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- Tartary - Wikipedia
In the present day, the Tartary region spans from central Afghanistan to northern Kazakhstan, as well as areas in present Mongolia, China, and the Russian Far East in "Chinese Tartary"
- 10 Reasons Why Tartaria Was Hidden From History - Tartaria Empire
Once featured on maps, in encyclopedias, and historical records across the world, Tartaria or “Tartary” was a vast civilization said to stretch from Eastern Europe across Russia, into Mongolia, China, and possibly beyond
- Tartaria: The Mystery Behind the Lost Empire and the Mud Flood . . .
Western Europeans and Russians used to refer to a region in Asia as Tartary This area included Siberia and parts of central Asia, including Mongolia and stretching as far south as Afghanistan
- Tracking “Tartary” on Western Maps | Worlds Revealed
For several hundred years, the term "Tartary" - or its Latin version, Tartaria - appeared on European maps, usually floating somewhere between Eastern Europe and China This post explores the etymology of the place name and the various regions to which it referred
- The Tartarian Empire - Tartaria Britannica Magazine
Learn about The Tartarian Empire's complexity, from its powerful emperor Tamerlane to its many names across maps
- The Jaw-Dropping Tartaria Theory Explained
Tartary, or Tartaria, is a real geographical region It was a term historically used by Europeans to refer to central Asia and Siberia and encompassed what is today Kazakhstan, parts of Mongolia and China, and the far eastern stretches of Russia
- The Tartarian Empire: Myth or Hidden Civilization? The Truth Revealed
Historically, “Tartary” (or Tartaria) was not an empire at all Instead, it was a broad term used by European mapmakers to describe vast, largely unknown regions of Asia, including Siberia, Central Asia, and parts of Mongolia
- The Truth about Tartaria | Lost Civilization
The name Tartary (or Tartaria) appears frequently in European maps from the 16th to the early 19th centuries One useful primary document is “A New Map of Great Tartary” (John Cary, London, 1806)—a well‑preserved example in the British Library map collection
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