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Jerusalem as placeholder for Constantinople and Moscow?

According to Doctor Fomenko, the city that we know today as Jerusalem was known prior to the seventeenth century as the nondescript Ottoman village of Al-Quds in the ottoman province of Palestine. It is also likely that Jerusalem wasn't named "Al-Quds" that is "the holy", before Scaliger decided it would have been the "Holy city" of "Jerusalem". The biblical "Palestine" is probably the Palatina, along the Rhine, between Basel, where Erasmus Rotterdamus wrote the "New-Testament", and between his hometown Rotterdam. First complete edition of the New Testament, including Apocalypse was published by Erasmus as late as 1515 AD in Basel, Switzerland. The very word "Rome" is a placeholder and can signify any one of several different cities and kingdoms. The "First Rome" or "Ancient Rome" or "Mizraim" is an ancient Egyptian kingdom in the delta of the Nile with its capital in Alexandria. The second and most famous "New Rome" is Constantinople, that is called Istanbul today. The third "Rome" is constituted by three different cities: Constantinople, Rome in Italy, allegedly founded by Aeneas, and Moscow. Moscow, which Orthodox scholars have named the third Rome was the capital of the great "Russian Horde". The word "Jerusalem" is actually a placeholder rather than a physical location and can refer to different cities at different times, for example to Constantinople of twelfth to fifteenth century, or Moscow in fourteenth to fifteenth century.

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