The Myth Of The "Mongol-Tatar Yoke" - An Information Sabotage Act - Alternative View

The Myth Of The "Mongol-Tatar Yoke" - An Information Sabotage Act - Alternative View
The Myth Of The "Mongol-Tatar Yoke" - An Information Sabotage Act - Alternative View

Video: The Myth Of The "Mongol-Tatar Yoke" - An Information Sabotage Act - Alternative View

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The term “Mongol-Tatar yoke” coined in the second half of the 19th century by Polish historians had a clearly political background for organizing the national liberation movement in the Grand Duchy of Poland, which was then part of the Russian Empire. That is why the complete inconsistency of this pseudo-historical myth is already obvious to many independent researchers, but for some reason it still migrates from some Russian history textbooks to others. I have already written a lot about this topic and cited the opinion of many Russian researchers who do not suffer from blind faith in the myths of official history. And today I want to acquaint you with the opinion of another of them - the Russian writer, traveler, independent researcher of the secrets of the real past - A. Kadykchansky.

Here's what he writes about this in his book "Small Encyclopedia of Great Tartary":

As you can see, the pseudo-historical myth about the "Mongol-Tatar yoke" not only has nothing to do with our true history, but is also a product of the obviously hostile Russophobic anti-Russian forces. One can argue a lot about the specific time of the appearance of the term "Mongol-Tatars", but the fact remains: in the European and Old Russian chronicles it is the "Tatars" (Tartars) that are mentioned, and not the mythical "Tatar-Mongols". The same "puncture" occurred with the falsifiers and with medieval European and Old Russian engravings, in which we see the characteristic Caucasoids that do not have any Mongoloid features.

But these "Tatars" also have nothing to do not only with modern Mongols, known as "Oirats". but also to the modern Kazan Tatars, who at that time were called "Bulgars" (Volga Bulgars). Thus, the absurdity of the term "Mongol-Tatars" or "Tatar-Mongols" becomes quite obvious as well as the pseudo-historical myth of the "Mongol-Tatar yoke" itself.

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