In my previous post, I mentioned Gabriel D'Anunzio Baraldi (1938-2004) an Italian amateur archaeologist and paranormal researcher, who believed in Atlantis, who reached Brazil, and were proto-Hittites. He wrote about this, and also about a Lost City in northeastern Brazil in his book A Descoberta Doc.512 — The Discovery Doc. 512, (1997), which ties up ancient megalithic builders with Percy Faucett's lost city of the Amazon. Interesting stuff, that makes for good-selling books aimed at gullible readers who believe in this sort of trash.
Percy Fawcett
Colonel Percy Harrison Fawecett (b. 1867 - disappeared 1925), and pictured above (Source), was a man of his Victorian and Edwardian times. He was born in Britain, and his career as military took him to Ceylon (modern Sri Lanka), he was also a surveyor and geographer, member of the Royal Geographic Society. In 1902 he visited Morocco as a British spy with an cover as an archaeologist, and in 1906 the border dispute between Bolivia and Brazil took him to South America, which he explored between 1906 and 1925. He was fascinated with the idea of a lost civilization in the Amazonian jungles and set out to discover its ruins.
In 1925 he set out with his son, Jack, and one of his son's friends, Raleigh Rimmel, to discover the Lost City that he called "Z". It was located in the South-central Amazonian region, along the basin of the Paraguay River in a region known as Mato Grosso. They vanished without a trace and were never seen again. The jungle, disease, and the natives were surely the cause of their disappearance.
Fawcett was persauaded of the existence of "Z". South America had its Eldorado and Lost City of Caesars, and Hiram Bingham III had discovered Machu Pichu (well, taken there by a local native guide) in 1911. Why couldn't there be a lost city hidden in the jungles of Brazil?
Manuscript 512
Furthermore, Percy is said to have seen a document known as Manuscript 512. This document is archived at the Livraria Publica da Corte (nowadays the Biblioteca Nacional or National Library of Brazil). The author is unknown, but it is attributed to a Portuguese bandeirante (men who organized and led incursions into the jungles to capture natives that were then sold as slaves), by the name Joao da Silva Guimaraes.
The manuscript was discovered by chance in 1839 by Manuel Ferreira Lagos, a naturalist. Nowadays it is known as "512" with the title "Relação historica de uma occulta, e grande povoação antiquissima sem moradores" (the manuscript's text is included as Annex 4, you can also read it here, in Portuguese), the name can be translated as "Historical narrative of a large, occult, and very ancient town without residents".
The bandeirantes, during one of their indian-hunting incursions in 1753, came across the ruins of a city, with arches, statues and temples. The narrative does not disclose where the city is located, but describes it in detail.
They came across a bright mountain (due to the crystals it contained), following an albino deer they found a narrow path that let up the mountain where they came across the city. Three stone arches marked its entrance (Arches were unknown to Amerindian constructors, they used beams for dorways, Romans invented the arch). There were inscriptions on the stone. The houses were built with bricks, and empty, no furniture or decorations. The town had a main square with a black column on which there was a statue pointing north. The corners of the squares had needles. There were large buildings around the square, one was a temple with many sculpted figures, crows, and crosses. The place seemed to have been struck by an earthquake. Nearby there was a large river. They followed it upstream and by a waterfall, three days later, they came across many caves with slabs of stone and inscriptions. There, they found a gold coin: "Our companion, named Joao Antonio, found in the ruins of a house some gold money, round in shape, larger than our six thousand four hundred coins: on one side with the image, or figure of a young man kneeling, and on the other side a bow, a crown, and an arrow.". They had explored the region of the Una and Paraguacu rivers in Bahia. One of the bandeirantes wrote a letter to the authorities in Rio de Janeiro telling about their adventure. It originated the manuscript. Source.
The interior of the state of Bahia in Brazil has a region (now a National Park), on the Paraguacu River, with caves, waterfalls, and plateaus (Chapadas) it is known as Chapada Diamantina (the second part of its name is due to diamonds found in the area). The place has great scenery and rock formations that could induce you to imagine that there is a city somewhere in those mountains.
However, Percy didn't head into the interior of Bahia, site of the manuscript's lost city. His city was located in South-central Brazil, in the Mato Grosso (Thick Jungle) region along the Xingu River. World War I delayed his plans, and his 1920 expedition failed, so he set out again in 1925, and vanished.
Ingrejil the Lost City
This "city" was discovered in 1984 by Gabriele D'Annunzio Baraldi together with two archeologists: Aurelio Abreu and Luis G. Moreira Jr. It is located in Bahia, and it was immediately linked to the city mentioned in manuscript 512.
The discovery became known in Sept. 1984, when the media announced that "A Brazilian archaeologist Sunday said he has discovered ruins of a legendary stone city dating from Incan times and sought by explorers for centuries in the country's remote interior. Aurelio Abreu, vice president of the Sao Paulo Archaeology Institute, said he and two researchers found 'ruins of a structure of stone giving the impression of a fortress and dating from remote times' in the mountains of Bahia state 700 miles north of the capital."
This city was very far from where Fawcett was trekking, it is northeastern Brazil, 25 km from the town of Brumado, 1400 km - 900 mi from Percy's "Z". See it in Google Maps.
Baraldi described the archaeological site as heavily altered by miners (searching for diamonds). The terrain had been artificially leveled, and there were large stones arranged in lines, they could be the foundations of large buildings or markers for some kind of astronomical or solar observatory. Some stones are set at right angles, there are some mounds shaped like pyramids, which he interpreted as temples. Abreu said that the "ruins" were very different from the work of paleoindians. He believed that the city's residents had come from Peru during the Inca period, or even earlier, and they settled there in the mountains of Bahia because it was similar to their Andean homeland. Baraldi, on the other hand, thought it was 4,000 years old, far older than the Inca empire.
A paranormal researcher, Yuri Leveratto wrote a book about American mysteries (Exploracoes na America do Sul 2006-2011) in which he suggrests that Ingrejil is much older than what Baraldi believed, Leveratto says it is at least 10,000 yers old and that due to the climate change prompted by the end of the Last Ice Age, the inhabitants of Ingrejil migrated west, into the Andes, and were the ancestors of the later Andean cultures. Sounds like the pre-Clovis advanced civilization in North America, in a South American version.
Natural or man-made?
The images below seem to indicate that the dolmens, menhirs, arches, and walls are natural geological formations. Rocks that form part of the ladnscape in the Serra das Almas. The locals named the place "Ingrejil", which is a deformation of the Portuguese word igrejinhas: "small churches" due to the shapes of the rocks.
The Brazilian Centro Nacional de Arqueologia, IPHAN has listed it as a site, and describes it as follows: "ruins of an unknown civilization. They are located on a plateau in the Serra das Almas [Range of Spirits] in the municipality of Livaramento de Nossa Senhora - BA. In the leveled area there is a water spring, menhirs, foundations, artificial hillocks and a parabolic rock."
But I could not find one single formal research paper about Ingrejil, no archaeologist or researcher has written any papers about this "city", no excavations, nothing!
Some images of the Lost City of Ingrejil
I did find some photographs, which you can see below. See many more images here. They seem to show natural rock formations, like eroded volcanic dikes, and jagged rock crests.
The first image depicts rocks that seem to have been placed in groups of three, upright in the ground (Source):
The next two images (Source) show a Dolmen, Pedra do Bandeira (Flag Rock), and the three-fold menhirs:
Below are two more views (Source) with the "parabolic antenna" and a the hillside with a rock "wall".
The final image (source) shows the valley with the stone "structuress".
Closing Comments
The tale of the lost city described in the manuscript is interesting, the gold coin is unexpected, but lacking a better description we couldn't say where it came from (was it an Inca jewel, or some European coin, or even older?). Fawcett was blinded by his zeal to discover his own lost city, and that led to his death in the jungle.
Ingrejil is a natural rock formation, it isn't a lost city. There were rumors of a similar lost city in Patagonia, where the Chelep dwarves lived, and where Aonikenk Chief Papon found a large gold nugget, a story repeated by a professor Wolf - Wolff or Wolfe who saw it in 1922. However, it turned out to be a natural lava formation with walls that were lava dikes.
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