(This
is the second part of chapter 21 of the book Shambhala by Nicholas
Roerich, and above I put one of the paintings that he painted about the
menhirs that he observed in the Himalayas.)
In
the Trans-Himalayas, at heights of fifteen thousand and sixteen thousand feet,
we found several groups of menhirs. Of these menhirs in Tibet, nobody knows.
Once after an entire day’s trip through the barren hills and rocks of the
Trans-Himalayas, we saw, at a distance, some black tents prepared for our camp.
At the same time, we noticed, not far from the same direction, those long
stones which are so meaningful for every archaeologist. Even from afar, could be
distinguished the peculiar design of their construction.
-
“What
kind of stones are these on the slopes?” we asked our Tibetan guide.
-
“Oh,”
he replied, “they are Doring—long stones; this is an ancient sacred place. It
is very useful to put grease on the heads of the stones. Then the deities of
this place help the travelers.”
-
“Who
laid these stones together?”
-
“Nobody
knows. But this district from ancient times has been called Doring—long stones.
The people say that unknown people passed here long ago.”
Across
the relief of the Trans-Himalayas we saw distinctly the long rows of vertical
stones. These alleys finished with a circle with three high stones in the
center. The direction of the entire figure was from west to east.
After
encamping, we hurriedly proceeded to the site. And with the full evidence
before us we realized that here was a typical menhir, such as gave its glory to
the stone field of Carnac. On the surrounding slopes, no objects were found.
Not far from the menhir was a trace of a small river, temporarily dried.
No
excavation was permitted because of the stupid prejudice of the Tibetans who
invented the story that Buddha forbade the touching of the soil. But no
excavation was needed to recognize the typical Druidic construction so
carefully transported from the shores of the ocean… “The strongest have passed
this way and found the most suitable sites.”
During
the next four days we found four other groups of menhirs. Some of them had the
same rather long alleys of stone; others consisted only of several long stones
encircled by smaller stones. When we approached the high passes before the
Brahmaputra, these constructions ceased.
In
connection with these old sanctuaries, we found several tombs, a square
outlined by huge stones. Again a complete repetition of those in the Altai and
Caucasus was revealed. Before me, from the same spot, is a characteristic
fibula—the two-headed eagle. The same design is known to us from the graves of
the northern Caucasus. Before me are Tibetan swords, exactly like those in the
Gothic tombs. The women of the same district wear the head-dress, like the
head-dress of the Slavonic peoples, the so-called Kokoshnik.
Ancient
Europeans in Central Asia
As
you travel through the heights of Tibet with their unbearable cold and
hurricanes; as you mark these savage Tibetans in decayed furs, devouring raw
meat, you are deeply astonished when out of the fur hat peers apparendy the
face of a Spaniard, a Hungarian or southern Frenchman. Admittedly, they are
somewhat distorted of feature, but they have no relation with the Mongolian or
Chinese type. You can relate them only to Europeans. One may also imagine that
the best and most courageous people have departed somewhere and now you have
before you only the poor degenerate remnants.
Looking
on the merciless glaciers of the Trans-Himalayas, on this sterile soil, on
barren rocks, where even animals are scarce, where even eagles are seen but
rarely, you may conceive how people were impelled onward, and how, from the
high mountains, they reached the expanses of the future deserts. But their
spirits were unsatisfied. They longed for the mountains.
Thus
did the Altai Mountains give them the temporary illusion of a longed-for
happiness. But the glaciers of the Altai were too close to them; only now are
they beginning to recede, for scientists have estimated the recession of the
glaciers to be about twenty-five feet during the last thirty years. Some new
and more fertile dwelling site for the courageous travelers was to be found in
the Northern Caucasus and in the Crimea. Once again, the mountains permitted
them breathing space. But they no longer had to combat the glaciers. The long
journey was rewarded.
Why, then, not to try
still further?
The
Carpathian Mountains were also inviting; so to the very shores of the ocean
came the pilgrims. And they remembered all the sacred signs of their long
journey. For this reason, we appreciated so much the menhirs and Stone Henge of
Bretagne and the British Isles. We cannot give statements of finality because
each finality is a conclusion, and conclusions mean death. In broad decisions,
in broad expectations and search, we are happy to add more pearls to the string
of searching.
When
I was asked, “Why do you so rejoice over these menhirs?” I answered, “Because
my map of fairy-tales was verified. When in one’s hand you hold one end of an
enchanted cord at Carnac, is it not a joy to find its beginning in the
Trans-Himalayas?”
Somebody
may argue, that perhaps the builders of the menhirs came into the
Trans-Himalayas from somewhere, and that the Trans-Himalayas may thus have been
their stopping place, but not their original abode. Of course, it may perhaps
have been thus. Hence, the less-defined conclusions we build, and the less we
expect, the better for the future.
-
“But
are you sure that the people, about whom you are talking, are the so-called
Goths?”
-
“It
is immaterial to me, what they are called, whether they were forefathers of the
Goths or their grandchildren. Were these deep links with Celts or Alans or
Scythian tribes? These scrupulous calculations will have to be undertaken by
some one else. But I rejoice at the fact, that on the heights of the
Trans-Himalayas I have seen the embodiment of Carnac. I do not insist upon
nomenclatures, because before my very eyes the superficial nomenclatures have
changed so often, and often a so-called fact was easily juggled about for
periods of approximately a thousand years. I shall not forget my amazement
when, on excavating a kurgan which at the time had been definitely established
as characteristic of a period not later than the Tenth Century, I found in the
hands of the skeleton, a coin of the Fourteenth Century. Such are the
fluctuations!”
The
folk determine these problems much more simply: for them all which has
disappeared, has departed underground.
When
we are asking our centenarian grandfather about the covered wagon of his youth,
we shall certainly hear many things in a fantastic manner. But there will
always be some truths revealed. When we ask the people about their forefathers,
they are still able to tell us, they may still sing to us some song of a great.
truth.
Old
Tibetan legends since very ancient times have drawn attention to the menhirs
and Dolmens of unknown origin. The memory of the Tibetan people thus records
these Great Travelers:
-
“From
far-away India there departed two princes and they turned their path
northwards. On the way, one of the princes died and his brother honored his
memory by erecting over him a resplendent abode of huge stones. And he himself
continued his long way into the unknown lands.”
Thus
the memory of the people knows!
Tangoo,
1928.
OBSERVATION
In the Kumaon
region there are menhirs, and it is known that ancient European tribes migrated
to Central Asia, so the Nicholas Roerich's theory that those ancient Europeans
put those menhirs is possible.
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