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The Catacombs of San Gennaro in Naples
(viewed from outside the official narrative)
Moving away from the standard label of an "early Christian cemetery" and observing them as the
technological and energy infrastructure of a previous civilization, these catacombs were not dug by monks with picks and shovels to bury the dead, but were part of a complex system.
Factors to consider:
1. Volcanic Tuff as an Energy Capacitor
Naples is built on
tuff, a porous volcanic rock with piezoelectric properties.
The catacombs would not be randomly excavated tunnels, but cavities designed to resonate with the frequencies of the earth and the nearby Mount Vesuvius.
The layout of chambers in superimposed levels would act as a
massive resonance box. Just as cathedrals collected atmospheric energy (Aether), the catacombs might have been designed to extract and process
telluric energy (from the ground).
2. Cemeteries or Water Processors?
The structure of the San Gennaro Catacombs is unusually spacious, with high ceilings and wide corridors that do not fit the need to "save space" for graves.
Before being "repurposed" as a necropolis, these spaces would have been
nodes of an aqueduct and fluid management system.
The Reset
Following a cataclysm (such as a
Mudflood), these infrastructures would have become unusable. The new civilization that repopulated the area, finding thousands of empty niches in the walls, would have interpreted (or adapted) them as places for bodies, turning an industrial plant into a place of death worship.
3. San Gennaro: A Saint or a Power Source?
The phenomenon of the
liquefaction of San Gennaro's blood is seen by official science as a chemical mystery.
The Relic
The concept of "blood that activates" could be the echo of a
fluid technology sensitive to energy.
The location of the catacombs directly beneath the city and their connection to the upper Basilica suggests that the entire complex functioned as a
biological battery. Skeletal remains (containing calcium and apatite crystals) act as semiconductors, maintaining a specific "frequency" in the site.
4. "Eternal" Lighting and the Underground Network
A detail guides often omit is how they managed to work and light these deep spaces without covering the ceilings in torch soot.
Cold Light
It is speculated that these structures used
bioluminescent lighting or some type of
atmospheric light captured from the surface through "lucernari" (vertical shafts). These shafts were not just for ventilation, but acted as waveguides for light and energy from the outside.
The San Gennaro Catacombs may have actually been
Naples' underground "hardware."
What we see today as a display of faith and skeletal remains could be the shell of an ancient telluric energy processing plant that harnessed underground volcanic activity to power the city that once existed above it.
The paintings and graves are merely the "graffiti" left by a subsequent civilization that no longer understood how to turn the machine on.
@TARTARIA HISPANICA
@TARTARIA in my CITY 🏰