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Figures

Fig. 1. Two "dependent" chronicles show peaks at the same place in time (from Fomenko).
Fig. 2. Two "non-dependent" chronicles do not show peaks at the same place in time (from Fomenko).
Fig. 3. An example of two "dependent" Russian chronicles (from Fomenko).
Fig. 4. Mystras and Sparta are two different cities according to Scaligerian chronology. Sparta is also called "Lacedaemon," but nobody knows why.
Fig. 5. Sparta and Mystras are one and the same city according to our revised chronology. Lacadaemon is a different city, originally called "La Cremonie" by Franks.
Fig. 6a. The Seleucid Empire in 200 BC according to historians.
Fig. 6b. The Seljuq Empire at its height, in 1092 AD, according to historians. The territories covered closely parallel those allegedly conquered by the Seleucids.
Fig. 6c. The Mongol Empire in 1259 AD. Their huge empire includes the territories allegedly conquered by Seleucids and Seljuqs.
Fig. 7. The name of the Seleucids and the Seljuks may derive from Sorkhagtani, the name of the Ptolemies and the Tulunids may derive from Tolui Khan, and the name of the Lagids may derive from Hulagu. In the same way, even the name of the Turks may derive from Töregene (also called Turakina).
Fig. 8a. The Ptolemaic Empire in 200 BC, according to historians.
Fig. 8b. The Tulunid Emirate c.900 AD according to historians. The territories conquered closely parallel those allegedly conquered by the Ptolemies.
Fig. 8c. The Mongol conquests of Mongke Khan, second member of the Toluid dynasty, in c.1260 AD. Some of these territories (modern Syria) correspond to those conquered by the territories allegedly conquered by the Ptolemies and the Tulunids.
Fig. 9. Hulagu Khan's Ilkhanate after 1259. The territory does not correspond to that of the Lagids (=Ptolemies), but Hulagu—just like his brother Möngke—was a Toluid (both were the sons of Tolui Khan).
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