Tartaria almost at the same place as Kazachstan.
That was at the end of the Tartarian Empire. The Russians had taken all of that area by that time.
Of course the "Russians" were just a Khanate (Rus Khanate, a Principality) of the Tartarians, so it was really more of an internal dispute, just like had happened many times before when one Khan would attempt to gain dominance over all the rest (Ghengis Khan, Attila the Hun, e.g.).
I'm not sure if there is anything special about that area, but it's not impossible. It's not too far from where Zoroastrianism is supposed to have been started, which has some very interesting connections to todays religions, including Freemasonry. There could be significance there? Having said that, Astrana is a few hundred miles away from the area it is supposed to have started in (Bactria/Samarkand area), so who knows. It's not impossible though. History doesn't really know where it started, when and where Zoroaster lived. He is supposedly from the same people that inhabited that area (a tribe of Scythians), though they inhabited a very large area so it's pretty tough to say.
Tartaria almost at the same place as Kazachstan.
That was at the end of the Tartarian Empire. The Russians had taken all of that area by that time.
Of course the "Russians" were just a Khanate (Rus Khanate, a Principality) of the Tartarians, so it was really more of an internal dispute, just like had happened many times before when one Khan would attempt to gain dominance over all the rest (Ghengis Khan, Attila the Hun, e.g.).
I'm not sure if there is anything special about that area, but it's not impossible. It's not too far from where Zoroastrianism is supposed to have been started, which has some very interesting connections to todays religions, including Freemasonry. There could be significance there? Having said that, Astrana is a few hundred miles away from the area it is supposed to have started in (Bactria/Samarkand area), so who knows. It's not impossible though. History doesn't really know where it started, when and where Zoroaster lived. He is supposedly from the same people that inhabited that area (Scythians), though they inhabited a very large area so it's pretty tough to say.
Tartaria almost at the same place as Kazachstan.
That was at the end of the Tartarian Empire. The Russians had taken all of that area by that time.
Of course the "Russians" were just a Khanate (Rus Khanate, a Principality) of the Tartarians, so it was really more of an internal dispute, just like had happened many times before when one Khan would attempt to gain dominance over all the rest (Ghengis Khan, Attila the Hun, e.g.).
I'm not sure if there is anything special about that area, but it's not impossible. It's not too far from where Zoroastrianism is supposed to have been started, which has some very interesting connections to todays religions, including Freemasonry. There could be significance there? Having said that, Astrana is a few hundred miles away from the area it is supposed to have started in (Bactria/Samarkand area), so who knows. It's not impossible though. History doesn't really know where it started, and Zoroaster is supposedly from the same people that inhabited that area (Scythians), though they inhabited a very large area so...
Tartaria almost at the same place as Kazachstan.
That was at the end of the Tartarian Empire. The Russians had taken all of that area by that time.
Of course the "Russians" were just a Khanate (Rus Khanate, a Principality) of the Tartarians, so it was really more of an internal dispute, just like had happened many times before when one Khan would attempt to gain dominance over all the rest (Ghengis Khan, Attila the Hun, e.g.).
I'm not sure if there is anything special about that area, but it's not impossible. It's not too far from where Zoroastrianism is supposed to have been started, which has some very interesting connections to todays religions, including Freemasonry. There could be significance there?