Androgynous kon -Tiki -Viracocha Deity -11th Century

public domain

In the Inca mythology Androgynous Viracocha is the creator of civilization and one of the main deities. Viracocha and his wife Mama Cocha called Sea Mother.

● Kon-Tiki-Viracocha is the deity- creator of the world in religions and mythology of many pre-Columbian peoples of the Andean region.

● According to legend, he came by cane boats in Lake Titicaca and founded the great city of Tiwanaku. Legend has it that from there, he sent bearded ambassadors to all parts of Peru, teaching the people and telling them that he was their creator. As a result, we hear again of an influential and skilled man who came to the founding of the world’s most powerful civilization, a civilization that would last for centuries.

Deity of the Andes, who came to Tiahuanaco “in the time of darkness” bearing the gifts of light and civilization.

Androgynous Viracocha, in South America, was said to have begun his civilizing mission immediately after a great flood;

GRAHAM HANCOCK, MAGICIANS OF THE GODS

Their mission, in short, was to repromulgate the lost civilization and
the lost religion of the days before the flood.”
GRAHAM HANCOCK, MAGICIANS OF THE GODS

Description of Viracocha in Different Account

Pedro Sarmiento de Gamboa pointed out that Viracocha Deity was described as “a man of medium height, white and dressed in a white tunic, like a bow secured at the waist, and carrying a staff and a book in his hands.”Sometimes he is represented as an old man with a beard. He is also seen dressed in a long cassock and endowed with a staff.

Regarding its appearance there are also different versions. With the arrival of the Spanish explorers, a version similar to that of Pedro Sarmiento de Gamboa, a 16th century explorer, began to spread. He described the deity as a white-skinned man of medium height, whose clothes consisted of a long white robe and a belt.Besides, it was also described with a staff and a book, each in one hand.

The icons of the door of the sun-Tiawanaku, where this deity originates and Machupicchu, the highest representation of the Inca culture; These symbols are found in architectural constructions, its builder Pachacuteq, left clues such as: double stepped, double spiral, double face; These would be works dedicated to their deity Wiracocha .

They say that in many places he gave instructions to the people how to live, spoke to them with great love and kindness, and exhorted them to be good and not to harm one another, but to love one another and show love to all. In most places they call him Ticci Viracocha…

He was a scientist, an architect of surpassing skills, a sculptor and an engineer: ‘He caused terraces and fields to be formed on the steep sides of ravines, and sustaining walls to rise up and support them. He also made irrigating channels to flow… and he went in various directions, arranging many things.’

Viracocha was also a teacher and a healer and made himself helpful to people in need. It was said that ‘wherever he passed, he healed all that were sick and restored sight to the blind.’

Juan de Betanzos, a sixteenth-century Spanish chronicler, stated that according to the Indians, he had been ‘a bearded man of tall stature clothed in a white robe which came down to his feet and which he wore belted at the waist’.

Other descriptions, collected from many different and widely separated Andean peoples, all seemed to identify the same enigmatic individual.

According to one he was: A bearded man of medium height dressed in a rather long cloak… He was past his prime, with grey hair, and lean. He walked with a staff and addressed the natives with love, calling them his sons and daughters. As he traversed all the land he worked miracles. He healed the sick by touch. He spoke every tongue even better than the natives. They called him Thunupa or Tarpaca, Viracocha-rapacha or Pachaccan…

In one legend Thunupa-Viracocha was said to have been a ‘white man of large stature, whose air and person aroused great respect and veneration’.

In another he was described as ‘a white man of august appearance, blue-eyed, bearded, and wearing a cusma, a jerkin or sleeveless shirt reaching to the knees’

In yet another, which seemed to refer to a later phase of his life, he was revered as ‘a wise counsellor in matters of state’ and depicted as ‘an old man with a beard and long hair wearing a long tunic’.

In particular, he was remembered for bringing to Peru such varied skills as medicine, metallurgy, farming, animal husbandry, the art of writing (said by the Incas to have been introduced by Viracocha but later forgotten), and a sophisticated understanding of the principles of engineering and architecture.

That man had been Viracocha. Wrapped in his cloak, he was strong and august of countenance, and walked with unassailable confidence through the most dangerous badlands. He worked miracles of healing and could call down fire from heaven.

According to legend, he came by boats in Lake Titicaca and founded the great city of Tiwanaku. Legend has it that from there, he sent bearded ambassadors to all parts of Peru, teaching the people and telling them that he was their creator.

As a result, we hear again of an influential and skilled man who came to the founding of the world’s most powerful civilization, a civilization that would last for centuries.Deity of the Andes, who came to Tiahuanaco “in the time of darkness” bearing the gifts of light and civilization.he is referred to as clever, skilful and kind, but at the same time is called the Son of the Sun.

Kon-Tiki was the high priest and sun king of the legendary “white men” of the Incas, who left huge ruins on the shores of Lake Titicaca. Legend has it that the mysterious white men with beards were attacked by a chief named Cari who came from the Coquimbo Valley. In a battle on an island in Lake Titicaca, the one race was massacred,

but Kon-Tiki himself and his closest companions escaped

and later descended to the Pacific coast, from where they finally disappeared overseas to the west.

Androgynous Kon-Tiki -Viracocha Left Similar Sign

Credit-Matthew DillonCC BY SA 2. 0 Fliker

In Maori mythology, Tiki is the first man created by either Tūmatauenga or Tān.The position of the hands focuses on the navel.These include a visit to the island of Hiva Oa, which is famous for its many tiki sculptures – representations of the first man, Half-man, half-god, this mythical figure of Polynesian culture, who was involved in the creation of humans, can be seen in various forms during a cruise to the Marquesas Islands.

Kon-Tiki & Viracocha two different names of Single Authority

The Inca called the wisdom bringer who visited them called Viracocha, which was also known in the pre-Inca by various people as con & tici, later merged into Con Tici Viracocha when the Inca realized they were all names of the same person. The Maya called the wisdom bringer visited them as kukulkan, votan & Itzamna, for the Aztecs it was Quetzalcoatl, for the Muisca it was Bochica. (Ancient Religion of the Sun Book No. 76,77)

Androgynous Viracocha Travelled World Teaching Things of civilization

And like other wisdom bringers, such as Viracocha of South America, Osiris is said to have traveled to the rest of the world and founded civilization elsewhere.

And there is much evidence to suggest that Osiris, Viracocha, Maasaw, and Odin/Wotan (as well as other wisdom bringers) were either the same person or people from the same group of people who shared the same mission.

Each of these wisdom bringers is described as bearded and Caucasian in appearance, having blue eyes, wearing long robes, teaching the religion of the sun, and such things as agriculture, buildings, ethics, and monogamous marriage.- The ancient religion of sun book, Lara Atwood, Page No. 46,55,56,71,74

Impossible Voyage of Kon-Tiki Through Pacific Ocean

Bahnfrend CC BY SA 4.0

Leave a Comment