Some Aspects of Empire Management : Part 1

  Below is the beginning of a good article – Some Aspects of Empire Management – by A.B. Nikolsky and published in 2004. It is very long and has been google-ated from Russian to English. A very interesting read for anyone interested in how to manage and then destroy an Empire as large as Tartaria.     […]

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Filthy Barbarian or Silk-Clad Tartarian?

There are two things that most people don’t know about the Tartarian Empire and their concern clothes and hygiene. Unlike the Filthy Barbarians of legend, the fighting men of the Empire dressed in silks, cotton and linen and loved steam-baths. When you travel long distances and the chances for bathing are few and far between, […]

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Phantom Battlefields…A Memory of the Tartarian Empire?

Straight Up – I claim absolutely NO originality for this thought. But the more I ponder, the more sense it makes. Phantom Battlefields and the rewriting of our history brings together several threads that include human memory/family stories/ancestors/myths/wishful/wistful thinking. It is beyond doubt now that there once existed a Great Empire that covered much of […]

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A Clue to “Ancient” Building Techniques

My research over the weekend threw up this subject – Geopolymer Concrete. Now – History is My Thing, so this information needs other brains to make sense of it or even nonsense of it. Please :o) WikiWhatever on Geopolymer Cement A full quote of Fomenko/Nosovskiy on Concrete and the Philosopher’s Stone.    “In [5v2], ch.7, […]

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For Etruscan read TARTARIAN!

There is growing evidence that the Stunning Etruscans – who, according to Fake History suddenly appeared in Italy 900BC and just as suddenly disappeared 100BC – were actually Tartarians. The language they used has been proved to be Slavonic although this has been rather badly covered up (!) I propose that the FAKE Etruscans were […]

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The Empire on which the Sun never Sets (?)

The Empire on which the Sun never Sets. Fake History — The World  According to WikiWhatever What if this Empire was actually Grand Tartaria? Just a thought.  

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The Real Genghis Khan?

In 1185 Andronicus I Comnenus was crucified in Yoros. During the horrors of the Sack of Constantinople, one of Andronicus’ close relatives (Aeneas/John/Ryurik) fled north to safety. Maybe he took several close family members with him, including the mother of Andronicus, whom he settled safely in her home at Cape Florient, Crimea. Who knows?   […]

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Genghis Khan and Communications in Tartary

The other day, Martin Liedtke’s video at Flat Earth British (Kansas is Bye Bye) showed the above picture of Genghis Khan’s “family tree.” Sorry to have cut your head off, Martin!! So I decided to look into this. Well. What a journey. Little did I know it would lead me down a road that I’ve […]

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Encyclopedia Britannica – 1771

The Encyclopedia Britannica 1771 edition is a great source of surprises. You can access and keyword search all three volumes here –   NATIONAL LIBRARY OF SCOTLAND   Today I searched Volume 3, Keyword TARTARY and all sorts of amazing stuff came up. Here’s just a taster – WITH ALL ITS SILLY OLDE ENGLISHE S’s […]

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The Sack of Constantinople – 1204

The Sack of Constantinople – part of the Fourth Crusade – is always described as a major turning point in Medieval History. It has perplexed many people for a long time. Few can agree on the reason why the brilliant, elite Crusaders of North Western Europe stopped at Constantinople and never attempted to move forwards […]

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Timeline for Tartaria – Basic

More and more people are waking up to the fact that our history has been altered. For the past few decades, mountainous amounts of work by many people has been done to reclaim some of the truths. At the modern forefront of this task has been Anatoly Fomenko and his team whose meticulous research has […]

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More Caucasian Mummies in China

Here is another video dealing with the mysterious White Mummies in the Western Chinese Desert.   A strange and haunting burial site deep inside the dunes. A place that today is harsh, barren and inhospitable but was once a lush green area fed by rivers and an ocean. Where poplar trees grew, fish swam, oxen […]

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