Showing posts with label Manchu. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Manchu. Show all posts

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?

21 May 2023

Prester John

Emperor Manuel Komnenos once semeed to have received a letter containing knowledge about Thomas the Apostle & Alexander the Great. Pope Alexander the Third then reacted strategically by writing a letter to its supposed sender, but it's uncertain Philip the Physician was able to deliver it. The original letter describes a wonderful kingdom, stretching over three so called Indias: Might they be identified as the three Hordes, where three Kings rule?

The New Chronology identifies the legendary patriarch as the so called Batu Khan, who they claim to be a younger brother of the so called Genghis Khan: Was the so called Mongol Empire the great eastern nation of the patriarch around the Golden Ring?

The Mirabilia Descripta describes the legendary patriarch as ruler of Ethiopia, an idea that seemed to have entered the collective consciousness by the time of the Samalas Eruption: Did some Hordians flee there, as well as to Manchuria & Afghanistan, after the Time of Troubles, offering another possibility for identifying three Indias with duplicated histories?

The Temple of Doom shows Indiana Jones was hired to retrieve the remains of Nurhaci, but he escaped over the Himalayas to defeat the Thuggee. From that mountain range, he started his quest for the Ark of the Covenant, which might be kept guarded nearby the Ethiopian Highlands: Do these plots hint to Abyssinia, Bharat & Zhongguó as three Indias?

Going back in time about one millenium from the mentioned letters, we might stumble upon three duplicates of the prester:

Might John te Baptist be the fourth Musketeer among the mentioned duplicates?

21 March 2023

Yekuno Amlak

Known as the historical equivalent of the traditional Menelik, he started the dynasty a few years after the Samalas Eruption: Did he travel from Jerusalem to Ethiopia after the medieval Trojan War & bring the Ark of the Covenant finally to Axum?

However, he never claimed to be a descendant of Solomon, as also some rabbinistic scholars do, so the propaganda against the Zagwe might have been inspired by different histories:

  • About 400 years after the official foundation of Karakorum, his descendants founded Gondar; before they were wandering nomads in tent camps
  • The origins of the Zagwe officially go back to the murder of the king of Axum by Gudit, which resembles the story in the book of Judith; researcher Anatoly Fomenko even claims the book of Esther is also a duplicate

In the above mentioned book, Haman is considered to be an Amalekite; in the Quran he is described as opposing the Jews & is ordered by the pharaoh to build a Tower of Babel, making the following duplicates possible: Eshter = Ishtar & Mordecai = Marduk?

As researcher Simcha Jacobovici suggests, the chronology of the book of Exodus is probably incorrect: As Cush might be identified as Midian, where the Jews fought Amalekites, do Rufaa & Damot compose the toponym Rephidim?

The name of the capital of Beta Israel seems to have been inspirational for some authors:

The father of founder Fasilides lived around the Time of Troubles: Did he actually as well, as also might have happened with migrants to Manchuria & Afghanistan, for the latter taking a chronological shift of 100 years into account, flee the Romanovs?

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?

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:

21 February 2021

Great Wall

As protection against raging nomads from the Eurasian Steppes, Chinese Emperors deployed labour forces to build qualitative fortifications. Alas, it didn't stop some invading hordes conquering the country: Qin, the first dynasty of the united empire, initiated the project, while Qing, the last dynasty in that empire, crossed it to take power overthere. Manchuria is a region in Chinese Tartary, whereof cartographer John Cary drew the borders:

Before Pugachev's Rebellion it seemed to belong to Great Tartary, together with Siberia & Turkestan, but Crimea was known as the distinguished Little Tartary: Were they even earlier united as one Tartary? On its borders with Persia, near the Caspian Sea, we also find walls:

  • Near Gorgan on its eastern shore
  • Near Derbent on its western shore

Dhu Al-Qarnayn or Alexander the Great might have built them to isolate Gog of Magog: In the Tartarus, where Giants are buried? In England, Gogmagog was killed by a companion of Brutus of Troy, as Goliath fell ...

Throughout Europe, the supposed descendants of Aeneas of Troy constructed the Roman Limes to keep nomadic tribes outside the empire, ranging from the Black Sea to the Atlantic Ocean, with the following extremities:

Did all those fortifications act as fences between a Heartland of a world-empire & the first parts of a separating Rimland?