The 19th century could only last 45 years
Source: (
https://bit.ly/3Nlg10A)
If you believe in the modern calendar, the chronology of years, then
you cannot deny the dates indicating the days of the week
of historical events. "Time Controllers" tried very hard to hide the
substitution of historical events. They did a very good job, but they
made a fundamental mistake. This mistake lies in one detail that
could not be verified during the forgery of the 19th century
calendar. Namely, the ratio of the date (year, date, day of the week)
with the real calendar. The fact is that a certain day of the week
(say, Friday) and a certain day of the month (for example, 13)
of a certain month (for example, May) coincide on average no more
than once per decade, due to the influence of leap years. And the
longer the chronology of events, the more clearly the authenticity
or unreliability of history is visible. To test this theory, you need
a site where the "perpetual calendar" in Julian format will be
located, as well as knowledge of the day of the week, date, month,
year of the declared historical event. Let us assume that all
significant events of the 19th century were dated correctly in
everything except the year. The day of the week, month and date
are correct. Next, we need to take these dates in the 19th century
Julian calendar. And with the help of the "perpetual calendar"
script, compare them with the actual data of the program.
Visual results:
1) The battle of Borodino officially took place on Monday,
September 7, Gregorian style or August 26, Julian style, 1812.
In reality, such a date could only fall on: 1818, 1829, 1835, 1846,
1857, 1868.
2) Peace of Tilsit June 25 (July 7), 1807, Tuesday. In reality, this
is only be concluded in 1863, according to the day and day of the
week with the month.
3) Austerlitz November 20 (December 2), 1805, Monday. This
event could only occur in 1822, 1850, 1861.
4) Waterloo June 18, 1815 (June 6, 1815 Julian calendar), Sunday
+1 year. According to the calendar program, this could only coincide
with 1871.
As can be seen from the calculations, the Battle of Borodino could
only take place in 1868 due to the identified range of dates for
certain years, days of the week and months. The coincidence was
only in 1868. For example, in 1852, when, according to the terms
of the task, the Treaty of Tilsit was to be concluded, June 7
(June 25, Julian calendar) does not fall on Tuesday. Although
historians assure that the Peace of Tilsit was concluded on Tuesday.
In general, try it yourself.