Is this 5000 year-old fire temple found in Peru an ancient havan kund?
Resham SengarResham Sengar/Times Travel Editor/TRAVEL NEWS, PERU/ Created : Sep 4, 2019, 00:05 IST
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Synopsis
If you were living with the belief that sacred rituals such as havan or homa were performed only in India, think again!
If you were living with the belief that sacred rituals such as havan or homa were performed only in India, think again! Read less
If you were living with the belief that sacred rituals such as havan or homa were performed only in India, think again!
The research team has named it the Temple of Fire, and it has been said that the hearth situated within the structure was used to burn ceremonial offerings.
The Paraiso Fire Temple seems to be a bigger version of a havan kund equipped with seating space for the priests.
As per the archaeologists, the site is equivalent in age to Caral, the oldest pre-Columbian site in South America. Caral lies 200 km to the north of Peru, and is honoured as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
The entrance of the temple measures 48 cm (19-inches) in width, and leads to a space measuring eight by six metres (26 by 20 feet), which was used to burn sacrificial objects. It has four levels overall.
In Sanskrit, Peru translates into ‘Golden Mountain’ and Paru means ‘Paradise‘.
Does that mean that Paraiso was a paradisiacal land where the ancient seers lived and performed fire sacrifices?
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