior, rather than inside its solid crust.

 

 

 

The whole Agharta chapter is right here:

 

http://skywebsite.com/hollow/thehollowearth/id16.html

 

Posted by Dharma/Dean

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