
audiobook
by Martin I. (Martin Ingham) Townsend
Transcriber’s Note
A vivid lecture from the late nineteenth century takes listeners on a tour of the massive stone structures that dot Mexico, Guatemala, the Yucatán and the highlands of Peru. Written not long after the Spanish first encountered these ruins, the author captures the wonder and puzzlement that early explorers felt when faced with architecture that seemed far beyond the capabilities of the peoples known to have inhabited the Americas at the time.
The work advances a bold thesis: that Mediterranean traders, especially the seafaring Phoenicians and their Carthaginian offshoots, were aware of these sites long before Columbus and may have been responsible for their construction. By examining the form of the buildings, the iconography of temples dedicated to a sun deity, and the striking similarity of carvings across the continent, the author argues for a cultural link that predates European colonisation.
Presented in a clear, lecture‑style narrative, the text weaves together classical references, contemporary scholarship, and speculative history. Listeners will appreciate both the detailed description of the ancient monuments and the glimpse into the 19th‑century mindset that sought to explain their mysterious origins.
Language
en
Duration
~50 minutes (48K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Julia Miller and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
Release date
2009-06-24
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1810–1903
A respected New York lawyer and public servant, this 19th-century congressman moved easily between the courtroom, state politics, and national office. His long career offers a window into the civic life of New York across much of the 1800s.
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