Pantheon II: The Lost History Beneath Your Feet
Chapter Five - Tartaria – The Empire That Isn’t in the Books
Section 5 of 20
CHAPTER FIVE
Tartaria – The Empire That Isn’t in the Books
YOU’VE PROBABLY NEVER seen it in school.
But it’s on old maps.
It’s in strange architecture.
It’s whispered through mud floods, resets, and missing time.
They call it Tartaria.
Or Tartary.
Or The Great Tartarian Empire.
Was it real?
Was it myth?
Or was it erased?
Tartaria allegedly covered:
- Eurasia
- Parts of Russia
- Siberia
- China
- Even the American West
You’ll find it on 16th–19th century maps labeled:
- "Great Tartary"
- "Independent Tartary"
- "Chinese Tartary"
- "Tartaria Magna"
Historians now say:
“Oh, that was just a vague term for uncivilized nomads.”
But wait…
Why does an “uncivilized nomad zone” have:
- A consistent name across multiple centuries and cultures?
- Recognized borders?
- Distinct architecture?
- Recorded royal lineages?
All over the world—in Russia, Mongolia, even San Francisco—you’ll find:
- Star forts
- Gigantic neoclassical domes
- Perfectly symmetrical mega-structures
- Often half-buried or built into hills
- With technology and size far beyond what the era supposedly had
Ask who built them?
The answer is often vague:
- “We don’t know.”
- “It was just always here.”
- “It burned in a fire.”
- “Some exposition was held here once.”
That’s not history.
That’s erasure.
Depending on who you ask, Tartaria was:
- A high-tech empire based on free energy, sacred geometry, and harmony
- A pre-reset civilization that ruled much of the world
- A victim of global cataclysm and a coordinated historical cover-up
- A symbol for forgotten timelines and buried power structures
In some versions, Tartarians used:
- Atmospheric electricity
- Sound resonance
- Magnetic energy
- Healing domes and vibration towers
And then?
It all vanished.
A popular theory:
- After a global reset (mud flood, war, or tech wipe), the Tartarian structures remained
- They were “rediscovered,” repurposed, and passed off as new builds
- World Fairs in the 1800s were used to showcase this repurposed architecture—
then demolish it immediately after
Why demolish beautiful, intricate, “brand new” buildings?
Because they weren’t new.
They were evidence.
If Tartaria existed, it likely:
- Collapsed in a great cataclysm
- Was absorbed by growing empires (Russia, China, British colonies)
- And was scrubbed from the official narrative
Why?
Because it challenges:
- The colonial timeline
- The idea of “primitive peoples” in North America and Asia
- The supremacy of Western “civilization” as the origin of advancement
Was Tartaria Real?
Maybe not as a unified empire.
But as a symbol, echo, and skeleton key to the missing past?
Absolutely.
The fact that so many people are rediscovering it—
in maps, mud, monuments, and whispers—
means something was there.
And they buried it fast.
Tartaria is more than a name.
It’s a signal.
A reminder that history is not just what’s remembered—
it’s also what’s forcibly forgotten.
You don’t need to believe every theory.
But once you see the outline?
You’ll notice it everywhere.
In 1771, the Encyclopædia Britannica referred to Tartary as "a vast country in the northern parts of Asia, bounded by Siberia, China, and the Caspian Sea..."
That’s not legend. That’s a textbook.
They called it barbaric. They called it lost. But the maps remembered, and the buildings still hum with the silence of a vanished empire.
