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Version: Reconstruction of the events of the 18-19 centuries
Version: Reconstruction of the events of the 18-19 centuries

Video: Version: Reconstruction of the events of the 18-19 centuries

Video: Version: Reconstruction of the events of the 18-19 centuries
Video: Cordyceps: attack of the killer fungi - Planet Earth Attenborough BBC wildlife 2024, May
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After reviewing a lot of materials, I decided to make some general reconstruction of events, as it is now presented, taking into account the available new facts.

According to the official version, St. Petersburg was founded by Peter I in 1703, and was officially declared the capital of the Russian Empire in 1712.

In fact, for the management of such a huge state as the Russian Empire (as official historians now picture it to us), St. Petersburg has the most inconvenient location. He is on the edge of the state, vulnerable from the sea. From this point of view, it is Moscow that looks much more advantageous, since it is located in the center, which means that the distances to the edges are approximately the same (at that time, only territories in the European part were actually controlled). Let's not forget that in the 18-19th centuries we really have neither fast transport, nor fast information transfer systems, which will significantly affect the efficiency of the control system, therefore, distances are very important for that period. And from a defensive point of view, the location of the capital in the center of the state's territory is much preferable.

But from the point of view of a springboard for the future capture of Russia, the best place is just St. Petersburg. Located on the edge, there is a direct sea connection with European states, which greatly simplifies the logistics in the conduct of military operations.

As a result, the following scenario of the development of events emerges.

At the beginning of the 18th century, the Germans (Prussians) captured (like "founded") St. Petersburg, apparently with the participation of the Scandinavian countries. A small state was created under the control of the "Romanovs" -Holstein from the Oldenburg clan, who were immediately recognized by all the Western powers. Note that St. Petersburg was allegedly founded in 1703, declared the capital in 1712, and these territories, according to the official version, were transferred to the "Russian Empire" only in 1721! Until that moment, they were officially considered the territory of Sweden. But, interestingly, all the Western powers amicably ignore this fact and begin to send their diplomats to St. Petersburg, hand over their credentials to Peter I, and establish their embassies and trade missions in St. Petersburg.

After that, this "empire" of the Romanov-Holstein-Oldenburgs begins to seize nearby territories, reaching the Volga, and also makes the first attempt to seize Moscow and the territories controlled by it, beginning in 1773 the war with Moscow Tartary.

But it doesn’t come out. Siberian Tartary with its capital in Tobolsk is included in the war, sending an army under the command of Emelyan Pugachev to help Moscow Tartary. As a result, Moscow is beaten off, and the Romanovs are thrown back to Peter.

This was followed by another stage of preparation, including the construction of a powerful canal system in the early 19th century, which was supposed to provide the logistics of a new military campaign. This campaign begins in the years 1810-1811. At the same time, the "gods" served by the European elite are launching a nuclear strike on the territory of the Volga region and the Urals. This does not allow the main forces of Siberian Tartary to come to the rescue, as they did in 1773-1775.

The war of 1810-1815 was waged by the united troops of the Romanovs and the dynasties of Western Europe.

In 1812, at the beginning, Smolensk was captured, for which Kutuzov received the title of "Count of Smolensk", and a little later Moscow. There was no Battle of Borodino in 1812, it takes place later, in 1867.

A separate question about the bombing of Moscow in 1812, as indicated by many facts. It is very likely that there was an inconsistency in actions between the ground units and the "gods", as a result of which the so-called "friendly fire" took place. That is, the defenders of Moscow surrendered earlier than expected, the invading troops entered the city, but they did not have time to inform the "gods" about it, or they could no longer stop the process. As a result, a high-altitude nuclear explosion over Moscow, which led to the well-known strongest "fire" of 1812, as well as the exposure of those who were in the city, penetrating radiation, which caused the consequences, in symptoms very similar to radiation sickness, but perceived by them as plague. It is known that the French troops left Moscow in 1812 precisely because of the alleged plague epidemic, which the Russians are accused of, who allegedly poisoned all the wells before retreating. But, what is also interesting, this epidemic did not spread beyond Moscow and no cases of infection with this "plague" outside Moscow were recorded, which is not typical for a real plague. If it were just the plague, then foci of infection should have appeared along the entire route of retreat, since everything was bad with sanitation there, taking into account the war.

In 1815 Kazan was taken by the Romanovs. It is known that in 1815 in the Kazan Kremlin there was a "huge fire" that destroyed almost all buildings, especially the cannon yard, where, according to the official version, guns were made for the war of 1812. That's just the question, and on whose side those guns fought, especially when you consider that after the fire, the Romanovs in Kazan did not restore the cannon yard.

In the history of the fire of 1815, for example, I am very surprised by the fact that the "fire" was so strong that all the decoration of the Annunciation Cathedral was destroyed, including the plaster painting, which had to be "restored" after 1815. This is taking into account the fact that the cathedral is a powerful stone structure, in which there is really nothing to burn. How the fire could have penetrated the interior of the cathedral and destroyed the interior decoration remains a mystery.

Judging by climatic changes, a massive meteorite bombardment of the territory of Western Siberia, which finally destroyed Siberian Tartaria, takes place in early 1815, most likely in April. For several years this territory has been a scorched and plowed desert, which leads to erosion of the topsoil over a vast territory. As a result, dust storms arise when the upper layers of the soil, under the influence of water, sun and wind, turn into dust, rise to the upper layers of the atmosphere, are carried thousands of kilometers, and then fall down as mud rains. Judging by the available documentary records, similar mud rains fell in Europe until 1847.

From about the middle of the 19th century, somewhere from the middle of the 1830s, the Romanovs began a massive expansion in order to annex Siberia. At the same time, old destroyed cities are being restored. Since the 1840s, a massive planting of new forests began in Siberia, for which a forest part and a forest guard were created on the territory of the same Altai Territory.

At the same time, the "Romanovs" began to write a new history in a hurry, inventing a lot of myths.

A separate moment arises with a shift of 40 years, which is recorded for many non-connections, including M. Yu. Lermontov, when a document written by him is discovered, in which 1870 and 1872 are corrected for 1830 and 1832.

But if the years of Lermontov's life are shifted by 40 years, then a whole layer of events and people should shift with him. This is Pushkin, and Zhukovsky, and the war with Napoleon. Moreover, this version is in good agreement with the new dating of the Battle of Borodino, which took place in 1867, as well as the fact that the first edition of Leo Tolstoy's novel "War and Peace" contains the dates 1865-1869, which show when the war actually took place. the events of which are described in the novel.

In this case, with Pugachev and the war of 1773-1775, there may be another scenario, since with a shift of 40 years we get 1813-1815. That is, in 1812 the Romanovs capture Smolensk and Moscow. Siberian Tartary begins a war with the Romanovs and tries to recapture Moscow and liberate Moscow Tartary, directing Pugachev's troops. And it is precisely on the troops of Pugachev that the "gods" are working from orbit with nuclear charges, traces of the use of which are read in large numbers both in the Urals and in the Volga region, and just in the territories that were occupied by the troops of Pugachev in 1773-1775.

In this version, the troops of Pugachev, indeed, were defeated, but the main reason was not the strength and might of the Romanov army, but the use of high-tech weapons by the "gods".

It is also interesting that St. Petersburg has an advantageous location not as the capital of the Russian Empire, but as the capital of the Roman Empire, which united the territory of Northern Europe and Scandinavia.

These are the first rough sketches. Objections, comments and additions are accepted.

About the "sonder teams" who were engaged in cleaning up the tracks

When discussing the approximate reconstruction of events, the question arose about the fact that there must have been "zodner-teams" who cleaned the traces after all these disasters and crimes.

As far as I know, there were definitely such "sonder teams", and they worked not only in Siberia. Nosovsky and Fomenko have a separate small book about how in the early and middle of the 19th century, in the European part of Russia, special expeditions, financed from the tsarist treasury, were equipped and worked, which were engaged in the excavation of burial mounds and burials. In less than ten years, these guys have excavated more than 7000 mounds! They just found there and where it all went, no one can really say anything. There are no inventories of finds, no documents of acceptance for storage. There is only about the equipment of these "expeditions".

I also once came across a story about the adventure of one of the geologists in the 1970s in Siberia. How reliable this information is, I cannot say, as they say, for what I bought, and for that I sell. And the story is as follows.

This guy worked in a geological exploration party that worked in Western Siberia. During the next drop to the point, their helicopter crashed, which killed everyone except this man. He miraculously survived, but received severe injuries and burns. He was found, picked up and left by local residents who, according to him, were very strange. They were Russians, not "residents of indigenous nationalities", they spoke a language that was more similar to Old Russian. They dressed in old simple clothes and lived in large wooden houses. Outwardly, as he says, all the inhabitants were very beautiful. Moreover, according to him, they lived separately, as a separate community, since they had no connection with the "mainland", therefore, he could not convey the information that he survived. As he later realized, the old people were strongly opposed to being rescued and brought to the village, but the young people insisted on their own.

In general, they cured him and went out. They were sealed with some infusions and smeared with ointments from burns, in which, as he understood, there was honey, some kind of clay, and all sorts of other things. Two girls were assigned to look after him, apparently he determined their age in the region of 17-18 years. And if in the beginning they just looked after him as if he were sick, then later they began to live like husband and wife, but three of them. In general, he lived there for several months, but how much exactly I did not understand from that story (or I don’t remember any more).

But it all ended badly. After a while, a helicopter began flying in the area of the settlement. All the locals immediately became very agitated. The old men demanded that the stranger be taken away from the village. After a long bickering, to which he was not allowed, they came to him and said that for some time he should live in a distant settlement. He was taken there by some grandfather who hardly spoke to him, but that was what saved his life. He and his grandfather never made it to the place. Grandfather sensed that something was wrong. From the beginning, they hid in some kind of cave in the forest, from which they saw that some people in military clothes and masks were looking for them. Moreover, it seemed to the peasant several times that they would be found now, but apparently the grandfather was doing something that they were just passing by. And when the helicopter departed, he and his grandfather returned to the village. There it turned out that a punitive detachment had burst into the village, which flew in that helicopter and looked for them in the forest. Everyone who was found was killed, the village was completely burned down. When they returned with that grandfather, it was evident that everything was thoroughly cleaned up there. All things, utensils, corpses were burned on large fires. Whether any of the residents managed to escape, the grandfather did not tell him, and the peasant himself could not determine, since it is not clear how many people were burned, and he did not have a great desire to find out.

In the end, the grandfather took this man somewhere to the river, there was a boat, told him to go downstream, and he just sat down by a tree and died. As if he just took it and passed out. And this man in the end sailed on a boat to the Ob, where he was picked up by some motor ship. And he returned back, if my memory serves me right, in 1975.

Yes, while walking to the river, he tried to find out from his grandfather what happened. As a result, he said that these were special punishers who had been hunting for their family for a long time. They could not resist them in a direct confrontation, since there was some strong sorcerer with them who helped them. All were destroyed most likely precisely because of this man, more precisely because his body was not found at the site of the helicopter crash. They began to look for him and, apparently, found a village. That is why the old people were opposed to being left in the village. But, they needed "fresh blood", since degeneration began, so the young people finally managed to persuade the old people. They wanted to let him live a little with them, so that children would be born from him, and then let him go to the mainland so that they would stop looking for him, but they did not have time.

When the man finally returned home, they began to drag him to all sorts of interrogations in the KGB, where they asked all sorts of strange things, because of which the man realized that everything was very serious. But in the end he somehow got off, like yes, they saved, but they went out and cured, and then they drove away. I don't know anything, they didn't tell me anything, they just put me in a boat and told me to go downstream. In general, he pretended that the punitive detachment did not know anything about the destruction of the village, like he was kicked out earlier. In the end, they took a nondisclosure agreement from him and released him.

I read this story in the early 90s, and then it was presented as "evidence of the crimes of the bloody GEBni." But now I don't remember where I read it and who the author is. Then I did not attach much importance to it, well, an interesting story, that's all, maybe even a fictional one. But now I think that this story can be real, except that in some places the narrator lied or mixed up. Again, I retell it as I remember now, but in the original everything was written in more artistic and detailed way.

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