26 October 2022

Khan Baliq

Khan Baliq literally translates as "Ruler's City", a good bet for the city founded by Kublai Khan, also known as Tartar City: It contains the Imperial City with the Forbidden Palace, the Chinese City was added in a later stage on its southern flank. Marco Polo supposedly visited Cambalu, officially known as its synonym, but some maps mention the toponym Cambalich in western Siberia:

These maps suggest another perspective on the history of the Mongol Empire:

  • Did the attacks on the Stroganov trading posts serve as inspiration to initiate the fairy tale of their massive conquest?
  • Is the conquest of China by the Ming Empire actually a duplicate of the conquest of western Siberia by the Russian Tsardom?

The New Chronology claims the Manchu are the actual builders of Pezhin:

  • Is the unification of tribes by Genghis Khan a duplication of the unification of tribes by Genggiyen Khan?
  • Did the imperial palace in Mukden, their first capital, serve as a prototype for the one in Peking, their second capital?

The city flourished as the capital of the Qing Empire, whose ruler was recognized by the VOC as the "Grand Tartar Cham", also drawn as "Tartarische Keyzer". After the seizure of power by the Romanov, did someone of the Shuisky flee and establish a new realm & capital for the old dynasty?

Since then foreign traders tried to access their territory, resulting in the Opium Wars & Boxer Rebellion, finally resulting in the end of their reign: Was it actually the last stronghold of the Tartarian Empire, ultimately conquered by the forces of the NWO?

However, Puyi was later installed as the ruler of Manchukuo by the Japanese Empire, around the time Germany witnessed the rise of Adolf Hitler, who sent several expeditions to Tibet:

06 October 2022

Kara Korum

Khar Khorin literally translates as "Black Twenty", but another translation is probably more appropriate: "Black Castle" & "Black Rock" are among the best bets. Although only two Bixi can be seen there, the meadow around the Erdene Zuu Monastery is considered to be the capital of the Mongol Empire. Nearby, similar ruins of rectangular walls can be found, from north to south:

Kara Bator literally translates as "Black Hero" & was the last legendary ruler of the southernmost of these ruins. A Khagan seemed to have held court in a golden yurt on top of a citadel in Khar Balgas, meaning "Black Ruins": Is that citadel actually a kremlin of the Golden Horde & did the story get duplicated to what we today know as Mongolia?

Helena Blavatsky claims the northernmost of these ruins to be the northern gate to Shambhala, now a toponym near the Khamar Monastery: Did Aryans found the kingdom in Tartary, interrupting their migration from Hyperborea to India?

That spiritual kingdom is usually associated with Agartha, possibly a network of caves underneath Tibet, inhabited by Asuras, similar in the following traditions:

  • Ahuras in Persia, where they play the opposite role
  • Ashur in Assyria, the chief deity of its pantheon
  • Aesir in Scandinavia, who originated from Asia

This pattern corresponds with the migration of what became the Khazar nobility along the Khazar Sea towards Europe: Did Zoroaster lay the foundations for the Abrahamic religions of western Eurasia & northern Africa?