Scientific plate made in 1791 for the book by De la Croix and Clayton, collected in Henry Lee's work. Credit: Public domain / ...
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Exploration Mysteries: Tartarian Empire
There is a real place called Tartary. It is an old name for parts of Eurasia. Europeans and Catholic missionaries used it to ...
The Blätterhöhle cave in Hagen, Germany, has become a significant archaeological site in Westphalia due to recent remarkable ...
Unlike the familiar common buckwheat (Fagopyrum esculentum) that thrives in the temperate zones of the northern hemisphere, its lesser-known sibling, Tartary buckwheat (Fagopyrum tataricum) prefers ...
Tartary, Mongolia, India (Malabar), Mesopotamia, Persia, Syria, Cyprus and as far as Egypt, became divided into two great rival Churches, viz., the Nestorian Church, and the Eutychian or Jacobite ...
Food Stylist: Simon Andrews. There are various types of buckwheat, but the two you’re most likely to be putting on your plate are common and Tartary buckwheat. Tartary buckwheat in particular is ...
John Dundas Cochrane (1780–1825) was destined for the sea from an early age, but is best remembered as 'the Pedestrian Traveller'. At the end of the Napoleonic Wars, he set out on a six-year tour of ...
Their religion now prevails in China, Japan, Thibet, Ceylon, the Birman Empire, and a large part of Tartary. Its votaries are computed at four hundred millions, — more than one third of the ...
If not for the Patterson-Gimlin film, chances are Bigfoot would’ve faded into history’s back pages, a dustbin relic no better known than the Vegetable Lamb of Tartary. From the Pattersonian stage, ...