Known as the grandson of Genghis Khan, he extended the Mongol Empire north of the Khazar Sea, comparable to the realm of Attila the Hun: He conquered Kievan Rus & invaded Central Europe. According to the New Chronology, he's a duplicate of:
Yaroslav derives from Yarilo, who is also identified with Saint John, which becomes Ivan in Russian ...
The mainstream known territory of the Golden Horde is approximately equal to the Khazar Khaganate, both having Astrakhan as its possible capital, making their histories possible duplicates: Might its name refer to arrows used during their raids?
The mainstream known territory of the Golden Ring had to pay tribute to the Golden Horde. However, for the New Chronology, both are duplicates: Did mainstream historians use the Khazar Khaganate as inspiration for a Mongol Yoke?
According to mainstream history, the Golden Horde was later split into an eastern & western part, though it isn't clear which colour fits which compass point. The New Chronology, rejectants of that Mongol Yoke, suggests another division:
- Golden Horde: Great Russia or the Golden Ring, refering to the many golden onion domes
- Blue Horde: Little Russia or the Ukraine, crossed by many rivers, similar to Mesopotamia
- White Horde: White Ruthenia or the Muscovite Russia, where the "White Tsar" ruled
The White Horde stretched to Belarus, Prussia & the Balkan Peninsula: Did Batu Khan & his Venedi continue the conquest of his grandfather by reaching as far as Baetica & the Vatican? Another concentric circle of cities around Vladimir fits that suggestion ...