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Assisting Tucker

In several previous publications we've brought in the evidence demonstrating the origins of Russia and its "okraina" (fringes), Ukraine, and how it relates to US' insatiable appetite for other peoples' assets. For those who had found it too much of information to absorb, here is a single phototype picture of the Genealogical Tree of the Russian princes from the earliest Russian Principality of Kievan Rus, per Johan Stritter, in Russica ex scriptoribus Byzantinnis, in Memoriae Populorum, Tomi secundi, Petropoli, 1771-1779. Johan Stritter (1740-1801), a German-born and trained scholar in history has spent the second half of his life serving Empress Ekaterina II in St. Petersburg. In the period 1771-1779 he has compiled and published his monumental opus Memoriae Populorum which traces the reflections of all events in the region as noted by the Byzantine scribes. Depicted in the genealogical tree above is the earliest recognized Prince Igor (transcribed with an added "n" due to the nazal sound of "i" at the epoch) acknowledged as of AD 941. His wife is entered in the chronicles as Elga, which corresponds to the sacred to the Russian hearts Grand Princess Olga, later elevated to the status of Saint Olga, the first female saint in Russian Orthodoxy. Other rulers in other Russian principalities are being quoted, including such at earlier times; however, all of these are to be considered subjects to myth and therefore only legendary since no official records by the self-appointed global arbiter, the ruler of the civilized (meaning "Christian") world, exist to support such claims. Hence you are looking here at the listing of the first Russian rulers of the first Russian state constituted in Kiev and recognized as such in Constantinople, the world's very center of the time...

Assisting Tucker: The Principality of Kievan Rus, the first Russian state recognized by the world’s arbiter in Constantinople Ivan Daraktchiev In several previous publications we’ve brought in the evidence demonstrating the origins of Russia and its “okraina” (fringes), Ukraine, and how it relates to US’ insatiable appetite for other peoples’ assets. For those who had found it too much of information to absorb, here is a single phototype picture of the Genealogical Tree of the Russian princes from the earliest Russian Principality of Kievan Rus, per Johan Stritter, in Russica ex scriptoribus Byzantinnis, in Memoriae Populorum, Tomi secundi, Petropoli, 1771-1779. Johan Stritter (1740-1801), a German-born and trained scholar in history has spent the second half of his life serving Empress Ekaterina II in St. Petersburg. In the period 1771-1779 he has compiled and published his monumental opus Memoriae Populorum which traces the reflections of all events in the region as noted by the Byzantine scribes. Depicted in the genealogical tree above is the earliest recognized Prince Igor (transcribed with an added “n” due to the nazal sound of “i” at the epoch) acknowledged as of AD 941. His wife is entered in the chronicles as Elga, which corresponds to the sacred to the Russian hearts Grand Princess Olga, later elevated to the status of Saint Olga, the first female saint in Russian Orthodoxy. Other rulers in other Russian principalities are being quoted, including such at earlier times; however, all of these are to be considered subjects to myth and therefore only legendary since no official records by the self-appointed global arbiter, the ruler of the civilized (meaning “Christian”) world, exist to support such claims. Hence you are looking here at the listing of the first Russian rulers of the first Russian state constituted in Kiev and recognized as such in Constantinople, the world’s very center of the time...
Assisting Tucker: The Principality of Kievan Rus, the first Russian state recognized by the world’s arbiter in Constantinople Ivan Daraktchiev In several previous publications we’ve brought in the evidence demonstrating the origins of Russia and its “okraina” (fringes), Ukraine, and how it relates to US’ insatiable appetite for other peoples’ assets. For those who had found it too much of information to absorb, here is a single phototype picture of the Genealogical Tree of the Russian princes from the earliest Russian Principality of Kievan Rus, per Johan Stritter, in Russica ex scriptoribus Byzantinnis, in Memoriae Populorum, Tomi secundi, Petropoli, 1771-1779. Johan Stritter (1740-1801), a German-born and trained scholar in history has spent the second half of his life serving Empress Ekaterina II in St. Petersburg. In the period 1771-1779 he has compiled and published his monumental opus Memoriae Populorum which traces the reflections of all events in the region as noted by the Byzantine scribes. Depicted in the genealogical tree above is the earliest recognized Prince Igor (transcribed with an added “n” due to the nazal sound of “i” at the epoch) acknowledged as of AD 941. His wife is entered in the chronicles as Elga, which corresponds to the sacred to the Russian hearts Grand Princess Olga, later elevated to the status of Saint Olga, the first female saint in Russian Orthodoxy. Other rulers in other Russian principalities are being quoted, including such at earlier times; however, all of these are to be considered subjects to myth and therefore only legendary since no official records by the self-appointed global arbiter, the ruler of the civilized (meaning “Christian”) world, exist to support such claims. Hence you are looking here at the listing of the first Russian rulers of the first Russian state constituted in Kiev and recognized as such in Constantinople, the world’s very center of the time... Burgas, 08.02.2024