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ANTROPOMORPHIC MEGALITHS in the Carpathian Mountains
The Album consists of 185 pages on coated paper, 22 x 21.5 cm format, 76
color pages, paper back. The photos are attended by description in Romanian
and English.
"At the moment, you are being invited to take a closer look at the
photographs of such anthropomorphic megaliths, but nothing equals
the satisfaction in seeing them there, right where They are." (page 13)
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THE BIG MAN
(Saturnus)
"“The most important mountain in the Northern chain of the Carpathians is
Bucegi. This mountain, remarkable for its majestic height and extensive
horizon, was highly esteemed once. In the prehistoric antiquity of the
Pelasgian pastoral tribes, it was proclaimed as a holy mountain”. This excerpt
is part of Nicolae Densusianu’s “Prehistoric Dacia”, published in Bucharest in
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1913. The book mentions the neolithic civilisation populating our country, the
Pelasgians, who are supposed to have built megalithic worship monuments.
The chapter extending from page 226 to 238 is entitled “Saturn as Zeus. The
Colossal Simulacrum on the Mount Omul in the Carpathians” and it indicates
the fact that “the supreme divinity of the Pelasgian region, the god of thunder,
lightning and rain, the one shaking the earth, fertilising the plains, the valleys
and the mountains was also named Peloros, that is equivalent to The Giant/
The Colossus or the Big Man”; “and this Peloros was considered by the
Tessalians as being the Saturn”. The author identifies “the colossal
simulacrum / semblance of Saturn” on Mount Omul and prints his image onpage 227, representing an aged, white-haired and white-bearded man, with a
broad face and energetic mien, emphasizing two “remarkable characteristics”
thoroughly supported by details in his bibliographical research. The first
peculiarity refers to his “broad expression of face”. The antique literature
continuously mentions “the all high, all kind, broad-faced god”, “the broad-
faced Pelasgian god living far away” or “Saturn the Broad-faced”. The second
“very eloquent peculiarity is connected to the antique symbolism”: “on the
calm and intelligent forehead of this god, can be seen natural or artificial
signs of a breaking skull”. The famous poet Pindarus has handed down this
legend of Vulcan who is said “to have broken Zeus’s skull with a brass axe,
so, Minerva came out and saw the light of day”. Densuşianu describes
another significant symbol: “close to the right shoulder of the god, we can see
in harmonious appearance a very well preserved figure of a huge shield. Thisshield was One of the main attributes of supreme divinity in times of
extraordinary acts of bravery: “the aegis or the shield bearer”. The symbol of
that shield “was of extreme value to the Pelasgians, because it represented
the symbol of their existence and of their political independence”. The next
chapter (p.238-242) N. Densuşianu underlines the astounding resemblance
between the Carpathian megalith and Jupiter’s marble bust discovered at
Otricoli in Italy and preserved in the circular hall of Vatican. Densuşianu
observes that “this bust does not represent a typical Latin - Italian figure, but a
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noble, ethnical, Northern Barbarian figure, characteristic of the Dacians
whose face features could be identified on old spotted coins”. He further
argues that the oldest Roman simulacrum of Joe was called Jupiter Lapis,
that is, Jupiter of Stone, assuming that this cult was brought to the Italian
Peninsula by a branch of the migrating Neolithic population from the
Carpathian region. After many years of climbing the mountains, I started to
consider more seriously the megaliths and particularly the anthropomorphic
megaliths (due to my medical profession). I searched for reference materials
and, so, the long-forgotten Nicolae Densuşianu guided me straight to the
target: I had often passed by “Zeus’s simulacrum” from the Bucegi Mountains,but I had never identified it before. Now that I had all the necessary
information, I ascended to the Bucegi Plateau, I stopped in the saddle (Şaua
Văii Cerbului - The Deer Valley Saddle) between the “Cerdac” (Porch) and the
Peak Omu and there it was! A huge rock with the steep stony side, rising to
the East, to Valea Cerbului (Deer Valley). It is formed of white limestone
surrounding a darker conglomerate (pudding stone). On the surface of this
core of conglomerate, we can barely distinguish the eyes, the vague form of a
nose and an ear; the chalky stone around stands for the white hair and beard.
It is easier to identify the broad, strong face and even the scar on the
forehead. The limestone pillar next to the right shoulder could be taken for the
above-mentioned shield. This is indeed an anthropomorphic megalith,
wrecked by the same external agents which contributed to its shaping. The
mythology presented by Nicolae Densuşianu’s paper might have adopted it.Or maybe the megalith itself was subject to worship rituals that spread over a
larger geographical area (this paper was delivered at a symposium on
“Science and Human Aspirations”, organized by the “Cosmos 2000 – Society”
at the Students Centre from Iaşi, May, 18 to 20th 1984).
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THE SPHINX OF OAS
Reading “The Curiosites” named column of a magazine, I became interested
for “the Sphinx of Oas”, but also warned me that it could be observed well in
the late autumn and in the winter, when the trees lose their foliage. I went
there twice: in November, and then in April. They didn’t seem to me a mere
“conglomerate of stones scraped and ground away by wind and rain” and
“deposited there along the centuries”. Something made me anxious.
Something there was missing. After few years, in the summer of 1984, I tried
again. I simply had to find that “something “that was missing in my previous
research. I don’t know if it was only by a strange coincidence that I went to the
bookshop in Negreşti-Oaş and I found the last copy (fallen under a huge
shelf) of “Tara Oasului” (The Oas Region) - a collection of photos taken by
Ionita G. Andron (Editura Dacia, 1977). The preface was signed by the
reputed critic Eugen Simion who presented it as “a book of photographic
icons” (the book of “faces”). You have to be an artist to take such
photographs, but there must be that “something” else, too. It was the first time
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in my life that I couldn’t help looking for the author and ask for an autograph.
We immediately became friends. The next day, I climbed the Gutâi
Mountains, I searched, I watched closely, I had to tear two bushes and there it
was: the THINKER*. Information concerning the access routes can be found
in the monographic study “Gutâi” in the collection “Our Mountains”, Editura
Sport - Turism, Bucharest, 1990.
THE MAN WITH PEAKED CAP
The anthropomorphic megalith represented in figure 1 is known under the
name of “The Man with Peaked Cap” and the one in the figure 2 bears the
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nickname of “Spanul” = “ The Lackbeard”. It is in fact one and the same
monolith seen from different angles. We can admire it if we looking to the
east, on the slope from behind the Sphinx of Bucegi.
THE SPHINX
Though many of the stones in our country bear the name of “sphinx”, the
Sphinx from Bucegi is the first and the best-known of all, a symbol of the
Romanian mountain attractions. The oldest photograph of the Sphinx date
back to the first decade of the 20th century; it was spread under the form of a
postcard in which only the front part of the rock could be seen, without any
anthropomorphic features. The name given to it was “Babe din Caraiman” =
“The Old Women from Caraiman”. The first mention of the name “Sphinx”
appears in “Buletin Alpin” = “The Mountain Almanac” published in 1935. In
1936, Prof. Al. Bădăluţă described it in the “Romania” magazine and called it
“The Romanian Sphinx”. In the introductory part of this article, there is a
listing of the problems raised by this megalith, one of them being the fact that
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it has two profiles. In fact, it is worth mentioning that there was identified even
a third profile (south), show on a postcard by the Human Biology Museum of
Ploieşti. It was not only the rope railway which contributed to turning the
Babele Plateau into one of the most frequently visited regions of the
Carpathians, but also the terrific landscape and the variety of the microforms
of relief; I daresay it might have been the pilgrimage tradition, too.
In Calimani Mountains THE SOLDIER’S PEAKED CAP
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DOCHIA
On 28th of June, 1984, the manager of the Sureanu Chalet (Mr. Cozmoiu),
built on the mountains bearing the same name, told us the story of poor
Dochia: an early spring, an old woman named Dochia had her nine goatsclimb the mountain to get across Varful lui Petru ( Peter”s Peak = 2130 m),
but right under that peak she was overtaken by a snowstorm and she died of
frost together with her nine goats. Reality seems to confirm this story, as right
under the peak, there rises a stone with the profile of an impetuous woman
surrounded by nine smaller stones. The legend of old Dochia is known all
over Romania and there are other stones witnesses to it: - “Scaunul Babei
Dochia” = “Old Dochia’s Chair” on the Negrileasa Plateau from the Trascau
Mountains; - “Fundul Dochiei” = “Dochia’s Back” in a place called “La Izvoare”
(at the mouth of the stream Izvorul Alb), in the Ceahlau Mountains; - “Dochia
fara cojoace” = “ Dochia without Sheepskin Coats” in the Cozia Mountains. -
“Dochia’s pipe” under Tarcu Peak.
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THE COLOSSUS THE SPHINX OF BANAT
THE SPHINX OF BANAT
This is the official name of this monolith, enlisted as a tourist attraction within
the territory of the Toplet village, in the Caras-Severin county.
Other names given to it are “Sfinxul de pe Valea Cemei” = “The Sphinx from
the Cerna Valley (as it lies on the left bank of the Cerna river) or “Capul
Turcului” = “The Turk’s Head (the exact location being a place called “Podul
Turcilor”= the Turks” bridge). This place has its own story: after the peace
treaty signed at Belgrade, in 1739, the Turks built a bridge, under French
guidance, at the new borders (Paul Decei - “Pe plaiuri si vai carpatine”,
Editura Albatros, Bucuresti, 1983). Somebody is supposed to have thought of
shaping this stone, but there are no written records of it and the researchers
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don’t confirm this hypothesis. Taking into account the numerous legends from
Banat, having as hero a certain Iovan Iorgovan (alias Hercules), we feel
inclined to trust Nicolae Densusianu who presents it as “an inanimate shape
of Hercules, not carved by human hand” or “the idol of the power of
Hercules”. (“Dacia preistorica” – Ed. Meridiane, 1986, Bucuresti, p. 308-314)