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A city that exists in human legends like Atlantis.
Maya Huang Jinguo

(Spanish: El Dorado) is a legend, which began with the story of a South American tribal chief covered in gold powder. [font class = "apple-style-span" style = "font-family: Song Ti; ] In October, Spanish adventurer Francisco Pizarro led an army of 180 men, which set out from Panama and arrived in Peru in America. Although these Spaniards were few in number, they were very brave, equipped with advanced muskets and cannons at that time, and had no 62 cavalry.

At that time, the emperor Taiyapa, who ruled the Inca Empire, knew nothing about foreign invaders and took no defensive measures. In this case, Pizarro occupied Taiya State by surprise attack and extorted gold from it. In order to save his life, Teyapa told Pizarro that if he was released, he would imprison his room with gold until he could raise his hand. But after Pizarro took the gold, he hanged the Inca emperor. 1533+065438+ 10, Pizarro led an army into Cuzco, the capital of the Inca Empire, and washed away all the gold treasures there.

The news that Pizarro plundered gold in the Inca Empire further aroused the greed of Spanish adventurers. More Spanish adventurers crossed the ocean and risked their lives to rush to the jungles of South America, trying to plunder more gold from here. The more gold they get, the more they think about where so much gold comes from, and the more they believe that they will get more gold as long as they cross more mountain markets and dense forests.

In A.D. 1535, Sebastian de Bellacasa, a Spaniard who had made an expedition to the Inca Empire, met an Indian, who told him that there was a king of a tribe in remote Hu, who bathed in the holy lake after being covered with gold powder. Bella Casa called the legendary King of dorado or "Golden Man". Later, this name was misinformed as "Edo" and became the legendary name of Huang Jinguo.

/kloc-in 0/536, a Spaniard named Gonzalo Mennes de Quesada led an expedition of 0.900 people, starting from the northern coast of Colombia, reaching the inland of South America in search of Huang Jinguo. In the Indian village of Sogamoso, they saw a temple of the sun. Chief Kibucha's mummy is kept in the temple and covered with gold ornaments. Kibucha people told Quesada that gold was salt from another Indian country. They also said that there is a lake called Gua Divita, where a magical ceremony is held every year, that is, the Golden People Celebration Ceremony. During the celebration, the king there was covered with gold powder, put on gold ornaments, boarded a raft and set out from the shore of the lake. When people around him lit a wildfire and played musical instruments, the king jumped into the lake and washed away the gold powder. At the same time, priests and nobles also threw valuable gold ornaments into the lake and presented them to the sun god.

According to the research of archaeologists and historians, the possible location is a place called Gusco on the Peruvian plateau in South America today. Cuzco was once the capital of the Inca Empire on the South American continent, 1532 was ravaged by the Spanish army. The original Inca architecture was completely destroyed, so we can only look for some prosperity from the flagstone road that has been smoothed down by years.