Cards With The Designation Of Tartaria - Alternative View

Cards With The Designation Of Tartaria - Alternative View
Cards With The Designation Of Tartaria - Alternative View

Video: Cards With The Designation Of Tartaria - Alternative View

Video: Cards With The Designation Of Tartaria - Alternative View
Video: The Tartars (Preview Clip) 2024, September
Anonim

A bike is circulating on the network, designed for gullible people and written, most likely, by the Jesuits of the Vatican, that allegedly the maps of Tartaria are in fact "fakes" and the real "sabotage of the Vatican" aimed at inciting ethnic hatred and separatism in Russia … But the fact is that in reality everything is exactly the opposite. I don’t know if one of the Jesuits just wanted to earn extra money by selling several cards of Tartary to Usmanov, or if he did it at the direction of his superiors, hoping to knock the Russians and Tatars head-on, but this very idea, if it was, it successfully failed.

The brains of Russians turned out to be not as “washed out” as those of citizens of the “democratic world”, and therefore independent study of this topic by independent researchers revealed that neither the present Kazan Tatars, nor the present Mongols have anything to do with the mythical “Mongol-Tatar yoke” invented by the Russophobic forces. They also have nothing to do with the Siberian confederation, which was designated as "Great Tartary" on medieval European maps. And since the attempt to organize interethnic hatred failed, and moreover, aroused genuine interest in the topic of Tartary, the Vatican's servants had to invent a new myth that these cards were allegedly "Vatican forgery." But in fact, Tartary is indicated on many European maps of adjacent territories. And not only European ones.

So, are European atlases and encyclopedias, as well as many other sources of past centuries, including artistic ones, where Siberian Tartaria is mentioned, are really the same "fake"? But let's dwell on the maps for now. Honest Russian historian Dmitry Belousov has posted a list of all these sources and maps on his website. Let's see what are the most famous cards, where Great Tartary is indicated, he gives in his list:

1) Map of Muscovy in 1525 "Moscoviae Tabula" from the Italian cartographer Battista Agnese (Battista Agnese, 1500-1564).

2) Sebastian Munster (1489-1552, German mathematician, philologist and geographer, Franciscan monk) - "Drawing of Tartary, once Scythia", Basel, 1550. Based on materials from Sigismund Herberstein (1486-1566, Austrian-German diplomat and historian).

3) map of southeastern Russia in 1559 "Sarmatia Asiatica" from the Franciscan monk Sebastian Munster (German scientist) from the Latin edition of Cosmography (page 7). In the center there is an eloquent inscription “Tartaria olim Scythia / Tartaria, Scythia in antiquity”. And in the northwest - the province of "Moscouia".

4) map of 1562 "Description of Russia, Muscovy and Tartaria / RVSSIAE, MOSCOVIAE et TARTARIAE Descriptio", from Anthony Jenkinson (Anthony Jenkinson, an employee of the English Moscow Company, was the first ambassador of England to Muscovy in 1557-1571) and and published from engraving Frans Hogenberg in Antwerp in 1570. The map is dedicated to “His lordship Henry of Sydney, ruler of Wales”:

6) Abraham Ortelius / Abraham Ortelius, "Map of Tartary or the Kingdom of the Great Khan" (from the atlas of Ortelius, Antwerp, 1570, "Teatrum orbis terrarum", "Spectacle of the globe"). Published in 1573. The texts on the map say that the Eurasian Empire of Tartary stretches from Kazan to Kumul [Camul], borders on the possessions of the Grand Duke of Moscow, Georgia, Persia and Tibet, and is washed by the Black Sea, the Caspian Sea, and the Scythian Ocean. It is ruled by the Great Khan, which … means “emperor.

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7) two maps of Asia from Egypt to Japan, from Russia to America ("Asiae Nova Descriptio"), 1574 and 1579. Author - Abraham Ortelius In the center there is a large inscription - Tartaria, many cities.

8) Tartary on the map of Asia by Gerhard Mercator, 1575.

9) Siberian province of the Tartary Empire on the map of 1578:

10) Tartaria on the world map of Rumold Mercator (son of the famous cartographer Gerhard Mercator), 1587. It is believed that this map was drawn by Rumold based on the map of his father, created back in 1569

11) Tartary on a Dutch map of Asia 1595

12) Cologne map of Antonio Magino Patavini "Tartar Empire" (Antonio Magino Patavini. Tartarie Imperium), 1597.

13) 1598 map "Russia" from Jenkinson (from the atlas by B. Langeles, p. 10), Amsterdam.

14) map of Moscow Tartary 1600. Cartographer Matthias Quad von Kinckelbach (1557-1613) "Moscoviae Imperivm Colonia", Cologne

15) "Map of Siberia or Tartary", Amsterdam, ~ 1606. Jodocus Hondius (1563-1612)

16) map "Tabula Russiae" from Hessel Gerrits (Hessel Gerard, Dutch geographer and cartographer, Asterdam, 1613) showing the border with Tartary.

17) Tartary on the French map "Asia" in 1626 by John Speed (1552-1629), English historian and cartographer

18) Tartary on the "newest map of Russia" in 1638;

19) Map of Asia in 1640 "Map of Tartaria or the Empire of the Great Khan / Tartaria sive Magna Chami Imperivm" from Blaeu (version - 1635).

20) map of 1650. Matthaeus Merian (1593-1650) and Martin Zeiler (1589-1661). Frankfurt am Main, Topografia Germaniae series in volume 21, "Map of Tartary or the Empire of the Great Khan / Tartaria sive Magnichami Imperiorum"

21) a map of three Tartarii from the World History of Dionysius Petavius, 1659 (incl. Siberia or Russian Tartary with Tobolsk, Astracan, Iakutsk), with three blocks of text along the edges.

22) Blau's Large Atlas, 1665. Here is a map of the Moscow kingdom of the Romanovs from Isaac Maas (Isaac Massa, 1586-1643, Dutch merchant, traveler, ambassador to Muscovy) - "Map of Northern and Eastern Russia"

23) Tartary on a giant copper globe made in 1672 for the Swedish king Charles XI

24) "Map of Russia or Muscovy" 1675. Amsterdam cartographer and publisher Frederick De Wit (1630-1706).

25) map of 1676. English cartographer and historian John Speede "A Newe Mape of Tartary", London. (John Speed, 1552-1629, "New Map of Tartary", London).

26) Dutch map 1680 Frederic de Vita "Great Tartary, Great Mughal Empire, Japan and China" ("Magnae Tartariae, Magni Mogolis Imperii, Iaponiae et Chinae, Nova Descriptio"), Amsterdam;

27) Tartary on the maps of the family of Nicholas Fisher (family of cartographers of the 17th century - Amsterdamman Nicholas Ioannis Fisher / Claes Jansz Visscher, Nicholas Fisher, 1587-1652 and his son Nicholas I Fisher, 1618-1679): "Map of Muscovy or Great Russia" (1681), "Big Map of the World" (the map was first published in 1683);

28) Dutch map of Pieter Schenk of the late 18th century;

29) Tartary and Muscovy on the world map of 1684.

30) French map of Asia 1692.

31) map of 1697, Phillip Cluverius, "Scythia et Tartaria Asiatica" / "Scythia or Asiatic Tartaria"

32) map of S. U. Remezov from the atlas "Drawing Book of Siberia", 1699-1701. One of the cards directly says "Great Tartary" in Russian;

33) map of 1705, publishers Chatelain. Amsterdam, Atlas Historique, The New Map of Asia

34) a 1705 map "Tartaria, sive magni Chami Imperium ex credendis" by the Dutchman Nicolai Witsen (1641-1717)

35) a separate map of Tartary from Guillaume de Lille (Guillaume de Lisle / Guillaume Delisle, 1675-1726) - the so-called. map of great Tartary (three Tartaries). Edition 1707-1709 (sometimes dated 1706):

36) map of 1707 by V. Kiprianov "Image of the Earth's Globe"

37) 1707 map "Kaart van Tartaryen" by Piter Vander.

38) map of 1707 "Generalis Totius Imperii Moscovitici", Homann John Baptiste (JBHomann / Iohannis Baptiste Homanni, 1664-1724, German geographer and cartographer)

39) map of 1714 "Possession of Muscovy or Russia" from Herman Moll (c. 1654-1732), London.

40) Map of Asia 1720 (option - 1743), Johann Baptist Homann (1664-1724), Nuremberg.

41) map of 1720, publishers Chatelain. Amsterdam, Atlas Historique, "New Map of Great Tartary or the Empire of the Great Khan"

42) map of 1725 "New map of the entire empire of Great Russia" of the captured Swedish officer Tabbert / Strallenberg, with the borders of the kingdoms of Tartary. Paris. Captain Philip Johann Tabbert (1676-1747)

43) map of Asia from V. Kiprianov 1745

44) Tartary on a papier-mache globe of the earthly and celestial spheres N. Hill 1754

45) Tartary on the 1st map of the Russian Empire in Europe (1st Catre de IEmpire de Russie en Europe) from the atlas of the Prince of Orange in 1755.

46) Tartary on a globe in 1765 (in the collection of the Historical Society in Minnesota);

47) An old Russian map of the world of the mid-18th century "Image of the Earth's Globe", kept in the Archive of Ancient Acts in Moscow.

48) map of Tartary ("Carte de Tartarie") 1766 by Guillaume de Lille (Guillaume de Lisle / Guillaume Delisle, 1675-1726) from the Universal geographical atlas of the French Academy of Sciences, published in Paris in 1789 (colored engraving) …

49) Map of Siberia in the 18th century. On this map, the whole of Siberia beyond the Ural ridge is called Great Tartary.

50) Map of Asia with the country of Tartary from the 1755 French Geographical Atlas of the Prince of Orange, later included in the Encyclopedia Britannica 1771:

51) Map of Asia from 1772 by Guillaume Delisle and Tobias Conrad Lotter (colored engraving).

52) map of two empires of 1786 "Empire de Russie & de la Grande Tatarie", Germany, Nuremberg. By Homann Heirs

As you can see, among the indicated sources there are, albeit few, but also Russian maps, although the falsifiers have pretty much "cleaned up" them on the territory of Russia. Like the Vatican, Romanov's Russia the truth about the existence of the Great Tartary in Siberia in the past was not profitable, because it did not fit into the falsified version of history, where this Siberian state was substituted for the mythical "Mongol Empire". Do you know why it was done? To hide the fact that the Aryans and Russes have long ago mastered Siberia and were indigenous peoples there. Also, from a single Aryan tree, the Türks were formed, whose representatives were also among the peoples of multinational Tartaria. But nevertheless, it was the Russian and Siberian Rus (or Tartars) who were its state-forming peoples, just like in modern Russia - the successor of Great Tartary.

So all these facts completely destroy Russophobic myths about "the conquest of Siberia by the Russians." There was no conquest. After the cataclysm, which destroyed almost all the cities and population of Tartary, these places were re-mastered by the Cossacks and Russians. Of course, they were not the only ones who had their own plans for these lands. Some of them were captured by Khan Kuchum who came from Central Asia, who occupied the Tobolsk land, which was less affected by the cataclysm. And just in order to expel these invaders, Ermak's detachment was sent by the Moscow Tsar, which was supported by the surviving Siberian Rus - the Chaldons and other representatives of the peoples of Tartaria, who did not perceive the Cossacks and Russians who came as invaders.

Therefore, in fact, it is precisely those who disseminate false myths that the cards of Tartary are allegedly "fake", knowingly or not, but serve a Russophobic parasitic force that is trying to create anti-Russian sentiments among the local population along the perimeter of our borders, and also to fuel separatist sentiments in Siberia, where Russians are presented as "occupiers", following the same scenario as happened in the Baltics and Ukraine. But the whole point is that once Moscow Tartary (and this is perfectly visible on the maps) was part of this confederation called Great Tartary. That is why the inhabitants of European Russia have nothing to share with the Siberians.

And only after the Jesuits helped the last Rurikovichs go into another world and drag their henchmen onto the Moscow throne with a characteristic surname indicating their masters, and then carry out the substitution of the tsar, Romanov Russia appeared with its capital in St. Petersburg, which over time managed to take control of all the lands of Moscow Tartary. But settlers from the Russian Empire came to Siberia only after the death of Tartary, in order to repopulate these lands, which had been deserted after the Flood and a sharp climate change.

Therefore, Russia was originally the legal successor of the Great Tartary, since it was inhabited by the same peoples, linked by a common cultural tradition and common roots emanating from the arctic ancestral home. And for this very reason, the annexation of the Siberian lands to Russia was very different from the colonization of various territories by the Anglo-Saxons and other "civilized" European peoples, who destroyed the indigenous population in their colonies. And, of course, all these "civilizers" are not at all interested in us getting to the bottom of our true history. That is why their servants are so diligently trying to convince us that supposedly no Great Tartary ever existed. Well, is it so or not - think for yourself.

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