Russian President Vladimir Putin inaugurated a new archive where Tartaria maps are made available to the public.
On January 15., 2013 Russian President Vladimir Putin inaugurated a new archive where Tartaria maps are made available to the public. You probably ask what’s so interesting about it. It is and a lot. This act gave the world a clearance that Russia is embarking on a journey of revealing its true, non-fake history, because it is aware that a NATION that does not know its history cannot have a future. The current official Russian history, as taught in schools, was created during the 18. th century and was written in accordance with the biblical Jewish concept of history, custom Romanovs. Just by transitioning from the original calendar (counted from signing peace in the Star Temple) to the Julian calendar, the history of this realm has been shortened by more than five and a half thousand years! The Russian Federation is therefore working on a completely new concept of education and history books that have created for this majority-Slavic country for the last twenty years for completely ′′ selfless ′′ reasons of Western ′′ educational institutions ′′ and ′′ non-profit organizations “.
Apparently many people have never heard of the largest state department on Earth during our history. Although we learned about the famous Egypt, Persian empire, Ottoman or Roman empire, but all of them were little ones against the huge Slavic empire, which over the ages were called Rassénia, Skátia and finally Tartaria. All the more surprising that this country has not found a single mention in official world history! This gap is now a bit filled by some information from historians Jelena Ljubimová and Dmitry Mylnikov, but also other available sources.
For a long time there was a huge state formation on Earth, which was decomposed on several continents. Millions of its inhabitants created a self-sustained culture based on the spiritual and moral qualities of man, respect for ancestors and justice, respect for family and love for their homeland. This country is displayed on many old maps and is spoken about in encyclopedias. Great Tartarians originally inhabited the Tartarians. Tall, red hair, white skin people with blue, green or grey eyes, Slavs-Aryans and Russians. Friendly and kind in times of peace, brave and merciless in battles. Righteous and compassionate in the days of victory and steadfast in adversity. And the fact that they fought for the most sacred thing, for their Rod, their Homeland and the moral purity and faith of their ancestors, made them almost invincible.
Encyclopedia Britannica, first edition, episode 3. Edinburgh, 1771, p. 887 tells us: ′′ From Urals to Alaska. From New Earth to Tibet. Tartaria was a great country in northern Asia bounded by Siberia in the north and called Great Tartaria in the west. Tartarians living south of Moskovia and Siberia were called Astrachans, Cherkez; Dagestanians lived northwest of the Caspian Sea, Kalmy Tartars named those who inhabited the territory between Siberia and the Caspian Sea; Uzbek Tartarians and Mogulas inhabited the land north of Persia and India and finally Tibetan Tartarians they lived northwest of China.”
The natural boundaries of the realm that we now know as Tartaria and that occupied almost the entire northern hemisphere in ancient times were ocean shores. Yet three of them – Ice, Silent and Atlantic – were actually its inland waters.
All of this was true until the 18. st century. Suddenly, as if the waving of the evil wizard’s magic wand, Tartaria disappeared. The world’s largest empire on the map from the Encyclopedia Britannica, year of 1771. was displayed on the threshold of the New Ages. Why didn’t this great empire leave a few less important states behind, as usually in case of the breakdown of other empires? And where did millions of its inhabitants go? Why can’t we find no mention of this amazing territorial whole in history books?
Tartaria suddenly disappeared from maps, books and memories. It also disappeared from other editions of Encyclopedia Britannica. Just suddenly it’s not…
By Ota Veselý
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