The Mistery of Belicena Villca to see a megalithic landscape on the banks of a huge lake : that place , said the Loyal Gods , lay beyond the Dark Sea ; but there they had to go , because a Great Empire would be of the House of Skiold by Will of the Gods . And that was why they set sail in the 220 drakkars . In short , the House of Skiold constituted a family of Hyperboreans Initiates , and it should not be surprising that upon leaving , both King Kollman and his Queen and numerous Noyos and Vrayas , were Men of Stone .
Despite having prevailed over the Toltecs without problems and contributed deeply to improve their civilization , ten years later the people of Kollman continued their journey to the South , staying with the Toltecs those who had committed the " racial sin " of mating with them . They would sail to Venezuela . They would then march in the direction of the West , crossing Venezuela , Colombia and Ecuador , and would reach Quito , from where they would sail again heading South . They would disembark in Tacna , and climb the Eastern mountains , until reaching the Tiwanaku plateau and Lake Titicaca . That was the place indicated by the Stone of Venus .
In Tiwanaku the Skioldans found a cyclopean stone city half built , a kind of workshop of the white Atlanteans . Next to the ruins , they built a settlement that would be the head of an Empire . And on the Island of the Sun , they erected a Temple to the local Deity , since they themselves had presented to the Collas , Aymara and other indians , as " Sons of the Sun ". The Viking Empire of Tiwanaku prospered and expanded until the fourteenth century , when it was unleashed the second part of the racial drama of the House of Skiold . In that century , indeed , the Skioldans , who were already called " Atumurunas " for their white skin and their predilection for the Cold Moon , had dominated all the indian peoples who lived nearby . Only one resisted , and not because of its own merits but because the Atumurunas doubted between knowing them free and far away , or subjecting them to vassalage and having to deal with them .
Viking Drakar
312