The mystery of the construction of ancient stone slabs

Picture 1 of The mystery of the construction of ancient stone slabs History of Beyrouth, Lebanon's capital soon recorded from the fourteenth century BC. In the long history of development, Beyrouth was occupied by Egypt, Rome, Uthmanibu "Affan", France and the United Kingdom, until 1941 became Lebanon's capital. These complicated historical events formed the pluralistic nature of this city.

The castle wall surrounding BaierBeit, located 7 km east of Beyrouth, is one of the most majestic wonders in the world. After the entire Palestinian territory was conquered by the Roman Empire in 63 BC, the Romans built the spirit of the goddess Vénus and the Roman god here to replace the temples of Pali and women god Askait - wife of Pali god.

These great architecture of ancient Romans spent thousands of years, the great part was destroyed in an earthquake. Therefore, when a remnant part of this ancient architecture is buried deep in the ground, it has become a difficult topic for thousands of archaeologists. In this architectural complex, there is a part of the diaphragm wall called Tam Thach Thap, because the diaphragm wall is made of beautifully cut stone slabs. These three stones each weigh 800 tons, but a stone of only 7m high is neatly folded on top of the two slabs. In the rocky beach near Tam Thach Thap, there is a beautifully cut blade of 4.5m high; 3.7m wide; 22m long, weighs nearly 1,000 tons.

Picture 2 of The mystery of the construction of ancient stone slabs The architectural origin of the stones shows that it has a longer history than in ancient Rome. In ancient times there were many divine worshipers who ate frost in Mésopotamie and in the Nil River to Pali and Askait.

According to the records of the ancient Arabs, a series of the first shrines worshiping Pali and Askait were built after the Great Flood. According to the Arab way of speaking, these temple builders were "giants of the same lineage" assigned to build by King Nynrö - a king in ancient times.

Architectural scholars say that today's heavy machinery cannot lift such heavy stones into such a position. So how did the ancient people lift the stone on the top of the tower in the right place? And what does that stone's architecture represent and what does it mean?

Until now, those stones still stood blankly and staring at the vast sky without any satisfactory explanation.