Mostishchensky labyrinth - Historical information Voronezh asdf. Stone labyrinths of the north The historical monument stone labyrinth is located in the village

I read about the fact that in the Voronezh region there is a stone labyrinth, built at the turn of the 3rd and 2nd millennia BC (!!!), on a local forum back in the winter and, of course, noted this circumstance in Plans.txt. Little by little, I collected the necessary minimum information to try to find him and was only waiting for the right set of circumstances to immediately rush off to find him.

And so, on May 9, 2010, when the entire public, including the legion of LJ photographers who later flooded my feed with sad pictures from military parades, were bruised and jostling on the main city streets, I and my eternal partner in all sorts of adventures, Lyokha, decided, on the contrary, to leave on this day, somewhere far away, or better yet, in the absolute wilderness. After purchasing provisions, we got out of the city in Lyokhin’s old “five” and headed for.


01 . The Ostrogozhskaya highway is indecently picturesque, empty and almost uncontrolled by the valiant traffic police. Every 5-10 km I had to fight the urge to stop and take a photo of something. But ahead, according to my forecasts, something completely prohibitive awaited us and therefore we flew to our intended goal without stopping. Until we saw the horse.
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02 . Look, you were too lazy to follow the link above and see where exactly we met such a crazy horse, and yet it’s even visible on Google Maps (!). Therefore, here is another warrior’s shoulder portrait. The model has a runny nose, don't pay attention.

03 . This, if you still haven’t followed the link, is the village of Devitsa. More precisely, its very outskirts.
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04 . Another native, but still unknown to Google.

05 . There is a small river called Potudan behind the trees.
Its section from the village of Soldatskoye to the confluence with the Don is called the Mordva tract and is considered one of the the most beautiful places in the Don region.
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06 . The meadows are flooded, every now and then we go around wet areas, but in the end we get stuck. I curse the hordes of man-eating mosquitoes and the rear-wheel drive in the AvtoVAZ design, but somehow I push the “five” out of the puddle. Ufff....

07 . The Mostishche farmstead, in the vicinity of which a stone labyrinth was discovered by archaeologists, is literally one and a half kilometers away. We decide to push our way further. Fighting off mosquitoes, I chewed in front of the car, choosing places on dry land. Suddenly a whole field of bells appeared around.

08 . It just so happened that before that I had only seen bells in pictures, so their presence, of course, brightened up my experience as a navigator a little.
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09 . And here is a new ambush. The bridge over Potudan, marked in the navigator as operational, was in fact in a state of disrepair.
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10 . Local men who came to fish reported that no one had been driving along it for a long time and there was another road to the farm. I was categorically against it and suggested returning through the bells and swamps, but Lyokha decides to force the bridge. Below you can watch a short video of how it happened. Lyokha is driving, I am in charge of the operation, the men are stupidly shocked. Pardon me for the shaking (the camera was just hanging around my neck), the trembling voice and the swearing - it was really annoying that we would accidentally drown the car.

11 . To catch our breath a little and let the jerk cool down, we wandered around the bridge. According to legend, Potudan was the border north of which the Tatars did not collect tribute. Hence the name, which means that on the other side of the river it is necessary to make money.

12 . By the way, this river gave its name to Andrei Platonov’s story “The Potudan River”, which was later used in the film “The Lonely Voice of a Man”. And some researchers also believe that it was on the banks of the Potudan that the battle between the Russians and the Polovtsy took place, described in “The Tale of Igor’s Campaign” and that the Potudan is the ancient Kayala River. Why not believe it, I think, especially since there is such nonsense around.
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13 . Beaver traces.
Sometime in the fall I visited, those interested can familiarize themselves.

14 . And finally, we enter the farm. It is almost entirely abandoned and mainly consists of these ancient abandoned huts.
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15 . Surprisingly, not only the signs with house numbers have been preserved...

16 . ...But also with street names.

17 . There are houses that are newer, if such a synonym can be applied to the Mostishchensky huts, but, for the most part, they are also uninhabited.

18 . We begin to circle around the village in search of the subject. I incorrectly interpret the information I have about the labyrinth and confuse it with an abandoned vegetable garden. The fact is that after excavations by archaeologists, the locals decided to steal ancient stones for their own household needs. The people of science scratched their heads and came up with nothing better than to cover their find with a thick layer of soil again.
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19 . There is a version that the labyrinth is still “working” and is an active place of power and a harmonizer of the environment. A giant dill grows in the garden and is not caught Cell phones, so for some time I am sure that we are wandering right above the labyrinth.

20 . Later it turns out that I poked my finger at the navigator too schematically and we wander around the garden, and giant dill is very common and is called fennel.

21 . We decide to climb a mountain familiar to you from two previous photos, but we take the wrong direction and again go to the damp banks of Potudan.
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22 . We understand that we have lost our way, we begin to turn around and get involved in full. It’s not exactly a swamp around, but the bald tires don’t want to somehow adhere to the damp ground. I’m starting to fume, because it’s no longer possible to push the car out of the way, the branches aren’t helping either, and now Lyokha starts putting shoes on the “five” in the chain.

23 . He invites me to wait and see how playfully he will get out of the ambush as soon as he finishes his installation. Having calmed down a little, I begin to while away the time by photographing all sorts of hats. Here, for example, is a tinder fungus.

24 . Suddenly (in such and such a wilderness) a man on a motorcycle from photo number 9 smokes past. He asks me if he needs help, I honestly answer that I don’t know. Like, the driver said that now everything will be fine at its best without any outside help. Luckily for us, the man still remains to gawk at the free circus, and Alexey gives the gas, then the gas, and then the burning and the surrounding reality is clouded with white smoke. When it dissipates, the man and I already see the “five” taking up all-round defense in a freshly dug trench. Alexey climbs out and reports that he forgot to put down the handbrake. I say that he himself is this word and with forces increased tenfold by this stressful situation and, of course, with the help of a man, I still push the “five” onto the dried soil. In the picture below, Lyokha is already washing his loins and miracle chains in the river. Left. About five meters.
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25 . Here, perhaps, it’s time to make a lyrical digression and tell us what kind of labyrinth this is. It was discovered in the late 1980s. Similar stone structures are well known in England (the rings of Stonehenge, for example), Sweden, Denmark, the Mediterranean, as well as in the north of Russia, Karelia and off the coast White Sea. All the more surprising is the presence of such megalithic structure V middle lane Russia. To date, this is the only one of its kind archaeological find in our latitudes. The Mostishchensky labyrinth has the shape of an oval measuring 26 by 38 meters, built of chalk stones. As to who and why erected such stone sanctuaries, science does not yet have an exact answer. And the uniqueness of the Mostishchensky labyrinth, it seems, has generally plunged scientists into a state of cognitive dissonance and they prefer to remain largely silent even about its existence. Below is a picture of what archaeologists managed to unearth. Please note that in some sources the farmstead is called M A articulation, and the labyrinth, respectively, M A Stishchensky.

26 . And we continue our search.
The farm, as can be seen below, is located between chalk capes (mountains). We climb onto one of them.
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27 . On the right hand of this place, as far as I understand (alas, I’m already at home) is the Mostishchensky labyrinth. Do you see a power pole? It's somewhere there.

28 . In wet weather, climbing up by car is almost impossible. Look at the angle of descent/ascent and what holes are being washed away by the water rushing down. By the way, this is the other road to the Mostishche farm that the fishermen told us about. If you continue to drive along it, it will lead through fields to big village Korotoyak.

29 . On the neighboring hill, stone structures were also discovered, but not in the shape of an ellipse, but rectangular. I repeat that I compiled in my brain what I had read and seen when I was already at home, and at that moment, having climbed up and suddenly seeing a picturesque drive up the next hill, I concluded that the most interesting thing would be there and we decided to return down the washed-out road and try to climb there along an overgrown dirt road. By the way, this place is called Mount Gorodishche, because an ancient settlement, excuse the tautology, was also discovered on it. Naturally not as ancient as the labyrinth, but still.
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30 . We slide down (poor “five”!), meander around the farmstead a little and crawl onto Gorodishche. According to our internal routine, it’s long past lunch time. Lyokha begins to prepare for the meal, and I suddenly find a pile of stones. Naturally, I begin to suspect the locals that they have dug into the labyrinth and are dismantling it for their own worthless aboriginal needs or even selling stones to companies that trade in landscape design.

31 . Suddenly the sky darkens and it becomes obvious that rain, or even a thunderstorm, is surely approaching. Remembering the fishermen’s warning about the subsequent impassability of the descents and ascents, we quickly collected the gear that had been laid out, retreated in horror and rushed non-stop to the nearest asphalt in the area of ​​​​the mentioned Korotoyak. We nervously have lunch in the car - it’s still starting to rain. We decide to move towards our native land, but along the way a wondrously beautiful panorama opens up to us. We stop. Somewhere on the left there is the village of Mostishche. The photo shows that it is raining steadily there.

32 . Something turns white behind the tree and I slide down the wet grass closer to the cliff. This is a chalk cliff, slightly gnawed by the aborigines.

33 . A look along the Don riverbed in the direction of Mostishche.
Lepota - the thunderstorm leaves, but the sunset begins.
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34 . Sliding, we crawl up to the car. The rain is still drizzling and the power lines are humming strainedly about this. The brain too. Time to go home.

Stone labyrinths of the North

A.A. Spitsin. issue No. 6 St. Petersburg, 1904, Archaeological Commission.

Many scientists and archaeologists were interested in labyrinths and their purpose. Academician Ber has studied Finnish stone labyrinths since 1842. small island Vir, located near the island of Gokhland in the Gulf of Finland.

More detailed information about the stone labyrinths of Finland was collected in 1877 by Aspelin, who in his article counts up to 50 labyrinths located along the banks of the Bothnian and Gulf of Finland and on the islands, from the Torneo River to Vyborg.

In Lapland, the first labyrinths were also indicated by Behr. One of them is located on south coast Laplana Peninsula, in the small uninhabited Vilovataya Bay. Ber saw two other labyrinths on Ponoy.

In 1877, they were examined, described and sketched by the ethnographer A. A. Kelsiev for the Anthropological Exhibition (According to Mr. Aspelin, Kelsiev found 3 labyrinths on the Solovetsky Islands and 2 or 3 on the Murmansk coast.), but where are the ones collected by him currently located? information is unknown to us.

In 1883 he published about the same labyrinths brief information member of the Imperial Russian Geographical Society A.I. Eliseev.

Curious ones have been preserved historical information about two large Babylons built near the city of Kola near the Varengsky churchyard. This information was collected locally by Russian ambassadors, Prince. Zvenigorodsky and Vasilchikov in 1592, awaiting the start of negotiations with the Swedes on the border.”

And in Vareng, at the German massacre (Vareng summer churchyard) To lay down for his glory, having brought it from the shore with his own hands, he laid a stone, at a height from the ground there are now even more oblique fathoms, and near it, in the distance, stones were laid out, like a city frame of 12 walls , and he called that salary Babylon. And that stone that is on Varenga, and to this day the word “Valitov stone”, a feature of the Valitov labyrinth is the large stone in the center of the structure.

The Ponoi labyrinths were known to Beru and were examined in 1900 by K.P. Reva.

There are two more known places in the White Sea where there are labyrinths: the Zayatsky Islands, near Solovetsky, and the Kemsky Islands. A.V. Eliseev, who gave the first information about them.

The first explorer of the northern labyrinths, Ber, recognized the possibility that they served as monuments of historical events. Ber recognizes the Vareng labyrinth as actually built by Valit, in which he is ready to see the Novgorod Varangian, who became the head of the Korelians, successfully fought with the Norwegians, but subsequently submitted to them and is known in the Norwegian chronicles under the name Martin.

In 1882, Meyer collected quite significant information about labyrinths depicted in medieval manuscripts starting from the ninth century.

"Labyrinths" - "Babylons"

A labyrinth is a structure with a complex and intricate plan. So what are labyrinths?

The first mention of labyrinths in domestic sources dates back to the 16th century and is contained in the notes of Russian diplomats G.B. Vasilchikova and S.G. Zvenigorodsky, who traveled in 1592 to the coast of the Varangian Sea - Varanger Bay. They report that "... .in Varenga during the German massacre,... to his glory, having brought a stone from the shore, there are now large fathoms high from the ground, and next to it, a city frame with twelve walls was laid out with stone, and that frame was called “Babylon...».

I came across these data, and others, in a fascinating article by a very curious author, known for his popular science books, which were also published by the Murmansk Book Publishing House, Candidate of Geographical Sciences B.I. Koshechkina, he called her “ Stone riddle North,” published in the popular science collection “Man and the Elements” in 1986.

Boris Ivanovich in his work provides data about the Russians who were involved in labyrinths. Among them, who earlier drew attention to spiral stone buildings, were ethnographer A.A. Kelsiev (1878) and E. Behr (1884). The latter in an article published in the bulletin of the St. Petersburg Academy of Sciences, along with the labyrinth on the island. Vir in Finland described the spirals laid out in Vilovataya Bay and near the mouth of the Ponoy River on Kola Peninsula. Academician Ber was the first in Russian scientific literature to use the name “stone labyrinth”, which later entered into wide scientific circulation.

The first report on the stone labyrinths of the Russian North of Finland, says B.I. Koshechkin. “I met in the work of A.A. Spitsin, published back in 1904 on the pages of the Izvestia of the Archaeological Committee. Even then, the inquisitive mind of an archaeologist and a great connoisseur of northern antiquities noted some of the most important features of labyrinths: their location exclusively in Scandinavia and the Russian North, the method and type of construction similar to all structures, their undoubted connection with the culture of prehistoric times.”

Alexander Andreevich Spitsin is an academician, his assessments should be treated with all care. He left us major works on the archeology of the Bronze and Early Iron Ages, on Slavic antiquities. And it is no coincidence that B.I. Koshechkin refers in his work to his authority.

And we will note in passing that people living near the labyrinths gave them a mystical character, trying not to widely advertise these structures that they did not understand. Let's say - “misunderstood”. And for us, now living in the 21st century. After all, science still does not give a concrete answer: how, what and why.

Over the years, the geography of labyrinths has expanded. The territory within which we find labyrinths today is very vast. About two hundred structures of this kind are included in the modern registers of ancient monuments in Sweden alone. Yes we have. Until recently, for example, two stone labyrinths were known in the Umba area, and recently we learned about a third.

So what are they?

The stone labyrinths, compiled by our ancestors in the North of Europe, stubbornly refuse to give up, do not want to reveal their secret. There are opinions that labyrinths have long been religious buildings. Incidentally, images in the form of similar labyrinths, in the form of spirals, were found on the floors of some early medieval churches in Sweden, and these spirals allegedly served to express certain Christian ideas.

Other researchers took a more pragmatic approach: they say that they are most likely connected with the sea and fishing. And another version: labyrinths are altars, giant altars left by some ancient people, they are associated with ideas about the transition of people to the world of the dead, made so that their souls lose orientation and can never return to the world of the living. Labyrinths in legends and tales turn out, according to such researchers, as a rule, to be entrances to the underground or otherworldly kingdom. They do not open to everyone, but only to those who know the spells or happen to be nearby at the moment the entrance unexpectedly opens.

Of great interest are the studies of archaeologist N.N. Vinogradov, expressed by him in the 20s of the XX century when he studied labyrinths Solovetsky Islands. Like nowhere else in our country, on Bolshoi Zayatsky Island, dozens of mysterious labyrinths, stone piles and other Neolithic displays are presented in a small area. True, there are different opinions about their dating. Some of them, supposedly created in “new” times, for example, by order of Peter I when he visited Solovki, can be distinguished from the ancients.

The earlier the earth becomes an object of human activity, the more mysteries it holds for researchers. And, naturally, Neolithic structures on the shores of the Solovetsky archipelago, and in general, everywhere where labyrinths are located, are one of the mysteries of archeology. Maybe over time a person will unravel their essence? And in our time, such unusual hypotheses arise that you are amazed. When a physicist and satellite communications specialist was shown a drawing of a stone labyrinth and asked: “What is this?” - he answered without hesitation: “This is the classic form of wide-frequency transceiver antennas.” And one more thing. According to researchers, some labyrinths, especially the most ancient of them, are located on clear geomagnetic anomalies.

What is this? Accident? Or did the ancient inhabitants of those places know how to use geophysical fields to maintain communication with each other over vast distances? “Younger” labyrinths were built after the departure of the people themselves, replaced by new inhabitants who purely formally reproduced the shape of the spirals (?).

But one thing is certain. These labyrinths, or as the northerners call them - Babylons, for some reason named after the biblical city of Babylon (the capital of Babylonia in the 19th-6th centuries BC), served as a kind of landmark for the new flow of people who still inhabit our northern places. Examples? As many as you like! There is a labyrinth of the former village of Ponoy, there are several near Umba, there is a labyrinth near Kandalaksha, to the east of the mountain, which was called Krestovaya… (Beautiful).

By the way, very long time local residents, the Pomors, knowing about its existence, kept secret information about this sacrament, kept it from all kinds of strangers.

The first of the scientists to “discover” for science a wonderful monument of antiquity was Sergei Nikolaevich Durylin, a man who knew a lot and experienced a lot. He died in 1951, having survived both prison and exile. But he became a Doctor of Philology and received high state awards. In total he lived a little less than seventy years.

In the summer of 1911 S.N. Durylin and his friend, geologist and photographer Vsevolod Vladimirovich Razevig, went to the North “to look for all sorts of antiquities” on a business trip from the Archaeological Institute. He made his book “Beyond the Midnight Sun” a kind of report on this expedition. Across Lapland on foot and by boat,” published in Moscow in 1913. Here are lines from this book about our Kandalaksha:

« In ancient times there was a city here, called by the Norwegians... Kandelakhte, there was a monastery with a rich saltworks, there was a lively trade, where Norwegians, Swedes, Russians, Lapps, Finns converged, there were also battles - now here is a quiet village, and in it - eternal workers - fishermen . There are two beautiful ones wooden churches, harsh stone cliffs that fall into the sea keep traces of mysterious writings - in the ground, if you dig into it, you find pieces of mica - the remains of a long-vanished monastery - and there is nothing else that speaks of ancient life. But from here, through rivers and lakes, forests and swamps, there was the famous Novgorod path to the ocean, which was known back in the 12th century, and only in the depths of Lapland we realized how close that time was still - the twelfth century, how the noisy life.

High mountains press towards the sea, blue with coniferous forest. Spacious two-story huts cling to the banks of the Niva River and run up the mountain to the church...».

I.F. Ushakov, who did a lot to “read” the history of our region, says this about those times:

« Upon arrival in the village, Durylin asked the guide: “Where is your Babylon here?” The question was asked "at random". The peasants preferred not to tell any of the visitors about the existence of Babylon. But since the arrival already knows about it, he had to show the attraction» .

And even now we know little about labyrinths, or “Babylons,” as they are sometimes called, and even more so in the old days. After all, there is still no consensus among scientists. S.N. Durylin in his book cites several options that existed at that time.

In the decades since the journey of Beyond the Midnight Sun. Across Lapland on foot and by boat” Durylin, a lot, as they say, has flown under the bridge. Knowledge about labyrinths has expanded significantly. A lot of research has emerged. Theories were developed and died. And the further we go, the more clearly the cult, astral idea of ​​these buildings is determined, first of all. Oh, what scientific jungle scientists are leading into in connection with this direction! And very exciting. And interesting connections can be traced.

Arkhangelsk archaeologist A.A. Kurasov makes interesting observations. He finds spiral images similar to the plan of the northern labyrinths on Canossian silver coins (III-I centuries BC), on an Etruscan vase from Trigliatella (VI-V centuries BC), and on a stele in Pylos. As we see, stone labyrinths are similar to them. Isn’t it possible that the penetration of the most diverse cultures, both in time and in location, can be traced here?

And the point of view of N.N. Gurina, in her interesting book “Time Embedded in Stone,” attracts interest in the hypothesis: the labyrinths are confined to sea ​​shores, similar to fishing traps. This allowed her to suggest the possibility of using labyrinths “for magical purposes, that is, when performing some rituals that, according to ancient fishermen, contributed to good luck in fishing”...

One can bring up a variety of arguments from researchers of the most unusual directions and interpretations, comparing labyrinths with religious buildings in other regions of Europe. And among such structures is the famous Stonehenge in Southern England, and numerous cromlechs and dolmens. But I’m not going to analyze all these positions and trends - I’m just trying to stimulate interest in such a unique ancient monument of ours as a stone labyrinth, located in a single complex of life of our predecessors in the distant past - near the mountain called Krestovaya... We, living in the Arctic, we always treat the Sun with more than respect. And let us remember that the image of the luminary, its veneration is sacred for all peoples, especially the northern ones. All of them - labyrinths, cromlechs, stonehenges, and others of this kind, emphasized the famous scientist N.M. Vinogradov, based on his knowledge, in particular the numerous Solovetsky labyrinths, have a rounded shape, which indicates a connection with the sun and in general with an astral cult. The circles of spiral and round labyrinths, and the arcs of horseshoe-shaped labyrinths indicate the annual movements of the sun, now rising and now falling below the horizon.

Let's read the lines of S.N. Durylina

Scientists argue a lot and express their points of view. And we will give the floor to Sergei Nikolaevich Durylin, who was the first to talk about the labyrinth. This is how he described it in 1913 in his book, which few people know or read. So, over to him...

“We have arrived at Babylon. It is three miles east of Kandalaksha, on a long narrow and low cape, with a tuft on the local “navolokka” that goes out into the sea. The toe is separated from the shore by a dry rocky shallow, which is covered with water during high tide. The toe is almost without any vegetation.

The labyrinth itself, “Babylon,” is located on rocky soil with barely wiggling grass. This is an irregularly shaped ellipse, an oval, with a diameter of -14 steps and a width of -10 steps. Entrance to the labyrinth from the east; the opposite western side faces the sea. From small boulders, from fragments of collapsing granite, low (no higher than ¼ arshin) elliptical circles are laid out.

Between these circles there is a path, so narrow that you can only put one foot on it. There is only one entrance to this passage winding between the stones. In the center of the labyrinth is a low pile of stones.

From all edges of the labyrinth there are 10 passages to this pile. Entering the narrow entrance, making three turns to the right and left, you quickly reach a stone heap in the center, but then the narrow path suddenly leads you to the left, then to the right - and you describe a huge circle along the outermost path, the longest. Having described this circle, you then describe - first moving away to the left, then to the right - the inner loop of the labyrinth. But the path, hitherto the only one, splits in two in front of you: where to go? If you take the path to the right, it will cause you to loop around the center of the maze, and you will end up back where you started, but on the left. If you choose the left road, it will also force you to describe a narrow loop around the center, leading again to the old place, but on the right. You will get lost. But you didn't have to pay attention to the forked path. Having passed along the left or right, returning to the crossroads, you must continue the path, follow the very path that led you to the crossroads, but in the opposite direction than you walked the first time; you will have to again describe the inner loop, a circle along the outermost path, then approach the center and, having described the innermost small loop near the center, go to the exit. All this becomes clear after studying the labyrinth, but on the way, wandering along the mysterious paths of the labyrinth, nothing is clear - and we get confused, me and the geologist, Mityushka gets confused (this is a Kandalakshka guide - E.R.), walking behind us, and P He chuckles on the sidelines.

We ask: what does Babylon mean and why? He doesn’t know the word labyrinth...

(Note by Author Durylev: on Bolshoi Zayatsky Island, which belongs to the group of Solovetsky Islands, I also observed the Babylons, laid out, according to the monk’s explanation, by Peter the Great.) Who laid out these bizarre cunning passages, this labyrinth, and for what purpose? There is no answer to this question yet.

…Despite north winds, storms and rains, which seem so easy to scatter or demolish small stones of labyrinths, always located on open places, the labyrinths are well preserved and their bizarre paths are still clear.

What can be said about their origin and the purposes for which they were established?

Of all the existing explanations given by archaeological science, there is not a single one that is completely reliable; all are contradictory and mutually exclusive.

The Russian scientist, academician Berg, who first discovered the northern labyrinths in the first half of the last century, thought that they were monuments of historical events. The Finnish archaeologist Aspelin, who studied the labyrinths more than anyone else, on the contrary, dates them back to an undoubtedly more ancient time - the Bronze Age. Our archaeologists Kondakov and Ya. Smirnov put them in connection with those labyrinths that were arranged in the Middle Ages in the form of patterns on the floors of churches. Some attribute the labyrinths of the north to Christian times, others to pagan times. But no one can say to what custom they belong, what they served; it is difficult to decide for what pagan ritual the labyrinths could have served. The Lapps with whom we had to deal say that there are no labyrinths in their country.

In Finland, labyrinths have different names, more and more the names of glorious cities: Jericho, Nineveh, Jerusalem, Lisbon; In Lapland, all labyrinths have only one name: Babylon. But this name must be written with a small letter, because it has become a common noun for labyrinths.

To explain the Russian name for labyrinths - “Babylon”, it is interesting to remember that in popular speech there is everywhere the expression “to write Babylons” - i.e. especially cunning, tangled circles, “embroidered with Babylons” - i.e. embroidered with particularly intricate patterns; Babylon, according to various concepts, is something cunning, confusing, intricate.

Babylon is closely associated with the sea.

This raises a natural assumption: aren’t the northern labyrinths monuments of pagan beliefs related specifically to the sea and dangerous sea crafts? Labyrinths are found exclusively in countries that in ancient times had and still have a vital connection with the sea - in Scandinavia, Finland, coastal Lapland, the White Sea region, Murman.

To this day, the population of these countries preserves a number of superstitions and rituals related to the sea. Of the Christian customs related to the sea, the custom of setting up a cross to ask God for a favorable voyage is ubiquitous in the Russian north. How many such crosses are there on Zayatsky Island, how many of them are there along the shores of the ocean and the White Sea! Didn't this Christian custom replace some pagan rite, which also related to the sea and associated with the labyrinth, and the labyrinth was always considered in ancient times a place of purification and redemption, a voluntary sacrifice? Perhaps the crosses on Zayatsky Island only replaced labyrinths, of which there are not many left on this island?

After all, just recently in Murman there was a completely pagan ritual of praying to the wind, on which everything at sea, life and death, depends. Perhaps, someone who went through all the passages of the labyrinth and came out without getting lost, having made a sacrifice, was considered pure and could not be afraid of sea misadventures and obstacles, storms and rocks, just as he was not afraid of losing the right path in a cunning labyrinth?

But all these are just assumptions, and the cunning patterns of northern Babylons, made of gray ancient stones, under gloomy clouds or the never-setting sun, look at us with an unsolved mystery to this day.”

...Sorry for such a long quote, it seems to me that it creates a certain mood about the unusual structure in the bay, which is called Maly Pitkul near the passage to O. Small Berezovy, which becomes an island only at high tides, and at low tides it is an isthmus connecting the mainland coast with this very Small Berezov Island.

And now even the very place where the labyrinth is located reveals a kind of “secret”. Located almost next to the city, it is fortunately located away from the roads - roads that are not very frequented. And fortunately for us, it has survived so far.

(Kandalaksha: “The ABC of History” Our memory. Efim Fedorovich Razin)

To be continued....

277 km from the city of Murmansk, near the small town of Kandalaksha, there is a labyrinth whose age is close to four thousand years. Most scientists suggest that such an amazing riddle in its form is more reminiscent of a trap, which was often used by ancient people in the process of catching fish or as a means of performing various rituals, with the help of which luck was supposed to go to their side.

The most common name for the Kandalaksha labyrinth is the “Babylon” stone labyrinth, which is big system intricate passages made entirely of stone - it was in these places that ancient people performed their magical rites. There is an opinion that the rituals have nothing to do with labyrinths, but only served as an aid in hunting. There were cases when the dead were buried in the passages of the labyrinth. It is known that many primitive peoples had this kind of labyrinths. In all existing labyrinths there are intricate and intricate passages, which are laid out in a special way from stone in the form of a spiral, which is especially noticeable in several places located on the Kola Peninsula, next to the Umba and Pona rivers.

Such a noticeable popularity of the presence of labyrinths gives rise to a virtually fantastic hypothesis about the purpose of these buildings. There are research scientists who believe that there was a close connection between the belief of ancient peoples in the afterlife, other worlds and this kind stone structures. It is believed that the villages near which the labyrinths were located apparently maintained contact with each other, even despite the enormous distances; at the same time, powerful structures were used not only as an antenna, but also as a kind of receiver.

It is worth noting that none of the presented theories has currently found exact confirmation, because no traces of burials could be found in the soil under the spirals, and as for confirming the version about the presence of doors to other worlds and the method of transmitting various signals in this way over long distances - then it seems unlikely at all.

All the tribes living near the labyrinth, whose name sounds like Pomors, called the spirals made up of medium-sized stones “Babylon.” In this case, it’s worth thinking about: why did the ancient people choose this name? This question can be answered in different ways: according to the first version, it is assumed that the word “Babylon” translated into Russian sounds like “wavy, winding”, and this option is considered the most obvious, but still is not the only and confirmed one. There is another version, according to which it is believed that the word “Babylon” is a slightly distorted word “Avalon”, which translated from the Celtic language means “the place where fairies live.” If you translate the word “Avalon” into Russian, it means “apple”, which is somewhat correlated with the inherent shape of “Babylon”, reminiscent of an apple cut lengthwise.

There is a legend that says that only a select few can get to the labyrinth, but in fact, getting to the labyrinth is not very easy, because it is not located so close to the city of Murmansk, especially for people who are not familiar with the area to find the right place It will be very difficult, because many simply do not notice it.

To date, it has been precisely established that on the territory of the modern Kandalaksha region there were two religious cults, one of which was called the cult of the highest gods, and the other was the cult of the Seids - sacred stones in which sacred and respected spirits live. It is known that Seyd always demanded respectful treatment of himself, and for respectful treatment he always rewarded with a rich catch during the hunt.

“Babylon” in the Kandalaksha Hills is a unique, although not uncommon, phenomenon, because the largest concentration of labyrinths is located on the famous Volosyanaya Sopka, three km from the main Kandalaksha road. All the secrets of the mysterious “Babylon” have not yet been clarified, which means that new excavations will follow.

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Six stone rings buried in the ground are called by some a magical labyrinth and therefore come to Voronezh region to recharge your energy.

Many people remember the myth of the Minotaur or have heard about the famous English Stonehenge. Meanwhile, it is quite possible that your labyrinth We have it too, very close to Voronezh- in the Ostrogozhsky district, next to Mostishche farmstead. Who created this miracle and why? And will it be possible to find the answer to at least one of his many mysteries?

Over three rivers

The village of Mostishche is located between three chalk hills. From the peaks there is an amazingly beautiful view of the valley of three rivers - the Don, Potudan and Devitsa. Such places have attracted people since ancient times. Around are forests rich in prey, an abundance of fish and free pastures. And if you build a rampart and install a palisade, the settlement on the hill will turn into a reliable fortress, impregnable to unfriendly neighbors.

Nowadays little can be seen from the labyrinth in Mostishche. It was badly destroyed, and archaeologists tried to bury what was left underground. On the surface you can only find isolated white stones, barely visible in the grass. But judging by the plan created by archaeologists, the structure was large and complex.

It is not surprising that archaeologists have long noticed this place. Back in 1957, an expedition from the Institute of Archeology of the Academy of Sciences discovered on the central hill an ancient settlement from the Scythian era, who settled in the southern Russian steppes in the 6th-4th centuries. BC.

And in 1983, an archaeological expedition of the Voronezh State Pedagogical University led by Arsen Sinyuk found traces of more ancient tribes that inhabited these places back in the 3rd millennium BC. There is little left from that era - a cluster of stones. But scientists soon realized that these stones were not scattered in disorder at all, but formed six concentric elliptical rings. Then a bold hypothesis was born: the ancient structure is nothing more than a labyrinth, the only one in central Russia.

The ellipse of the labyrinth is stretched along the northeast - southwest line, the outer boundaries of the structure are 26x38 m. Most of the stones are chalk, but there are also granite boulders - a rock not typical for these places.

Conservatives from Ivanova Bugra

Why was this unusual structure built? Researchers agree that the labyrinth could be an ancient sanctuary. At the same time, there is a version about its astronomical purpose. The fact is that granite boulders clearly indicate the direction to the north, the points of sunrise and sunset on the days of the summer and winter solstices, the spring and autumn equinoxes.

Arsen Sinyuk believed that the sanctuary was built by representatives of the so-called Ivano-Bugorsk archaeological culture. For the first time its traces were found on Ivanovo Bugre - hence the name. The people of Ivano-Bugorsk were forest hunters and fishermen and at the same time communicated with the population of the steppe.

The people were very conservative, did not take advantage of the achievements of their neighbors, and even in the Bronze Age they retained a way of life characteristic of the Neolithic - the New Stone Age. Except in Mostishche and Ivanovo Bugre, this culture is not found anywhere else.

Place of power

And yet, the fact that the Mostishchenskaya find is a labyrinth is only a hypothesis. The trouble is that the monument came to us badly damaged: the Scythians began to take away the stones for building materials.

Although 2.5 thousand years have passed since then, archaeologists are not confident that our contemporaries will treat the structure more carefully: in the end, it was decided to bury the ancient stones again. The tourist will see nothing in this place except a hill covered with steppe grasses.

The place of power attracts many lovers of esotericism

Nevertheless, the hill with the labyrinth buried in it is very popular today, especially among enthusiasts keen on searching for paranormal phenomena. According to eniologists - supporters of the theory of energy-informational interaction at a subtle level - the Mostishchensky labyrinth is a “place of power” with special energy.

“The radiation from the labyrinth is felt at a distance of up to 2 km and covers nearby villages,” says Alexander Sukhorukov, chairman of the committee for the study of anomalous phenomena in nature. - Being at the epicenter, people feel drowsiness, slight dizziness, a pleasant tingling throughout the body, especially along the spine, and enter a state of euphoria, increased activity, and the body’s healing processes are activated.

There is a slight swaying. All this may even be accompanied by visions. It is important to get out of resonance in time, because the energy is very strong. After some time of relaxation, a state of increased activity sets in.”

The labyrinth even gained international fame. So, tourists from Germany came here for group meditation. According to German fans of esotericism, Voronezh and 100 km around the city are “the heart chakra of Europe.”

“I don’t really believe in it, but megaliths really have amazing energy properties,” says Alexander Sukhorukov.

Unsolved mystery

Will we learn anything new about the labyrinth and its builders? Or has the veil of millennia hidden the truth from us forever? Archaeologist Valery Berezutsky, one of the discoverers of the labyrinth, is not optimistic.

“The entire area occupied by the stones has already been explored,” said Valery. - Besides, not all researchers consider this structure a labyrinth. I also have doubts. For example, we excavated what we thought was one of the turns of the labyrinth, but then it turned out that this was a natural outcrop of chalk. This happens often in archaeology.

Maybe this is a discovery. Or maybe a misunderstood object. The difficulty is that after the Ivano-Bugorsk people, at least two or three peoples lived there. Only from the Scythians there remain 126 household pits, cut into the chalk. And it’s very, very difficult to find a labyrinth among a pile of stones.”

The archaeologist is also skeptical about the fact that the pilgrimage to Mostishche is gaining momentum every year.

“Yes, I talked to people who say that they feel a surge of energy in this place,” says Valery Berezutsky. - Maybe it's true. But there is no guarantee that it comes from the labyrinth.”

In a word, everyone decides for themselves whether to believe in the labyrinth and its magical powers or not. It is unlikely that evidence will be found that can convince a stubborn skeptic. For enthusiasts, a fragile hypothesis that opens up scope for imagination is enough. Be that as it may, it is important that another secret awakens interest in the turbulent past of the forest-steppe expanses of the Voronezh region.

There are five of them on the Kandalaksha and Tersky shores of the White Sea: Kandalaksha, located on Cape Pitkulsky Navolok on absolute altitude 3.4 m a.s.l., Umbinskie (large and small) - on Cape Anninsky Krest, 90 m west of Toni Udarnik at an altitude of 6.6 m a.s.l. and two Ponoiskie labyrinths.

The study of these objects on the coasts of the White and Barents Seas, as well as in Sweden, Norway, Finland showed that the “Trojan cities”, with very rare exceptions, were built in close proximity to the ancient coastline(high tide lines) and were never flooded by the sea.

Some labyrinths are located next to other archaeological sites (primitive sites, prehistoric burials), where quartz scrapers and staples, arrowheads made of slate, fragments of asbestos ceramics, and rare fragments of vessels decorated with ornaments were found. The finds of these artifacts were associated with the so-called “Arctic Neolithic culture,” which refers to the time interval V-I thousand. years BC (Gurina, 1953), which allowed archaeologists to compare the age of the Kola labyrinths precisely with the Neolithic era and estimate it at 3-4 thousand years.

There is no clear answer yet to the question regarding the purpose of the stone labyrinths of the Kola region, but it is known that they are all connected with the sea and are confined to places rich in fish. It is reliably known that the Kola labyrinths were never flooded by the sea. Based on this, it is possible to determine the maximum age of these archaeological objects by relating them to the position of sea level at one time or another. A similar approach to estimating the age of Scandinavian labyrinths allowed foreign researchers (Kern, 2007) to significantly adjust it towards rejuvenation.

The work carried out at the Geological Institute of the KSC RAS ​​to study the late post-glacial movement of the sea coastline makes it possible to determine its altitudinal position on the coast at one time or another, i.e., using geological methods to establish the age of the coastline at the height at which the labyrinth is located, as is the maximum possible age of the stone labyrinth (Kolka, Korsakova, 2010). For this purpose, we used data from a study of the movement of the sea coastline in the late Holocene at the top of Kandalaksha Bay and in the area of ​​the village. Lesozavodsky on its southern bank. According to these data, the age of the Kandalaksha labyrinth cannot be more than 918-1000 calendar years, and during the “Arctic Neolithic” the surface with an absolute elevation of 3.4 m, on which the Kandalaksha labyrinth is located, should have been at a depth of approximately 11 m below modern sea level.

There are two ways to get to the labyrinth:

By car - exit from observation deck(route marked in red)

On foot - through the "Japan" microdistrict, thanks to which you can see what Kandalaksha was like several centuries ago. And then along the rocky shore with beautiful views of the White Sea (route marked in yellow). ()

Prepared based on materials from Kolka V.V., Korsakova O.P., Nikolaeva S.B.