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Is recognized and honored by at least eight major religions, and is regarded by most esoteric traditions as the true

center of the planet and the world's spiritual powerhouse. It is said to be inhabited by adepts from every race and

culture who form an inner circle that secretly guides human evolution.

This remarkable kingdom reputedly exists both above and below ground, with a network of tunnels hundreds of miles

long.

"Cars of strange design flash along their length," writes Andrew Tomas, author of Shambhala, Oasis of Light, "and

they are illumined by a brilliant, artificial light which affords growth to the grains and vegetables and long life

without disease to the people."

Atlantis Rising #21, by atlantisrising.com

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Agartha (sometimes Agartta, Agharti, Agarta or Agarttha) is a legendary city that is said to reside in the Earth's core.

It is related to the belief in a Hollow Earth and is a popular subject in Esotericism.

Agartha is one of the most common names cited for the society of underground dwellers. Shamballa (also known as

Shambalah or Shangri-La) is sometimes said to be its capital city. While once a popular concept, in the last century

little serious attention has been paid to these conjectures and the theory is not supported by modern science.

Ferdynand Antoni Ossendowski's 1920 book Beasts, Men, and Gods discusses Agartha. The myth of "Agartha" is also

known as "Shambhala", as it was known in India, the underworld realm peopled by initiates and led by "the Masters",

Masters who are the Spiritual leaders of humanity.

Agartha, by en.wikipedia.org

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In the 1922 book Beasts, Men and Gods, Ferdinand Ossendowski (1876–1945), a Polish scientist who spent most of his

life in Russia, wrote of his recent travels in Outer Mongolia during the campaigns of Baron von Ungern-Sternberg.

Ossendowski related that several Mongol lamas had told him of Agharti, an underground kingdom beneath Mongolia,

ruled by the King of the World. In the future, when materialism will ruin the world, a terrible war will break out. At

that time, the people of Agharti will come to the surface and help end the violence. Ossendowski reported that he

convinced Ungern of his story and that, subsequently, Ungern twice sent missions to seek Agharti, led by Prince

Poulzig. The missions were unsuccessful and the Prince never returned from the second expedition.

[...] The British astronomer Sir Edmund Halley, also in the late seventeenth century, forwarded the theory that the

earth is hollow. The French novelist Jules Verne popularized the idea in Voyage to the Center of the Earth (1864). In

1871, The British novelist Edward Bulwer-Lytton, in The Coming Race, described a superior race, the Vril-ya, who

lived beneath the earth and planned to conquer the world with vril, a psychokinetic energy. In Les Fils de Dieu (The

Sons of God) (1873), the French author Louis Jacolliot linked vril with the subterranean people of Thule. The Indian

freedom advocate, Bal Gangadhar Tilak, in The Arctic Home of the Vedas (1903), identified the southern migration of

the Thuleans with the origin of the Aryan race. In 1908, the American author Willis George Emerson published the

novel The Smokey God, or A Voyage to the Inner World, which described the journey of a Norwegian sailor through

an opening at the North Pole to a hidden world inside the Earth.

Mistaken Foreign Myths About Shambhala, by Alexander Berzin, 1996

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