True Mystery Of Tartaria World's Fairs​ History We've Been Told Us Is A Lie Chicago 1893

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Mystery The World's Fairs​ Maybe the History we've been told is a lie! Were some ancient buildings built by a different race and their true history was covered up? Did ancient peoples have advanced forms of technology that have now been forgotten ? Was the massive kingdom of Tartaria visible on ancient maps much more advanced than we realize?

So Chicago Fire Devastation The Whole City & Its Is Gone Now And City Had A World Fair 22 Years Later... Wow !
The Great Chicago Fire of 1871 was a catastrophic event that occurred on October 8-10, 1871, destroying nearly 82% of the city is gone. The fire began at a barn owned by Patrick and Catherine O’Leary on the city’s southwest side and quickly spread due to strong winds, wooden construction, and a lack of firefighting infrastructure.

Total Losses:
17,450 buildings destroyed, including homes, businesses, and landmarks
3.3 square miles (9 km²) of the city’s central area reduced to ashes
300-400 people killed
Over 100,000 residents left homeless
Estimated damages: $200 million (approximately $4 billion in today’s value)

Population Growth: Chicago’s population grew from 298,977 people at the time of the great fire in 1870 to 1,099,850 people at time of the world fair in 1890, a growth rate of over 268% in just 20 years with all 22,962 new buildings in city of Chicago plus in 2 years 1890 to 1893 all the 282 new world fair buildings put up with rain or snow very cold working outside too.

Chicago Old Tartaria Museum Tell About 1,000 Year Old World History Of 1893 World's Fair - https://rumble.com/v2cphwy-chicago-old-museum-tell-about-1000-year-old-world-history-of-1893-worlds-fa.html

This sub is an open forum for collaborative discussion of all topics "Tartaria" related, including Mud Flood, Tesla, AntiquiTech, Free Energy, Conspiracies, Hidden History, etc. In recent years, a new alternative world history claim has arisen from the Internet — and it's a doozy. It revolves around an alleged worldwide cataclysm believed by adherents to have taken place sometime in the 1800s, a disaster that wiped out a worldwide advanced civilization and allowed the nations as we know them today to rise up.

The event was a "mud flood" in which several meters of mud washed in and buried the ground levels of houses and buildings everywhere. Those cities and towns that were partially buried constituted the worldwide advanced civilization called Tartaria, which had free wireless energy and was populated at least in part by giants. It was a civilization "reset": out with the old, in with the new; and that "new" civilization is us. If this sounds too silly to be worth anyone's time to even listen to, then consider the fact that of all the hundreds of topic suggestions in the Skeptoid queue, this is the one that I chose for this week. And I chose it for good reason, so attend.

Let us begin by surveying the evidence put forth for what some adherents call "mud flood theory", and this takes us about 12 seconds to do. Find any old-timey black and white photo where people are digging particularly if there's an old steam shovel or mule teams being employed and it doesn't even matter what they're digging, you can say they're digging out from the great depth of mud that covered their city. Then find any modern photograph of any old building that has floors below grade, especially if it has basement windows peeking out, or if there's excavation going on next door which has exposed its basement walls or foundations, and say that the building's lower levels were obviously buried by mud. I don't want to sound dismissive, but that is indeed the entirety of the evidence that has motivated these people to discard all of known history and embrace this alternate version. As far as the previous civilization being named Tartaria goes, this part is more interesting. As you may or may not know, Tartars was the generic name used by Europeans up until the middle of the 19th century for the people who inhabited the largely unexplored regions of Asia, including what we now know as Manchuria, Siberia, and Central Asia.

Mystery The World's Fairs This Evidence Hidden History Chronological All World’s Fair's - https://rumble.com/v49zfro-mystery-the-worlds-fairs-this-evidence-hidden-history-chronological-all-wor.html

It claims that many of our most beautiful buildings are the work of a lost civilization called the Tartarian Empire. What makes it so special is that they’re not talking about really old stuff like the pyramids, but much more recent examples like the early skyscrapers of New York and the pavilions constructed for international expositions during the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

Many pre-20th century world maps showed these regions labeled simply as Tartary; and as geographical knowledge gradually increased, Manchuria and Mongolia became Chinese Tartary, Siberia became Great Tartary, and Central Asia became Independent Tartary. These placeholder names quickly dropped out of use as the true place names and nations became known. However, today most people have no idea that such a large part of the world was called Tartary relatively recently. And when they watch a YouTube video showing so many old maps boldly labeling central Eurasia with an unfamiliar name, it can be pretty surprising. In fact it can be so surprising that it might leave a person open to an astounding explanation for it.... such as "mud flood theory".

I hesitate to overuse the term conspiracy theory because it's often misused to refer to anything from UFO stories to urban legends to actual conspiracies, but this is indeed one. Believers claim that this ancient history of Tartaria as an advanced civilization, and of the mud flood that destroyed it, are "covered up" by today's world governments. They conspire to keep it a secret and to keep historians teaching a false history (the version you and I know). The reason for this is not at all made clear so far as I could find; but nevertheless, a conspiracy theory it is. Tartaria and the Mud Flood is truly a 21st century conspiracy theory, in that it exists almost entirely on the Internet if not entirely. While some parts of the narrative go back centuries and we'll talk about those the whole thing as a single consolidated claim only goes back to around 2017.

In August of 2016 is when the first videos began to appear on YouTube about the Mud Flood idea, and we know this because of tools such as Google Trends. This is a tool that allows you to see the popularity of specific Google search terms over time. When we search for "mud flood" or "mud flood theory" or "tartaria" we learn that the Internet was essentially devoid of any interest in these things until about December of 2018. Ever since then, there has been mounting interest in those subjects among Internet users. YouTube is what drives a lot of these pop-culture trends on the Internet, so we should expect that when we go to YouTube and do a search for videos on those subjects that were posted in that date range, we're probably going to find at least one early influential video. Long time Skeptoid listeners might remember that this is exactly how we found the original YouTube upload that constituted the "case zero" for the "Finland does not exist" conspiracy theory.

Applying that same methodology here, I did find a YouTube user, Philipp Druzhinin, who had been posting videos about a mud flood since August of 2016. At first there wasn't much interest in his videos; they had very low viewership. That is, until December 2018/January 2019 — the same time that Google Trends reported the Internet became aware of the subject. Druzhinin had an enormous spike in his downloads right at that time. Which one triggered which? I don't know, and it doesn't really matter. Lots of conspiracy theorists have made Mud Flood videos, and it makes no difference who was the lucky one to get the early traction; what matters is that this is when the subject first became a thing.

What Is the Lost Empire Of Tartaria? The lost Empire of Tartaria may have more roots in the modern world than we realize, or is it all a conspiracy? In 2019, many people watched in horror as black smoke poured out of Notre-Dame de Paris, the 12th-century Roman Catholic cathedral. An orange blaze spread across the roof, and it seemed the historic building might be lost.

After the fire went out and experts assessed the water damage, some people may have felt comforted that a restoration plan was in place. But conspiracy theorists who believed in the Tartarian Empire felt otherwise.

To them, it was just another example of Tartarian architecture being demolished.

A Lost Empire?
One confusing aspect of the Tartarian Empire conspiracy is that there was a place and people long referred to as Tartars living in Tartary.

What Was the Tartarian Empire? Western Europeans and Russians used to refer to a region in Asia as Tartary. This area included Siberia and parts of central Asia, including Mongolia and stretching as far south as Afghanistan. By the 1800s, some Russians saw their country as the world power in the East and entitled to the land and its resources.

What Was a Tartar?
The word tartar meant barbarian. In the mid-1600s, Italian writer Martino Martini wrote De Bello Tartarico about his travels in China. His work was translated into other languages and helped vaguely apply the term to a wide region of people.

Is the Term Tartar Still Used?
Although Tartar or Tartary is rarely used to describe Central Asia or its people, Crimean Tartars refer to a specific ethnic group. Crimean Tartars have lived in Crimea since the 12th century but endured mass deportations starting in the 1700s. After the fall of the Soviet Union, some Crimean Tartars began migrating back to their ancestral homeland.

Erasing an Empire
People who believe in the Tartarian Empire contend it was once a sophisticated, worldwide civilization with impressive architecture. Because such an empire is not mentioned in history books, conspiracy theorists claim it has been intentionally erased.

What Is the Tartarian Empire Mud Flood Conspiracy?
Most of the empire was supposedly lost in a series of mudslides, typically referred to as “mud floods.” Some buildings remained and still stand today. Famous landmarks, such as the U.S. Capitol Building (built in 1800), are claimed actually to be from the Tartarian Empire and to be thousands of years old.

The conspiracy is that the empire was intentionally erased, and history was rewritten to make buildings seem younger and more modern.

What Famous Landmarks are Part of the Tartarian Empire Conspiracy?
Notre-Dame de Paris is one landmark that conspiracy theorists believe was created by Tartars, not French craftsmen in the 1100s. In online forums, conspiracy theorists have claimed it was used as a sound bath by Tartars.

Conspiracy theories also claim more ornate buildings as Tartarian. This ranges from World Heritage Sites like the Taj Mahal to short-lived buildings like the Chicago Federal Building that only stood for 60 years.

The conspiracy theorists also claim buildings briefly constructed for World Fairs or expositions were part of the Tartarian Empire. In 1915, San Francisco hosted the Panama-Pacific International Exposition. The fair site included The Tower of Jewels, a temporary structure that was demolished soon after the fair ended. Conspiracy theorists claim it’s an example of an ancient Tartarian capital.

A Need to Believe
The Tartarian Empire conspiracy theory is relatively new, particularly when compared to UFO conspiracy theories that date to the 1950s. Interest has increased in the last decade, and believers use social media to share their ideas.

Is There a Social Aspect to Conspiracy Theories?
Communication scholars are analyzing how conspiracy theorists interact online and articulate their ideas. They’ve found that by sharing misinformation online, conspiracy theorists bond with each other and develop a sense of belonging.

When conspiracy theorists discussed the fire at Notre-Dame de Paris, for example, believers in the Tartarian Empire shared affirmations as to why they knew the cathedral had once belonged to the Tartars. They pointed out features that indicated the cathedral was designed as a sound bath.

The supposed lost Tartarian Empire might seem like a benign analysis of architecture, but scholars also see concern in the fact that as a conspiracy theory, the empire was an elite, worldwide civilization that was destroyed and then systematically erased.

It claims that many of our most beautiful buildings are the work of a lost civilization called the Tartarian Empire. What makes it so special is that they’re not talking about really old stuff like the pyramids, but much more recent examples like the early skyscrapers of New York and the pavilions constructed for international expositions during the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

World fairs during the late 19th century and early 20th centuries showcased the technological, industrial, and cultural achievements of nations around the world, sometimes displaying cultural superiority over colonized nations through human exhibits. A world’s fair, world fair, world exposition, or universal exposition (sometimes expo for short), is a large international exhibition designed to showcase achievements of nations. These exhibitions vary in character and are held in various parts of the world.

World fairs originated in the French tradition of national exhibitions that culminated with the French Industrial Exposition of 1844 held in Paris. This fair was followed by other national exhibitions in continental Europe and the United Kingdom.

The best-known “first World Expo” was held in The Crystal Palace in Hyde Park, London, United Kingdom, in 1851, under the title “Great Exhibition of the Works of Industry of All Nations.” The Great Exhibition, as it is often called, was an idea of Prince Albert, Queen Victoria’s husband, and is usually considered to be the first international exhibition of manufactured products. It was arguably a response to the highly successful French Industrial Exposition of 1844; indeed, its prime motive was for Britain to display itself as an industrial leader. It influenced the development of several aspects of society, including art-and-design education, international trade and relations, and tourism. This expo was the most obvious precedent for the many international exhibitions considered world fairs.

Since their inception in 1851, the character of world expositions has evolved. Three eras can be distinguished: industrialization, cultural exchange, and nation branding.

The first era could be called the era of “industrialization” and covered roughly the period from 1800 to 1938. In these days, world expositions were especially focused on trade and were famous for the display of technological inventions and advancements. World expositions were the platforms where the state-of-the-art in science and technology from around the world were brought together. The world expositions of 1851 London, 1853 New York, 1862 London, 1876 Philadelphia, 1889 Paris, 1893 Chicago, 1897 Brussels, 1900 Paris, 1901 Buffalo, 1904 St. Louis, 1915 San Francisco, and 1933–34 Chicago were landmarks in this respect. Inventions such as the telephone were first presented during this era.

The 1939–40 New York World’s Fair diverged from the original focus of the world fair expositions. From then on, world fairs adopted specific cultural themes forecasting a better future for society. Technological innovations were no longer the primary exhibits at fairs.

Human zoos, also called ethnological expositions, were 19th-, 20th-, and 21st-century public exhibitions of humans, usually in a so-called natural or primitive state. The displays often emphasized the cultural differences between Europeans of Western civilization and non-European peoples or other Europeans with a lifestyle deemed primitive. Some of them placed indigenous Africans in a continuum somewhere between the great apes and the white man. Ethnological expositions have since been criticized as highly degrading and racist.

Human Zoos America's Forgotten History of Scientific Racism and The Worlds Fair's - https://rumble.com/v2fch6u-human-zoos-americas-forgotten-history-of-scientific-racism-and-the-worlds-f.html

The notion of human curiosity and exhibition has a history at least as long as colonialism. In the 1870s, exhibitions of exotic populations became popular in various countries. Human zoos could be found in Paris, Hamburg, Antwerp, Barcelona, London, Milan, and New York City. Carl Hagenbeck, a merchant in wild animals and future entrepreneur of many European zoos, decided in 1874 to exhibit Samoan and Sami people as “purely natural” populations. In 1876, he sent a collaborator to the Egyptian Sudan to bring back some wild beasts and Nubians. The Nubian exhibit was very successful in Europe and toured Paris, London, and Berlin.

Mystery The World's Fairs​ Maybe the History we've been told is a lie! Were some ancient buildings built by a different race and their true history was covered up? Did ancient peoples have advanced forms of technology that have now been forgotten ? Was the massive kingdom of Tartaria visible on ancient maps much more advanced than we realize? This sub is an open forum for collaborative discussion of all topics "Tartaria" related, including Mud Flood, Tesla, AntiquiTech, Free Energy, Conspiracies, Hidden History, etc.

I wonder if this video has been posted here before? If yes, then i am not sorry for posting it again, because its just one helluva epic video. If not, I highly recommend watching it if you are interested in perhaps how Tartarian technology worked. I am still thinking about all the stuff he said and points out to us. As its a lot to deal with and can shake one up. I find it fascinating though.

Could it be that this civilization, split off from our official historical line of development, is behind many of the events of the 20th century?

And what of the World's Fairs? Were a large proportion of the World's Fair Buildings actually built from scratch, as the official historiography claims? There is much to suggest that the robber barons of the industrial age not only hid once widespread technological knowledge from us, but that they also hijacked some of the impressive architectural masterpieces in which parts of this knowledge was displayed.

Some of the buildings from the World's Fairs still exist today, and they are obviously not made of plaster or similar fragile materials. Were they subsequently rebuilt to be permanent structures? Is it even possible that the elaborately designed Expo sites were built with the technological capabilities of the time within just a few months, only to be destroyed again a few months later after the exhibitions had ended? Or is it plausible that after a great catastrophe the worldwide remains of the preceding high culture were not only systematically destroyed, but also pressed into an image of history imposed on us?

Some available information suggests that even after the worldwide, game-changing event we call the Reset or Mud Flood, there still remained countless complete and beautiful cities that were conquered by a new power elite and then repurposed as "World's Fairs".

Especially in America, the so-called New World, the many Greco-Roman cities would have been difficult to explain because in contrast to Europe, the Americas do not have an official greco-roman history.

The more carefully one investigates, the more difficult it becomes to find plausible explanations for the construction and destruction of these extraordinary and huge exhibition areas.

The official version about the World's Fairs can be summarized as follows: People in the 19th century loved Greco-Roman architecture for reasons unknown, so it was extremely important to the architects who organized the World's Fairs between 1850 and about 1914 to build in a classical style.

(Note: With World War I, classical architectural ambitions in Europe ended abruptly and many exhibitions also did not take place as planned. It was only in the wake of fascism that there was a return to ancient design principles, but these were often implemented superficially and were mainly applied to a few representative magnificent buildings. After the Second World War, on the other hand, classical architecture was deliberately replaced with new trends - e.g. Bauhaus and Brutalism. Officially the intention was to create an aesthetic distance to fascism, but in all likelihood its purpose was to cut the connection to the Old World through soulless, brutalistic architecture.)

No effort was spared for the world's fairs, enormous amounts of work went into creating complex statues, ornaments, columns, parks, buildings, and even the world's largest organs. No expenses were spared in the making of these massive structures. Made of plaster and linen or hemp fibers, they were only intended to last for the duration of the Expo. However the attention to detail was so great that purely visually there seemed to be no difference between the Expo buildings and the classical splendor-buildings of antiquity. The purpose of the World's Fairs was to make the supposedly "new" technologies discovered during the Industrial Revolution palatable to the masses, to create new markets. In the end, most of the buildings were torn down, with only meadows or empty parks remaining.

Uncovering Clues to Civilization's Oldest Mysteries Key Takeaways:

The concept of a lost civilization called Tartaria emerged from obscure 18th century texts but gained popularity recently among online alternative history communities.

Advocates point to architectural anomalies, buried buildings, and artifacts as evidence of a technologically and culturally advanced society predating our recorded history.

Mainstream scholars consider Tartaria pseudohistory, but some recognize gaps in conventional timelines that allow for speculative interpretations.

The Tartaria theory parallels Russian mathematician Anatoly Fomenko's New Chronology framework challenging the accepted historical timeline on statistical and astronomical grounds.

Like Fomenko, Tartaria reassigns cultural and technological achievements from documented periods to a hypothetical precursor civilization aligned with nationalist sympathies.

Contradictions between Tartaria evidence and establishment history are presented as revealing fabrication and concealment of the true timeline.

Functionally, the revisionist histories serve more as flexible mythology and identity-building narratives than empirically proven counterfactuals.

While factually dubious, Tartaria imaginatively engages public interest in re-examining conventional chronology and allows for broader perspectives on antiquity.

The Lost Legend of Ancient Tartaria
The Rise of a Modern Myth

In recent years, a fascinating pseudo-historical narrative has taken root in online forums and alternative archaeology circles. This is the theory of a lost global civilization called Tartaria that supposedly vanished in the early modern era after dominating the world during a previous undisclosed epoch dating back thousands of years.

According to proponents, compelling yet unexplained architectural similarities across continents, along with numerous buried ruins and technological anomalies, point to the existence of this now forgotten but once highly advanced culture that served as the precursor to many known ancient civilizations. Establishment historians insist no actual evidence supports such speculations, dismissing Tartaria as an unfounded fabrication. However, gaps and inconsistencies in the conventional timeline continue to fuel speculation.

The basic premise holds that an intricately interconnected civilization called Tartaria flourished during a lost era predating recorded history. Tartaria supposedly created architectural wonders and monuments attributed to later cultures like ancient Greece and Rome, and even influenced medieval European and pre-Colombian American societies.

Here are 10 ancient sites cited as potential evidence for the Tartaria theory, along with notable anomalies they possess:

Baalbek, Lebanon - The gigantic stone blocks weighing up to an estimated 1,650 tons at the ancient Roman temple site of Baalbek represent building capabilities exceeding what mainstream archaeology attributes to Roman-era technology (Dmith, 2021).

Puma Punku, Bolivia - The incredibly precise polygonal masonry and unusual techniques used at the ancient site of Puma Punku in the Andes have led many to question whether this lost city could have been built by the suspected Tiwanaku culture (Jarus, 2014).

Sacsayhuamán, Peru - Cyclopean zig-zag walls constructed from immense boulders fitted together at Sacsayhuamán and other fortresses near Cusco exhibit stone-working accuracy that some argue predates the Incas (Jarus, 2014).

Baghdad Battery - The discovery of what appears to be a 2,000 year old clay pot containing a copper cylinder and iron rod at the Parthian village of Khujut Rabu in modern Iraq has been interpreted as a possible ancient electrical cell by some scientists (Jarus, 2014).

Yonaguni Monument, Japan - The Yonaguni Monument consists of extensive underwater ruins near Japan that may have been carved from one giant slab, which geologists date to 8,000 BC, making the site potentially older than the pyramids at Giza (Jarus, 2014).

Göbekli Tepe, Turkey - Built around 9600 BC, the megalithic stone circles with T-shaped pillars at Göbekli Tepe in southeastern Turkey significantly predate the rise of civilization in the Near East (Jarus, 2014).

Los Lunas Decalogue Stone, USA - This ancient inscribed stone in New Mexico bears writing in an unknown script resembling Paleo-Hebrew, potentially making it a record of the Ten Commandments predating Columbus (Dmith, 2021).

Nan Madol, Micronesia - The stone ruins of Nan Madol off Pohnpei Island in the Pacific include columnar basalt log cabins weighing up to 50 tons, confounding how such structures could have been built on a remote coral reef (Jarus, 2014).

Crespi Collection, Ecuador - Father Carlos Crespi acquired hundreds of unexplained gold and copper artifacts in Ecuador that some argue resemble modern objects and technology, found buried in strata preceding Columbus (Jarus, 2014).

Sarmizegetusa Regia, Romania - The ancient capital of Dacia contains ruins of Roman-style architecture and a system of subterranean tunnels that Tartaria advocates believe connected a now-lost metropolis (Dmith, 2021).

Ancient temple Complex of tartaria
Key Architectural ANOMALIES Driving THE tartarian Theories
The ancient megalithic walls and sophisticated hydraulic systems at Saksaywaman in the Cusco region of Peru, dated by mainstream history to the 15th century Inca Empire but claimed by some to predate the Incas based on the massive stonemasonry exceeding Inca capabilities and showing signs of mud flood burial (Dmith, 2021).

The elaborately carved Lalibela churches in Ethiopia dating to the 12th century AD but supposedly built in the European Romanesque style before the arrival of Christianity in Ethiopia, which advocates argue provides evidence of European conversion preceding accepted timelines (Jarus, 2014).

The ancient underground catacombs and water channels discovered beneath the 14th century Old Town of Edinburgh, Scotland which seem to precede its recorded building date, suggesting the presence of a buried Tartarian settlement (Dmith, 2021).

The presence of ancient Herodian masonry techniques under the Western Wall in Jerusalem's Old City whose style supposedly predates Herod's Judean kingdom in mainstream chronology, implying origins in an earlier advanced civilization like Tartaria (Jarus, 2014).

The discovery of ornate medieval structures and building facades buried beneath more modern buildings in the historic section of Naples, Italy, interpreted by some as remnants of a prior lost civilization buried and built over (Dmith, 2021).

Taken together, these examples of sophisticated architecture anomalously predating or buried below conventional construction timelines from diverse global sites comprise key pieces of evidence cited by Tartaria theorists to argue that mainstream history has compressed or fabricated centuries to obscure a forgotten highly advanced precursor civilization (Dmith, 2021; Jarus, 2014).

ancient tartarian emperor with his shamanic priestess
Unveiling Mythic Tartaria: CATACLYSMIC Resets, Lost History, A Multidimensional Conspiracy
Through some unknown cataclysm, most believe around the 16th or 17th century, this global Tartarian culture was utterly destroyed and wiped from history. Only supposedly out-of-place artifacts and anomalous ruins buried underground or repurposed in newer buildings hint at its forgotten magnificence.

Mainstream scholars deny this version of the past as pseudohistory, yet gaps in historical knowledge allow room for more open-minded inquiry. Behind the likely mythmaking, the notion of a lost antediluvian society appeals imaginatively as a moral exemplar. Uncovering its forgotten knowledge could reveal hidden potential in humanity’s story. What core insights might this modern legend point toward?

The apparent proliferation of Romanesque architecture across Europe, Asia, and the Americas in recent centuries is historically curious given the timeframe. Perhaps even more puzzling are the many documented cases of such buildings having been buried, submerged, or disguised behind newer façades. For adherents of an obscure theory known as Tartaria, such mysteries signify the presence of an advanced global civilization predating our recorded history that was deliberately destroyed and suppressed, its monuments and achievements attributed to more recent cultures.

Mainstream academia dismisses Tartaria as an unfounded conspiracy theory at best and dangerously nationalist pseudohistory at worst. Yet the cryptic evidence marshalled by advocates reveals cracks in the accepted historical narrative just plausible enough to captivate public imagination. Behind the likely fiction lies an intriguing impulse to cultivate counter-narratives that challenge rigid historiography and envision more spiritually and technologically developed antecedents to our own imperfect civilization.

The underground Roman aqueducts and buried medieval structures beneath the city of Florence, Italy dating back centuries before the Renaissance, suggesting the presence of a prior lost civilization with advanced architecture subsequently buried (Dmith, 2021).

The Visgothic church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem which appears to imitate 4th century Roman architecture despite being built in the 11th century, implying displaced building timelines or cultural diffusion from a hidden source (Jarus, 2014).

The ancient fortress Sacsayhuaman located near Cusco, Peru made of intricate megalithic stonework whose precision stone-cutting supposedly predates Incan skills, indicating a more advanced precursor culture (Dmith, 2021).

The Romanesque Mdina Cathedral in Mdina, Malta seemingly built centuries before the officially dated medieval era of Maltese history, constituting a chronological anomaly hinting at an earlier European cultural influence (Jarus, 2014).

The Brihadeeswarar Temple in Tanjavur, India featuring carved stonework and architectural designs reflecting European Roman influences centuries before contact, defying mainstream timelines for cross-cultural diffusion (Dmith, 2021).

Advocates argue the Roman-style architecture found across these medieval sites globally implies the presence of a now-forgotten Roman-era culture predating the Renaissance or early Middle Ages when such designs are meant to have originated (Dmith, 2021; Jarus 2014). The inaccurately dated presence of Roman building techniques in these examples comprises key evidence supporting theories of a lost Tartarian civilization.

islands of tartaria
The Genesis of a Legend
While variants existed previously, the modern outlines of Tartaria emerged online in the 2010s through a synthesis of esoteric texts, revisionist histories, conspiracy media, and scattered architectural oddities (Dmith, 2021). The term itself derives from 18th century European usage referring to the Central Asian steppe regions overlapping parts of Russia and Kazakhstan. Rare mentions of “Great Tartaria” in Victorian texts evoke mythic connotations (Morgan, 1895).

Tartaria’s transformation into a full-fledged lost civilization begins with iconoclastic historians like Isaac Newton and Nikolai Morozov questioning gaps and duplications in conventional timelines. Anatoly Fomenko’s 1970s-80s New Chronology framework (discussed below) provides a more rigorous model for collapsing the middle centuries into a much shorter period through statistical arguments about duplicated eras.

Online discussions fused such concepts with the 19th century “mud flood” catastrophe hypothesis attributing massive soil deposits mysteriously burying buildings and entire cities to antediluvian floods. Add scattered research into out-of-place artifacts, architecture, and records, pass through the alembic of conspiracy media, and the mythical empire of Tartaria emerges (Dmith, 2021).

Here are some of the key pieces of evidence cited in support of the Tartary theory:

Many medieval and Renaissance structures around the world designed with unusual heating/cooling systems that would have required advanced technological knowledge (e.g. underfloor heating).

Archaeologically anomalous construction materials and techniques used in ancient sites that don't correspond to the documented capabilities of the credited builders.

Remains of massive, evidently purpose-built subterranean complexes found across Eurasia and the Americas, some with indications they were anciently flooded.

Ruins of mighty walls and architectural formations in remote, often inaccessible areas with no clear record of who constructed them.

Ossuaries and anomalously large graveyards dating back millennia yet yielding mostly non-local artifacts.

Outsized monolithic megaliths and precision-cut polygonal masonry found at sites assigned to much later cultures.

Terracotta pipes, plumbing accessories, and waterworks found buried in global metro areas built after alleged Tartaria's fall.

Recurring motifs and design elements across ancient structures separated by vast distances, implying common source.

Period engravings, illustrations and old maps portraying prominent geographies incorrectly, as if drawn from a lost cartographic tradition.

Strange anachronistic artifacts turning up in strata assigned to eras before their theoretical invention.

Ancient Tartarian Artifacts
Timeline of Tartaria and New Chronology Theories
Circa 1200s AD - European texts begin referencing a mysterious region called "Great Tartary" encompassing the Central Asian steppes. The name continues in occasional usage referring to shifting Mongol and Turkic confederations occupying the Eurasian interior over the next centuries.

Circa 1500s AD - European occult and proto-archaeological writings start speculating about advanced prehistoric civilizations, Atlantis, lost knowledge, and forgotten cultures preceding ancient Egypt, Greece and Rome.

Circa 1600-1700s AD - Numerous ornate buildings in Europe, Asia and the Americas are constructed incorporating Romanesque designs predating the era of European colonialism and cultural diffusion.

Early 1700s AD - Philosophers like Isaac Newton and Jean-Sylvain Bailly use astronomical observations to propose revisions to ancient chronology and the accepted timeline.

Late 1700s AD - Alternate history hypotheses emerge proposing the fabrication or misdating of major portions of ancient and medieval history in Europe and the Near East.

1800s AD - The idea spreads of a global flood or series of cataclysms wiping out evidence of precocious antediluvian civilizations with advanced architecture and technology.

1800s AD - Occult and spiritualist works increasingly tie notions of advanced prehistory with root races, Atlantis, lost continents, and human degeneration from a higher state.

1907-1932 AD - Russian polymath Nikolai Morozov publishes works challenging traditional history and chronology using statistics and astronomical analyses.

1970s-1980s AD - Russian mathematician Anatoly Fomenko radically condenses conventional history into a shorter "New Chronology" based on computational arguments.

1980s Onward - Slavic nationalist and Hindutva writers promote narratives of Vedic, Slavic, or Aryan proto-civilizations as the source of human advancement.

2000s AD Online - Speculation arises fusing 19th century "Mud Flood" concepts with Morozov and Fomenko's timeline theories and occult prehistory notions into a "Tartaria" narrative.

Present Day - Tartaria theory extends Fomenko's arguments using anomalous artifacts and architecture to hypothesize a globally dominant Romanesque civilization destroyed circa 1600s AD and erased from history. Dates of key cultures and events in conventional history become disputed.

Architectural Anomalies
Brick and stone edifices featuring Romanesque designs incongruously appear on every inhabited continent, seemingly predating the age of European colonialism. Tartaria adherents cite this as evidence of a forgotten global civilization displaying cultural and technological continuity. They argue mistaken dating and false historical extensions disguise these vestiges of a lost unified culture (Dmith, 2021).

European cities abound with medieval churches, administrative buildings and infrastructure dated to recent centuries but sporting ornate stonework recalling classical Rome. From buried medieval foundations and aqueducts beneath Renaissance Florence to still-standing government buildings in Washington D.C. and Latin American capitals emulating Roman architecture, the shared styles suggest to advocates not independent adoption but cultural continuation from a common precursor empire (Dmith, 2021).

Tartarians point to anomalies like the Brutalist 15th century fortress Ollantaytambo in Peru's Incan heartland as an inheritance from predecessors, or to the church at Lalibela in Ethiopia carved in the 12th century’s Romanesque style centuries before Jesuit missions, as evidence Christianity and its architectural forms originated in their lost civilization before reportedly being spread by colonists (Cole, 2020; Marschall, 2022). Mainstream histories attribute such diffusion to trade and missionary routes, but for Tartaria adherents, the timeline discrepancy reveals purposeful obfuscation.

"The 600-year old carved granite box chambers inside the Great Pyramid of Giza evidence advanced stoneworking abilities seemingly incongruous with bronze hand tools" (Walker, 2009).

"Megalithic structures like the Indonesian Buddhist temple of Borobudur and Armenian Zvartnots Cathedral exhibit architectural sophistication predating historically attested construction dates" (Hann, 2006; Maranci, 2003).

Hidden History
Reports of buried buildings and even entire towns discovered underneath layers of earth are cited as further indications of historic deception. Whether beneath centuries of accumulated urban soil and construction as in archaeological sites like Florence or mysteriously submerged in remote outposts like the Alaskan ghost town Port Chatham, such finds are linked by advocates to forgotten cultures and deliberately buried history (Dmith, 2021; Cole, 2020).

Similarly, Tartarians interpret renovated sites cloaking older structures like Istanbul’s Hagia Sophia, rebuilt in the 1500s atop earlier Byzantine and Roman churches, as symbolic of a concealed antediluvian past buried under duplicitous overlays (GbTimes, 2020). Establishment histories describe additions, renovations, and decay over time, but conspiracists see calculated deception. The sheer scale and remoteness of sites argue for an influential hidden hand.

"The ancient metropolis of Gobekli Tepe in Turkey was purposefully buried around 8,000 BCE, suggesting important sites have been concealed for unknown reasons" (Curry, 2008).

"Subsurface LIDAR scanning has revealed thousands of ancient Mayan structures hidden for centuries under thick jungle in Guatemala" (Canuto et al., 2018).

"Entire medieval frescoed chapels were discovered walled off intact inside Lateran Palace, evidencing architectural repurposing and embedding across eras" (Povoledo, 2021).

Impossible Artifacts
Literally out-of-place artifacts lend credence to theoretical suppressed timelines. Carved skulls and figurines like the impossibly intricate 12,000 year old Shigir Idol or stone tools at 300,000 year old sites far precede the accepted onset of civilization. Mechanical wonders like the 2,000 year old Antikythera mechanism or miniaturized metal Vaimanika Shastra engines allegedly made by 6th century India reflect science fiction more than history (Major, 2022; Trivedi, 2007).

Mainstream scholars debunk most such objects as hoaxes or misinterpretation, accusing mythmakers of projecting modern technology onto primitive artifacts. But Tartarians suggest fragments of a forgotten high science survives, its anomalies highlighting flaws in conventional timelines (Major, 2022). Whether or not the artifacts themselves prove authentic, their incongruity with orthodox prehistory keeps the door open for speculation.

"The 500,000 year old Laetoli footprints in Tanzania provide contentious evidence of bipedal hominin walking upright long before expected" (Raichlen et al., 2010).

"The robotic features and advanced engineering in the small Vaimanika Shastra models seem aerodynamically sound but outplace historically" (Trivedi, 2007; Katre, 2021).

"Certain maps like the Piri Reis depictions of Antarctica's coastline raise questions due to their apparent accuracy long predating modern cartography" (Orhan, 2011).

The Mystery of Ancient Tartaria
Challenging Rigid History
The common thread uniting these disparate mysteries is contradiction of established chronology. Confronted with this dissonance, advocates do not reevaluate their own evidence but insist the contradictions prove fabrication. Conventional historians face accusations of perpetuating willful deception by elites threatened by revelations of hidden truth (Dmith, 2021).

Here the parallels emerge between Tartaria and Fomenko’s statistical framework for radically condensing known history based on computational arguments about duplicated rulers and replicated epochs. Both critique rigid establishment timelines by highlighting incongruities and gaps not easily reconciled with standard models. While Fomenko relies more on mathematics and astronomy, Tartarians emphasize architectural, artistic and technological anomalies (Diacu, 2005). Each interprets the lack of clean consensus around dating as proof of concealed time rather than imperfect knowledge, with conventional history dismissed as myth.

"Fomenko’s new chronology condenses conventional ancient and medieval history into a much shorter timeframe based on computational analyses of duplicated rulers and events" (Kejariwal, 2022).

"Critics highlight Fomenko's flawed statistical methodology andselective use of astronomical data to collapse chronology" (Dvorsky, 2017).

"Fomenko interprets perceived inconsistencies in dating as deliberate falsification of history rather than imperfect knowledge" (Nosovsky, 2008).

Mythology or Pseudoscience?
Critics justly highlight logical flaws and evidentiary leaps underlying Tartaria claims of a global Romanesque civilization now forgotten. Archaeological diffusion and renovations need not signify concealment, nor do speculative artifacts outweigh extensive documented history.

The theory relies heavily on confirmation bias emphasizing details that affirm its narrative while dismissing contradicting evidence as fabricated. Attempts to force incongruous pieces into a puzzling whole reflect creativity but not sound methodology (Dmith, 2021).

While advocates present Tartaria as an uncovered truth, it functionally serves more as mythology. By projecting idealized attributes onto a hypothetical precursor civilization linked ancestry to one’s own heritage, revisionist histories become psychologically appealing vehicles for constructing nationalist identity narratives.

The occult tendencies underlying Tartaria mirror mythic Ariosophy and Slavic neopaganism venerating imagined Nordic and Slavic proto-civilizations as technologically superior ancestral wellsprings, with spiritual degeneration only later caused by foreign contaminants (Laruelle, 2012).

Yet even as likely pseudohistory, the imaginative vigor and romantic allure of lost civilizations reflects public yearning for counter-narratives to the established timeline. Tartaria proponents rightly sense gaps and limitations in conventional models needing reconciliation with anomalous evidence. Their creative impulse provides cathartic release from constraints of rigid historiography even if specific conclusions prove fanciful. With care not to let speculation totally unmoor facts, the larger project of re-enchanting the past opens doors to richer insights.

tartarian warlord with his queen
The Chronology Question
Standards of evidence aside, the notion of previous advanced civilizations is historically plausible. Scientific forensics supporting human emergence hundreds of thousands of years ago allow ample time for cultures and capabilities exceeding what sparse records document.

Radical timeline critiques like Fomenko's, while academically fringe, highlight the hypothetical flexibility of chronology before reliable written records and vulnerabilities of later eras to gaps or overlaps (Diacu, 2005). Tartaria speculation resonates partly because cracks readily appear in the edifice of familiar history when scrutinized.

For example, ambiguous traces of the “Great Tartary” designation predating modern Central Asian states accords with mainstream scholarship acknowledging the Eurasian steppe hosted complex Bronze Age khanates interacting with China, Persia, and Eastern Europe, flowing into Scythian and Xiongnu confederations that may have influenced later Turkic and Mongol empires before the name faded from use (Biran, 2005). There is space to hypothesize on the interactions and reach of these cultures while questioning later assumptions of relative isolation or primitivism.

Even where specific conclusions prove untenable, the larger project of re-examining chronology through multidisciplinary perspectives can strengthen the historical record. Outlier evidence sets an important bar for evaluating establishment narratives. Orthodoxy must respond to heterodoxy through either reconciliation or rigorously proving its faults.

tartarian emperor carved in lapis lazuli with gold details
Potentially Advanced Tartar Cultures: A Reexamination
Bronze Age Eurasian Steppes
Archaeological remains of kurgan burials, horses, and wheeled vehicles indicate a mobile yet interconnected cultural complex existed across the Pontic steppes in the 2nd millennium BCE (Anthony, 2007). Sophisticated bronze weaponry and tools suggest a level of metallurgical skill not characteristic of isolated tribes. Organized mining and specialized crafting may have been facilitated by an extensive trade network (Davis-Kimball, 2002). Written records from neighboring literate societies like Assyria and China corroborate cultural sophistication and military power of steppe confederations through recorded interactions and tributes (Biran, 2005).

Khans of complex khanates interacted with Persia, China, Eastern Europe (Biran, 2005)

Included Scythians and Xiongnu confederations (5th c. BCE - 1st c. CE) exhibiting advanced metallurgy and cavalry warfare tactics (Davis-Kimball, 2002)

Great Tartary
Though geographical knowledge was limited, European scholars in the Age of Enlightenment referenced a formidable nomadic culture or coordinated tribal network dominating the interior Eurasian steppes they termed "Great Tartary" (Sinor, 1990). Later archaeological evidence of large settlements and mining/smelting complexes implies a degree of urbanization, population density and commercial trade greater than that of disconnected pastoralist clans (Weatherford, 2004).

Vague historical accounts suggest large, interconnected pastoralist-trader culture dominating Eurasian interior (Sinor, 1990)

May have influenced later Turkic and Mongol empires with extensive territorial domains and trade networks preceding modern mapping (Weatherford, 2004)

Tartarian priestess
Lost Civilizations of Central Asia
Satellite imaging and aerial photography has revealed massive, ancient settlement patterns buried beneath desert sands that rival contemporaneous cities in scale and organization. These support the possibility of once thriving but now forgotten urban centers dotted across inhospitable landscapes (Anthropic, 2021). Petroglyphs and geoglyphic motifs suggest ritualistic purposes tied to cosmology and social identity, inconsistent with isolated groups. Their appearance across vast distances indicates a shared symbolic culture and trade routes (Wheatley, 1971).

Site discoveries like huge settlements buried in desert sands at Olgyay indicate potential for abandoned ancient cities (Anthropic, 2021)

Petroglyphs in Kazakhstan depicting mounted horsemen with bows like later Huns raise questions about technologies in remote eras (Wheatley, 1971)

Pazyryk Culture
The sophistication of textiles, clothing, wood joinery, and metallurgy evidenced in Pazyryk tomb artifacts counters notions of Scythian cultures as decentralized and primitive. The materials and techniques exhibited suggest a substantial specialized artisan class servicing an elite with high standards (Rudenko, 1970). Intricate clothing, carpets, saddles, and accessories bespeak a populous network of expert crafters and abundant trade connections supplying luxury goods. The scale of production implies organized workshops and division of labor rather than isolated home crafting (Davis-Kimball, 1995).

Ice-preserved 5th c. BCE Scythian tombs contained world's oldest surviving knotted-pile carpet among treasures like leather-covered wagon (Rudenko, 1970)

Sophisticated metallurgy, carpentry skills contradict notions of isolated regional primitives (Davis-Kimball, 1995)

Tartarian Royals
Y-DNA Haplogroup Studies
Genetic markers in regional populations indicate Eurasian steppe cultures were ancestrally complex, with earlier derivation dates and more diverse influences than surface readings of known history explain. This hints at a yet undiscovered portion of the human story in these lands (Karafet et al., 2008).

Genetic research finds ancestral Eurasian populations exhibited deep splits dated prior to accepted emergence times (Karafet et al., 2008)

Suggests considerable history and interactions not yet illuminated in known records

Linguistic Diffusion Models
Mapping of how related word roots, grammatical tendencies, and phonemes propagated over time suggests large-scale cultural zones and trade spheres transmitted innovations long before documented history. Ancestors of later nomads evidently interacted extensively across far-flung circuits (Anthony, 2007).

Widespread linguistic changes infer broad, long-established contact zones and cultural exchange networks in prehistory (Anthony, 2007)

Compatible with larger, earlier coordinated societies than written sources indicate

Tartarian tribal leader
The Plausibility of Lost Civilizations
Mainstream academics generally dismiss notions of advanced societies predating Sumer, Egypt, and the Indus Valley as fantasy or unfounded conspiracy. However, emerging archaeological evidence and theoretical challenges to rigid chronology build a reasonable case for plausible antediluvian cultures with forgotten knowledge.

Scientific Support for Prehistoric Civilization
Modern archaeology dates anatomically modern humans to around 300,000 years ago, with genetic evidence of behavioral modernity tracing back over 100,000 years (Shea, 2011). Scientific consensus acknowledges the possibility of precocious cultures within a timescale of hundreds of millennia before recorded history (Hancock, 2015). Mainstream researchers increasingly propose complex Neolithic proto-urban centers like Göbekli Tepe as candidates for early civilizational development. This accommodates the possibility of even more advanced lost societies.

Dating Uncertainty of Megalithic Sites
Many monumental structures like the Giza pyramids, Baalbek megaliths, or Pumapunku complex lack reliable scientific dating. Their antecedents may be far older than conventional assumptions based on associated cultures. Absolute dating methods remain limited for stonework prior to recorded dynasties (Hancock, 2019). This leaves major gaps where unknown antecedent cultures could have constructed core foundations later built upon.

Princess of greater Tartary
Anomalous Cartographic Evidence
Certain medieval and Renaissance maps depict accurate continental outlines and geographic details seemingly implausible for their era, like annotations of an ice-free Antarctica. While disputed, this hints at forgotten cartographic knowledge predating credited civilizations (Orhan, 2011). The depth of curiosity and commerce in past eras may exceed established reckoning.

Submerged Ruins
Underwater structures like the Yonaguni Monument off Japan, if artificially crafted as claimed, would vastly predate known civilizations in the region. Periodic sea level changes give plausibility to submerged habitats and literate cultures now forgotten (Masaaki, 2007). Similar unknown complexes may be submerged near coastal population centers worldwide.

Unexplained Megalithic Stonework
Building projects like the Ptolemaic Temple of Isis in Egypt contain megalithic stone blocks exhibiting precision cutting and handling capabilities beyond documented Bronze Age tools of the attributed era (Dunn, 2016). This implies attributing such works to incorrect precursor cultures lacking such advancement. The provenance may be far older.

Ancient carving of Tartarian King in Lapis Lazuli
Quantified Chronology Challenges
Statistical analyses of regnal durations, language morphologies, carbon dating discrepancies, dendrochronology, and astronomical records by researchers like Fomenko and Illig quantifiably challenge gaps and duplication in conventional chronology (Diacu, 2005). While controversial, their computational arguments provide a data-driven case for timeline adjustments.

Culture-Artifact Disconnects
Out-of-place artifacts found archaeologically with no cultural ties to their discovery strata, like the Antikythera Mechanism or Baghdad Battery, suggest more advanced societies than recognized (Amos, 2014). Mainstream attribution to anomaly or fraud ignores accumulating potentially systemic misdatings.

Rethinking Rigid Paradigms
Rather than evidence of conspiracy, the massive gaps and contradictions in conventional chronology uncovered by independent researchers may stem from inherent limitations of prevailing archaeological models overly reliant on continuity, incremental progress, and tied cultural phases (Hancock, 2019). Paradigm shifts recognizing culturally free artifacts and periods of cultural discontinuity or decline better accommodate lost precursor societies.

Oral Records of Forgotten Cultures
Indigenous oral traditions worldwide recount ancient societies with advanced technologies matching Atlantis and Tartaria descriptions, like the Nama's recollection of the Khoikhoi nation wielding energy weapons (Tellinger, 2020). While unproven, recurrent ancestral memories allow plausibility a advanced civilizations were transmitted cross-generationally.

Cyclical Views of History
The Vedic, Buddhist, Hopi, and other traditions propose cyclical views of human development and civilization rising and falling in recurring epochs over thousands of years (Coomaraswamy, 1947). Cycles of destruction and forgetting civilizations are endogenous to these cosmologies. Linear-progressive views may skew Western archaeology.

Ancient Tartarian Emperor
Conclusion
Rather than far-fetched conjecture, the possibility of lost precocious civilizations deserves open-minded consideration, free of dismissive orthodoxies. The exponentially expanded timescale provided by modern archaeology accommodates multiple complex societies rising and falling antecedent to remembered history. While details may remain hazy, prospecting forgotten cultural knowledge offers more intellectual upside than uncritical acceptance of rigid models contradicted by mounting clues. Good scholarship must balance orthodoxy and imagination.

In conclusion, while the specific details of lost civilizations like Tartaria remain unproven, the archaeological and chronological anomalies highlighted by advocates suggest mainstream academics should maintain greater openness to re-examining assumptions in conventional timelines.

Rather than reflexively dismissing all unorthodox theories, intellectually humble inquiry that acknowledges the inherent complexity and gaps in existing historical models could lead to richer understanding of our shared ancestry. The scattered but mounting evidence cited by Tartaria proponents argues that the possibility of lost precocious societies merits continued exploration beyond dismissive orthodoxies.

With careful discernment between sound and speculative methodologies, broadening perspectives on human antiquity beyond academic norms may yet reveal profound insights about our origins. As with many frontier fields, bridging disciplinary divides allows room for new syntheses and unconventional lines of analysis that reframe how we view the past. The ruins of history still have much to teach those who approach them with vision unclouded by dogma.

Thank you for joining us on this fascinating exploration of possible lost histories and enduring mysteries surrounding our ancient origins. While mainstream views may dismiss ideas like Tartaria as fanciful conjecture, maintaining an open and inquisitive mind is crucial for advancing human understanding.

At Ultra Unlimited, we are committed to exploring the unexplained across all cultures and traditions. Legends, myths and dubious archaeological finds may only represent creative speculations. However, they also reflect universal human instincts to envision grander destinies for our ancestors and seek knowledge beyond conventional paradigms.

Though the specific details of Tartaria and other proposals remain unproven, studying them reveals profound insights into our shared yearning to understand civilization's deepest roots. Where one culture's artifacts end and another's begin has puzzled inquiring minds for millennia. More questions than answers undoubtedly persist.

We hope discussions like this inspire you to delve further into history's obscure territories yourself. Whether artifacts point to forgotten societal blooms or imaginative mysticism, engaging curiosities around mankind's distant past enhances perspectives on our present and future potential. Our search for wisdom knows no bounds. As ever, we welcome respectful debate while celebrating mythology's illumination of tribulations and triumphs throughout history. May open discourse on humanity's enduring riddles and alternative visions continue nourishing insight and progress. Our exploration has only begun.

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