--

Excellent text, Markus, which instigates us to think and investigate.

When I entered, by competition, in what was called "Gymnasium" (today it is called Ensino do Segundo Grau, more or les High School Teaching), back in 1939, at Escola Caetano de Campos, approved by the Board chaired by Professor Carolina Ribeiro, our history and geography teacher, it was Orestes Rosolia, of vast culture, I remember he told us about the Tartarus Empire, but I don't remember if he talked about his capital; maybe it's in one of his books.

Excerpt from the history of the Caetano de Campos School: "Who will deny the beauty of the History of Civilization classes that Rosolia transmitted to us, with novels and charm? Or would the History of Brazil classes be more beautiful?".

I did research, too, not as objective as yours:

I saw the CIA document that erased everything about the Tartar Empire and Tartars because... they were communists!

I found and downloaded the book "Tartary / Tartaria — The Mystery of an Empire Lost in History, https://historyofyesterday.com/tartary-tartaria-the-mystery-of-an-empire-lost-in-history-a99abb5cc9b6. I just started the reading.

I saw that, in Russia, the period is referred to as the Tartar-Mongolian Yoke, That the Turkmen and Mongol peoples of the Mongol Empire, were generically called Tatars, that Tartarius was often divided into sections, with prefixes that indicated the name of the dominant authority or geographic location. Thus, western Siberia was the "Moscovite Tartary" or "Russian", the eastern Turkestan (later the Chinese Xinjiang) and Mongolia the "Catai Tartary" or "Chinese", the western Turkestan (later known as the Russian Turkestan ) was known as "Independent Tartary", and Manchuria as "Eastern Tartary";

That, as the Russian Empire expanded eastward, more of Tartary became known to Europeans, and the term gradually came to be less used. The European regions north of the Black Sea that were inhabited by Turkmen peoples became known as Little Tartary.

The "Komal desert of Tartary" was mentioned by the German thinker Immanuel Kant in his Observations on the Feeling of the Beautiful and the Sublime as a "great and infinite solitude";

That in all current areas Tartarus is one of the spoken languages, the Siberian Tatars are survivors of the Turkmen population that inhabited the Ural-Altaic region, mixed to some extent with the speakers of the Uralic and Mongolic languages.

That the Tatars are one of 56 ethnicities officially recognized by the People's Republic of China that inhabit their enormous country.

Markus, if the history of the Tartars and their Imperium will ever be unveiled, sure it will owe a lot to your work.

Congratulations and thanks for the pubblication.

--

--

Flavio Musa de Freitas Guimarães
Flavio Musa de Freitas Guimarães

Written by Flavio Musa de Freitas Guimarães

Already watching the eighty-eight turn of the Earth in curtsy around its King, I’m an engineer that became a writer, happy, in perfect health, body and mind.

No responses yet