Other Worlds

Other Worlds

Architectural history often explains monumental Old World structures as the result of patience, manpower, and simple tools pushed to their limits. But when you examine the scale, precision, and coordination required to build them, that explanation starts to strain.

In this video, you can examine the Old World architects who built bigger than their tools should have allowed. Structures spanning entire city blocks. Stone components weighing far beyond the lifting capacity of documented machinery.

Geometry and alignment so exact that even small errors would have made construction impossible without precise planning and control.

   

Using historical construction records, early photographs, tool inventories, and physical measurements taken from surviving buildings, this investigation focuses on what these architects were able to achieve — and what their era’s tools should realistically have permitted.

 

The gap between capability and result raises uncomfortable questions about methods that were either undocumented, forgotten, or never fully explained. This is a contradiction.


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Because when buildings exceed the limits of the tools said to have built them, the most important question is not how impressive they are, but how were they constructed at all.

Tartary, a global civilization that preceded ours?


A recently forgotten world?

Came electricity & heat from free etheric energy?


Liquid propulsion?

Stress reduction church bells made before 1750, ringing between
100-130 Hz. were all destroyed allover Europe during 1929-1945.
Optimal therapeutic effects around 112 Hz:

Those earlier bells contained trace silver 0.00.8%, and gold 0.003%. Silver conducts divine breath. Gold holds eternal tone. Together with copper the sound will touch your soul.

Did traveling Tartarian casters, taught the used techniques, sharing formulas, always moving west from territories labeled Tartaria on maps? Was this Tartar metallurgical Technology?

The precise trace metal ratios, the timing, the astronomical considerations made these bells like acoustic medicine. These population-scale therapeutic instruments rung daily, multiple times, at specific frequencies, thereby maintaining population mental health through passive acoustic exposure.

Listening to it, made people feel calmer, clearer thinking, less fearful. The clocks in the church of St. Mary in Lübeck, Germany, contain 3 bells from before 1750. You can feel their sound near your heart. The other 9 only in the head or throat.

Check it for yourself!?!