Showing posts with label Kublai. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kublai. 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?

25 December 2023

Kublai Khan

Known from a poem written under opium intoxication, he decreed a stately pleasure dome in the mythical Xanadu: Mainstream history identifies it as Shangdu, where a kurultai was held to oppose his brother. After winning the consequential civil war, he transfered his capital from Karakorum to Khanbaliq: Is he a duplicate of Dmitry Ivanovich, who moved it from Vladimir to Moscow?

Where Kublai supposedly refounded Zhongdu, Donskoy renewed the kremlin of Moscow. As well as Tartar City, it neighbours an outer city, whose name can be translated as Cathay City. The New Chronology claims a big part of the mainstream history of Zhongguo is a fraud: Was the history of one capital city copied to hide another's?

While Moscow might be the reconstruction of Jerusalem, the description of the Forbidden City fits the description of a new Jerusalem in the book of Revelation & scrolls of Qumran: Although the measurements are too huge, the rectangular shape & twelve gates fit the picture. The Opium Wars weakened the Manchu Empire, where the Taiping Rebellion even proclaimed a(nother) new Jerusalem: Were the thousand years mentioned in Revelation another exaggeration & Tartar City the capital city of the new earthly realm, ultimately defeated by the Eight Nation Alliance?

The few remaining ruins near Shangdu also display a rectangular shape, similar to the ones of Ordu Baliq, suggesting they belong to another era than proposed by mainstream history. Terpischore performed in Xanadu, whereas the river Alfeios springs in Arcadia:

As Canada might suggest, the empire even stretched to the New World. The putsch by the last ruler of a unified empire yet met permanent resistance, slowly dismantling the realm. Independent nations arose, stimulating the grow of the modern world-system:

  • Was the battle of Peking the final blow for the former world-empire?
  • Are Olympic Games held to stimulate competition in the modern world-economy?

The original known version of those games honored Zeus, the only surviving son of Cronus, of whom mainstream christianity inherited the celebration of Christmas on the day of Sol Invictus: Was a putsching Constantinus Magnus actually implementing opportunistic reforms to distract christians to an occult worship in a pleasure-dome?

It inspired Frankie Goes To Hollywood, where the Red Hot Chili Peppers claim space is filmed. After the release of 2001: A Space Odyssey, the general repetition for faking the moon landings, writer Arthur Charles Clarke honored Stanley Kubrick with a variant on the mentioned poem: Does Hollywood provide us pleasure under a firmament?

Besides there, the idyllic place is found elsewhere:

Were Operation Warpspeed & Vaccination Passports unrolled in an attempt to control pleasure under the dome?

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:

07 February 2021

Mongol Empire

In my former post, I mentioned the existence of a world-empire before it collapsed into the world-economy we know today. Our mainstream history teaches us the existence of such an empire near the end of the Middle Ages, the greatest one ever existing, the Mongol Empire.

Mainstream history describes the Mongols as being a bunch of nomadic tribes roaming around Tartary, using bow & arrow in conflict while riding horses. Once united under Temujin, in about 20 years they managed to conquer a territory ranging over the Eurasian Steppes between the Caspian & Japanese Sea. The following 50 years, their offspring added more parts of Russia, Persia & China to the realm, resulting in the greatest world-empire ever conquered on landmasses. Horses might allow a quick conquest, but how did nomads adapt so quickly to change their lifestyle from cattle-breeders to empire-managers?

Initially they lacked a real capital, but later Ögedei upgraded Karakorum. Today we find Erdene Zuu Khiid on the spot, but remnants of the former city are almost absent: Where are the foundations of the Silver Tree & Great Palace on the meadow?

For example, in Rome, another capital of a former world-empire, we find much more remnants, supposed to be much older. I would rather expect the opposite, so is that remote spot in Mongolia the real location of their former capital?

The conquest went smooth until the battle of Ain Jalut: The smaller Mamluk Sultanate pushed the greater Mongol Empire back. According to mainstream history this was a turning point in the conquest & must have felt as king David defeated giant Goliath again, or was that story just a tale?

The reason for the pushback was the war about the succession of Möngke, resulting in the partitioning of the world-empire. Although Kublai was successful in claiming the throne, the central authority over the different parts was waning, especially in the most remote region of the Golden Horde. The transfer of the capital to Khanbaliq only contributed to the defragmentation of the greatest world-empire ...