Travel Blogger, Beautiful Places, Nice Place to Visit

Welcome to World Travel Blogger

Have you ever travel to Iguazu Waterfalls, Pyramids and The Sphinx, Nabatean City of Petra, Victoria Waterfalls, Great Coral Reef, Niagara Waterfalls, Juneau Alaska, Salar of Uyuni, Moai Statues of The Easter Island, Aerial View of Rio Bay, Kilauea and Hawaii Volcanoes, Mont Saint-Michel, Uluru Giant Monolith at Ayers Rock, and other beautiful places? You can glance through their amazing and beautiful scenes via this blog. You are WELCOME to share yours. Think GREEN - Act GREEN!


Travel Blogger, Beautiful Places, Nice Place to Visit


Advertlets #4

fotolia

Advetlets #3

Easter Island History

Easter Island History – The Island Itself
Many people have found Easter Island history very fascinating! On Easter Sunday, April 5, 1722, a Dutch sea captain named Jacob Roggeveen landed his ship on an island known as Te Pito o Te Henua, meaning “The Center of the World.” Captain Roggeveen renamed the island Easter Island. Located 2200 miles (3500 kilometers) off the coast of Chile, it is the world’s remotest inhabited island. The island is 63 miles in size with three extinct volcanoes; but technically speaking, the island is a single massive volcano that rises over 10,000 feet from the ocean floor! Once a luscious refuge for migratory birds and wildlife, the island has now been stripped of its native forest due to overpopulation and improper farming techniques. At first, Polynesian travelers from the Marquesas, or Society Islands, populated the island. These inhabitants carried with them rich religious and artistic cultures. As the population increased, the food chain broke, resulting in famines and even cannibalism. Those who survived were left to the mercies of slave traders from other lands and governmental domination by Peru and Chile. The onslaught also brought various devastating diseases.



Easter Island History – Cultural Development
The cultural development on the island has been fodder for widespread speculation. Since the island consists of volcanic rock, the early inhabitants quarried the material into giant statues, some as tall as 14 feet, 6 inches and weighing about 14 tons. This was the reason for the depletion of the rich forestry. The villagers used the trees to transport these giant rocks all over the island as early as AD 700. Most of the surviving statues are lined up all along the shoreline facing out to sea. Their faces and bodies resemble similar statues in Polynesia but have evolved uniquely. The statue cult symbolized male dominance and power throughout the societal structure of the inhabitants; not only signifying power and stature, the natives believed they were indwelled by a sacred spirit. Worldwide knowledge of Easter Island’s strange statues has fueled many interesting theories, all of which have no scientific backing. One man wrote that armadas carrying elephants had been blown off course by typhoons and ended up on the island. The man goes on to claim that the elephants were then used as the muscle behind the movement of the monuments. A man by the name of Tom Gary suggested that Easter Island transmitted energy to Mexico and South America. He suggests that messages found on the statues are diagrams explaining how copies can be made in three-dimensions. Then there is the sunken city group (the same people who believe in Atlantis) who theorize that Easter Island is actually a sunken continent. Modern exploration with the use of sonar has proven this theory to be false. Of course, we can’t leave out the space travelers. Yes, the same ones who built the pyramids in Egypt stopped in at Easter Island and made all those statues. Authors have also written books about the island without actually visiting, neglecting to do their homework.


Easter Island History – The New Age Draw
New Agers are enthralled by places like Easter Island, the pyramids, and Stonehenge. There have even been claims of mystic energy fields and alien influence. The mysteries of this ancient civilization have caused theories to form and today many New Agers consider it to be a very spiritual place. The statues that look out to sea are a poignant reminder that man is forever searching and seeking a place of peace and harmony. Despite whatever meaning the early builders may have originally had for these figures, only a sense of loss and hopelessness remains.


Source:
(A) Easter Island: Legacy of Statues from www.allaboutpopularissues.org

No comments:

Post a Comment

Crestock

Crestock Logo

The Most Beautiful Places In Our Lovely World

The Inca City of Machu Picchucountry, Sigiriya, The Mosque of Djenné, El Tajin, Baalbek, Nightlife on The Djemaa Elfna Square, The Pagoda of Shwedagon, The Tasmania Island, Giant Sequoias, The Sagrada Familia, The Karnak Temple, The Wulingyuan Rocky Peaks, The Baikal Lake, The Uluru Giant Monolith at Ayers Rock, The Reims Cathedral, The Neuschwanstein Castle, The Plitvice Park and Its Waterfalls, The Aeolian Islands and The Stromboli, The Canaima Park and The Salto Angel Waterfalls, The Alhambra, The Louvre Museum, The Komodo Island, The Kremlin and The Saint Basil the Blest Cathedral, The Colorful Waters of The Jiuzhaigou River, A Nil Cruise between Luxor and Assuan, Hindu fervour at The Banks of the Ganges at Varanasi, The Mont Saint-Michel, The Meteors: Monasteries Built on Rocky Peaks, The Acropolis and The Parthenon, The Hassan II Mosque, The Kilauea and the Hawaii Volcanoes, The Buddhistic Temple of Borobudur, Milford Sound and The Mitre Peak, The Giants' Causeway, The Limestone Basins at Huanglong, The Piana Rocky Inlet and the Girolata Gulf, The Yellowstone National Park, The Maya City of Chichen Itza, The Vatican and The Saint Peter's Basilica, Moai Statues of The Easter Island, The Cappadocia and the Goreme Valley, The Rice Terrace Fields of Banaue, The Caves of Carlsbad, The Perito Moreno Glacier, The Galapagos Archipelago, The Galapagos Archipelago, Lunar Scenery at the South of Altiplanoand the Colourful Lagoons, White Immensity of Antarctica, The Ngorongoro Crater, Fjords and the Preikestolen Cliff, Pagan, the Thousand Pagodas Plain, The Bora-Bora Island, The Halong Bay, The Abu Simbel Temple, The Salar of Uyuni, The Niagara Waterfalls, The amazonian Virgin Forest, The Great Coral Reef, The Victoria Waterfalls, The Big Wall of China, The Great Canyon of Colorado, The Pyramids and the Sphinx, The Iguazu Waterfalls, The Inca City of Machu Picchu ... ...

Chitika