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Sumerian History and Aliens

Erasmus: Erasmus. There are more ancient books than the Bible. Can you tell us about these?
Kinkajou:Kinkajou. Zecharia Sitchin in his book “The 12th Planet” describes his interpretation of the translation of the Enuma Elish- the Babylonian Epic of Creation. He believes that Ancient Sumerian texts described the planets of the solar system too well, describing planets that have been discovered by modern astronomy only recently.


The stories in the text i.e. the Enuma Elish - The Babylonian Epic of Creation  (including Epic of Gilgamesh), talk about the wars of the gods. He suggests this, does provide an element of explanation for the unique circumstances of the structure of our solar system and some of the orbits of the moons and planets within the solar system.

Sumerian Cities
Sumerian Cities

Sumerian Cities inc Babylon
Sumerian Cities inc Babylon
Babylon was founded at some point prior to the reign of Sargon of Akkad (the Great, 2334-2279 BCE) and seems to have been a minor port city on the Euphrates River until the rise of Hammurabi (r. 1792-1750 BCE), who made it the capital of his Babylonian Empire. After Hammurabi's death, his empire quickly fell apart.

Goo: Goo the Numbat. We talk of Babylon as Ancient. But in reference to the first civilisations on the planet, Bablyon was a much more modern construct, postdating many Sumerian cities by up to three thousand years.


Kinkajou:Kinkajou. Zecharia Sitchin suggests that billions of years ago, a near miss collision between solar systems resulted in an extra solar planet “Marduk” tearing an inner solar planet Tiamet in two, creating the earth and subsequently the Moon (Kingu). Debris from the collision formed the hammered bracelet ( asteroid belt). Other debris formed the comets. It suggests an explanation for the retrograde orbiting of comets of our solar system, an explanation of the existence of the asteroid belt, the moon and its position on the earth and its origins. The moon is certainly unusual for its size as a body orbiting a planet. The average moon in our solar system is substantially smaller. The near miss collision between solar systems far in the past, caused Pluto to attain its extended “lonely” and unique orbit as well.

The Enuma Elish is today thought to predate much of the Bible and to have provided an inspiration for the Hebrew scribes who created the text now known as the biblical Book of Genesis.

Erasmus: Erasmus. By comparing the stories , it would appear logical to conclude that the stories of Evolution, the Fall of Man and the Great Flood all derive their roots from Mesopotamian region.. They would have been transmitted as a verbal history in preliterate times. The times they describe (the Fall of Man and the Great Flood ) predate the development of written language by up to 5000 years.

Famous stories such as the Fall of Man and the Great Flood were likely written down in Sumer, translated and modified later in Babylon, and reworked by the Assyrians before they were used by the Hebrew scribes for the versions which appear in the Bible.

Babylon Babylon


Kinkajou:Kinkajou. Although the basic paradigm of the biblical narratives and the Mesopotamian stories align closely, there are still significant differences as noted by scholar Stephen Bertman:
Both Genesis and Enuma Elish are religious texts which detail and celebrate cultural origins: Genesis describes the origin and founding of the Jewish people under the guidance of the Lord; Enuma Elish recounts the origin and founding of Babylon under the leadership of the god Marduk.
The founding of Babylon in terms of Bible history is modern history. It significantly postdates the early stories of the Bible such as the fall of man on the great Flood.


Erasmus: Erasmus. The logical conclusion would be that the modern version (Babylon’s version) has been modified in interpretation from more ancient sources by Babylonian/Assyrian scribes.
Kinkajou:Kinkajou. Contained in each work is a story of how the cosmos and man were created. Each work begins by describing the watery chaos and primeval darkness that once filled the universe. Then light is created to replace the darkness. Afterward, the heavens are made and in them heavenly bodies are placed. Finally, man is created. There are some interesting divergences in the texts.


The Hebrew scribes emphasized the concept of the all-powerful deity who brings order from chaos.. In Mesopotamia, however, it was thought that humans were co-workers with the gods to maintain the gift of creation and keep the forces of chaos at bay.

 

Conclusions:
Erasmus: Erasmus. The Flood occurred c. 11000 BC, and the first Pyramids at Giza were constructed long afterwards, c.2550 BC.

Erasmus: Erasmus. . Sitchin suggests that the Sphinx was built c. 8700 BC to commemorate the end of a war between the Gods and retrospectively marked the first precessional age of Leo. The war led to surrender by the Enkiite group of Gods, who agreed that their rivals would assume “Lordship” over the Earth for three consecutive precessional periods. Accepted archaeological opinion disagrees with this.

Current knowledge is that :Is the Sphinx 12 000 years old?


The most common wisdom holds that the monolith is around 4,500 years old, and was built for Khafre, a pharaoh of Egypt's Fourth Dynasty who lived circa 2603-2578 B.C. His pyramid is the second tallest of the pyramids built at Giza, next to his father Khufu's Great Pyramid.


This date of building for the Sphinx postdates the date of development of the Sumerian civilisation: the planet’s first civilisation (predating Egypt).

Pyramids and Sphinx
Pyramids and Sphinx

 


But back to the “precessional” periods and conceding “Lordship “over the earth..

Goo: Goo the Numbat. This seems an odd thing to concede lordship over the earth for 3 processional periods, each being approximately 25,000 years. So conceding knowledge about the earth three consecutive processional period amounts to conceding lordship over the earth for 75,000 years. As I said – it seems a strange concession.

Kinkajou:Kinkajou. The shift from Taurus to Aries c. 2400-2300 BC marked the time when Marduk was controversially due to resume Lordship for the Enkiite Gods. Antipathy towards Marduk led to a bitter dispute over the exact date for the beginning of his reign.

the 12 Planets of the Solar System
Our Solar System: by traditional views


Erasmus: Erasmus. Zachariah Sitchin mentions the 12th planet of the solar system. Currently we were identified this planet is Proserpina (planet X). We believe it to be a hypothetical planet. It does have a hieroglyphics character sign to identify it in astrology. Traditionally, it was called Nbiru.

Zachariah Sitchin describes Proserpine as a planet much larger than our Earth at a distance of almost ten billion kilometres from the Sun, with a revolution period of 512 terrestrial years. Nobody on Earth can say for sure that he has seen Proserpine and I doubt very much that it will ever be visible from a terrestrial vantage point. Yet our ancestors had knowledge of its existence.


Kinkajou:Kinkajou. Some people might be surprised by Sitchin’s certainty that that our ancestors knew of the planets Uranus and Neptune as well as the precession of the equinoxes. This assurance is shared today by many authors trying to explain our ancestors' astonishing knowledge of astronomy."


Erasmus: Erasmus. Maurice Chatelain, a designer of the Apollo space craft, and NASA Chief of Communications for the Apollo lunar missions has also made a comment that pictographs inscribing the new ancient monuments point to the existence of events prehistoric civilisation regularly visited by EBEs. He talks about the “great constant of the solar system” which he believes proves that thousands of years ago, humanity knew the orbits of all the planets/comets/large asteroids within the solar system.

 

Epic of CreationBabylonia Epic of Creation Tablet

Erasmus: Erasmus. Enuma Elish - The Babylonian Epic of Creation
The Enuma Elish (also known as The Seven Tablets of Creation) is the Mesopotamian creation myth. The myth tells the story of the great god Marduk's victory over the forces of chaos and his establishment of order at the creation of the world.


All of the tablets containing the myth, found at Ashur, Kish,  Ashurbanipal's library at Nineveh, Sultantepe, and other excavated sites, date to c. 1200 BCE. We believe they are all copies of a much older version of the myth dating from long before the fall of Sumer in c. 1750 BCE.


As Marduk, the champion of the young gods in their war against Tiamat, is of Babylonian origin, the Sumerian Ea/Enki or Enlil is thought to have played the major role in the original version of the story. Ea also plays an important part in the Babylonian version of the Enuma Elish by creating human beings.


Mesopotamian Epic of Creation Tablet

Erasmus: Erasmus. Summary of the Story
The story concerns the birth of the gods and the creation of the universe and human beings.


In the beginning, there was only undifferentiated water swirling in chaos. Out of this swirl, the waters divided into sweet, fresh water, known as the god Apsu, and salty bitter water, the goddess Tiamat. Once differentiated, the union of these two entities gave birth to the younger gods.


These young gods, however, were extremely loud, troubling the sleep of Apsu at night and distracting him from his work by day. Upon the advice of his Vizier, Mummu, Apsu decides to kill the younger gods. Tiamat, hearing of their plan, warns her eldest son, Enki (sometimes Ea) and he puts Apsu to sleep and kills him. From Apsu's remains, Enki creates his home.
Tiamat, once the supporter of the younger gods, now is enraged that they have killed her mate. She consults with the god, Quingu, who advises her to make war on the younger gods. Tiamat rewards Quingu with the Tablets of Destiny, which legitimize the rule of a god and control the fates, and he wears them proudly as a breastplate. With Quingu as her champion, Tiamat summons the forces of chaos and creates eleven horrible monsters to destroy her children.

Sumerian Tablet re MardukSumerian Tablet Featuring Marduk


Ea, Enki, and the younger gods fight against Tiamat futilely until, from among them, emerges the champion Marduk who swears he will defeat Tiamat. Marduk defeats Quingu and kills Tiamat by shooting her with an arrow which splits her in two; from her eyes flow the waters of the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers. Out of Tiamat's corpse, Marduk creates the heavens and the earth, he appoints gods to various duties and binds Tiamat's eleven creatures to his feet as trophies (to much adulation from the other gods) before setting their images in his new home. He also takes the Tablets of Destiny from Quingu, thus legitimizing his reign.


After the gods have finished praising him for his great victory and the art of his creation, Marduk consults with the god Ea (the god of wisdom) and decides to create human beings from the remains of whichever of the gods instigated Tiamat to war. Quingu is charged as guilty and killed and, from his blood, Ea creates Lullu, the first man, to be a helper to the gods in their eternal task of maintaining order and keeping chaos at bay.


As the poem phrases it, "Ea created mankind / On whom he imposed the service of the gods, and set the gods free" (Tablet VI.33-34). Following this, Marduk "arranged the organization of the netherworld" and distributed the gods to their appointed stations (Tablet VI.43-46). The poem ends in Tablet VII with long praise of Marduk for his accomplishments.

Goo: Goo the Numbat. Zachariah Sitchin who has considerable expertise in translating Sumerian literature (on clay tablets) believes that the war between the gods actually describes the formation of the planets. ( Note 11 Gods > 12 planets: the fighting broke one planet in two).

 

 

 

 

 

 

Erasmus