Showing posts with label Castilia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Castilia. Show all posts

06 December 2024

Praga Khan

Known as the stage name of Maurice Engelen, it could be translated as Ruler of Prague. The board game Praga Caput Regni is about the reign of Emperor Charles IV, whom Anatoly Fomenko considers to be a partial duplicate of the following historical characters:

Constantinus Magnus   -    Sviatoslav Igorevich   -    Dmitry Alexandrovich   -    Tokhta Khan   -    Dmitry Ivanovich   -    Tokhta Mysh

As already suggested in my blogposts, Dmitry Donskoy & Kublai Khan even might be partial duplicates, whose composed biographies might have been inpired by Simeon Bekbulatovich & Feodor Ivanovich, possibly even extended with those of Boris Feodorovich & Feodor Borisovich. The first mentioned character above is the last one in the assembled reign of Ivan Vasilyevich, whose conquest of the khanates of Kazan & Astrakhan might have been partially duplicated as:

His successor withstood a last attack of the khanate of Crimea, possibly a remainder of the mentioned khaganate, which might have been partially duplicated as the battles of Kulishki & Karakorum. The producers of the Masonic Victory of WWII state that the Reformation was initiated by Judaism, which the researchers of the New Chronology describe as the struggle of Ivan Vasilyevich against Khazars & Livonians: Did Feodor Ivanovich give the final blow for a diaspora, as suggested in the Thirtheenth Tribe?

They seem to have migrated along Bohemia & Bavaria, where they later founded the Illuminati, while their royal family even reached Castilia, whose history might have been rewritten:

As experienced traders from European Mesopotamia, they subtly acquired prominent financial positions abroad, a network that would evolve into what is known as the Khazarian Mafia, who plays a prominent role in a History of Central Banking & might commemorate their first home abroad as follows:

Born in a family that followed the teachings of Zoroaster, it might however be that Freddy Mercury just expressed his struggle with sexuality. The song Injected with a Poison launched Praga Khan on the international scene: Does its phrase Rainbow inside your Mind refer to the indoctrination of LGBTQIA+, promoted by the ahrimanic Khazarian Mafia?

11 March 2023

Yermak Cortez

Known as the conquistador of Sibir, the scarce documented hero Yermak Timofeyevich has been portrayed alike, which raises the following questions:

According to the New Chronology, the story of Hernan Cortez is a duplicate of the mentioned Cossack Ataman: Is Castilia actually refering to the dynasty ruling around the river Itil?

After dealing with the khanate of Sibir, they continued eastwards and conquered the territory of the Pegaia Orda: Was it a remnant of the former world-empire of whom some people could flee to Manchuria & later found Peking?

Besides being a possible source for the name of the mentioned city, also the following toponyms might derive from it:

  • Pakistan, wherefrom a fled Mo(n)gol Dynasty conquered India, which might fit if we take a chronological shift into account
  • Pegu, written as "Пегу" in Russian, also found as "Пегя" on old maps, is easy to confuse with "Peru", home of the Incas

The realm of the Sapa Inca bordered Araucana, while Arakan is next to Pegu: Did the history of "Peru" & "Mexico" get duplicated & transposed to America?

The ruins between Teotihuacan & Tiahuanaco suggest very advanced civilizations, even the construction of recent examples as Tenochtitlan & Sacsayhuaman required technology the known American Indians didn't posses: Who really built those structures?

A world-empire that once encompassed all those areas with advanced architecture isn't only mentioned by the New Chronology, also World-Systems Analysis suggests it: Did the seceding Rimland of Tartary falsify history to mask the existence of a world-empire, which the Axis Powers might have tried to restore?

16 July 2021

Samalas Eruption

In 1257 AD one of the largest volcanic eruptions took place on Lombok, causing worldwide catastrophies the subsequent years, possibly even resulting in the Little Ice Age. It was an outburst of similar strength as the well knows of Santorini, Vesuvius, Tambora & Krakatoa ...

In The Medieval Empire of the Israelites, the authors describe that glacial cores point out a catastrophe must have taken place around 1260 AD. Ten years later, scientists concluded Segara Anak was the result of that catastrophic eruption. For these authors, the mentioned year is a key to understand history, some important historical turning points took place around that time:

Although at first glance these events seem unconnected to each other, some interesting questions arise:

  • As the Mongols, the Byzantines got defeated first, however the latter ones were succesful one year later: Might the spring of Goliath refer to the spring near Constantinople, of which the nearby gate contributed to the surprising seizure?
  • Cadiz means stronghold, while Constantinople is famous for its walls: Could it be the former ones captured it too under their pseudonym Castilians, although mainstream history claims otherwise?

Considering these similarities, is one real historical blueprint used to, at least partially, invent some fake histories for different regions, so creating some fake history & hiding some real history?

About one millenium earlier, around 536 AD, a volcanic eruption also caused extreme weather events & crop failures. Late in that year the troops of Flavius Belisarius seized Naples by using an abandoned aqueduct to capture the city by surprise: Is this a duplicate story of the mentioned seizure, as well as the seizure of Troy?

30 June 2021

Attila the Hun

Know as the "Scourge of God", he conquered an empire ranging from the Roman Limes to the Ural Mountains: The European part of the Heartland, extending from Hungary to Yugra, comparable to the territory of the Golden Horde at its peak. On his way to Aurelianum, he got defeated for the first time on the Catalaunian Plains. His name is similar to a Khazar capital & another name for the Volga river:

  • Switching vowels might turn it into Ital(ia)
  • Reversing consonants might turn it into Lati(um)

In Romance languages, a royal dynasty ruling the region of the Во́лга river might be translated as 'Casa Итиль': It can be contracted to Castil(ia), which on itself leads to 'castle'. It arises the following questions:

We might make the following comparison with the wars of Carolus Magnus:

According to Heribert Illig, this phantom character never existed: So where did the inspiration for the story of this 'Great King' come from? From the 'Genghis Khan' who, according to the New Chronology, conquered Europe? He might have built castles to maintain control, helped by his brother Khasar?