Table of contents:

Who and how could build the impossible Vorontsov Palace?
Who and how could build the impossible Vorontsov Palace?

Video: Who and how could build the impossible Vorontsov Palace?

Video: Who and how could build the impossible Vorontsov Palace?
Video: The Ready Made Man: Is it becoming normal for ladies to date married men 2024, May
Anonim

It turns out that the Vorontsov Palace is built of a superhard material that cannot be processed, but itself is a tool for processing granites.

As it turned out, the Vorontsov Palace in Alupka was not made with a finger. It is not made with a finger from a particularly hard dolerite stone. Dolerite is the modern name. Formerly called diabase. On the hardness scale, only topaz, corundum and diamond are harder than it. Building buildings from it is almost the same as building from diamonds.

The material is so hard that it is commonly used for paving roads. Because the wheels rub against the road and the hooves knock, and the harder the material, the longer the road will last. Nothing rubs against the walls of buildings or knocks on them. Therefore, dolerite is not used for building construction.

Let's take a look at Wikipedia

  • Red Square in Moscow is paved with Crimean dolerite.
  • Dolerite is used for the manufacture of large tables for precision measuring instruments, measuring and surface plates [3].

What does this mean? About the highest strength of the material. It is so hard that, in comparison with other types of material, it does not undergo deformation under loads and various other influences, which makes it possible to make accurate measurements. It is too expensive to build entire buildings from such material. It's like making toilets out of gold or transporting gravel by air. If we were talking about the construction of, for example, a fortress or defensive fortifications, then it would be possible to somehow justify the use of strong material. And the palace should be beautiful first of all. But, as you can see, from an aesthetic point of view, the gray stone of the Vorontsov Palace looks completely nondescript in comparison with the granite facades of, for example, St. Petersburg. Why is so much manual labor involved?

To understand the meaninglessness of building from dolerite, I will give one more example from Pyramid Egypt. There in the Aswan Quarry there is a famous unfinished cracked giant pink granite obelisk:

Image
Image

At the top left of the center of the picture is a pile of dolerite, which is darker in color than the entire quarry and obelisk. These inclusions of dolerite are found in granite; when mining granite, dolerite is added separately:

Image
Image

Scientists who do not believe in gods interpreted the presence of dolerite in the quarry as being used as a tool in cutting down the obelisk, because dolerite is much harder than granite.

Tourists are given a little bit of dolerite cobblestones under the obelisk.

Image
Image

Here is the result of experimental hand chiseling of granite with a dolerite hammer:

Image
Image

And from this tool, which can crush granite, the Vorontsov Palace was built.

Building buildings out of it is almost the same as cutting a file with tin or copper wire.

Wikipedia also noted:

Stonehenge is a stone megalithic structure in Wiltshire (England) - built of dolerite

Image
Image

The Guinness World Records management has accepted the application of the Ural jewelers for the registration of the world's largest cut crystal "Oil Drop".

The answer of the owners of the world "record" resource and the crystal itself was presented at the Ural regional center of TASS by Viktor Moiseikin - the general director of the Yekaterinburg jewelry house, where a unique in the world dolerite crystal was made. The 11-kilogram (55 thousand carats) crystal really looks like a drop of oil - it is deep black, but when it is poured with water, it acquires a deep velvet black and blue tint. It took Ural craftsmen more than five years to make and cut it. The mineral was found in the Southern Urals, initially it weighed over 100 kilograms. "There are 2260 facets in the crystal. It was cut by our craftsmen on a unique machine designed specifically for this work under the guidance of craftsman Vladimir Sapozhnikov."

According to Moiseikin, the crystal may be the "sibling" of the dolerite stones of Stonehenge.

“For us, and for all science, I think it’s a big mystery how these blocks appeared on the British Isles. Dolerite is not there, but there is in the Urals. Maybe they were brought there from us?"

Image
Image

So much for the dolerite. Indeed, I wonder how he ended up in England?

Further information from Wikipedia:

Vorontsov Palace is located in Alupka (Crimea) at the foot of Mount Ai-Petri. the palace was built according to new (in comparison with classicism) architectural and construction principles. An important architectural feature was the location of the palace in accordance with the relief of the mountains …

Embedding artificial stone structures in the natural topography of rocks is a traditional method of building megalithic structures around the world. Especially in South America, Machu Picchu:

Image
Image
Image
Image
Image
Image

The palace was built from 1828 to 1848 as a summer residence of the prominent statesman of Russia, the Governor-General of the Novorossiysk Territory, Count M. S. Vorontsov.

Interestingly, according to the official version from Wikipedia, the Palace was built by the English architect Edward Blore, who did not come to Alupka.

Image
Image

Wow! Continuous miracles are associated with England! Dolerite isn't there, but Stonehenge was built out of it. And the Englishman did not come to Alupka, but he built a castle from dolerite in Alupka.

So maybe this "architect" simply sent stones for Stonehenge from the Crimea to his home in England, and therefore they called him an architect? After all, the Russians are ignorant, and without the Europeans in any way. They also have bears with balalaikas drinking vodka. Peter, for example, was built by the Frenchman Montferrand, from which neither offspring nor a grave remained, although he lived quite recently

And Samson Semyonovich Sukhanov broke stones out of the quarry, but only because his father was not Russian, but the Greek Xenophon. Without Greek origin, he would not have failed a single White Bear.

Further from wikipedia:

In addition, the foundations and the first masonry of the deep portal niche of the central building were already ready (the palace began to be built according to another project - architects Francesco Boffo and Thomas Harrison). In the construction of the palace, the labor of quitrent serfs from the Vladimir and Moscow provinces was mainly used. Hereditary stonecutters and stonecutters were involved in the construction. " All work was done by hand, with primitive tools "(this is a quote from wikipedia).

The construction of the palace began with the dining building (1830-1834). The last library building was built (1842 - 1846).

That is, it was built before the appearance of photography, and, therefore, its construction can be attributed even to monkeys. It is not possible to prove with photographs that it was actually built in the 19th century. The same song with St. Petersburg megaliths. We managed to build all the most interesting things just before the advent of photography. In the first photographs of St. Petersburg in the 50s, Isaac is already built. So, to believe that it was built at the beginning of the 19th century is only due to the drawings, which, in fact, cannot be believed due to their inconsistency and absurdity.

The Vorontsov Palace is also famous for the fact that there is a strange impossible statue of a girl in which you can see even a pockmark on her hand that is meaningless for art, which suggests the idea of its automated production as a three-dimensional photograph

Image
Image

It is good that the Crimea did not go to maidan marauders. Otherwise, the Western Ukrainian rogues would have taken the entire palace to Galicia. On December 7, 2015, the Bandera television channel ICTV is forced to admit that Galicia child-killers are looting in Donbass. Especially, pay attention, they pick wires from the walls of the houses of Ukrainians in Donbass and take out used toilets from the toilets (on the 6th and 7th minutes of the video):

"Marauders in the Armed Forces of Ukraine: the shocking truth about the other side of the war - Enough! 07.12"

This confirms the opinion of East Ukrainians that Western Ukraine is indeed a depressed impoverished region, morally and materially lowered below the plinth. Pull the wires out of the walls and toilets! This also indirectly confirms the rumors that they began to dry poop for heating instead of coal. The fact that they are exporting to western Ukraine not only old toilets from houses in Donbass, but also old brushes for cleaning toilet bowls is not news at all. Imagine what would be left of the Vorontsov Palace if these dryers got to it!

Even more interesting is the explanation of the Bandera commander. He gives 3 "counterarguments":

1. The houses were destroyed not by looters but by the shelling of Putin.

2. The owners of the houses took out their property themselves.

3. Each episode must be dealt with separately.

"Commentary for the command of the 93 ombre brigade of the" Distalo "program"

1. How can the shelling of Putin rip the wires out of the walls and send trucks to Western Ukraine only Bandera knows.

2. Why do homeowners not only take out furniture, but also pick out wires and toilet bowls from their own homes, if they are going to return there after the war?

3. What will fundamentally change the proceedings? He hopes that it will suddenly become clear that the wires were not torn out by Bandera, but by Putin or Zhirinovsky?

More details here

Since I mentioned the Aswan obelisk, it is worth recalling that a very authoritative well-known professor geologist Igor Davidenko understands, as a geologist, that it is not realistic to hollow out such an obelisk by hand. Therefore, he deceitfully and brazenly denies that the obelisk has an ancient origin and attributes its construction to Soviet engineers in the 1960s. But, I found photographs of the obelisk dating back to 1851. Details here

Updated source

Recommended: