SEE SITCHIN’S EARTH CHRONICLES, ETC.:
(Texts: All Artifacts, Color Coding, & Writings in Bold Type With Italics Inside Parenthesis, are Added by Editor R. Brown, not the Authors, Translators, or Publishers!)
(gods in blue …mixed-breed demigods in teal…)
In the 13th century B.C. a Mesopotamian king stated that he rebuilt Inanna’s temple in her brother Utu’s city of Sippar. The ruins rebuilt upon was at that time eight hundred years old. Her original city with temple was Aratta, located in a far land east of Sumer.
In the Land of Aratta she was “the lofty one, Inanna, queen of all the land”. The great-nephew of Inanna and ruler of Uruk, Enmerkar, set out on a “war of nerves” to force the city of Aratta to submit—
“the lord Enmerkar who is the servant of Inanna
made her queen of the House of Anu…”
She kept her house in Aratta while moving into Anu’s temple in Uruk, becoming a “commuting goddess”.
We read in the ancient text that at first all Enmerker demanded of Aratta was that it contribute
“precious stones, bronze, lead, slabs of lapis-lazuli…”
to the building of the enlarged temple, as well as
“artfully fashioned gold and silver…”
“Let Aratta submit to Erech (Uruk) he demanded…”
In frustration Enmerkar sent another message written on clay tablets…in the language of Aratta, a feat made possible with the help of Nidaba (Nisaba), the Goddess of Writing.
“The lord of Aratta from the herald took the baked tablet;
the lord of Aratta examined the clay…”
“The dictated word was nail-like in appearance…”
Just at that moment
“a storm, like a great lion attacking, stepped up….”
The drought was suddenly broken…and once again “white-walled Aratta” became a land of abundant grains.