Showing posts with label Samarkand. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Samarkand. Show all posts

21 November 2022

Samar Kand

Known as an architectural pearl along the Silk Road, the city has officially been seized by great conquerors as Temujin & Alexander, whose supposed empires encompassed Greater Iran:

  • Whose area nearly fits the territory of the Khwarazmian & Timurid empires: Are they partial duplicates?
  • Where we find its characteristic architecture, as can be seen in the Jameh Mosque of Isfahan

Two years after the conquest of Khanbaliq by the Ming Empire, Timur besieged Balkh, where Zoroaster supposedly died & also was associated with Shambhala: Are the Timurid & Ming empires partial duplicates of each other?

After that era, the area split into two parts, more or less along the prolonged path of the Gorgan Wall:

While Turkistan might have been a destination for the fleeing dynasty, some of their members also might have migrated to Japan: Tokugawa Ieyasu founded the shogunate, where Samurai held bureaucratic positions: Do Ieyasu & Yeso refer to Jesus?

After the revolt of Yemelyan Pugachev, the northern part of Great Tartary got conquered by the Russian Empire, while the southern part remained independent, but split into a western & eastern part, roughly similar to the case of the Turkic Khaganate: Fortresses along the Ural & Irtysh marked the border. After China took the eastern Chinese Tartary, Russia focused in the Great Game on acquiring the western remaining Independent Tartary, finalising it with the conquest of a last remainder, the Bukhara Khanate ...

29 May 2021

Mehmed the Conqueror

Almost one millenium after Rome fell to the Germans, after a siege of seven weeks the Turks finally conquered Constantinople: These events can respectively be considered as start & end of our known Middle Ages. During this epoch, the Byzantine capital endured yet many sieges ...

After the conquest, sultan Mehmed quite quickly ordered the construction of the Eyüp Sultan shrine, honoring the standard-bearer of prophet Muhammad, who supposedly died there during a former siege: Almost eight centuries later, a religious scholar suddenly seems to do discover the burial spot. According to the New Chronology, sultan & prophet are duplicates: the standard-bearer probably died during the last siege of the city, the mentioned timespan fits closely in the difference between chronological shifts they discovered ...

The sultan mainly focused on Europe, possibly derived from the Hebrew "עֶרֶב" or Greek "Ἔρεβος": Switching vowels may clearify why the prophet conquered Arabia, it's quite curious we find Arabic inscriptions on Roman mantles or Russian weaponry. According to the New Chronology, the conqueror had more partial duplicates, for example:

Which story fits best the real history? Astronomy even associates the Apocalypse with the mentioned conquest ...