
Tartaria & History Channel
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Канал құрылған күніГруд 01, 2021
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Трав 27, 2024Қосылған топ
"Tartaria & History Channel" тобындағы соңғы жазбалар
20.04.202513:36
In Genesis 6:3, which states "My Spirit shall not strive with man forever, for he is indeed flesh; yet his days shall be one hundred and twenty years," is often interpreted as a statement about God limiting human lifespans to 120 years. For those that want to extend that lifespan they follow the white rabbit (adrenochrome)
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19.04.202518:17
According to Nikola Tesla, spheres are amplifiers, so Slim Spurling decided to add beads to some Tensor Rings to amplify their beneficial effects.
Tensor rings hold an incredible power especially if the correct dimensions are used which are cubits. If you're looking for real copper with no film and the correct cubits size for natural powerful frequencies, you can find them here. https://cu-bits.org/
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Tensor rings hold an incredible power especially if the correct dimensions are used which are cubits. If you're looking for real copper with no film and the correct cubits size for natural powerful frequencies, you can find them here. https://cu-bits.org/
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Қайта жіберілді:
GreatReject.org

18.04.202523:16
After the earthquake in Myanmar, this emerged from below.
Check the GreatReject Free Earth Store 👉 freeearthstore.com
Check the GreatReject Free Earth Store 👉 freeearthstore.com
18.04.202519:34
Metekhi Castle, Georgia
This is what this castle, built in the 5th century by King Vakhtang I Gorgasali, looked like in 1930, still hidden beneath the surface.
Although today there is hardly any trace left of its former monumentality and it has undergone several reconstructions over the centuries, it is a place of interest for tourists visiting the city of Tbilisi.
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This is what this castle, built in the 5th century by King Vakhtang I Gorgasali, looked like in 1930, still hidden beneath the surface.
Although today there is hardly any trace left of its former monumentality and it has undergone several reconstructions over the centuries, it is a place of interest for tourists visiting the city of Tbilisi.
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@Du Labyrinthe aux Hypothèses
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Қайта жіберілді:
Historia Occulta

18.04.202514:29
Atlantis: Beyond the Pillars, Before the Flood
The only detailed account of Atlantis comes from Plato—first in Timaeus, then Critias. He places it beyond the Pillars of Heracles, larger than Libya and Asia combined, with concentric rings of land and water, advanced technology, monumental architecture, and a structured society that had once lived in harmony with the divine. Then came its decline—moral, not just material—and its destruction by flood and fire.
Modern scholars often frame it as allegory, a philosophical metaphor for hubris. But Plato was clear: he called it a true story, passed down through Egyptian priests and recorded by Solon. He gave names, measurements, locations, even the exact number of years—9,000 before Solon’s time. It wasn’t vague. It was specific.
Whether Atlantis was a memory, a distortion, or a deliberate preservation of something older, Plato treated it as real. And for over two thousand years, so did many others—until the modern world decided it knew better.
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The only detailed account of Atlantis comes from Plato—first in Timaeus, then Critias. He places it beyond the Pillars of Heracles, larger than Libya and Asia combined, with concentric rings of land and water, advanced technology, monumental architecture, and a structured society that had once lived in harmony with the divine. Then came its decline—moral, not just material—and its destruction by flood and fire.
Modern scholars often frame it as allegory, a philosophical metaphor for hubris. But Plato was clear: he called it a true story, passed down through Egyptian priests and recorded by Solon. He gave names, measurements, locations, even the exact number of years—9,000 before Solon’s time. It wasn’t vague. It was specific.
Whether Atlantis was a memory, a distortion, or a deliberate preservation of something older, Plato treated it as real. And for over two thousand years, so did many others—until the modern world decided it knew better.
Follow @historiaocculta


18.04.202511:21
The Holy House of Loreto looks like it was built by Angels. It comprises three walls of stacked stones and is safeguarded beneath an ornate Renaissance-era basilica. It is believed that Mary grew up in this house and that the Annunciation took place in it.
So, how did the walls get to Loreto? For many centuries, tradition held that Angels miraculously carried the Holy House from Nazareth to Loreto. Throughout the basilica are numerous artistic depictions of angels flying over the seas with the house.
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So, how did the walls get to Loreto? For many centuries, tradition held that Angels miraculously carried the Holy House from Nazareth to Loreto. Throughout the basilica are numerous artistic depictions of angels flying over the seas with the house.
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Қайта жіберілді:
Historia Occulta

17.04.202512:44
Hair Remembers What Skin Can’t Feel
Across cultures and centuries, hair has been treated as more than dead matter. It’s been grown, protected, braided, covered, offered. Warriors kept it long. Monastics shaved it off. The body produces it without pain, but rarely without meaning.
Some Indigenous accounts describe hair as an extension of the nervous system—a sensory tool that reaches beyond the skin. Stories from the Vietnam War tell of Native scouts who performed with unexplainable precision—until their hair was cut. Afterward, their awareness changed. Reaction times slowed. The sense of danger that once came without thinking became dull or delayed.
Science doesn’t formally recognize this connection. Hair is considered biologically inert, but traditions across the world say otherwise. They treat it as antenna, as memory, as signal. Not symbolic—but functional. A kind of listening the body still remembers, even if the language has been lost.
Follow @historiaocculta
Across cultures and centuries, hair has been treated as more than dead matter. It’s been grown, protected, braided, covered, offered. Warriors kept it long. Monastics shaved it off. The body produces it without pain, but rarely without meaning.
Some Indigenous accounts describe hair as an extension of the nervous system—a sensory tool that reaches beyond the skin. Stories from the Vietnam War tell of Native scouts who performed with unexplainable precision—until their hair was cut. Afterward, their awareness changed. Reaction times slowed. The sense of danger that once came without thinking became dull or delayed.
Science doesn’t formally recognize this connection. Hair is considered biologically inert, but traditions across the world say otherwise. They treat it as antenna, as memory, as signal. Not symbolic—but functional. A kind of listening the body still remembers, even if the language has been lost.
Follow @historiaocculta


16.04.202517:20
The quarry in Nokogiri mountain, Futtsu City, Chiba Prefecture, Japan
It is probably the melted remnants of a huge brick structure.
Mr. Kao has been studying meltology for the past 20 years.
Here is his theory:
https://youtu.be/CjClsB6Oh9k?si=UVMWjonc2mJD3a98
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It is probably the melted remnants of a huge brick structure.
Mr. Kao has been studying meltology for the past 20 years.
Here is his theory:
https://youtu.be/CjClsB6Oh9k?si=UVMWjonc2mJD3a98
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@TARTARIA JAPAN
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Қайта жіберілді:
Historia Occulta

16.04.202512:44
Excreta Mechanica, or the Anatomy of a Credible Lie
In 1739, Jacques de Vaucanson unveiled a mechanical duck that could eat, digest, and defecate. At least, that’s what the public believed. It flapped its wings, craned its neck, and pecked at grain with lifelike precision. Inside, a network of bellows, gears, and tubes imitated digestion. It was an automaton—but not a novelty.
Vaucanson was part of a larger current in Enlightenment thought: the idea that the body, even the soul, might be reducible to mechanism. The duck wasn’t built to entertain—it was built to provoke. If life could be imitated this closely, then what was life? And what separated man from machine?
Though later it was revealed that the digestion was an illusion—the excrement pre-loaded, not processed—the point remained. Vaucanson had built something that blurred the boundary, not just between nature and artifice, but between body and system. The duck worked because the world was ready to believe it could.
Follow @historiaocculta
In 1739, Jacques de Vaucanson unveiled a mechanical duck that could eat, digest, and defecate. At least, that’s what the public believed. It flapped its wings, craned its neck, and pecked at grain with lifelike precision. Inside, a network of bellows, gears, and tubes imitated digestion. It was an automaton—but not a novelty.
Vaucanson was part of a larger current in Enlightenment thought: the idea that the body, even the soul, might be reducible to mechanism. The duck wasn’t built to entertain—it was built to provoke. If life could be imitated this closely, then what was life? And what separated man from machine?
Though later it was revealed that the digestion was an illusion—the excrement pre-loaded, not processed—the point remained. Vaucanson had built something that blurred the boundary, not just between nature and artifice, but between body and system. The duck worked because the world was ready to believe it could.
Follow @historiaocculta


15.04.202508:35
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13.04.202516:07
128.9KЖазылушылар21.12.202423:59
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