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noah research facts

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NUNAMNIR Nabonidus nebuschadnezzars son

According to the king-lists, the history of Sumeria goes back to the creation of man with 10 generations from Adam (or Adapa) to Noah, a Chaldean Monarch

The 10 generations (ancestral kings or ur-kings...Methuselah among them) covered a span of 456,000 years (the Sumerian record only covers eight of the ancestral kings covering 241,200 years)[4

The colony of the Indus Valley (in India) was founded by the Sumerian King Uruas' (Ur-Nina, Haryas'wa in Vedas and Indian Epics)[1]. The founder of the Indus colony may have also been known as King Madgal (who was also the governor and King of Elam)[11]. Elam (its capital was called Susa) was a province in southwest Persia (Iran today)[12].

The Sumerian King Uruas' (Ur Nina) was the son of Hercules of the Phoenicians and Greeks identified with the Sumerian epic hero "Gilgamesh" of Erech (Erek) (Gilgamesh or "Gis'zax" being a king and Sun-priest of Bel (Induru or Indara by the Hittites) around 3150 B.C.)[1]. The Hittites were in Syria in text noted by superscript[45]. Zax (Sax, Sakh, Sakko, S'akra) is the Sumerian origin of the name "Zeus" of the Greeks King-list of Gudea and Ur Dynasties from Indian Epics compared with Sumerian (of additional interest with the Sumerian King-list is the Sumerian King-list and Indian list comparison chart[ Most texts associate the image (to the left) to the god Ea (Hea)(Oannes) who was the one which imparted arts and civilized life. However, one text has suggested that this image was the Sun Fish-man (S'ukka or Biesh) who bestowed the ambrosia of Resurrection and Life, which is contained in the basket[4]. A relatively new interpretation of the pointed object he is holding up is akin to a pine cone or possibly a ritual involving the pineal gland; the container (what appears to be a bucket) held genetic material or DNA god Ea (Hea)(Oannes)

According to Berosus[24], from the record of the Chaldeans, wrote that the empire of Babylon endured for 432,000 years prior to the Great Deluge (or Flood) estimated to be 3185 B.C.[25].

Noah, a Chaldean Monarch[23] at or near Surippak (port near the entrance of the Euphrates river into the Persian Gulf), was known under several names. Some of them were: (Adrahasis, Hasisadra, Xisithrus)[23]. The pre-dynastic Pharaohs of Egypt were Sumerians from about 2780 B.C.[5]. At the time of Sargon (Sargon the Great) Egypt was referred to as Mizir or Dilmun and his tomb (as a predynastic Pharaoh) was found at the royal tombs at Abydos (in Egypt today)[8]. Egyptian hieroglyphs are a slightly modified conventional form of the Sumerian diagrammatic picture-writing which came into use during the rule of Menes and the 1st dynasty pharaohs; they have the same phonetic values as their parent picture-signs in the Sumerian[5].

Menes (Manj of Egyptian legend) (Manis of Mesopotamia) (Min or Minos of Greek legend) erected Egypt into an independant kingdom and preserved its independence within the Mesopotamian empire when he succeeded to the throne after his father's death; Menes was the prince of Sumeria and governor of the Sumerian Indus Valley. Menes annexed and civilized Crete and extended his rule to the Pillars of Hercules and Britain[5].

Menes was the son of Sargon (who had a Queen named Lady Ash[9]), or "Sargon the Great"[6] of ancient Mesopotamia and Menes and his dynasty referred to themselves as "Gut"(Goth) (in Indus Valley seals) and "Bar" or "Par"(Pharaoh) (as referred to in Egyptian records).

Menes' Egyptian inscriptions were written in Sumerian script (not the later conventionalized hieroglyphs) and deciphered to match Menes' Mesopotamian and Elam records as well as his official seals in the Indus Valley (where he was a Sumerian governor there until he revolted against his father (Sargon) and annexed Egypt)[10]. Menes had a son named Narmar or Naram (Naram Enzu) whom he sent to the Indus colony of Edin as a viceroy.

The massive Sumerian empire split into two sections what we could consider today as Europe and the Near East (or Middle East) about 2522 B.C. thus forming the "West" and the "East"[16]. Almost 200 years before the creation of Hammurabi's Code, the Sumerian King Lipit-Ishtar around 1934 B.C. created a set of laws that Hammurabi's Code may have drew from. It is known that King Darius of Persia created a set of laws based on Hammurabi's Code and the Greeks (possibly others) studied those laws. Below is a snippet of the prologue of Lipit-Ishtar (sound familiar?): "...when An (and) Enlil had called Lipit-Ishtar--Lipit-Ishtar, the wise shepherd, whose name had been pronounced by Nunamnir--to the princeship of the land in order to establish justice in the land, to banish complaints, to turn back enmity (and) rebellion by the force of arms, (and) to bring well-being to the Sumerians and Akkadians, then I, Lipit-Ishtar...procured...the freedom of...the sons and daughters of Sumer and Akkad upon whom...slaveship...had been imposed."[18]

Sumer (periodically attacked by wandering tribes to the West and mountain peoples of the North and East), in the delta region of southern Mesopotamia where the Euphrates and Tigris rivers flow into the Persian Gulf, is believed to have been settled as early as 6000 B.C. by the Sumerians[19]. As early as 3000 B.C. the Sumerians were already skilled in writing and were drafting deeds and bills of sale for the transfer of title for houses, lots and slaves[20]. Before 2200 B.C. Sumerian priests had warned people that they could not kill, rob, rape, commit adultery, swear falsely, or deprive one another of their freedom with impunity[21]. In fact the Sumerian judges scrupulously guarded property rights of individuals and even went so far as to provide compensation for victims of robberies (even to slaves of that era); California in 1965 became the first state to create legislation of similair nature; of equal interest may be that the individuals who drafted Hammurabi's Code believed that property acquired by one or both spouses during marriage should be equally shared between both[22]. According to Berosus[24], from the record of the Chaldeans, wrote that the empire of Babylon endured for 432,000 years prior to the Great Deluge (or Flood) estimated to be 3185 B.C.[25].

Noah, a Chaldean Monarch[23] at or near Surippak (port near the entrance of the Euphrates river into the Persian Gulf), was known under several names.

Some of them were: (Adrahasis, Hasisadra, Xisithrus)[23].