Cincinnati-Old World Tartarian City in Ohio

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#oldworld #tartaria #cincinnati

An exploration into the many Old-World/Tartarian structures that continue to exist in Cincinnati, Ohio. Another city founded by three random settlers in 1788 that grew to incredible proportions in a few short decades. The various examples of Old-World architecture show this city to be a wonderful example of evidence of a previous civilization.

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#oldworld #tartaria #cincinnati
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18:54 Cincinnati had a big German population there is a historical neighborhood called over the rhine that was the largest German built neighborhood and most populated outside of Germany. Basically when you mentioned the German stone I thought of this being why, great video man ! I love learning about my beautiful city

cober
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I grew up in Michigan but started coming to Cincinnati with my Dad when I was a HS freshman, instantly I fell in Love with this city. I'm 30 now with a family of four, living happily here.

cincinnattydaddy
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I am also a native Cincinnatian. Music Hall was just one of a complex of buildings that was said to be created for the 1888 bicentennial fair of Ohio and the midstates. You can look up brochures from this fair and read about the incredible light displays and 100 foot shooting fountains. Then you can look up the palatial post office building that use to exist and marvel in it’s construction and wonder why it was torn down 50 years after it’s founding.

TradersWorld
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The more I see the more I believe that many of these buildings are from a previous civilization. I'm a retired construction contractor so I know how much work it would have taken to build them. They didn't do it with horse and wagon and with no heavy equipment, we don't build anything close today because the cost would be astronomical.

warnerhome
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Please don’t forget the fact that a lot of free men and fugitive slaves made Cincinnati their home. The workers were trained and very skilled laborers. The black population grew so large in 1829 they had to flee up north, due to race riots overs JOBS. Until the second wave of African Americans that migrated to Cincinnati again because the work was definitely here that would be around the time Union Terminal ( our Hall of Justice) was built. I am a true and true HOMETOWN person. I love this city and it is FASCINATINGLY RICH with so much HISTORY.

Babyface
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As a native born cincinnatian I have been looking into it's history since my eyes have been opened I see mud flood buildings and a number of tartianian style buildings.
This city is definitely older than it's acknowledged founding date of 1788

gregorymerritt
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We live outside of Cincinnati, and we are educated in art and architecture. The time frame that these buildings were built aesthetic was very important, also we had many skill guilds that had apprentices. We don't have these guilds anymore, they are a lost art. Also, the different styles like the elephant house at the zoo, it was built to look like place in Asia where the elephants came from. and the German style is because it is a German city.

davidbeardmore
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I never miss a Jon Levi video, very happy YouTube actually recommended one of your videos to me, very surprised by that!! Just found your channel and I'm making my way threw watching all your videos. Really enjoying you showing the buildings and especially the amazing insides of the buildings. Love your sarcasm and knowledge of history. Well what they tell us is history. Happy I found your channel. I live in York Pennsylvania and I see so many old world structures in my city, just have to open your eyes, its everywhere and its fascinating. I just went hiking and came to an old train tunnel, definitely not built by us. Huge blocks at the base, cut into a Mountain of rock, thousands of brick. Anyway, keep exploring

legomylinda
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The reason they could build so fast was simply due to the fact that the weather was absolutely perfect any time they were building. Between the asylums and civil war it's not hard to rewrite narratives...

joshuadoesstuffandsuch
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Incredible video! Thank you for this content!

Cultureshockcrew
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I was just telling my coworker today how I follow all these youtubers that investigate Cincinnati such as Michelle Gibson, Jon Levi, Jared Booster and others and boom you made this video 🤯. I was born here just moved back after 20+ yrs and when I tell you I’m amazed everyday of the old world architecture just blown away! Also checkout Hughes high school it looks just like many old world structures across the plane! Thanks 😊

FPdoubleR.
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Man it must have been amazing to live back then... You were clear cutting forests, draining swamps, building canals and railroads, building massive intricate structures and monuments all over with only a handful of people to help, setting up entire cities worth of buildings and waterways and lighting for fairs that would just be torn down right after, all while farming at home and running your brick factory to supply the absolutely massive amount of bricks that were needed to build everything... despite living in a forest and having tons of wood.

Captiiva
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Wow great video and photos, and amazing channel dude we are from here and love this stuff

harutakagura
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There are numerous castle looking structures of the Cincinnati water works. There is a much larger one than shown in Colerain. They’re all façades. It’s a traditional tank inside with a brick or stone veneer. As opposed to the actual castle in nearby Loveland, which is explicitly called a castle.

rightwingsafetysquad
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I was blown away when I learned that there were five (5) vertical inclines built to support transportation in Cincinnati back in the late 19th century. Sadly they are no more but the city of Pittsburgh still has a couple that still function. At one time they had seven built!

jackzimmer
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The Suspension Bridge is in fact much older than they want you to know. It was built in 1066 by William the Conqueror in order to move the Normans into Cincinnati, Ohio. There is a street there called Norman Avenue where Normal people still live today and there was a restaurant there called La Normandie, but it went out of business because nobody could afford to eat there. The Normans brought in the Masons who built everything else seen here in the following years. They named a town in Ohio after those Masons. It is called Mason, Ohio and was founded in 1137.

kosmokritikos
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I am an Ohio historian and am aware of its impressive and often majestic architecture. I say visit Dayton, Toledo, Columbus and Cleveland as well. Midsized cities offer some wonders as well. Canton, Chillicothe, Lancaster, Delaware all reflect your bygone perspective. There were many German immigrants who settled the heartland, bringing with them old world building skills. They were not afraid to recreate the environment they left behind. Cincy was once the richest cities in the USA during the gilded age and produced President Taft. Railroads, industry and river traffic created this urban boom. Ohioans had created an empire the seemed to decline after WWII. German was the spoken language in Over the Rhine for nearly a century. You shouldn't underestimate American ingenuity and creativity. The Freemasons were master architects and Cincinatti could have been the next NYC with an elaborate subway as well. Now it's just another city in the rust belt. "Fly over it-nothing to see here..." I feel our best is yet to come.

chophel
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As far as the subway goes, what was being dug out was the canal system. When the canals became impractical because of the railroad, the canals were filled in and became roads. I live off of one of them in Hamilton, Ohio. The canals were everywhere.
There is a YouTube channel called History in Your Own Back Yard which goes into a lot of details about the history of the buildings. I was blessed with grandparents who were born in the 19th century and raised in this area.

theresa
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I'm 20 minutes from Lake Elsinore, California. There's an abandoned castle there that is fenced off. "They" were not masters of their Craft, they were masters of the Physical Realm.

timothydillow
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I've lived in Cincinnati my whole life and I agree whole heartedly with this statement! Thank you for making this video!!

keithbaker
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