Did the Catholic Church Rewrite History? | Tartaria Delenda Est Part I

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  • Опубликовано: 20 окт 2024

Комментарии • 3,9 тыс.

  • @TheLoreLodge
    @TheLoreLodge  Год назад +497

    Apparently ​⁠@MindUnveiled made a response video to this. Lot of their supporters in my comments saying I “got cooked”.
    I’ll be live reacting to his video on Twitch on Tuesday, Wednesday, and Friday of next week. 6pm-9pm EST.
    If you’re one of his, you’re welcome to join. I’ll happily take your questions. Oh, and tell him to come on the live show. We’d love to discuss live, and since y’all seem to think I have him pegged wrong and that I’m too arrogant to recognize my own flaws, I don’t see how it could go badly for him.
    He’s right, isn’t he?

    • @AnonNonaA
      @AnonNonaA Год назад +44

      Oh this’ll be good

    • @nly4607
      @nly4607 Год назад +34

      It's amazing you got 90k views with this lol
      Imagine if someone who wasn't short and ugly just read Wikipedia like this they would probably have 200k by now!

    • @danhorne76
      @danhorne76 Год назад +67

      The CIA released documents mate (freedom of information) admitting to Tartaria coverup. Alittle more research before you go de-bunking young man🤙

    • @TheLoreLodge
      @TheLoreLodge  Год назад +241

      @@nly4607 it’s very telling that all of Mind Unveiled’s supporters are either saying I’m ugly, fat, or Jewish, but none have presented a single counter argument to any point made in this video.

    • @TheLoreLodge
      @TheLoreLodge  Год назад +220

      @@danhorne76 nope, they discussed the Russian suppression of the Muslim Tartar ethnic group, which still exists to this day both in and outside of Russia. This is super simple, easy stuff to find.

  • @coinwater8511
    @coinwater8511 Год назад +779

    My high school history teacher was so passionate about history, and I watched him die inside pretty much every day because he had to teach to a standardized test. Which was essentially just remembering names and dates. I always felt really bad for him. He would get so excited when he'd find an excuse to actually talk about history.

    • @last_american445
      @last_american445 Год назад +31

      Why i left history teaching

    • @lowwastehighmelanin
      @lowwastehighmelanin Год назад +12

      I hope he gets to teach uni someday. Sounds like he'd be much happier.

    • @coinwater8511
      @coinwater8511 Год назад +19

      @lowwastehighmelanin I'm not sure what he does now. He may be retired. I had his class in 2017, and he had already been teaching quite a while.
      I hope he has joy in what he does now, whether he's retired or not.
      Edit: also, his name was Mr. Ferguson. We called him Fergie Fresh. He was a cool guy.

    • @Uncanny_Mountain
      @Uncanny_Mountain 11 месяцев назад +10

      Tartaria is Phoenicia, which fell at the time of Christ. Pythagoras means Heart of the Serpent, he was born in Sidon, a fishing Port in Phoenicia. His mother recieved a message from the Oracle of Delphi that he would become a great Leader and Teacher. Sidon means Kingdom of the Fish, and the Essenes, who wrote the Dead Sea scrolls, worshipped Pythagoras. The Sarcophagus of Eschmun III found in Sidon names him as the Widow's Scion, aka Hiram Abiff, the Founder of Freemasonry, of which Tyre was the premier Capital (at least equal to Thebes).
      In 911BC Rameses II married the Queen of Sidon, home of Jezebel (Daughter or consort of Baal, basically "Queen") founding Neo Assyrian Babylon, an alliance between Egypt and Hiram, father of Jezebel and King of Assyria, and Egypt, forming the Phoenician colonies and building the first Temple of Melqart to commemorate the alliance.
      The Si in Sidon is the basis of the Latin Exe, or X, and is the basis of the Cross, or Chi Rho that Constantine painted on his shields. Also known as the Cross of Tyre, or Cross of Baal, being Ra-El, or Ba'El. Oddly enough irrational numbers can also be mapped using Euler's number, producing a Templar Cross in the process. This cross can also be seen around the neck of Nimrod in Assyria, and is consistent with the Union Jack, and Solstice Calendar found in the Vatican Shiva Lingam.
      Shiva is the Hebrew word for 7, their culture also found its way to Japan (via the Phillipines) ultimately becoming Shintoism.
      It was the Phoenicians who gave their name to the Pole Star, which they used to Navigate the Oceans using the Zodiac, thats what the Antikythera mechanism was for, and with it they wrote the Byblos Baal, what we now call the Bible. The first form of the Bible was written in 325BC and called the Vaticanus Greacus, or Son of the Sacred Serpent, a reference to Sirius, the basis of the Sothic Calendar, which uses a Hexidecimal or base 60 system found in all the Megalithic sites around the world.
      In the second century AD astronomer Valentinus Vettori transcribed it into a Lunar chart of 13 houses, what we now call the Zodiac. Horoscope means Star Watcher, and the Phoenician word for Saturn, or El, was Israel or El, (Fruit) of Isis and Ra.
      El is the primary God of the Phoenicians, representing the offspring of Egypt, and his consort Astarte represents the Assyrian half of the alliance. It may be possible to trace lineages and alliances through the naming of gods, which can be traced all the way to Ireland and the Vikings, and to Indonesia and the Americas, even as far away as New Zealand and Australia.
      It denotes Sirius as Son of Orion and Pleaides, which sits at 33 degrees of the Zodiac. The basis of the Sothic (dir Seth) Calendar of the Egyptians. The New Moon in this position marks Rosh Hashanah, the Egyptian, Celtic, Phoenician, and Assyrian New Year, the first New Moon of September, which is called September because it's the 7th House of the Zodiac, when the Sun is in Ophiuchus.
      The Phoenix, Benben, or Bennu is the Egyptian word for Heron, a Feathered 'Serpent'. It baptised itself in frankincense and myrrh at BaalBek, and then alights atop the Pyramid, upon the Holy Grail, or Alter of Ra every 630 years to take three days off the calendar during the course of the first New Moon of Nisan, which means "Prince". The Capstone of Pyramids is even called the Benben or Bennu.
      The Phoenix is found in all religions, which are all Astrological Allegory for the Moon travelling through the Constellations, as a soul migrating from body to body, this is the basis of Joseph Campbell's Monomyth, or the Hero's Journey. The various planets no doubt play their own roles as portents, omens, and aspects, this astrology is the science of the Bronze age, and lasted all the way up to the 20th Century. Resurrection was an early teaching of the Christian Church, and likely relates to the lineage of Kings (The King is Dead, long live the King.)
      Phoenicians represent the interim step between Egypt and Greece, their artisans and culture exceeding that of the Greeks, who literally adopted the Phoenician Alphabet, which we still use to this day, sounding out words phonetically. Phoenician is aliiterated in Venetian, and Vikings, being Kings of the Sea.
      The Bennu is the Egyptian Phoenix, to Phoenicians the Hoyle, no different to the traditions of the Etruscans, who saw birds as sacred, just as the Celts. Hebrew and Iber as in Iberia have the same root meaning over, as in overseas, as in those who travel "over the sea." A colony called Iberia also appears on the Eastern shores of the Black Sea, where the same Dolmens and Megalithic culture originating in Ireland and Brittany appeared circa 4500BC.
      _Phoenician_ means Scions of the Phoenix, the first Bible: Vaticanus Greacus Son of the Sacred Serpent (Prince). Then there's the Essenes, Sons of Light, the Tuatha De Danaan, Sons of Light, Annunaki, Sons of Light, Arthur Pendragon means Arthur Son of the dragon, Chertoff is Russian for "Son of the Devil" and Dracula also means Son of the Dragon, Masons have been known at times to call themselves the "Brotherhood of the Great White Serpent". The Ziggurat of Anu also denotes her as a great white Serpent, while New Grange and the Bru na Boinne in Ireland (4000BC) coated buildings with white quartz to denote the Moon. The Moon itself travels outside the Solar Elliptic by 5 degrees, which means it passes through specific constellations in a serpentine fashion that is always changing, but repeats every 19 years, the time it took to train a Druid or Magi, Magi meaning "Teacher" the Phoenix is also associated with this sacred number 19.
      The name "Pharoah" means "Great House"
      or "House of Light" and Cairo used to be called Babel. Pharaoh's themselves wore a hooded crown representing feathers, just as Native American Chiefs, ie the Feathered Serpent, they were also called the Commander in Chief. Aztecs also had Serpent Kings, (Canaan means Serpent Kings, and Sidon was a Son of Canaan, and Great Grandson of Noah) who were called to lead with cunning and guile, being the very virtue by which they claim the title in the first place; but to be seen in public as just and diplomatic.
      "As wise as Serpents, but gentle as Doves" the old Egyptian flag of an Eagle attacking a Snake is also reflected in the Modern Mexican flag, denoting the Constellations of Serpentis (13th sign of the Zodiac) and Aquila.
      The dimensions and 12 mathematical constants of the Great Pyramid are also expressed in New Grange, and Stonehenge, as well as in Watson Brake, (2500BC) and Teotihuacan, which correlates to the Phoenician/ Sumerian Hexidecimal system, which is what our modern systems of time are based on.
      Officially no one knows who invented astrology, the zodiac, navigation by the stars, and time keeping. But whoever built the pyramids, and pioneered the 24hr clock in Egypt 5000 years ago also knew the exact dimensions of the Earth, as well as the speed of light. These calculations can all be made using these Megalithic sites as surveyors use a theodolite. Specifically Teotihuacan, which sits 180 degrees opposite Cairo, and has the exact same footprint. The ideal positions to determine the speed of light using the transit of Venus, by which one can accurately determine Longitude for navigation. Capt cook did the same thing in 1774 when he 'discovered' Easter Island.
      The only culture that fits the bill was wiped out "not one stone upon the other" by the Romans in 146BC. Tyre, the capital of Phoenicia (israel) sat just offshore from Ur Shalom, City of the New Moon, or City of Peace. The root of the name Jerusalem, and was also seized by Rome in 70AD after a 13 year seige. The gap between is 216 years.
      Greek Dionysians built the Temple of Solomon (now called the Temple of Melqart) representing the Solar Lunar Metonic Calendar on which this system is based, they also carried mirrors, a practice associated with both the Magi and the Druids as well as Greek and Egyptian scholars, these Mirrors are Astrological charts called "Cycladian Frying Pans" and record the cycles of the planets. The first Temple of Melqart (the Phoenician form of Horus, or Hercules, or Pan, or Thor) representing the 13th Constellation of Ophiuchus or the Serpent Bearer (hence Orphic Serpent worship) had pillars of Emerald and Gold, representing Isis and Osiris. The Jerusalem Temple only took payment in "Shekels of Tyre" a currency minted during the Jewish rebellion against Rome. "Give that which is Ceasar's unto Ceasar"
      When Alexander sacked Tyre in 332BC they moved to Carthage meaning "New City" or New Jerusalem, where they built a second temple with Pillars of Bronze.
      Nebuchadnezzar also seiged Tyre for 13 years, taking the City captive in 573BC: the same time as the biblical account of the Jews. And again in 70AD after a three and a half year seige, also consistent with biblical accounts.

    • @dogwhistle8836
      @dogwhistle8836 11 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@Uncanny_Mountain Americans 😂

  • @natedogfb5277
    @natedogfb5277 Год назад +1515

    Maybe Tartaria was the friends we made along the way

    • @Mixmenfuck223
      @Mixmenfuck223 Год назад +28

      This gotta be the only explanation

    • @trustworthydan
      @trustworthydan Год назад +7

      It's all about the journey man. Also 60/40 bro.

    • @philup6274
      @philup6274 Год назад +10

      Bro its on maps.......

    • @tianmere
      @tianmere Год назад +8

      Regardless of what one believes, I found this video to be rather interesting and helpful. To the issue of "hidden" or "untrue" history, I believe there is a degree of that going on. After all, history is written by the victors with the victors' mindset and goals in mind. But, overall, history, as it is taught in the US is pretty straightforward. PS: You channeled my history teacher when you described the Holy Roman Empire.

    • @rasbaindechain7863
      @rasbaindechain7863 Год назад +3

      Get out of here with that Raxxla slander... I believe in the honk...

  • @Levittchen4G
    @Levittchen4G 6 месяцев назад +173

    I was so confused when I clicked on a lore lodge video and suddenly charlie starts talking

    • @rauldoukenholzlokschin7536
      @rauldoukenholzlokschin7536 Месяц назад +1

      who is charlie?i can't remember someone charlie talking, is the guy in this video charlie?

  • @intrynzyk
    @intrynzyk Год назад +886

    When people say that we aren't capable of building things like the Romans, I'm pretty sure they're talking about the fact that when we build things out of concrete, they have serious erosion damage after only a few decades. Yet things like the Colosseum and Pantheon have stood for 2000 years. We only found out fairly recently how Roman concrete has the ability to 'fix' itself, its got big chunks of lime in it that react with water to fill in any holes.

    • @TheUglyBiker42069
      @TheUglyBiker42069 Год назад +126

      We do know the formula we just don't use it because it's not realistic to use because of how long it takes to strengthen enough for modern use

    • @imperiumoccidentis7351
      @imperiumoccidentis7351 Год назад +197

      @@TheUglyBiker42069 In addition, Roman concrete is extremely unsuitable to use in conjunction with rebar in modern reinforced concrete.
      The common claim that Roman concrete is stronger than modern concrete is technically true, but that's without the rebar. With rebar, Roman concrete preforms far worse, and you can't build large (and I mean skyscraper large) constructions with it, despite its longevity.

    • @fuzzydunlop7928
      @fuzzydunlop7928 Год назад +163

      I appreciate ya'll for teaching me so much about concrete in like three paragraphs.

    • @Slappap
      @Slappap Год назад +48

      Yay i finally understand roman concrete and why we don't use it.

    • @foreshadowing-sp5qc
      @foreshadowing-sp5qc Год назад +9

      Can we make Roman Cement? Can we make Natural Cement (like fort Jackson Florida)?

  • @Trivial_Whim
    @Trivial_Whim Год назад +206

    I think John Dee taking out the entire Spanish Armada with an obsidian mirror taken from the Aztecs is a strong indication that if you didn’t have a court magician you didn’t deserve to be a kingdom in the first place.

    • @fredjohnson9833
      @fredjohnson9833 Год назад +4

      John Dee did that? What source are you getting this from? That doesn't sound real

    • @Trivial_Whim
      @Trivial_Whim Год назад +33

      @@fredjohnson9833 He didn't actually do that, specifically. It was something the peasants came to believe and used as an example of his witchcraft to justify destroying his house and research.
      He did help plan the naval strategy that resulted in the British victory and sea domination that followed, he also had a bunch of new world curios that included an obsidian mirror. The uneducated masses around him conflated the two due to timing of him collecting the mirror and the victory over the Spanish some weeks later.
      It was basically believed that nothing could defeat the Spanish Armada at the time, so supernatural intervention was blamed instead of the British ambushing the Armada piecemeal before it could gather up and attack as a group. It was a long chain of the entire British Fleet versus one to five Spanish Armada ships over and over until there weren't any Armada ships left to sink. To keep Spain from regrouping, none of these victories were announced until they were all destroyed, making it seem like they won with a fleet less than a tenth the size.
      Ergo, the wizard must have did it.
      I don't know why the mirror was involved in the story, there's no real explanation except that he got it shortly before the announcement. In fact, I think it was probably retrieved from one of the Spanish ships as loot because where else would he have gotten an Aztec artifact from at the time?
      Edit: It was from a book about Robert Dudley and his affair, it was just a footnote about how John Dee was ousted from his residence and forced to flee to the palace 'at the time'. It even notes in the book that while it's the reason the peasants rose up, it's also nonsense as he wasn't even there while the naval war was ongoing. I can't remember the name, it was something like Elizabeth and Leichester?

    • @jamiecullum5567
      @jamiecullum5567 Год назад

      Nope

    • @J.DeLaPoer
      @J.DeLaPoer Год назад +6

      @@Trivial_Whim Dee was a fascinating man; as was Kelly (his scryer/assistant); Robert Fludd, Roger Bacon... All the alchemists and occultists and magicians of the past, particularly the Medieval to Enlightenment eras really were fascinating people. They did a lot of incredible things, even according to what most regard as legitimate history. Still, many of their feats were apocryphal at best. I believe this particular story ultimately stems from the ancient legend of Archimedes defending Syracuse by using mirror-polished shields to set fire to the Roman fleet.

    • @50iraqidinar
      @50iraqidinar 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@J.DeLaPoer John Dee, the OG conlanger

  • @whiskycharlie12b8
    @whiskycharlie12b8 3 месяца назад +25

    If Tartaria doesn’t exist, explain Tartar sauce. Checkmate.

  • @misha5670
    @misha5670 Год назад +760

    My wife is full blooded Tartar. When this misguided conspiracy came out, I had fun telling proponents of it this fact. Of course few of them even knew of the actual ethnic group in Russia, so they assumed I was married to an Atlantian-type woman lol.

    • @wlodek8757
      @wlodek8757 Год назад +53

      Wait, isn't the group called tatars? We have them in Poland, though its possible that it's written tartars in english

    • @foreshadowing-sp5qc
      @foreshadowing-sp5qc Год назад +18

      What are the Basques people between France and Spain?

    • @foreshadowing-sp5qc
      @foreshadowing-sp5qc Год назад +21

      ​@@wlodek8757 yeah the president of the tartars met with Russia in 2017 and Putin Gave him a map made by William Bleu, a renowned dutch cartographer did he not?

    • @perjutsu2936
      @perjutsu2936 Год назад +18

      Don't you mean Tatars? and aren't they Mongols?

    • @isaak_komnenos
      @isaak_komnenos Год назад +34

      @@perjutsu2936 They are a mixture of Turks and Mongols

  • @quillencre8719
    @quillencre8719 Год назад +60

    Not only does he turn into a salmon but he is made human again when the daughter or wife of the king EATS his salmon form and becomes pregnant and births him "reborn" but he has all the knowledge of his past "life" and relays the whole thing yo the king. That legend is wild Istg

    • @darklelouchg8505
      @darklelouchg8505 4 месяца назад +3

      Ah, I see. The original Returner manga protagonist.

  • @TheGhostOfFredZeppelin
    @TheGhostOfFredZeppelin 10 месяцев назад +41

    I've always liked this theory in a kind of creepypasta or monument mythos kind of way, it's just really interesting to see how they form connections between things that aren't actually connected and at first glance seems fairly plausible if you just refuse to look into any of it.
    The worst thing about it is that there is almost no actual information that really explains anything, just a bunch of "if you know you know" and showing random pictures without any context, description or explanation and saying "see, I told you!". They need to work on that

    • @Dankness-e6i
      @Dankness-e6i Месяц назад

      Well that's nonsense and you clearly haven't researched anything just reached your own conclusion

  • @DPolk98
    @DPolk98 Год назад +560

    I absolutely love the Tartaria myth because it really puts on display how far some people will carry their desire to have a hidden, secret truth, no matter how ridiculous their idea becomes.

    • @yunglou5967
      @yunglou5967 Год назад

      And it's funny because when there are actual important things that are being suppressed or kept hidden and even when there's evidence you're still called a schizo.

    • @highbread817
      @highbread817 Год назад +66

      Really reminds me of Black Israelites, but for Irish people

    • @yeetus_reetus_deeleetus
      @yeetus_reetus_deeleetus Год назад +11

      Gnosisim never dies out does it

    • @Mvanhouten83
      @Mvanhouten83 Год назад +19

      @@highbread817lmaoo why is this so accurate

    • @osirisatot19
      @osirisatot19 Год назад +55

      My brother seems to think this is real, but got very angry when I pointed out that if you are going to erase history and change things, how do you miss everything but maps? Maps would be the first thing you would change or get rid of.

  • @witchsbrewconjurings
    @witchsbrewconjurings Год назад +97

    What got me interested in history, was my 8th grade history teacher. We where learning about WWII and everyone walked in to class one day to find that the teacher had turned the class into a mini battlefield. The tables created trenches on both sides of the room and the middle was no man's land. We had to throw paper balls at the opposing side, and anyone that got hit was considered dead and had to go stand in the hall. I pretty sure it was just an excuse to goof off but it made learning about a graphic time in history a little more barrable for a bunch of middle schoolers.

    • @AvrageAndy
      @AvrageAndy Год назад +10

      I think VR could expand on this type of teaching. Like you’ll actually be in the trenches. Bombs falling, machine gun rounds wizzing by.

    • @the7thseven873
      @the7thseven873 11 месяцев назад +6

      That sounds cool. Real good technique to teach history. Man was a genius

    • @katherinecarpenter4677
      @katherinecarpenter4677 10 месяцев назад +5

      That's the kind of teachers we need now. I had teachers back in the 60's that would do that! I was fortunate to grow up on a peninsula in VA. So got to go on field trips to Yorktown where Cornwallis surrendered to Washington and there's still buildings with cannon balls in the walls and Jamestown and colonial Williamsburg. I highly recommend these places to this day to take kids on vacation. I'm 63 now but when I was young there was still the remains of an Indian village on the banks of the York River which was way cool. Colonial parkway between youktown and wbg. You can still see remnants of original homesites. Pretty awesome

    • @stoptrudeau42
      @stoptrudeau42 8 месяцев назад +2

      ​@AvrageAndy ya let's do VR then eat bugs in our pod while owning nothing.

    • @iNCoMpeTeNtplAyS
      @iNCoMpeTeNtplAyS 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@AvrageAndy the vr shifts because you took methamphetamine,it's lovely

  • @EvaDelutis
    @EvaDelutis 8 месяцев назад +20

    This vid is a wonderful example of, when in our "gullible people believe the weirdest things" world, those who know nothing about stuff are easily refuted by those who actually know a whole lot about stuff. Well done Aiden! I knew nothing about this but as usual, you've taught me about the subject in a way that's super interesting and informative.

    • @bentheten874
      @bentheten874 8 месяцев назад +8

      how about you do your own research also, instead of blatantly believing everything someone online says.

    • @selokin3974
      @selokin3974 7 месяцев назад +9

      Wouldn't you fall in that same "gullible" category by blindly believing what he's saying?

    • @Giothecreator3
      @Giothecreator3 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@bentheten874I mean they believe in moon landing that’s all I have to say 😊

    • @Ad_Astrum1121
      @Ad_Astrum1121 5 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@bentheten874 Actually you have a really good point; it is always good to do your own research.
      However, their point was he explains the details really well and in depth to make it consumable and takes 10+ hours of reading into 1-2 hour videos, but to add more points to Lore Lodge's credit he brings up actual known sources when applicable, when he doesn't what he says can be fact checked easily with more then 2 minutes of searching and those sources can be fact checked by checking where the info comes from or he states it is his opinion based on the known facts, when he has got something wrong in the past he has admitted it which is more then I can say for any conspiracy theorists I've met(which is is way more then I'd like), and he discredits the sources used to "prove" what he is explaining the reality behind instead of just telling them to believe his point, so even if they don't agree with his point they understand that the other belief is still wrong because the basis of their idea just doesn't work.
      So overall if you're going to blindly follow what someone online tells you and it's between one trying to get you to believe everything historians have found to be as accurate as they can get for this moment in time is just wrong and they are all idiots despite actually studying it and doing the research or the man who never goes out of his way to make crazy claims, explains all of his points clearly without accidentally discrediting other things he's said before hand, admits when he's wrong, tells people when he is unqualified for talking on the next subject due to being further out from his general knowledge, he also tells people when what he is saying is unproven and just his conclusion with the proven evidence he has found, and to top it all off he is just overall really consistent with what he's saying. I'd take my chances with the latter.
      Now I personally do neither, I just find these types of videos very interesting and enjoy his content because he goes in depth and when it does catch my interest I do more research myself which he makes easier with sources related to specifically what he's talking about and only using easily checked facts. See I base my reality off of what I can visually know, because obviously, or what I have gone out of my way to understand, the idea behind it, where it comes from and any opposing ideas then follow what I feel is correct with the most evidence and general believability. I'm a heavily distrustful person and my sisters manipulated multiple people when I was a kid so I'm good at spotting the signs of untrustworthy information or just people.

    • @andrewspicer6399
      @andrewspicer6399 4 месяца назад +1

      Dude saying someone else is wrong doesn't make you right. His whole argument is just personal conjecture and without obsessively "disproving" other people has no actual argument or proof even and everything he says is a guess or probability he concludes. He Goes "this guy thinks this but he's wrong because of x, and this other guy thinks a different thing but he's wrong because of y, then he cherry picks things that closely resemble one another and makes personal anecdotes and opinions about them by changing them to construct his narrative and saying everyone is wrong and what I have decided is truth. He extrapolates his reasons from Any and every source imaginable throughout history and uses Google to support his ideas when in reality the people from the area he is discussing would all have different and varying truths and recollections and histories...he hasn't shown any proof for anything. He just shows someone else's opinion with some pictures someone else drew or painted and goes , this is common sense and obviously this happened because it's possible and no one else can be right because of something someone else says..without the use of someone else's opinion to disprove another person's opinion, he literally has no proof and simply says obviously "this didn't happen, but sometimes it does, and even those so and so has a real good point that actually supports itself with modern notions and understandings of evil people and events and groups that have every reason to lie and had the power to rewrite history, simply saying the persons ideas while shaking your head left and right and squinting your eyes is enough proof to dismiss them completely and use whatever theory he found most plausible based off his Google searches

  • @fpsmarshall123
    @fpsmarshall123 Год назад +60

    WE WUZ LEPRECHAUNS 'N SHIEET

  • @comhaltacht315
    @comhaltacht315 Год назад +350

    Fun fact about the Seattle image that he used, all of Seattle used to be one floor below where it currently stands. When Seattle was first built, it was done so by people with no understanding of engineering or city planning, so the city would flood whenever it rained. After the great Seattle fire that burned 33 blocks of the city, they decided to rebuild it properly. So they started literally piling on dirt until the streets were about ten feet higher than before, this gave the city a "waffle iron" appearance, where the streets were considerably higher than the sidewalks.
    This became a problem because people would fall off the road to their deaths on the sidewalks below. The city officially dubbed these deaths "Involuntary Suicide" This problem was solved by building new sidewalks at street-level, and paving them with glass in some sections so light could still get into the original sidewalks below. While most shops just moved their store-fronts up a floor, some couldn't afford it and stayed below, and soon the underground became a haven for anything "disorderly"

    • @jimboscooter432
      @jimboscooter432 Год назад +29

      They should've never rebuilt it

    • @simpublic89
      @simpublic89 Год назад +26

      WHAT

    • @texaskc
      @texaskc Год назад +27

      If I remember properly they also did something similar in Chicago.

    • @Bunchoeves
      @Bunchoeves Год назад +20

      Believe Sacramento also rebuilt streets a story higher as well.

    • @t.n.1116
      @t.n.1116 Год назад +7

      ​@Sam BANKman Heeb 💀💀

  • @cuprite3430
    @cuprite3430 Год назад +20

    “Your astrologer or alchemist was not a court wizard” Tragic, that would have been awesome

  • @kayleehog
    @kayleehog Год назад +209

    I told my sister you did a video on the tartaria “theory” and she having never heard of it said “is that where we get the name of tartar sauce?” And I laughed so hard I almost choked on a soda.

    • @drak_darippa
      @drak_darippa Год назад +15

      it is tho

    • @kpal2946
      @kpal2946 Год назад +17

      Tartar sauce was first used as a mortar to solidify the underground buildings, until one day a worker spilled some on his lunch.

    • @janemiettinen5176
      @janemiettinen5176 Год назад +13

      They ate only raw food, hence beef tartar. I would be great at this make believe stuff..

    • @rotisseriebear5394
      @rotisseriebear5394 Год назад +6

      @@janemiettinen5176 That's actually a legit argument for Tartaria. Some day, after the next reset, someone will be eating Yorkshire pudding, and the lightbulb will light up over his head. Everyone else will call him crazy to suggest that an island nation could have been at one time the global super power that claimed that the sun never set on their flag.

    • @jimboscooter432
      @jimboscooter432 Год назад

      Chicks really are as dumb as a bag of rocks

  • @Llynethil
    @Llynethil Год назад +52

    I think the druid thing comes from how romans did target them, but it was because druids were the history and storykeepers of their tribes essentially, wipe out the history of a tribe makes it a hell of a lot easier to assimilate them into your empire and lessens chance of revolts.

    • @AlexisVolk97
      @AlexisVolk97 6 месяцев назад +4

      It's more a part of their killing of authority figures in the conquered, as most cultures never separeted religious and political power (faz and ius) at least not fully. So killing isolated priests was easy enough to avoid future rebellions the could theoretically lead.

  • @arejaybee
    @arejaybee Год назад +9

    In repsonse to the end of your video, I think that historians need to give legitimate arguments like the ones you gave here. I appreciate you taking things point by point and explaining, at least in some detail, *why* they were wrong. A lot of times, I just see people smugly say that conspiracies are obviously wrong and thats that. But when you're talking to someone who whole heartedly believes a conspiracy, you telling them they're obviously wrong just serves to make them resent you and boldens their beliefs. New to your channel, and I followed the channel for the fun creepy time lore videos, but I hope to see more like this one!

  • @cornpop8586
    @cornpop8586 Год назад +111

    Imagine naming your empire after tartar sauce.

    • @cuntontheweb2657
      @cuntontheweb2657 Год назад

      Elite sauce tho

    • @Slappap
      @Slappap Год назад +2

      😂

    • @TheLoreLodge
      @TheLoreLodge  Год назад +55

      Oddly enough “Tartaria” and “Tartar (in regards to sauce)” are not etymologically linked

    • @danielturczan2485
      @danielturczan2485 7 месяцев назад +7

      I see that you are a proponent of the Saucist Hypothesis. Numerous internet scholars have identified the name as stemming from a type of tooth decay.

    • @garyfoxall279
      @garyfoxall279 4 месяца назад +2

      Goes with salmon I guess 😂😂

  • @goosegirl941
    @goosegirl941 Год назад +175

    I feel like Tartaria is basically America’s “middle earth” but they were way too lazy to flesh it out into a fun story with characters so it just sort of got pooped out onto the internet.

    • @hulopinja3522
      @hulopinja3522 Год назад +34

      best description of these fanatic weirdos. "got pooped out onto the internet" lmao

    • @jamesdaviesanswers8751
      @jamesdaviesanswers8751 Год назад +9

      The Irish are the Maiar 😂

    • @Poetessa2
      @Poetessa2 Год назад +7

      Perhaps at first glance, if you don't really look into the multitude of different offshoots from this one badly entitled genre. If you find good creators and there are many and go back and watch many of their videos, many things just cannot be explained away. Trust me, I knew nothing of this but once I watched several credible videos and began doing my own deep dives into a myriad of subjects that which are oddly all related surprisingly, I couldn't just write this off as something that 'just sort of got pooped out onto the internet.' There's a lot more to this than mere poop...trust me. I hate poop but find some of these topics, certainly not all and definitely NOT the creator showcased here. I thought I knew most creators but he's awful. There are far better ones which I've mentioned in several comments above. But I'm not here to convince anyone. If you've actually given it a fair look... like hearing more than this dude but several creators who discuss so many connected subjects and you still find it doesn't resonate at all. That's ok, it's not for you but, it doesn't mean that it's internet poop or all full of BS. Kindest regards to everyone,
      LC

    • @joelcolegrove
      @joelcolegrove Год назад +9

      They have the Man-Salmon.

    • @sinoist742
      @sinoist742 Год назад

      Tartaria is basically just pro-Putin propaganda because I’ve seen so many Tartaria believers support Putin and his invasion of Ukraine because they believe he’s going to restore Tartaria. Kinda funny when you realize the last time someone tried to build a nation of racially superior peoples by invading neighboring countries was back in the 40s by Hitler… so not exactly a very good look for all those Tartaria believers because they’re literally shilling the 21st century equivalent of Hitler according to their beliefs.

  • @matthewwoods3150
    @matthewwoods3150 6 месяцев назад +8

    Little known fact - Uranus is a mud volcano. I'll show myself out.

    • @rowanoak433
      @rowanoak433 6 месяцев назад

      Thank you for justifying sorting the comments by "newest first"

  • @Werevampiwolf
    @Werevampiwolf Год назад +59

    Small pedantic gripe - wood is in fact a conductor of electricity if it's wet or even damp, and even when dry, it can still conduct at high enough voltages. The latter is usually only an issue when dealing with powerlines. But it's important to know if you're going to be messing with anything electrical and things are wet - that wood isn't safe to touch). But that is actually why you can see St. Elmo's fire on wooden ship masts and church steeples - because it generally only appears during storms, when the wood would be wet (and the pointy shape of them allows the energy to sort of concentrate in a small area. But church spires are still definitely not power stations or whatever these people believe.

    • @buythegamesagain
      @buythegamesagain Год назад +32

      This was a long way of saying water is the main conductor in wet wood.

    • @andrek6920
      @andrek6920 Год назад +3

      Yep, its why you wanna cut down or trim any tree growths near electric fences for example, because if you dont the electric fences will just be regular fences.

  • @ArthurPekarsky
    @ArthurPekarsky 8 месяцев назад +9

    @ 1:19:42
    Here in my home of Baltimore, MD. is a little known "Star Fort", known as "Ft. McHenry". Although I'm not sure what year the fort was built.(EDIT: After looking it up it was built in 1798 ) I can say it was already there when a certain man by the name of Francis Scott Key wrote this fairly obscure poem while he was on a British ship just off the coast, while the fort was being attacked. Meanwhile, a certain (quite enormous) US Flag which flew over Ft. McHenry, caught his eye (which incidentally, IS STILL THERE!!!). And Key watched on, as the British Navy bombarded this, STAR FORT...(So heavily though the night. The bombs were even bursting in mid air) This was during the War of 1812.
    Some keen historians may actually know the poem he wrote that night. It was later put to music, and titled:
    "The Star Spangled Banner"
    All jokes aside, growing up within 7 miles of Ft. McHenry (at times even closer, less than one mile away) Anyone in this City (Well, at least some of the residents of Baltimore, I'd be willing to bet a decent percentage... at the very least a couple other people besides just me! The "Groundskeepers anyway definitely know the truth! :P LOL) can tell you "Star Forts" have been around for well over 200 years at the very least. Also, The Civil War, which just to be thorough, kinda sorta started at Ft. Sumpter,.. yet ANOTHER STAR FORT in South Carolina. So how can these so-called star forts, be from the American Civil War, when the war started at an existing "Star Fort"???

    • @davidjones8043
      @davidjones8043 2 месяца назад

      Good point. The star forts are intriguing

  • @thezblah
    @thezblah Год назад +184

    Best part about these ridiculous theories is that when you call them out about not citing any sources they turn around and say its because all the sources were obfuscated or destroyed.

    • @brandyjean7015
      @brandyjean7015 Год назад +39

      The mud floods did it!

    • @whiteglint7694
      @whiteglint7694 Год назад

      If it is all true and the people that rule over us don't want us to know, of course they would use their extensive powers to hide/destroy any evidence.

    • @monkeyman9856
      @monkeyman9856 Год назад

      But is that not exactly what someone trying to hide something would do. I’ll use JFK as an example. The video of the other angle of his shooting showing the grassy knoll was “lost” while it was in CIA possession. Not saying Tartaria is real but obviously the people in control destroy anything that would ruin their reputation or alter how we perceive them.

    • @proudpatriot2072
      @proudpatriot2072 Год назад

      They burned down all the major libraries of ancient written chronicles around the world. They burned down the Libraries of Alexandria. The Romans confiscated what manuscrpts were remaining under the Vatican. True or not? What are they hiding and why? They burned down all the cities for a reason.

    • @baneofbanes
      @baneofbanes Год назад +41

      It’s always terribly convenient for them isnt it?
      Even worse when they just say actual sources are fake.

  • @bobnuggit
    @bobnuggit Год назад +222

    Who live in a pineapple under the sea

  • @perturbedbatman2009
    @perturbedbatman2009 Год назад +26

    Small brain: “The Egyptians built the pyramids.”
    Big brain: “Aliens built the pyramids.”
    Galaxy brain (and me from now on): “The Irish built the pyramids.”

    • @boneman-calciumenjoyer8290
      @boneman-calciumenjoyer8290 Год назад +2

      This is from now on my headcanon, just because of how funny it sounds.

    • @balazsvarga1823
      @balazsvarga1823 11 месяцев назад +2

      They built the pyramids for Pharaoh Wewuz after getting drunk at the local pub.

    • @jeffiedone
      @jeffiedone 6 месяцев назад +3

      Lol Reminds me of that Family Guy episode where it showed that the Irish had flying cars and a futuristic society with cures to most diseases, then someone went and invented whisky and the society collapsed in mere minutes.

  • @ithyphal
    @ithyphal Год назад +120

    I think the idea that the Irish originally came from Atlantis was thought up by Robert E. Howard as part of his Conan stories. And Howard never claimed that any of this was real.

    • @sophiehasachoice
      @sophiehasachoice Год назад +18

      I think it probably wasn’t helped by the fact that we have our own island flood myth of Hy Brasil, these people may have seen it as “proof” because it was so close in old maps to Ireland

    • @martinharris5017
      @martinharris5017 Год назад +9

      Ever heard of Doggerland? I suggest you look it up. You might be surprised.
      Edit: To clarify, I'm not suggesting an Ireland-Doggerland connection, just that Howard's sunken land in Northern Europe has a basis in fact which influenced myth and legend.

    • @ithyphal
      @ithyphal Год назад +6

      @@martinharris5017 I know about Doggerland. But that's not the same thing as Atlantis.

    • @berserkasaurusrex4233
      @berserkasaurusrex4233 Год назад

      No, it comes from Irish stories about Hy-Brasil, and some similar myths.

    • @martinharris5017
      @martinharris5017 Год назад

      @@berserkasaurusrex4233 Yes, I'd forgotten about that! Thanks.

  • @darkartsbyadrienne
    @darkartsbyadrienne Год назад +154

    I'm glad you're confronting these theories rather than censoring them. Too many content creators are happy to dismiss alternative ideas WITHOUT walking people through why those ideas are incorrect.
    Your promotion of critical thinking is very important for developing crucial skills, ex that forts could be and were built on beaches once a stable fountain was laid. Simple, but important.
    And to be fair, if mind theory does take itself seriously, your critique of their work was devastating. But not cruel.
    And who really knows, but there is a hint of griftiness put forward by supporters of Tartaria. I wouldn't be surprised if the source was a creative writing experiment mutated into a very roundabout attack against elitist academia, at times known to suppress new information and destroy reputations.
    You've struck a chord of balance here and it's super refreshing. Thank you so much!

    • @JohnKerans
      @JohnKerans 11 месяцев назад +5

      Its so daft you could almost believe it was deliberately written so insanely to check how much it would get cited or something, kind of like how map makers put made up streets on maps so they knew when a competitor copied their work

    • @JerryBoy245
      @JerryBoy245 10 месяцев назад +3

      YOU FOOOLS THE TARTAR PEOPLE WILL RISE WE WILL RIRE SN

    • @JourneyOfStrength
      @JourneyOfStrength 9 месяцев назад

      Wow. Sssstupid

    • @mariecolette170
      @mariecolette170 9 месяцев назад +7

      Promotion of critical thinking? With that cynical condescending tone the second he begins his narrative?

    • @001UnknownPerson
      @001UnknownPerson 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@mariecolette170😊

  • @mansquatch7433
    @mansquatch7433 11 месяцев назад +78

    I’m completely ignorant about most everything you talked about, but as someone who absolutely despises people thinking that their ability to use a search engine gives their opinions as much validity as those who devote their ENTIRE LIVES to study and research, I absolutely love this.

    • @yugij0319
      @yugij0319 11 месяцев назад +9

      I hate those kinds of people. I have gotten into arguments with this guy who basically worships Google. He will say something outlandish, I will say that's not true, and then he googles some vague thing, and go's, "Google says this, I'm right" without actually understanding what's being said. It's really annoying when someone knows nothing about a topic, and thinks they know all about it.

    • @Dade-xo9xt
      @Dade-xo9xt 8 месяцев назад +3

      You can devote your whole life researching the wrong thing.

    • @mansquatch7433
      @mansquatch7433 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@Dade-xo9xt What is “the wrong thing” exactly? Do you mean being over-reliant on a single “wrong” theory or something? You make zero sense. If you’re going to insinuate that he’s somehow researching “the wrong thing” - cite an example so that the rest of us know what you’re talking about.
      Dumb, ambiguous statements are not arguments. Sorry.

    • @mansquatch7433
      @mansquatch7433 8 месяцев назад

      @@yugij0319the pandemic was absolutely ripe with uneducated people looking at cherry-picked examples of raw data that they had no idea how to interpret and then choosing that as a hill to die on. 2020-2022 came with the realization that there is an entire world of functional idiots who were so attached to their confirmation bias that they would let it put them in a hospital bed fighting for their lives on a respirator. Ugh.

    • @Dade-xo9xt
      @Dade-xo9xt 8 месяцев назад +3

      @mansquatch7433 There was nothing dumb and ambiguous about my statement at all. I'm sorry you didn't have the capacity to comprehend it, so I'll elaborate. You come off as bit emotional, and I understand that you're not particularly a person who appreciates when someone disagrees with you. My point is that just because you devote your whole life to researching something doesn't necessarily mean that the information that you accumulate is inherently 100% correct. That is basically science. It's for the most part theories based on our own perception of reality and heavily marginalised by our limited senses and our own indoctrination. How do I know? Well, you can easily find someone who agrees with your initial comment (like the one above), but I can just as easily find someone who would disagree, meaning that it's easy to assume or suggest something exists as a basis for reasoning, discussion or belief. I assume you don't have any peer reviewed studies published to back your claims either, so if you want to make such a bold statement that suggests that anyone who disagrees with you are ignorant, then the burden of proof is just as much yours as anyone elses.
      Do better, buddy👌🏽

  • @Trivial_Whim
    @Trivial_Whim Год назад +52

    Okay, let’s look at it from his theory view for a second.
    The forts were already there because Tartaria built them.
    That means that Tartaria had to defend its coastline from an enemy that was attacking from the sea…
    My god I figured it out!
    It was those damn pesky sea people again!
    First they caused the Bronze Age Collapse and then they disappeared only to resurface and sack Tartaria!
    We need to counter invade and take their capital of Ry’leah before they decide to end civilization again!
    I bet they sank Atlantis too!

    • @Nadiki
      @Nadiki Год назад +14

      Those gosh darn sea peoples, always showing up and ruining ancient history

    • @BombardierTraxx
      @BombardierTraxx 11 месяцев назад +1

      The Sea People were Mongols.
      Mongols and Ta(r)tars are ancient East Asian civilizations that have been aroune for a long while.
      They evolved into Tartarians after sometime.
      The Mongol Khaganate was a remnant of Tartaria.
      Mongolia and Tartaria were the same thing.

  • @TrentFalkenrath
    @TrentFalkenrath Год назад +64

    A "mud volcano" sounds like someone experiencing Taco Bell in the worst possible way.

    • @josephlittlefield05
      @josephlittlefield05 Год назад +1

      Jackass, did this exact thing, you describe. I wouldn't recommend watching that bit.

    • @TrentFalkenrath
      @TrentFalkenrath Год назад +2

      Well, now I gotta look it up...

    • @josephlittlefield05
      @josephlittlefield05 Год назад +3

      @@TrentFalkenrath I warned you, lol.

    • @michaelross1452
      @michaelross1452 Год назад

      A mud volcano is very very bad.
      It burns. Its wet and you must immediately shower.

    • @wingman3570
      @wingman3570 6 месяцев назад

      🤣

  • @Ihavemessageforyou
    @Ihavemessageforyou 9 месяцев назад +5

    Love your channel and the way you're doing your research to either debunk other's lies or to present some facts on your own. To tell you the truth, I am very proud of you, because in today's world there are not so many intelligent people as one may think, especially when it comes to young ones. And it is good to show the world that not everyone can be deceived. Great job!
    PS: I see you're thinking of changing your channel's name to "Redacted." There is another one named like that. It is a news channel with the Morris family.

  • @chidoman1595
    @chidoman1595 Год назад +186

    I love conspiracies because even when they are obviously made up, they're fun stories to hear about.

    • @davidpurll4570
      @davidpurll4570 Год назад +13

      Tartaria is no story or myth

    • @mstone-wd7kc
      @mstone-wd7kc Год назад +54

      @@davidpurll4570 Yes, it’s a complete lie.

    • @TEXAS_94
      @TEXAS_94 Год назад

      ​@SamBANKmanHeebfor real

    • @yunglou5967
      @yunglou5967 Год назад

      @Sam BANKman Heeb lmao dude what? The dude is pretty based, the moment your theory gets debunked you turn into a some goofy liberal claining weird shit lmao

    • @mikes7012
      @mikes7012 Год назад +4

      Aiden is a real grifter. Who wants to watch this guys face for so long?

  • @matthewlevi600
    @matthewlevi600 Год назад +17

    Someday there will be another global collapse and then hundreds of years later someone will dig up the Lord of the Rings or Game of Thrones books with maps and will argue that there was an ancient lost civilization and here's what the world used to look like!

  • @mridgaf3233
    @mridgaf3233 10 месяцев назад +9

    I majored in music but I've been a lifelong student of history, it's always fascinated me and I've always felt like there's a lot of missing pieces to the story. I honestly believe that somewhere in between what we'd call the mainstream narrative and the wild stories of Tartaria, the theories (not so wild) of guys like Hancock, etc... is the truth.
    Gobekli Tepe doesn't stand alone. It's part of a complex and it's not even the oldest part of that complex. The Sumerians say some crazy things in the Enuma Elish but it's also strikingly similar to the Bible. It appears to me that most religions tell essentially the same stories with much the same message: strive to be a good person.
    I think people believe stuff like Tartaria because something inside them tells them that what we know isn't all there is and that the supposed mud floods could almost make sense in the context of the Younger Dryas impact hypothesis.
    In reality, who really knows?

  • @yourfriendlygothfox9888
    @yourfriendlygothfox9888 Год назад +63

    Aiden: *speaking of Theosophy* "I still don't totally understand it"
    Me, as an over 10-year researcher of the occult: "Nah, you understand it perfectly"
    If Theosophy makes sense, you're a Theosophist. If it doesn't, grats, you're more normal than you thought.
    Personally I'd rather salute Thelema over Theosophy. Although I still wouldn't recommend shaking their hand.

    • @alexhutton155
      @alexhutton155 Год назад

      Thelema < Theosophy. Crowley died a perverted opium addict and pretty sure was what people are calling “MAPS” these days

    • @jeremyt4292
      @jeremyt4292 Год назад +1

      Ew, what? Thelema and it's creator are disgusting.
      Theosophy is inherently racist tho

    • @yourfriendlygothfox9888
      @yourfriendlygothfox9888 Год назад

      @@jeremyt4292 I agree as far as Theosophy goes.

    • @Psi-Ink
      @Psi-Ink Год назад

      So do you also get visions from staring up the butt of a murdered child?!

    • @arloeikerson3009
      @arloeikerson3009 Год назад +3

      @@jeremyt4292why are you people so obsessed with racism? Nature is inherently racist, and racism is true

  • @aspenshades
    @aspenshades Год назад +69

    Looking at that phrase that was written on the Map by Urbano Monti, you have to remember that Italy unified in 1861, and prior to that, the Italian peninsula was made up of many smaller countries that spoke their own italic langauge, such as neapolitan, sicilian, Lombard, ect. The modern Italian language is basically just the Tuscan dialect. Now considering Urbano Monti was born and raised in Milan, you could probably make more sense of that word if you were to find someone that speaks Lombard or studies the Lombard Language. Also remember that Lombard is Gallo-Italic and Tuscan is Italo-Dalmatian.

    • @TheLoreLodge
      @TheLoreLodge  Год назад +28

      Yeah, I would’ve loved to have a solid translation on that one. I looked at a couple of 16th and 17th century italian dictionaries and couldn’t find anything in there or on wiktionary. I’ll see if any of my professors know a Lombard specialist

    • @juliannacolombo5584
      @juliannacolombo5584 Год назад +10

      ​@@TheLoreLodgeYou could reach out to the gentleman of the channel Metatron. You could consider him a history channel. He has often spoken on the importance of correct translations as well as understanding usage of words in the context of their time.
      He is a Sicilian man, very knowledgeable in the history of Ancient Rome. He puts a lot of research into his work.
      He has done videos on different biblical topics. What can or can not be cross references to other written histories, in other languages,of the past.
      It's almost 4am I fear I am explaining poorly as I am finally getting sleepy...
      From what he has mentioned, I bet he could find you the right person. If still interested.
      Cool channel regardless. (Yours is too,sir)

    • @aresjerry
      @aresjerry Год назад +3

      ​@@juliannacolombo5584great connection, Metatron is a good resource. He does make a lot of effort for translations so I think he could be of some help to Aiden.

    • @thecoolestofthe834s2
      @thecoolestofthe834s2 Год назад +1

      @@juliannacolombo5584 he also says europe wasnt white and was infact black look up the video not a good source at all

    • @Concavenator128
      @Concavenator128 10 месяцев назад

      I'm an Italian from the Milan region. That writing on the map is definitely standard Italian, not Lombard dialect, which is not too surprising -- it goes back to the time of Dante (1300s) and was already used in writing even if few people spoke it. I agree with the translation given here, but I'm afraid I can't be of any help with "Jesubiri".

  • @OduThickness
    @OduThickness 11 месяцев назад +42

    I absolutely busted out laughing when I heard "Hebrew is a dialect of Irish" 😂

    • @dr.2335
      @dr.2335 11 месяцев назад +9

      Errrm, bro, Gaelic is actually an ancient language directly related to Hebrew.
      Go look into the Irish (not Celt) DNA and the Middle East.
      Also look into The Tuatha De.
      Read the opening paragraphs of the Scottish Declaration of Arbroath. Then who the Scythians/Cimmerians/Khumry were and where they travelled from and to.
      Have a fun dig.

    • @balazsvarga1823
      @balazsvarga1823 11 месяцев назад +2

      With Irish you perish! Do you think A Wyatt Man didn't know this?

    • @Ihavemessageforyou
      @Ihavemessageforyou 9 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@dr.2335Talking about Scythians, are you trying to say that Irish people are of turkik origin? 🤣🤣🤣 And I thought that only we, Hungarians, of all European nations are of turkik origins. So, all the DNA scientists, linguists, and historians are wrong?

    • @matildamarmaduke1096
      @matildamarmaduke1096 9 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@balazsvarga1823
      Just because you miss spell it doesn't change intent white shows your true colors.stinkin thinkin of the wyhit man jeez
      None us know how deep this goes we are all humans just different shades of BEAUTIFUL. Grow up.stpp drinking the Kool aid but never stop seeking the whole truth.
      That means watch read listen to all views but it still may not be while truth's

    • @balazsvarga1823
      @balazsvarga1823 9 месяцев назад

      @@matildamarmaduke1096 Az ember színe fehér.

  • @Χριζαϊων_Ζηνόβῐος

    As a person with a love for languages I appteciate your attention to linguistics as a way of debunking things like this

    • @foreshadowing-sp5qc
      @foreshadowing-sp5qc Год назад

      I like the linguistics of the Basques, especially Erromintxela

    • @TheLoreLodge
      @TheLoreLodge  Год назад +8

      @SamBANKmanHeeb I’m like 3.8% Ashkenazi and I learned that in April, you’re gonna have to find a new conspiracy theory

    • @Χριζαϊων_Ζηνόβῐος
      @Χριζαϊων_Ζηνόβῐος Год назад +2

      @Sam BANKman Heeb ... what?

    • @thomassinclair731
      @thomassinclair731 9 месяцев назад

      Now, now. You know darn well that in a few decades or so the public schools will be teaching that D. J. Trump was personally stuffing children into cages on the southern border and leading an armed insurrection into the halls of legislature!

  • @michij3852
    @michij3852 Год назад +21

    OH MY GOD
    I am 30 minutes in and I realize that guy is literally just using the lore from Conan the Barbarian.
    The Cimmerians were the ancient ancestors of the Irish, who were the descendants of Atlantis.
    It sounds so much like the Hyborian age.

    • @marilynrichardson1807
      @marilynrichardson1807 2 месяца назад

      Atlantis - A lot to be uncovered there.

    • @Capsuleer7
      @Capsuleer7 7 дней назад +1

      What would my Zingarian wifes family say when they learn she married Kothian blood!

  • @PositiveMe100
    @PositiveMe100 Год назад +5

    I’m half tatar and half kazakh. Tartaria means land of the turkic people who ruled Eurasia for hundreds of years, including many turkic ethnicities.

    • @balazsvarga1823
      @balazsvarga1823 11 месяцев назад

      Do not try to reason with Americans, they are a silly folk.
      I know you are right. But they'll never believe you, as that would mean aknowledging how far they have fallen in the last half century.

  • @smoot9069
    @smoot9069 Год назад +22

    1:30:51
    I actually have a very cynical perspective on the average person's take on history, kind of bordering on conspiracy theory honestly, but it's one I do truly believe in. The main gist is this; *public schooling, at least in the United States, purposefully makes history as bland and vague as possible with a number of techniques, one of them teaching geography before even going onto history of any kind.*
    Now, what I mean by the second part of that sentence is not to discredit geography; I myself am on my way to becoming an Egyptologist and obviously understand the importance of geography, especially human geography. The problem is that most teenagers don't and pushing the more technical side of our fields almost signals a deliberate tone-deafness to it all.
    For example, if it wasn't for my already existing love for world history and human sociology, I'm almost 99% sure that because I was forced to take either world geography or human geography before even touching world history in freshman year, I would've become completely turned off by the entire subject and it's overlapping fields altogether. Its essentially forcing a 5th grader to do quadratic formulas before they even understood long division; it's reductive, makes a lot of people confused and frustrated, and then you have generation after generation of people being apathetic to their surroundings and the human conditions around them.
    Not to mention of course, that a lot of history/social studies classes are optional in most cases so it really does to show how much the government really doesn't want you informed on the causes and effects of what happened in the past. History repeating itself has got to be one of the truest phrase ever uttered by man.

    • @noahmiller4780
      @noahmiller4780 Год назад +1

      Then you went to a weird school, we never had to do any history before world history in 7th grade. And I'll be honest I've never even heard of human geography, I went to a rural Iowa school, and everyones favorite class besides p.e was history

    • @ViveLeQuebecLibreTabarnak
      @ViveLeQuebecLibreTabarnak 10 месяцев назад +2

      I went to school in canada, graduated high school in 2017. I can only say that if we ever learned world history at any point in school, I don’t remember it.
      It was basically twelve years of “social studies” (that’s what they call it here” and it was literally just learning about the colonization of canada and the fur trade. Over and over. For twelve years.
      Canadians don’t know shit about world history unless they take it upon themselves to learn it.

  • @Hunterhopefool
    @Hunterhopefool Год назад +28

    That "oh I'm gonna debunk it" mentality is what I'm here for Aiden

    • @vroomkaboom108
      @vroomkaboom108 Год назад +3

      It's like I'm opening an anti-SJW video from 2013, it really sets in the shitty snarky mood for the rest of the video.

    • @Hunterhopefool
      @Hunterhopefool Год назад

      @@vroomkaboom108 i love it

    • @ErikPhillips-vk8qx
      @ErikPhillips-vk8qx Год назад +6

      yea but he didn't..he just said " no..didn't happen" can't debunk shit w shit talking...show at least 1 fact

    • @maxjohnson403
      @maxjohnson403 Год назад +7

      @@ErikPhillips-vk8qx Did you even watch the video lmao

  • @CrazyMorbidity
    @CrazyMorbidity 3 месяца назад +1

    I'm not great with history, but I enjoy learning about it and hate how people find it boring. The fact that my dad cared to bring me to battlegrounds and museums while also having lots of history documentaries on helped me find history engaging. I wish we as a society cared to do this more for younger generations.

  • @OpasgegenLinks
    @OpasgegenLinks Год назад +46

    There is a German lady called Hannelore Vonier. She has a massive homepage on which she collects all of the Tartarian lore.

  • @JaelaOrdo
    @JaelaOrdo Год назад +7

    Could really hear the emotion in Charlie’s voice when he said “don’t debunk it”.

  • @tonyindiana
    @tonyindiana Год назад +4

    Stay teachable and question everything, curiosity fuels life and knowledge is strength

  • @Trivial_Whim
    @Trivial_Whim Год назад +17

    No no, there were three cultures in Ireland. There were the Formian giants, the Tuath De fairies that were at war with the Formians and of course the Fir Bolg who were just kind of there forever without doing anything.

  • @iantaran2843
    @iantaran2843 Год назад +17

    I like The Why Files and this channel because its nice to have someone be genuinely honest about these stories instead of playing up the fantastical elements of it for veiws.
    Thanks for your work my dude 🤘

  • @bottled_leviathan9376
    @bottled_leviathan9376 Год назад +3

    Blimps and airships are actually really useful technologies that if done right are a lot more economically feasible than planes in a lot of ways, the main issue were having currently is that they kind of work too well, we need an efficient way of descending without sacrificing on the ability to lift cargo

    • @Houtont
      @Houtont Год назад +3

      Also a new gas that isn't flammable (hindenburg) or as rare as helium which has other uses and is dwindling in supply.

  • @mishmashmedley
    @mishmashmedley Год назад +13

    I learned early on not to engage with Tartarianites, as I couldn't eloquently explain and distill 4 years of art and architecture classes to explain how silly the idea is.

    • @TheLoreLodge
      @TheLoreLodge  Год назад +12

      They’re typically not stupid, they just know so much that isn’t true.

    • @gregorymerritt2528
      @gregorymerritt2528 Год назад

      The fact you think your education taught the truth about everything is evidence of a naive educated fool grow up

  • @jamesobrien8362
    @jamesobrien8362 Год назад +7

    Aidan that welsh uni u attended was money well spent u know ur stuff ill give u that. I like the variety u have with the vids mixing it up. the lore lodge is one of the few YT channels i look forward to watching.Keep up the good work. All the best from Waterford Ireland, Gach an chuid is fearr

  • @MurdockCakeLie
    @MurdockCakeLie Год назад +2

    This is truly a Proverbs 26:4-5 moment.

  • @XXMatt0040XX
    @XXMatt0040XX Год назад +29

    I love how the summary is literally just "Yeah it's like 10 old era things put together, they even have alchemy!"
    I can, and would LOVE to believe the Catholic Church did something so wild. But it becomes literally impossible once you start saying *alchemy* is involved. And I'm just zeroing in on the alchemy part, that summary has a lot to bite into.
    Edit: I paused the video to type this comment, unpaused, and WHAT THE HELL IS THIS ABOUT A SALMON???

    • @bickyboo7789
      @bickyboo7789 Год назад

      I mean alchemy was the predecessor of chemistry. Distillation of alcoholic beverages to create spirits was discovered (in europe) by monks who were into fucking around with "alchemy". But yeah, I get alchemy is pretty much bullshit.

    • @evyonnjames9387
      @evyonnjames9387 9 месяцев назад

      Why would the alchemy part of it throw you???

    • @evyonnjames9387
      @evyonnjames9387 9 месяцев назад

      @burntgrilledcheese. Yes yes I do... And while you say it's nothing to do with gold and whatnot it is always been internally entwined with it throughout the ages

  • @MysticalPolymath
    @MysticalPolymath Год назад +34

    I've never looked into tartaria too deeply but always found it fun and interesting to listen to. nice to have a rational and factual perspective on it though

    • @reagan2347
      @reagan2347 Год назад +18

      ​@Sam BANKman Heeb you calling people "normies" and using the word "jew" as an insult is all we need to know about how credible you are.

  • @rocketsummer
    @rocketsummer 2 месяца назад +2

    as an illinois resident, i kind of love the idea that whoever moved out here in the first place just stumbled upon chicago already existing

  • @neo_7864
    @neo_7864 Год назад +20

    you also don't explain why they tore down buildings after the world fair.. because if you are saying it was built weakly due to rapid construction then why do the remaining building from the world fair still stand?

    • @mik212who7
      @mik212who7 10 месяцев назад +5

      Carving huge granite statues in a week ? Building massive glass green houses in a week? Why is the majority of the architecture that involves predominantly Greek and Roman style? Everywhere they go .

    • @piffofdrabbit
      @piffofdrabbit 9 месяцев назад +14

      The building built for the worlds fairs were not built to be permanent structures. Think of them as “exhibits”.
      Remember, the absence of answers doesn’t authenticate any viewpoint. Ideas need to be backed by something more than suspicion to be given any attention.

    • @clifforddurbin5168
      @clifforddurbin5168 Месяц назад

      @@piffofdrabbitSo why is the Eiffel Tower still standing?

  • @TheWorkmonkey1
    @TheWorkmonkey1 Год назад +19

    People who subscribe to Tartarian "theory" are 100% likely to say "space isn't real globetards"

    • @truthseeker7183
      @truthseeker7183 7 месяцев назад

      Yeah globtard space does not exist

    • @AndyR1982
      @AndyR1982 6 месяцев назад +2

      ..... I just met someone of this description..... you are correct in this statement my friend.

    • @MattBrunson
      @MattBrunson 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@AndyR1982same as me. Was told the sun and moon werent real and space didnt exist and the earth was flat with a clear dome around it that we couldnt get through, then was told about tartaria. Didnt know how to properly explain how they were so incorrect it hurt.

    • @AndyR1982
      @AndyR1982 5 месяцев назад

      @MattBrunson , the best part is that the few people that I have personally met that believe this are atheists..... so when I asked well who built the dome? They say it has always been there.
      No, nope, sorry. Can't have it both ways. Either the world is a globe and it is plausible either Creation OR the big bang happened. Or the earth is flat, under a dome, in a snow globe on God's desk for 100% Creationism. Because SOMEONE HAD RO BUILD THE DOME.

  • @Mad_Heretek
    @Mad_Heretek 7 месяцев назад +1

    I gotta say the comments on this video are hilarious and wild, seeing you reply calmly to the rude and insulting people in the comments while also gently helping and offering info on the subject is like watching one of those fight scenes in a movie where the main character fights off like 100 enemies without being touched, it’s honestly great 😂😂😂

  • @vercingetorix2128
    @vercingetorix2128 Год назад +35

    Great video just a few comments!
    While Roman Engineering did drastically decline, tmk this was occurring even during the Empire as Late Roman's lost information of their earlier techniques from their height.
    While earlier Germanics groups did defintely raid and invade notably across the late antiquity period, Many of the Important groups (such as Franks) were actually hired mercenaries and naturally migrated into Rome and integrated. This is more noticeable of the Franks and Goths. They sort of start out with raids or as military combatants but are gradually brought into the Empire.
    And LL is correct we don't use Dark Ages anymore, Early Medieval (generally the fall of Rome over to the 10/11/th century) is the usual term in Academia. There's also quite a bit of academia on how Germanic groups adopted Roman customs and practices in the formations of their new Kingdoms (look at Goths and Merovingian Franks early on) and how while Rome did fall and never truly rise again the same way, roman custom by no means vanished truly simply become merged with numerous "germanic" Customs.

    • @MrHawkelement
      @MrHawkelement Год назад +8

      Unlike quite a few other comments, this was insightful to read, thank you. I genuinely appreciate it. So many others are claiming Aidan is "reciting lies" and it's tiring to see everyone say "liar" and have no intention of backing it up with evidence.

    • @vercingetorix2128
      @vercingetorix2128 Год назад +15

      @Elisa The Wanderer Aidan is far from a liar. generally he's making good points and the entire theory of Tartaria and New Chronology is like psycho lol. If I wanted to be a stickler I could probably find like 1 or 2 thing maybe but generally he gives what's necessary to combat a poor conspiracy
      I'm an MA student for Medieval History and thought it would be worthwhile to make a comment. I'm glad you appreciate my nerd out lol

    • @chefscorner7063
      @chefscorner7063 7 месяцев назад

      ​@Adamfaneufand late one night you hear a gentle knock on your door, after which you're never to be heard from or seen again. Muagghhhhh...

  • @26th_Primarch
    @26th_Primarch Год назад +142

    Tartaria and the whole Mud Flood thing is super interesting to learn about even though it's obviously bullshit but it could definitely be good for setting up a fantasy story or a long DnD/Pathfinder homebrew campaign.

    • @biglemonyman5956
      @biglemonyman5956 Год назад +19

      Bro I’m gonna have to mention that to my DM

    • @26th_Primarch
      @26th_Primarch Год назад +8

      @biglemonyman5956 I'm glad I could help with some inspiration for the next campaign.

    • @biglemonyman5956
      @biglemonyman5956 Год назад +11

      @@26th_Primarch he loves coming up with new campaigns especially stuff based on conspiracy theories so thanks

    • @CassandraPekar
      @CassandraPekar Год назад +7

      How is it obvious bullshit?

    • @biglemonyman5956
      @biglemonyman5956 Год назад +21

      @@CassandraPekar I’m guessing you didn’t watch the video

  • @42saram42
    @42saram42 4 месяца назад

    This video really reminds me of the passion my middle school history teacher had for history. I was already falling in love with history since I grew up playing Civ 1 and 2 which made me look up information on the various leaders and civilizations but his passion really helped cement it for me. It's really cool to see the passion as I binge watch your channel after I found it recently.

  • @karkatshipper8383
    @karkatshipper8383 Год назад +21

    I always trust the info on this channel. On topic : There is the saying the history is told by the winners so I like to think some things might have been hidden or plainly destroyed to wipe out the cultures maybe nothing to this scale but warfare goes back all the way through evolution..

    • @TheLoreLodge
      @TheLoreLodge  Год назад +11

      We’re not perfect, but I do try my best to give the most accurate information possible

  • @TheRavenLord1
    @TheRavenLord1 Год назад +13

    Clearly, Tartaria was wiped out during the Great Finno-Korean Hyperwar, when the Korean army caused a great mud flood. That’s the reason lol

  • @bottled_leviathan9376
    @bottled_leviathan9376 Год назад +5

    Haven't seen the full video yet, but as a Native American with history going back 12,000-24,000 years and a personal interest in science and architecture, I think this is going to be VERY interesting

    • @thomasmyers9128
      @thomasmyers9128 10 месяцев назад +1

      Everyone that ever lived has a history from day one …..

    • @bottled_leviathan9376
      @bottled_leviathan9376 10 месяцев назад +1

      @thomasmyers9128 History and ancestry are two different words, with different meanings! I think we're both smart enough to figure out how I was using the term :)

    • @jarrell4878
      @jarrell4878 4 месяца назад

      my history goes back further

  • @stevenwarnock2334
    @stevenwarnock2334 Год назад +11

    I had a fantastic history teacher, which is why I appreciate the work you fine young men are doing. OTOH, Tartaria, as weirdly interesting as it is, makes my brain itch.

    • @TheLoreLodge
      @TheLoreLodge  Год назад +15

      The issue I take with it certainly isn’t the question of “are we missing a chapter”, it’s the utterly unsupported claims about buried cities and ancient technology as if this is all something that should be obvious to people haha

    • @googleedwardbernays6455
      @googleedwardbernays6455 Год назад

      But your brains perfectly at peace with the disneyfied fairytales programmed into the youth at the public brain-cemeteries we call education . Gimme a break

  • @lunarvision
    @lunarvision Год назад +17

    I love the Tartaria conspiracy. One of my favorites.

  • @TwiggyMcShaman
    @TwiggyMcShaman Год назад +1

    Non chalantly drops the best sounding podcast in the world

  • @dylanvickers7953
    @dylanvickers7953 Год назад +33

    I hope we get a video breaking down the “New Chronology” concept. I love dunking on idiots who say the Middle Ages didn’t happen

    • @MikeMichaels1987
      @MikeMichaels1987 Год назад +1

      Hey Dylan, remember me? It's Mike, from the dark ages, remember? Awww they were the good old days.

    • @DUKEHadToDoItToEm
      @DUKEHadToDoItToEm Год назад

      The middle ages or the "dark ages"? I feel like you'd have to be insane to claim the prior never happened but the latter seems arguable

    • @crystalinedreams6039
      @crystalinedreams6039 Год назад +1

      @@MikeMichaels1987 right! what do we believe when none of us were actually there? what "knowledge" we have is mostly if not totally someone's idea of what might have happened based on someone else's written works that may have been a completely made up story. even if their story was somewhat true they had their bias so they didn't always see the truth but only what they wanted to.

    • @freshstart747
      @freshstart747 Год назад

      ​@Mike Michaels do u remember me we had primary school together I remember when we would get boners and race each other to finish

    • @ashleydlg1119
      @ashleydlg1119 Год назад

      en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_chronology_(Fomenko)
      Fomenko’s New Chronology is the basis for most of the Tartaria hypothesis. Hopeful that rabbithole is explored in another episode.
      Kinda reminds me of Von Däniken and ancient alien theory. Except for Fomenko’s weapon of choice is mathematics instead of outright bullshittery like Von Däniken.

  • @1000_Jeezai
    @1000_Jeezai Год назад +12

    Mind Unveiled may do a rebuttal vid but to save you and us from having to watch that I think it's best if you and Mind Unveiled meet up, off camera, with your books, jpegs and RUclips links and nut this all out amongst yourselves. Feel free to team up and make a conclusion vid together. That'd be great.

    • @RH-ds4wk
      @RH-ds4wk Год назад +1

      Oooh, that's a great idea - but ONSCREEN! I'd love to see that, am v fond of mind unveiled and would be good to see some sensible discussion of the specific points of disagreement. If LL could put his sneering down for a little while that could be really interesting. Open and detailed discussion of these things is what we all want, right?

    • @Randomjackass135
      @Randomjackass135 Год назад

      Maybe he could knock their fascist ass out too

  • @waluigiyaoi6246
    @waluigiyaoi6246 Год назад +11

    Weird that he choose the ark as a wmd when Indian traditions have so many depictions of stuff like that that it inspired Oppenheimer to makes nukes (he was quite possibly the most read scholar of these texts in modern history)

    • @Poetessa2
      @Poetessa2 Год назад +2

      Yes India definitely had the absolute best description of wmd from our distant past. However, there are other legends or even events that seem very much like just that. Many locations across the world appear to have been hit by something beyond what we are told they had at the time. Huge structures seem melted or shattered apart...I could go on and on. I did a video about this and the Cathar Castles in France. Moscow, as Napoleon had pretty much conquered the city and was negotiating terms, many described what appeared to be a blinding light suddenly appearing in the sky that they described as a second sun. It struck the 'White City' and levelled a good part of it. The casualties close to the blast must have been devastating. The best account was a French officer and nobleman who watched from his position outside the city and he wrote a detailed account in his diary. They didn't get injured from the blast, however, as they immediately left, heading to safer ground, in the days and weeks to come, their horses began to get sick and die, the men began losing their hair, losing weight , skin issues and several died, which sounds a lot like radiation poisoning. Yet, there's no evidence that the Russians or the French possessed a weaponry that powerful in the 1800s. Especially one that would cause symptoms of radiation poisoning and many deaths. And as for the Ark of Covenant. If you read different accounts of this mysterious 'connection to God.' If certain people approached it, they got terrible sick, some accounts are that it caused their skin and eyes to melt etc. When it was stolen and brought to a town, people who came in contact with it began mysteriously dying. When they got to the outer stone wall at Jericho, they circled the city 7 times with the Ark, then they sounded the trumpets and the walls crumbled. That sounds like energy/sound frequency technology. And it had to be kept in a carefully crafted container made out of wood and gold with very precise dimensions, perhaps to keep it stabilized. And they had to build a temple ...'' the Holy of Holies'' to house it and only trained high priests could enter wearing special safety gear with different coloured stones on their chests. Those guys went blind rather fast and didn't live long. So, what is it? I have no idea but it sounds rather dangerous. There are many more stories but who knows if any of this is actually true. There's no concrete proof that it ever existed other than legends and drawings....

    • @tmo.48
      @tmo.48 Год назад +2

      ​@@Poetessa2The Word of GOD says so and it is true❤

  • @xXclonemasterXxx
    @xXclonemasterXxx Год назад +68

    My favorite part was when he said " It's debunkin time", and then debunked everywhere

    • @teddscaut493
      @teddscaut493 Год назад +10

      @SamBANKmanHeeb Mind Unveiled? Yeah, those Tartaria videos are like watching flat earth videos. Conspiracy theories are fun, but having to make as many leaps in logic as you do to accept the Tartaria conspiracy is wild.

    • @brianlbeck
      @brianlbeck 4 месяца назад

      Cringe

  • @matthewholloway8703
    @matthewholloway8703 Год назад +7

    I have said it once and I will say it again. Isaac Newton is one of the most influential men of all time in both Physics and Math. He invented calculus and made strides basically founding the modern interpretation of classical mechanics and made great strides understanding optics. However his historical and theological takes leave something to be desired.

  • @purenightshade
    @purenightshade 2 месяца назад

    I don't often comment on videos, but I felt the need to here based on the last minute or so of the video regarding how history is taught. As it happens, my husband has degrees in Asian history and teaches elementary-aged kids. He is very passionate about teaching history (and science, but that's not important here). He's remarked on more than one occasion that he wishes more people had an interest in the subject matter and insists that it's not as boring as many teachers make it.
    So I appreciate your efforts in debunking historical misconceptions and going in depth on a wide number of topics.
    Semi-related, most of my experience with history was dry and boring, except for this one nutty social studies teacher I had in the 10th grade. The entirety of out World War I unit was 'Black Adder Goes Forth'. Best teacher ever.

  • @MsMtheory
    @MsMtheory Год назад +5

    I was so confused for a moment there 😂 I watch Charlie too, so I had a moment where I was like "But I just put lore lodge on..?"... Then the ooOooo moment haha

  • @TheFadedMusic
    @TheFadedMusic Год назад +13

    This whole video summed up in one thought “this one guy says a bunch of shit that’s super verifiably wrong and I took that personally.”
    Love your content man.

  • @WithTheSun33
    @WithTheSun33 9 месяцев назад +3

    I find it so incredibly fascinating that we are being lied to 100 percent and there is know reason for it other than to hide truth …. I have been researching this for 6 months now . When I research somthing I do endless research I spend hours and hours weekend and weeks reading and watching documentary’s to support every idea. I do not take any one idea and accept it . I believe that is how you should approach anything that is told to you

  • @Laoboi2o3
    @Laoboi2o3 Год назад +6

    The problem with this subject is both sides will argue their point til they cant breathe anymore neither will give in and say oh yea you’re right that doesn’t make sense.. in all fairness im somewhere in the middle cuz where and why did all those giant architectural structures from the old world just come from…

  • @umutcangun
    @umutcangun Год назад +14

    Is it possible that you examine the Chicago World's Fair without the Tartaria context?
    By that I mean the construction aspects of the whole fair; how it was built with temporary materials like timber framing and staff in 2 years, on 690 acres, on a marsh land with 1890s technology.
    It still baffles me how much effort must have been gone into the foundations of the buildings alone, regardless of how temporary they meant to be, and also the construction of the canals.
    Not to mention all the production of the materials and infrastructure required to transport the materials on site and to accommodate the construction workers etc.

    • @ZombClapzCheekz
      @ZombClapzCheekz Год назад +3

      Yea the worlds fairS as in multiple amazing builds that were temporary but some were in fact kept. Not to mention several buildings were as big as the largest we have currently.
      No matter what something fishy as hell with americas past and the victor's write history period

    • @christopherlin4706
      @christopherlin4706 Год назад +4

      Still, we have the San Francisco pan am exposition stuff and the San Diego Balboa Park architecture still standing. It doesn’t really add up that these seemingly sturdy structures get easily burnt down

    • @cindymoore4413
      @cindymoore4413 Год назад

      The Natives knew how to make that kind of stuff years ago..They used rock from Pipestone MN mixed with seaweeds and seawater. You can't use regular water. Seawater keeps the mix from disintegrating fast while setting up. That's pretty much what the Corn Palaces in SD were made of with corn adorning the exterior.

    • @cindymoore4413
      @cindymoore4413 Год назад

      The seawater used came from Lake Superior

    • @CrystalLarsh-ds9gu
      @CrystalLarsh-ds9gu 9 месяцев назад

      Plus he spoke of the zeppelin aircraft and how the photos of them docking at these towers are supposedly photo-shopped but I've seen photos like this in the library archives so library archived photos are faked. Now why tf would anyone do that?

  • @mysteriousstranger5873
    @mysteriousstranger5873 Год назад +1

    That last point hit hard for me, I never really was interested in history till I started learning medieval armoring and armored combat, which made history very exciting very fast

  • @hematite2
    @hematite2 Год назад +12

    I don't think you've ever made me laugh as much as when you said 'The war of 1812!" Nothing could have possibly prepared me for that answer.

  • @Idaho-Cowboy
    @Idaho-Cowboy Год назад +27

    Turning into a Salmon-man is more believable than the mud flood.

  • @mrs.barbarinaybarra7765
    @mrs.barbarinaybarra7765 10 месяцев назад +3

    I’m happy for hearing this and hope that others are able to comprehend historical facts about all history in how you give so much thought and wisdom about attempting to make sense of sadly non educated humans so many thanks to you happy to share this

  • @nodgelyobo1
    @nodgelyobo1 Год назад +7

    This guy is so perplexed that he has wasted over 5 years of his life studying absolute nonsense that he resorts to childish insults....Shame really...And here's the funny thing....He knows it..but could never admit it.....Jeez he can't even look at the camera straight in the face (lens)

  • @mcsquizzieee
    @mcsquizzieee Год назад +14

    Incredible how people turn so nasty instead of having conversations.

  • @TheRealXyvar
    @TheRealXyvar 5 месяцев назад +2

    As someone who knows buck-all about history, I like to play this little game in my head where Aiden knows UM is telling the truth and Aiden is telling either the truth about history to distract us from a hidden superpower we have to access the ancestors, or that UM knows how history plays out and Aiden himself is recounting a well-constructed view of history that is somewhat based on actual events but fake/uninclusive enough to hide the stuff that actually matters.
    I'm easily entertained.

  • @maxhanney4277
    @maxhanney4277 Год назад +6

    As an Irish person, I can personally say this is all true

  • @feroxta
    @feroxta Год назад +17

    I love watching these and hearing Irish words, you pronounce the words correctly and it’s great as an Irish person to hear our language not be butchered for once lol

    • @TheLoreLodge
      @TheLoreLodge  Год назад +11

      I’m trying my best haha

    • @TheLoreLodge
      @TheLoreLodge  Год назад +8

      @SamBANKmanHeeb dude..I’m an Italian American methodist

    • @sirendipityful
      @sirendipityful 10 месяцев назад

      I came here to say the same about Irish pronunciation. Much appreciated!

  • @TheOnlyCarnie
    @TheOnlyCarnie 6 месяцев назад

    At the time of this post Mind Unveiled - 287k, Lore Lodge - 441k keep up the good work!

  • @Grimkeeper17
    @Grimkeeper17 Год назад +10

    Does alot of this tartaria stuff stem from the book of jubille after the flood when noahs sons settled in ruins of cities or is this something supposedly more recent?

    • @TheLoreLodge
      @TheLoreLodge  Год назад +14

      It’s way more convoluted than you could ever imagine

    • @Grimkeeper17
      @Grimkeeper17 Год назад +6

      @The Lore Lodge well I'm here for whatever it is.

  • @HoosierDaddy2a
    @HoosierDaddy2a Год назад +14

    Now I want a Aiden and Charlie Collab

  • @lukesayers5850
    @lukesayers5850 6 месяцев назад

    Nice work on the etymology, Aiden's. I think your killing it so far. And you aren't arrogant, and you needn't feel guilty about being right,

  • @hugovomit
    @hugovomit Год назад +4

    Finally you spoked about this but we need another video debunking this urban myth cuz there is a lot of Mind Unveiled content to debunk

    • @ultravioletiris6241
      @ultravioletiris6241 Год назад +1

      Yea theres way further to go if there is going to be a full professional debunk of it

  • @shadowenju273
    @shadowenju273 Год назад +19

    Isn't basically the only thing from roman history we aren't sure on how to recreate the flame throwers that apparently burns on the ocean?
    Like I know we struggled with how their concrete mix was as strong as it was but I remember recently I saw a video explaining why

    • @shayalynn
      @shayalynn Год назад

      I believe it had some limestone

    • @EmiStar070
      @EmiStar070 Год назад +6

      Greek fire is really cool and there's some theories that it was probably crude oil based and we know some of the components and manufacturing, but it's very unknown

    • @SockieTheSockPuppet
      @SockieTheSockPuppet 11 месяцев назад

      I thought that we had figured it out years ago.

  • @birdy6049
    @birdy6049 Год назад +15

    Gotta say retconning all of history to be Irish is pretty funny

  • @patchnpaw15
    @patchnpaw15 Год назад +9

    Have you considered making a series on pre-contact North American history? I really want to learn more and would trust you to not twist or omit facts, not to mention the way you speak is really engaging

    • @TheLoreLodge
      @TheLoreLodge  Год назад +5

      It’s definitely something I’d like to cover, but it’ll take a while to put together a series on it just because of how many irons are in the fire

    • @googleedwardbernays6455
      @googleedwardbernays6455 Год назад

      You should also definitely keep paying into Goolags engagement system. It’s definitely not TOTALLY obvious whose a bot and whose an actual human being.
      Gotra admit, its fun to watch you respond to your tens of adoring bots.!!!

    • @TheLoreLodge
      @TheLoreLodge  Год назад +5

      @@googleedwardbernays6455 it’s funny because his comments section is full of nothing but praise, suggesting he deletes negative comments, but you’re complaining about me responding to both supporters and detractors. It’s kind of sad how much y’all worship that guy.

    • @googleedwardbernays6455
      @googleedwardbernays6455 Год назад

      @the lore lodge I thought of something last night that irritated me i had not figured it out years ago..
      Out of necessity, internet was used to formulate & discuss viewpoints and narratives that conflict the Rockefeller-funded and “enforced” status-quo.
      The most apparent example of this being public education/ programming.
      For a while, everyone was cool with that arrangement and we left each other alone. But, like all good things, in come the neo-cons with their corporate interests to ruin the party.
      Anyways, i find it ironic that this guy with his Rockefeller approved prevailing theories and narratives still finds it necessary to come to the aid of the status quo and ruling class.
      Like, literally Mind Unveiled exists to debunk and challenge popular, prevailing belief systems that are jammed down our cultures throat against our wills. But here comes the invaders of our good time, the status quo guys like Ayden. The icing on the cake is his acting as though HE’s the outcast with the fringe/edgy POV. Also more icing, is his type is the first to yell about “safe spaces” , while at the same time wrecking anyone elses space.
      Swear to God. Its like we cant have anything nice

    • @googleedwardbernays6455
      @googleedwardbernays6455 Год назад

      Also, i brought up the fact that you could be paying into an engagement system and instead of addressing my claim, you start in with the Mind Unveiled nonsense.
      ❤️ Someone has a crush ❤️ and it ain’t me!!!

  • @onlyonewhyphy
    @onlyonewhyphy 10 месяцев назад +4

    Mind Unveiled puts an incredible amount of work into being wrong.
    He would be a great fictional author.

    • @dalstephen3834
      @dalstephen3834 9 месяцев назад

      Plot twist - he is. 😅😅😅

  • @martinharris5017
    @martinharris5017 Год назад +7

    Atn. Lore Lodge, I'd love you to do Doggerland, which is the closest thing we have (in my opinion) to a real Atlantis. I'm sure a lot of people don't know about it.

    • @AndiCmartin
      @AndiCmartin Год назад +3

      America IS Atlantis...

    • @martinharris5017
      @martinharris5017 Год назад +2

      @@AndiCmartin No it isn't.

    • @AndiCmartin
      @AndiCmartin Год назад +2

      ur just discovering Doggerland.... lol, but yeah 😉ok

    • @martinharris5017
      @martinharris5017 Год назад +2

      @@AndiCmartin I'm not just discovering Doggerland, I've known about it for long time. I'm suggesting to this channel that they might like to do a presentation on it.
      A few years ago someone told me new Zealand might be Atlantis. I also heard a theory that the Sahara is Atlantis. Rand Flem Arth thought Antarctica was Atlantis.
      Throw a dart at the world map and you'll hit a location that "might" be Atlantis.
      The difference with Doggerland is that it actually was a substantial chunk or\f populated land that actually did sink beneath the ocean without a trace. Unlike America which is still high and dry;)

    • @AndiCmartin
      @AndiCmartin Год назад +1

      @@martinharris5017 alot of America is now gone/ Check old world Florida, great info

  • @RexFrost-p6l
    @RexFrost-p6l Год назад +6

    the catholic church is always rewriting they made Josheph a carpenter when he was a mason.

    • @TheLoreLodge
      @TheLoreLodge  Год назад +1

      Eh, it’s a bit of a nitpick. He was more akin to a general contractor. Less specialization at the time, so you’d see that people were often proficient in everything it took to do a job.