r/Tartaria • u/Novusor • Mar 28 '25
r/Tartaria • u/Ok_Professional1844 • Feb 23 '25
General Discussion IVE FIGURED IT OUT 100%
TARTARIA STILL EXISTS
They say truth is in plain sight… watch those who will disagree with me providing that truth. (Freemasons will reveal themselves)
Mud flood .. when you take the d and change it to a b… it’s dumb fool
Tartaria still exists.. the Antarctic Treaty blocks us from going.
The ice walls are blocking. Get this… the word Cataract comes from the word Antarctica. (Or vice versa) So the view is blocked from the Ice Walls
I see Walls = Ice Walls are the cataract that’s blocking Tartaria. E Y E S Walls
Antartica is Terra Australis on the old maps and that’s Tartaria.. they claim that 70% of Australia is unexplored and that’s what they mean.
r/Tartaria • u/MunchieMolly • Apr 13 '25
General Discussion horse and buggy built for sure
galleryr/Tartaria • u/MunchieMolly • Mar 31 '25
General Discussion Aetheric Architecture?
Recently I’ve been diving deep into the concept of aether architecture and this visual really brings it to life for me. Maybe ancient buildings weren’t just sacred because of spiritual belief, but because they were literally designed to interact with energy.
This diagram shows what I believe many cathedrals and temples actually were:
Aetheric free energy machines
The dome and spire- a transmitter/receiver, tapping into the aether, the energetic medium that fills all space (Tesla spoke of this often).
Telluric energy (Earth currents)- drawn from water systems and underground aquifers beneath the building, like an energetic root system.
Sound- organs, choirs, and architecture created resonance, tuning the frequency of the entire structure.
Rose “windows” and sacred geometry- not just pretty, they likely channeled vibration, much like cymatics.
This blows open a whole new way of seeing oldworld architecture. these weren’t just places for prayer, they were technologies for healing, harmonizing, and amplifying raw energy.
And it makes me wonder… why were so many covered, gutted, or “destroyed in fire”? Why were so many built atop springs, aquifers, or ley lines?
What do y’all think? Anyone else feel like we’ve only scratched the surface of what these buildings really were?
r/Tartaria • u/OkJuggernaut7127 • 14d ago
General Discussion What was the purpose of building the Great Wall of china?
I don’t believe Jon Levi or this sub has ever discussed it
r/Tartaria • u/le_sossurotta • 4d ago
General Discussion is China restoring tartarian buildings for their own uses?
recently found out about Yunnan University and it's really ticking my old world site radar off, the architecture looks very tartarian for something that the chinese supposedly built for themselves. there isn't a lot of info on the buildings nor any interior photos (only one i could find by quickly googling was a photo of a dome in their library). what do you think is going on in here?
r/Tartaria • u/evilomens • Sep 09 '24
General Discussion Just a cool old book I have w Tartary mention
r/Tartaria • u/Accomplished_Ad_673 • Jun 22 '25
General Discussion The traveling people from Tartaria
My grandfather is from the south of Sweden and he often talks about the travelling people from Tartaria (Tatarien in Swedish). They were called ”Tattare” and they were living kind of off the grid and people were afraid of them, rumour saying the were quick to pull knives if threatened - I think it might’ve been a rumour started by themselves to be left alone because grandpa says he never really heard of an instance where they actually got violent.
I wonder if this is just old gossip talk from the countryside or if it might actually be connected to Tartaria and when it was erased it’s people fled as travelers?
r/Tartaria • u/BENshakalaka • May 08 '25
General Discussion TARTARIA: Is All Of Recorded History A Lie? A deep dive into the rabbit hole with Lucius Aurelian
r/Tartaria • u/LordInquisitorRump • May 19 '25
General Discussion What do you guys think?
So I’ve been following the “Old World/Tartaria” “Conspiracy Theory” for about 5-6 years now, I’ve always heard the detractors arguments for why the theory is not plausible, mainly stating how there is far too much “documented” evidence that disproves the idea of a worldwide civilisation, in my opinion the evidence kind of leans in the other direction, anyway what is your guys’ opinion on the detractors like this guy from ‘The Lore Lodge’ who apparently disproves the entire theory in this 3hour 44minute video, frankly I got about 20 minutes in and was bored out of my mind by his style of argument where he just goes on to state how stupid the idea even is, 0 facts, observations or logical conclusions, just emotion, he may well have gotten deeper into the topic, but I had no interest in continuing the video,
My question is mainly; is there any overt “evidence” that can disprove the theory in its entirety, and if so why has there not been a mainstream scientific (historical or archaeological or whatever) debunking of this theory (or do they think it is just far too “stupid” to even address)
r/Tartaria • u/ComfortableStock5718 • Oct 15 '24
General Discussion Who inhabited/built “Tartaria” in the United States
Was having a discussion about Tartaria with some friends this weekend. They asked “well who lived there then?”
……well, it’s not like an entire group of people in the US were forcibly removed from their land in the 1800s. …Oh wait…
r/Tartaria • u/CrazyBar6116 • Mar 09 '25
General Discussion What’s the conclusion you came up with?
No matter how ridiculous it may sound, just say every fact that you believed happened ranging from homunculus babies, hyperbolia, gian*s, mudfloods, fabricated history (and from when to when you think), the true DNA history of humanity in your opinion. Just mention anything you came to believe in after all the research you’ve done
r/Tartaria • u/ShaneE11183386 • 15d ago
General Discussion Has anyone ever found what they thought were from tartarian times in old basements or antique shops?
I like looking for that kind of stuff
Even metal detecting maybe
r/Tartaria • u/caem123 • 17d ago
General Discussion A three story, 1850 former stable reimagined, enclosed glass courtyard and a rooftop deck. Well made!
galleryr/Tartaria • u/Soggy-Beginning604 • Jun 11 '25
General Discussion The "Eastern European" connection to Tartaria
I read awhile back only came up in my mind rn , that eastern Europeans kids back in the day were tuaght sumhow about Tartaria existing.
Any1 eastern European? I.. imagine most of ya'll folks are American unfortunately
r/Tartaria • u/High_Strangeness10 • Apr 13 '25
General Discussion Men of renown?? Baton Rouge Louisiana capitol building
r/Tartaria • u/flexwaterjuice • 21d ago
General Discussion Made PDFs of Marcia Ramalho’s Tartaria videos (too long to watch) — upload to AI and share your take
I’ve been researching Tartaria and came across Marcia Ramalho, who has very long YouTube videos on the topic (one is 8 hours, others 4+). Because of the length, it’s hard to find people who’ve actually gone through her work and can share their views.
her 2 videos made into pdf files.
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1Z6RzFSJ_zVcclbuztED7U-P8qSnhULQO?usp=sharing
Since her videos don’t have transcripts, I extracted the text from her two most well-known videos and made PDFs. The text is messy on its own (since it’s tied to images), but AI chatbots can help make sense of it.
her youtube video
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vI8FIpDpNg8
I’m sharing the PDFs so others interested in Tartaria can run them through AI, explore her perspective, and see whether it matches their own knowledge of Tartaria and the Old World. The YouTube video link are included for reference, but you don’t need to watch them—just check the Google Drive, downloade the pdf and upload the PDFs to ai, and share back what you think.
r/Tartaria • u/le_sossurotta • May 13 '25
General Discussion Manchu Tartars
kind of weird that the dude carries an entire deer on his back, although there are quite small ones i haven't yet found any that would live in northern china and mongolia.
r/Tartaria • u/the_monarch1900 • Jul 27 '25
General Discussion Mongols and Turks were extremely advanced people, Tartaria is the sole proof of it.
They weren't just warriors on horses, they were also great engineers and architects. The Ta(r)tars was an extremely skilled and potent nation.
r/Tartaria • u/LiquidLogStudio • Sep 28 '24
General Discussion The Devils Slide Wyoming.
r/Tartaria • u/MO0NAGE_DAYDREAM • Dec 26 '24
General Discussion Looking for recommendations 🧠💬🏯🕍🏰🏛️🕌🛕
What are your favorite or most respected sources of information on this subject ? And what platforms do you use to to find them ? I use YouTube a lot but am open to any others! I rly like to listen to things while I work (it helps balance out the monotony lol), audio or video is great but I’m also looking for book ideas too! Thank you ALL in advance and happy exploring as well! 🙏🏽🌟
r/Tartaria • u/BENshakalaka • May 04 '25
General Discussion New Podcast: Is All Of History A Lie? The Tartaria Conspiracy Explained with Scott Dedels
- Was free energy achieved long ago...and simply hidden from us so a few at the top could charge money for it?
- The truth about the "World Fairs", "Great Fires" and other suspicious mass-destruction of ancient architecture
- Why are so many old buildings partially buried underground? #MudFloods
Enjoy the conversation!
r/Tartaria • u/NewShatter • Jun 13 '25
General Discussion A very catchy song about alternative history. Lyrics by me, music written by AI.
cdn1.aisonggenerator.ior/Tartaria • u/trust-urself-now • Feb 18 '25
General Discussion dreams about Tartaria
I'm sure you have them. do you want to describe your favorite dreams featuring Tartarian architecture and atmosphere? I've been having them since early childhood, before the concept was popularized.