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Key Facts |
| Location |
56° 20' N, 44° 0′ E |
| Original Name |
Ninevah |
| Year Founded |
760/770 |
| Founders |
Khagan Bek Aaron (Rurik) 760-800 |
| Location Function |
New Capital of the Khazars |
| Etymology |
"Great City" the reformation of the Biblical "Ninevah" |
| Name Change |
Novgorod |
| Etymology |
Russian for "Great (New) City." |
| Year Changed |
13th Century, then changed again to Nizhny Novgorod around 17th century to hide its true origin. |
| Change Group |
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Novgorod (deliberately and falsely renamed Nizhny Novgorod or "Lower Novgorod") is located in central Russia, at the upper reaches of the great Volga River where it meets the Oka River tributary. Today it is regarded as the fourth largest city in Russia. However, its true (and deliberately hidden) significance is as the first official capital of the Khazar Rus--the god priest kings who went on to rule Russia until the beginning of the 20th Century. |
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The Khazar civil war of the 8th Century |
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During the early part of the 8th Century, following the death of the great Sarmatian Jewish Khagan Zachariah, a civil war erupted amongst his sons and major family tribes of the Khazars. |
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The same period of history witnessed a significant number of simultanous events including the rapid climate change of much of Western Asia to desert, the complete collapse of the Umayyad Empire, and the split of the Khazars into the Magyars, the Bulgars and the Bulgar split to form the Abbasids. |
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Prince Aaron, also known as Rurik (a norse name applied some centuries later to hide his Jewish Biblican name and heritage) of the main Khazar Priest-Kings abandoned his capital of Samara (Odessa) and travelled up the Volga River to the present day location of Novgorod (Nizhny Novgorod) -- naming it Ninevah the famous Biblical city also known as "Great City". The name "Novgorod" is a word play on this original name, retaining the meaning of "great city" while hiding its original name. |
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It appears Novgorod remained the capital of the Khazar Rus until the reign of the grandson of Aaron whose name was Yisrael (Igor) around 843, when he chose to construct a new city called Bet She'an (Belgorod) as the new capital of the Rus. |
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The name Novgorod |
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The original name Novgorod was changed to Nizhnii Novgorod (meaning lower Novgorod) around the 14th century and a new "north-eastern" location was selected principally to hide the obvious Khazar origin of the city and protect the forgery of the Primary Russian Chronicles. |
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By the 17th Century, it would have been obvious to scholars and readers that no "Viking" prince could possibly have founded a capital so far East and South in Russia-- therefore the heavily doctored Russian Chronicles of Nestor would be easily exposed as forgeries. However, a far more easterly location would help eliminate greater suspicion. |
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Again to hide the history of the Russian Sarmatian bloodlines, the false history is included that the Khazars moved to create Kiev as their new capital at this time-- a deliberate lie designed to hide the history of Belgorod. |
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The city defences were reinforced under the reign of Grand Duke Yuri of Russia in 1221 and the city defended from the attacks by Purgaz from Arzamas in January 1229. In some historical accounts it is claimed the city fell in March 1238 to the Mongols, yet this needs to be discounted in the whole context of the creation of a duplicate fale history of a Novgorod several hundred miles West to hide ancient Russian history. |
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In evidence that highlights these apparant contradictions, the Mongol Khan recognized the city as the capital of the Vladimir - Suzdal Principality in 1264. It was in this city that the forgery known as the Laurentian Codex purportedly a copy of a claimed history known as the "Russian Primary Chroncile" was created under Grand Duke Dmitry Konstantinovich (1323-1383) no later than 1377. |
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The city suffered destruction under Crimean Tatar chief Edigu in 1408. However, the Muscovites ordered the city not only to be rebuilt but with massive defences to ensure such an event could not re-occur. |
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It was under the supervision of Peter the Italian a "kremlin" was built from 1508-1511 -- an enormous red-brick citadel that withstood two massive Tartar seiges in 1520 and 1536. |
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In 1612, the so-called national militia, gathered by a local merchant, Kuzma Minin, and commanded by Knyaz Dmitry Pozharsky expelled the Polish troops from Moscow, thus putting an end to the "Time of Troubles" and establishing the rule of the Romanov dynasty. |
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In the 17th century, the city prospered commercially and was chosen by the Stroganovs (the wealthiest merchant family of Russia) as a base for their operations. A particular style of architecture and icon painting, known as the Stroganov style, developed there at the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries. |
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Under the tyrannical reign of Fr Joseph Stalin SJ, the city was renamed Gorky -- a name it retained until 1991. |
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