Tartaria and Preterism - Printable Version +- Radix Fidem (https://radixfidem.org) +-- Forum: Discussion (https://radixfidem.org/forum-8.html) +--- Forum: Miscellaneous (https://radixfidem.org/forum-11.html) +--- Thread: Tartaria and Preterism (/thread-1084.html) |
Tartaria and Preterism - jaybreak - 05-15-2022 One of the newer, and more fun, conspiracy theories, is that the millennial reign of the church happened after the fall of Rome (preterism), but also that the church established a kingdom in the East and Far East, called Tartaria. Tartaria is essentially the already-vague Tartary Empire, but juiced up a little more. Tartaria supposedly had spread into many areas around the world that previously thought, indicated by classical architecture all around the world that seems to share characteristics they shouldn't...mostly just their elaborate designs. It hints that the millennial church had superhuman abilities to design and create these buildings without the aid of industrial or space-age technology. These buildings, though. were literally covered up, or at least partially, by a great "mud flood" that sullied Tartaria's glory, just in time for the end of the 1000 year church reign. The theory also claims Tartaria's history was covered up in the historical sense, its true Christian nature denied by historians. Or denied by Satan. Satan is rather involved in this storyline. Some videos are below. It's almost 100% nonsense, though here and there there a few interesting points that really aren't significant but are good to keep in mind. One crazy idea, I think in the "part 2" video (second one), is that some older coins dated after the first millennium, between 1000 AD up until the 1800s or so, the "1" is actually an "I." Coins stamped with 1766, for instance, would really be from 766. Just because. Giant humans also feature nicely into this, which you can see in the 3rd video below. I don't take this stuff seriously. It's more entertainment, a story, to me, than anything else. But it is something to take note of. |