King of the World
There have long been wild rumors of a powerful, advanced underworld kingdom. Much of the literature on the topic indicates this mysterious civilization is headquartered somewhere beneath central Asia led by the "King of the World." A leading proponent of this idea was Dr. Ferdinand Ossendowski, a Polish explorer who wrote of this kingdom—dubbing it the “Mystery of Mysteries”—in his 1923 book Beasts, Men and Gods. He wrote:
On my journey into Central Asia I came to know for the first time about “the Mystery of Mysteries,” which I can call by no other name…The old people on the shore of the River Amyl related to me an ancient legend to the effect that a certain Mongolian tribe in their escape from the demands of Jenghiz Khan hid themselves in a subterranean country. Afterwards a Soyot from near the Lake of Nogan Kul showed me the smoking gate that serves as the entrance to the “Kingdom of Agharti.” Through this gate a hunter formerly entered into the Kingdom and, after his return, began to relate what he had seen there. The Lamas cut out his tongue in order to prevent him from telling about the Mystery of Mysteries.1
The Kingdom of Agharti is ruled by the “King of the World” who Ossendowski described as “a realistic and powerful force capable of influencing the course of the political life of Asia.” Moreover, the King of the World invisibly rules over hundreds of millions of people on the surface of the earth.2
Ossendowski wrote that the exact location of Agharti is unknown, but those who dwell there—a population in the millions—have attained the highest degree of knowledge. He went on to say that the underworld caverns have “peculiar light which affords growth to the grains and vegetables and long life without disease to the people.” This subterranean world extends throughout the entire earth including America, where an ancient people inhabit the caverns.3
When I visited the vast underworld that is Carlsbad Caverns in the summer of 2017, I could not help but wonder: What if Ossendowski was right? Is it possible? Are there deeper caves connected to the Carlsbad Caverns system that have a peculiar light source, food, and advanced human (or humanoid) inhabitants?
Ossendowski was not the only author who wrote of an elaborate underworld headquartered in central Asia. In her book The Secret Doctrine, cofounder of the Theosophy Society, Madame Helena Blavatsky, spoke of an advanced underworld whose entrance lies somewhere in the Gobi Desert.
A hollow—and inhabited—earth is a centerpiece of esoteric and occult teachings and traditions. Samael Aun Weor wrote in The Gnostic Bible: The Pistis Sophia Unveiled:
The Kingdom of Agharti is found in the subterranean caverns of the Earth. The Earth is hollow and the network of caverns constitute Agharti. The Genie of the Earth (Melchisedec) lives in Agharti with a group of survivors from Lemuria and Atlantis. The Goros, powerful Lords of life and death work with Melchisedec. The whole ancient wisdom of the centuries has been recorded on Stone within the Kingdom of Agharti.4
So what does it all mean? Surely there cannot be an ancient population of advanced people—Atlanteans and Lemurians among them—living deep inside the earth. It simply cannot be. Can it?
Read more about the King of the World in my book El Paso to Las Cruces via Roswell, the second book in my Detours Into the Paranormal series.
End Notes
1.Ferdinand Ossendowski, Beasts, Men and Gods, (New York: E.P. Dutton & Company, 1923), 300–301.
2. Ibid., 301–302
3. Ibid., 302–303
4. Samael Aun Weor, The Gnostic Bible: The Pistis Sophia Unveiled, (New York: Glorian Publishing, 2013).