Tag Archives: Quotes From Texts

Ninagal Quotes From Texts

(Texts: All Artefacts, Color Coding, & Writings in Bold Type With Italics Inside Parenthesis, are Added by Editor R. Brown, not the Authors, Translators, or Publishers!)

(gods in bluemixed-breed demigods in teal…)

 

        “’Where is Ninagal (Enki’s son), wielder of the upper and lower millstone

        ‘Who grinds up hard copper like hide and who forges tools?’…”

 

        “Ur-Bau the patesi of Shirpurla-ki,

        the offspring begotten by the god Nin-âgal,…”

 

         For the god Nin-âgal (Enki’s son), his (Ur-Bau’s) god,

       his temple he has constructed. …”

Puzuramurri Quotes From Texts

Puzuramurri = Ninagal, Enki’s son

          And in the sky the dark water heavy clouds did form as Ea (Enki) had foretold.

             We bustled everyone below.

          Puzuramurri did caulk the top hatch full shut from outside where he did stand.

          So to make him glad I gave to him my house and everything around…”

I boarded the boat without further ado

And made sure that the door was safely pulled to.

I committed the navigation of the great house and its contents

         To the boatman Puzur-Amurri….”

Gibil Quotes from Texts

Gibil = Enki‘s son, God of the Kilns

maker of the gods metal products

(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….semi-divine mixed-breeds in teal)

 

(Lipit-Ishkur speaking:)

          “Uta-ulu, when like all the evil winds you rise to ……

          like Gibil (Enki‘s son), the lord of ……, the hero; …”

 

(Inanna speaking:)

         “I shall set fire to its thick forests.

I shall take an ax to its evil-doing.

I shall make Gibil (Enki‘s son), the purifier, bare his holy teeth at its watercourses.

         I shall spread this terror through the inaccessible mountain range Aratta …”

        

          “O Gibil the god of fire, …… the palace ……, as he radiates great awesomeness, his countenance ……!

 O Nun-bar-ana (Gibil), angry avenger (?) ……,

 bringing forth the great torch from the abzu, lifting his head with the noble divine powers! …”

         

          “Through the wool from a fair lamb and the wool from a fair kid, Gibil, the foremost, the right arm,

          lifting his head to heaven receives water from the holy teats of heaven …”

        

          Enlil brought Gibil as his aid.

He called the great storm of heaven — the people groan.

The great storm howls above — the people groan.

The storm that annihilates the Land roars below — the people groan.

The evil wind, like a rushing torrent, cannot be restrained.

          It attacks the weapons of the city and completely devours them. …”

 

         “In all the storehouses abounding in the Land fires were kindled.

          In its ponds Gibil, the purifier, relentlessly did his work. …”

 

          “Enlil — choosing Gibil (Enki‘s son) as his helper —

          called the (great) hurricane of heaven. The people mourn.

          The (blinding) hurricane howling across the skies — the people mourn —

          the tempest unsubduable like breaks through levees, beats down upon, devours the city’s ships,

          (all these) he gathered at the base of heaven. The people mourn.

          (Great) fires he lit that heralded the storm. The people mourn.

          And lit on either flank of furious winds the searing heat of the desert.

          Like flaming heat of noon this fire scorched.

          The storm ordered by Enlil in hate …”

Gibil Quotes From Zecharia Sitchin Books, Etc.

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)

 

To his north, in the mining regions, Gibil (“The One of Fire”) was installed, having been taught by his father the secrets of metalworking.

        “In its ponds Gibil, the purifier, relentlessly did his work …”

 

        Gibil made his hoe (al) raise its head towards the heavens —

        he caused the hoe (al), sacred indeed, to be refined with fire …”

Some of Dumuzi’s brothers, not Marduk / Ra, blessed the nuptials as well. It’s not clear if Enki responded favorably. Dumuzi’s brothers hid for in the bedroom,

         “a bed of gold, adorned with lapis lazuli, …”

a precious, blue-hued gem,

         “which Gibil had refined for her in the abode of Nergal …”

 

         “inlaid with lapis lazuli, which Gibil has purified for you in the Iri-gal shrine …”

The Enlilite’s first reaction…was to accuse her of giving aid and comfort to the “demons”.” Ninhursag denied the accusation:

         “My House is pure, …”

she answered. But a god whose identity is unclear challenged her sarcastically:

         Is the House which is loftier and brightest of all– …”

the Great Pyramid—also “pure”?

         “Of that I cannot speak …”

Ninhursag answered;

         “its brilliance Gibil is soldiering …”

…verses in the Babylonian text…have a direct parallel in the biblical tale of the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah:

         “But when the son of Marduk

         in the land of the coast was,

         He-of-the-Evil-Wind (Erra)

         with heat the plain-land burnt …”

 

         “He (Nabu) the great sea entered,

         Sat upon a throne which was not his

         (Because) Ezida, the legitimate abode, was overrun …”

Enki stood by his firstborn son:

         “Now that Prince Marduk has arisen,

         now that the people for the second time have raised his image,

         why does Erra continue his opposition? …”

Finally, loosing his patience, Enki shouted at Nergal to get out of his presence. Leaving in a huff, Nergal returned to his domain. “Consulting with himself,” he decided to unleash the awesome weapons:

         “The lands I will destroy, to a deep dust-heap make them;

         the cities I will upheaval, to desolation turn them;

         the mountains I will flatten, their animals make disappear;

         the seas I will agitate, that which teems in them I will decimate;

         the people I will make vanish, their souls shall turn to vapor;

         none shall be spared. …”

We learn from a text…that it was Gibil, whose domain in Africa adjoined that of Nergal, who alerted Marduk to the destructive scheme hatched by Nergal…It was then that Gibil “these words to Marduk did speak” in regard to the

         “seven awesome weapons which Anu created..

         The wickedness of those seven against thee is being laid, …”

he informed Marduk. Marduk inquired of Gibil where the awesome weapons were kept. “O Gibil,,” he said, “those seven—where were they born, where were they created?” To which Gibil revealed that they were hidden underground:

         “Those seven, in the mountain they abide,

         in a cavity inside the earth they dwell.

         From this place with a brilliance they will rush forth,

         From Earth to Heaven, clad with terror …”

But where exactly is this place? Marduk asked again and again; and all Gibil could say was that “even the wise gods, to them it is unknown.”

Now Marduk rushed to his father Enki with the frightening report.

         “To his father Enki’s house he (Marduk) entered …”

Enki was lying on the couch in the chamber to which he retired for the night. “My father” Marduk said,

         Gibil this word hath spoken to me:

         of the coming of the seven (weapons) he has found out …”

Telling his father the bad news, he urged his all-knowing father:

         “Their place to search out, do hasten thou! …”

Enki spoke out strongly against the idea, urging steps to stop Nergal, for the use of the weapons, he pointed out,

         “the lands will make desolate, the people will make perish. …”

Nergal Quotes From Texts

in some texts Nergal is Enlil‘s & Ninlil’s son: in some texts Nergal is Enki’s & Inanna‘s son:

 

(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 bluemixed-breed demigods in teal…)

 

Nergal as son to Enlil & Ninlil:

        “Lord who, like his own father Nunamnir (Enlil)… , has the power to create life,

        Nergal, enduring house (?), great shrine — you are the junior Enlil!

        It is in your power to determine destinies, to render judgments and to make decisions,…”

 

         “Lord, you have avenged Enlil! He has calmed the heart of his father!

         Nergal the strong, son who subdues the foreign lands for Nunamnir:

         may you assist in battle, furious fight and combat the shepherd whom An (Anu) has chosen among the numerous people,

         the good and exalted youth of the Great Mountain (= Enlil) –– 

         Cu-ilicu (Shu-ilishu), who publicly performs the purification rites, born of Ninlil!

          Nergal, catch his malefactors for him like small birds!”

 

           Nergal, single-handed crusher, who tortures the disobedient, fearsome terror of the Land,

          respected lord and hero, established offspring of Nunamnir……!

          Nergal, who sprinkles cool water on the angry heart of Enlil, great lord ……!”

 

          Nergal, your supremacy in the rebel lands!

          Your father loves you greatly.

          He has made your heroism known among the people.

          Your father Enlil loves you greatly’ …”

 

           “Nergal, hero, after your father begot you,

           your father Enlil bestowed on you the mountain of the earth and all of the people.

           He definitively handed the deciding of destinies to you.

           Hero, Nergal, you are their king!…”

 

         Nergal [ ]

She went to the bath

And dressed in a fine robe, and allowed him to catch a glimpse of her body.

He gave in to his heart’s desire to do what men and women do.

The two embraced each other

And went passionately to bed.

They lay there, queen Ereshkigal and Erra, for a first day and a second day.

They lay there, queen Ereshkigal and Erra, for a third day and a fourth day.

They lay there, queen Ereshkigal and Erra, for a fifth day and a sixth day.

When the seventh day arrived,

Nergal, without [ ]

Took away after him [ ]

‘let me go, and my sister [ ]

Do not make tremble [ ]

Let me go now, and I will return to Kurnugi later.’

Her mouth turned dark with rage [ ]

Nergal went and made his voice heard and spake.

He addressed his speech to the gatekeeper,

Ereshkigal your lady sent me,

Saying, ‘I am sending you to the heaven of Anu our father’

So let me be allowed out! The message [ ].’

 

Nergal as son to Enki & Inanna:

           “Then Ea made his voice heard and spake, he addressed his words to Nergal.

           ‘My son, you shall go on the journey you want to make, … grasp a sword in your hand…”

 

Nergal came up along the long stairway of heaven.

When he arrived at the gate of Anu, Ellil (Enlil), and Ea (Enki),

Anu, Ellil, and Ea saw him and said,

The son of Ishtar (Inanna) has come back to us,

          She (Ereshkigal) will search for him and [ ]. …

          Ea his father must sprinkle him with spring water, and bareheaded,…”

        

Also:

         “Ereshkigal cried aloud, grievously,

Fell from the throne to the ground,

Then straightened up from the ground.

Her tears flowed down her cheeks.

Erra, the lover of my delight-

I did not have enough delight with him before he left!

Erra, the love of my delight-

          I did not have enough delight with him before he left.’ …”

                

         “Ea from his abyss deep heard Gilgamesh and took pity then said:

Nergel, hear me now, open a most wide hole in your roof

From whence can Enkidu waft like smoke up from your hot fires below.’

Nergel heard Ea‘s great voice and did cut a hole in his roof

To let Enkidu‘s spirit waft up from his hot fires below.

         Enkidu‘s spirit did waft up …”

         

            “Nergal, lord of weaponry …”

 

          “Tiglath-pileser the valiant hero,

          the holder of the scepter unrivaled who completes the mission of the supreme (gods).

          Uras (Marduk) and Nergal have given their forceful weapons

          and their supreme bow to the hands of my lordship …”

         

          “Assur-natsir-pal

          In reliance on Assur the great lord, my lord, and Nergal who marches before me,

          with the forceful weapons which Assur the lord gave unto me, my arms (and) armies I assembled; …”

         

          “In the powers supreme of Nergal who marches before me

          I fought with them.I made a destruction of them.

          I shattered their forces; 1460 of their fighting-men in the lowlands I slew …”

         

           “By the command of Assur the great lord, my lord, (and) Nergal who goes before me, …”

 

Erra Quotes From Texts

Erra = Nergal God of war

Nergal As Erra:

Erra Speaking in the 1st Person:

          “’Like the sun, I scan the circumference of the world,

          ‘I am the wild ram striding forth in the steppe,

          ‘I invade the range and take up my dwelling in the fold,

          ‘All the gods are afraid of a fight, so the black-headed folk are contemptuous!

          ‘As for me, since they did not fear my name, and I have disregarded Marduk´s command,

          so he may act according to his wishes I will make Marduk angry,

          stir him from his dwelling, and lay waste the people!’

          The warrior Erra set out for Babylon, city of the king of the gods.

          He entered Esagila, (Marduk’s temple / residence) palace of heaven and earth and stood before him.

          He made ready to speak, saying to the king of the gods:

          Why has your precious image, symbol of your lordship, lost its brilliance?

          ‘Your lordly diadem,

          which made the inner sanctum shine like the outside tower, why is it dimmed?

          The king of the gods made ready to speak, saying to Erra, these words,

          ‘O warrior Erra, concerning that deed you said you would do,

          ‘Once, long ago indeed I grew angry,

          indeed I left my dwelling and caused the deluge!

          ‘When I left my dwelling, the regulation of heaven and earth disintegrated:

          ‘The shaking of heaven meant:

          the positions of the heavenly bodies changed, nor did I restore them,

          ‘The quaking of netherworld meant: the yield of the furrow diminished,

          being thereafter difficult to exploit.

          ‘The regulations of heaven and earth disintegrating meant:

          underground water diminished, high water receded.

          When I looked again, it was struggle to get enough.

          ‘Productivity of living offspring declined, nor did I renew it,

          ‘Such that were I a plowman, I could hold all seed in my hand.

          ‘I built another house and settled therein

          ‘As to my precious image, which had been struck by the deluge

          that its appearance was sullied,

          ‘I commanded fire to make my features shine and cleanse my apparel.

          ‘When it had shined my precious image and completed the task,

          ‘I donned my lordly diadem and returned.

          ‘Haughty were my features, terrifying my glare!

          ‘The survivors of the deluge saw what was done,

          ‘Shall I raise my weapon and destroy the rest?

          ‘I sent those craftsmen down to the depths, I ordered them not to come up,

          ‘I removed the wood and gemstone and showed no one where,

          ‘Now then, warrior Erra, as concerns that deed you said you would do,

          ‘Where is the wood, flesh of the gods, suitable for the lord of the universe,

          ‘The sacred tree, splendid stripling, perfect for lordship,

          ‘Whose roots thrust down an hundred leagues

          through the waters of the vast ocean to the depths of hell,

          ‘Whose crown brushed Anu´s heaven on high?

          ‘Where is the clear gemstone that I reserved for [ ]?

          ‘Where is Ninildum (unidentified), great carpenter of my supreme divinity,

          ‘Wielder of the glittering hatchet, who knows that tool,

          ‘Who makes it shine like the day and puts it in subjection at my feet?

          ‘Where is Kunig-banda (unidentified), fashioner of god and man, whose hands are sacred?

          ‘Where is Ninagal (Gibil), wielder of the upper and lower millstone

          ‘Who grinds up hard copper like hide and who forges tools?

          ‘Where are the choice stones, created by the vast sea, to ornament my diadem?

          ‘Where are the seven sages of the depths, those sacred fish,

          who, like Ea (Enki) their lord, are perfect in sublime wisdom,

          the ones who cleansed my person?

          The warrior Erra heard him….. [ ]

          He made ready to speak, saying to noble Marduk,

          ‘[ craftsmen ],

          ‘[ tree ],

          ‘Clear gemstone [from] its place will I bring up.’

          When Marduk heard this, he made ready to speak, saying to the warrior Erra:

          ‘(When) I rise from my dwelling,

          the regulation of heaven and earth will disintegrate,

          ‘The waters will rise and sweep over the land,

          ‘Bright day will turn to darkness,

          whirlwind will rise and the stars of heaven will be…

          ‘Ill winds will blow and the eyesight of living creatures will be darkened,

          ‘Demons will raise up and seize [ ],

          ‘They will …. the unarmed one who confronts them!

          ‘The gods of hell will rise up and smite down living creatures,

          ‘Who will keep them at bay till I gird on my weaponry once more?

          When Erra heard this, he made himself ready to speak, saying to noble Marduk:

          ‘O noble Marduk (older brother to Erra / Nergal), while you enter the house,

          fire cleanses your apparel and you return to your palace,

          ‘For that time I will govern and keep strong the regulation of heaven and earth,

          ‘I will go up to heaven and issue instructions

          to the Igigi (Anunnaki in orbit, for the transport of goods) gods,

          ‘I will go down to the depths and keep the Anunna gods in order.

          ‘I will dispatch the wild demons to the netherworld,

          ‘I will brandish my fierce weaponry against them,

          ‘I will truss the wings of the ill wind like a bird’s.

          ‘At that house you shall enter, O noble Marduk,

          ‘I will station Anu and Enlil to the right and left, like bulls.’

          Noble Marduk heard him, the words which Erra spoke pleased him. …”

 

           “Mighty Erra, who goes before his army,

           Will shatter his front line and go at this enemy´s side …”

        

         “’He (Anu) summoned the first to give his instructions,

‘Wherever you go and spread terror, have no equal.’

He said to the second, ‘Burn like fire, scorch like flame’.

He commanded the third, ‘Look like a lion, let him who sees you be paralyzed with fear’.

He said to the fourth, ‘Let a mountain collapse when you present your fierce arms’.

He said to the fifth, ‘Blast like the wind, scan the circumference of the earth’.

He said to the sixth. ‘Go out everywhere (like the deluge) and spare no one’.

The seventh he charged with viperous venom,‘Slay whatever lives’.

After Anu had ordained destinies for all of the Seven (nuclear missiles),

He gave those very ones to Erra, warrior of the gods, saying:

‘Let them go beside you, when the clamor of human habitations becomes noisome to you,

‘And you resolve to wreak destruction,

‘To massacre the black-headed folk and fell the livestock,

‘Let these be your fierce weaponry, let them go beside you’. …”

        

         “’Let me … him at the outer gate.

Let me bring back to my lord a description of him.’

Namtar went and looked at Erra (Nergal) in the shadow of the door.

Namtar‘s face went as livid as cut tamarisk.

His lips grew dark as the rim of a kuninu vessle …”

        

         “Namtar went and let in ‘the Gods’, Erra (Nergal).

He let Nergal in through the first, the gate of Nedu.

He let Nergal in through the second, the gate of Enkishar.

He let Nergal in through the third, the gate of Endashurimma.

He let Nergal in through the fourth, the gate of Enuralla.

He let Nergal in through the fifth, the gate of Endukuga.

He let Nergal in through the sixth, the gate of Endushuba.

He let Nergal in through the seventh, the gate of Ennugigi.

He came into the broad courtyard,

And he knelt down, kissed the ground in front of her.

He straightened up, stood and addressed her, …”

        

         “He (Nergal) struck down Nedu, the doorman of the first gate, and did not let him grapple with him.

         He entered her wide courtyard,

         And went up to her and laughed.

         He seized her by her hairdo,

         And pulled her from the throne.

         He seized her by her tresses[ ]

         The two embraced each other

         And went passionately to bed.

         They lay there, queen Ereshkigal and Erra, for a first day and a second day.

         They lay there, queen Ereshkigal and Erra, for a third day.

         They lay there, queen Ereshkigal and Erra, for a fourth day.

         They lay there, queen Ereshkigal and Erra, for a fifth day.

         They lay there, queen Ereshkigal and Erra, for a sixth day.

         When the seventh day arrived, Anu made his voice heard and spoke,

         Addressed his words to Kakka, his vizier, ‘Kakka, I shall send you to Kurnugi,

         To the home of Ereshkigal who dwells within Erkalla,

         To say, ‘That god, whom I sent you,

         Forever [ ]’ …”

        

        Namtar made his voice heard and spake,

         Addressed his words to Ereshkigal his lady,

         ‘The messenger of Anu our father who came to see us-

Before daylight he disappeared! ‘…”

Ereshkigal cried aloud, grievously,

Fell from the throne to the ground,

Then straightened up from the ground.

Her tears flowed down her cheeks.

Erra, the lover of my delight-

I did not have enough delight with him before he left!

Erra, the love of my delight-

         I did not have enough delight with him before he left. …”

       

         Ereshkigal made her voice heard and spake,

Addressed her words to Namtar her vizier,

‘Go, Namtar, you must speak to Anu, Ellil, and Ea!

Set your face towards the gate of Anu, Ellil, and Ea,

To say, ‘Ever since I was a child and a daughter,

I have not known the playing of other girls,

I have not known the romping of children.

That god whom you sent to me and who has impregnated me-

let him sleep with me again!

Send that god to us, and let him spend the night with me as my lover!

I am unclean, and I am not pure enough to perform the judging of the great gods,

The great gods who dwell within Erkalla.

If you do not send that god (Nergal) to me

According to the rites of Erkalla and the great Earth

I shall raise up the dead, and they will eat the living.

I shall make the dead outnumber the living!’ …”

 

Namtar made his voice heard and spake, addressed his words to Erra,

Erra, [ ]

All the rites of the great Underworld [ ]

When you go from [ ]

You shall carry the chair [ ]

You shall carry [ ]

You shall carry [ ]

You shall carry [ ]

You shall carry [ ]

You shall carry [ ]

[ ]

Do not grapple with him lest he bind your chest.’

Erra took to heart the speech of Namtar.

He [ ] oiled his strap and slung his bow.

Nergal went down the long stairway of heaven ….”

 

Irkalla Quotes From Texts

Irkalla = Nergal in reference, the name for the Under World

Anu your father (grandfather) sent me to see you,

Saying, ‘Sit down on that throne,

Judge the cases of the great gods,

         The great gods who live within Erkalla (Under World)!’ …”

        

         “’he led me to the House of Darkness

There where Irkalla (Nergal) lives, He, the God of the Dead.

No one who enters that house comes forth again.

It is the one-way road from which there is no return;

Those residing there are bereft of the light for ever,

         Where dust is their food and mud their sustenance’ …”

 

Gukgalanna Quotes From Text

Gugalanna = Nergal, Erishkigal‘s spouse

deity of the Under World

         “Inanna:

          ‘I am Inanna, Queen of Heaven, on my way to the East’.

          I came … because of my older sister Ereshkigal,

          Her husband, Gugalanna, the Bull of Heaven has died.

          I have come to witness the funeral rites …”

        

          “Holy Inanna answered him:

‘Because lord Gud-gal-ana (Nergal),

the husband of my elder sister holy Erec-ki-gala (Ereshkigal), has died;

in order to have his funeral rites observed,

          she offers generous libations at his wake — that is the reason.’ …”

 

Meslamta-ea / Meclamta-eda Quotes From Texts

Meslamta-ea / Meclamta-eda / Nergal = Enlil‘s & Ninlil’s Son

god who joined Ninurta in battling Marduk

         “Ninlil touched with a tender wave of her hand the gatekeeper’s face:

‘This seed of yours that grows within me now,

          I’ll call him Nergal-Meslamtaea,’ …”

 

          “’you are Mešlamta-ea, …….

          Nergal, lord, you are the Enlil of his Land.

          Like Alla (Utu) (?), you have no rival.

          Like Ištaran (Ninurta),’ …”

        

          “Meclamta-eda, your supremacy in the rebel lands!

          You have encircled the rebel lands, O youth.

          Nergal, your supremacy in the rebel lands!

          Your father loves you greatly.

          He has made your heroism known among the people.

          Your father Enlil loves you greatly’ …”

        

          “The warrior qualities of Meclamta-ea and Lord Lugal-era ……

          in the foreign lands;…

          Their power is a storm which could eradicate the Land.

          Meclamta-ea and Lord Lugal-era, it is sweet to praise you!

          Its kicu.

          A cir-namgala of Meclamta-ea and Lugal-era (Ninurta)

Nergal Quotes From Zecharia Sitchen’s Books

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 bluemixed-breed demigods in teal…)

        

         “To Nergal, the Enlil of the nether world, in his palace,

the shepherd Ur-Namma offered a mace,

a large bow with quiver and arrows, an artfully made …… dagger,

         and a multi-colored leather bag for wearing at the hip …”

The southernmost domain was granted to NER.GAL (“great Watcher”) and his spouse Ereshkigal.

         Mighty Erra (Nergal), who goes before his army,

         Will shatter his front line and go at this enemy´s side …”

Some of Dumuzi’s brothers, not Marduk / Ra, blessed the nuptials as well. It’s not clear if Enki responded favorably. Dumuzi’s brothers hid for in the bedroom,

          “a bed of gold, adorned with lapis lazuli, …”

a precious, blue-hued gem,

         “which Gibil had refined for her in the abode of Nergal

 

Most dramatic phase of the Second Pyramid War…recalling the heroic feats of Nergal in this war, the text relates how, as the other gods found themselves hemmed in within the Giza complex, Nergal

         “Lofty Dragon Beloved of Ekur …”

         “at night stole out …”

broke through the encirclement to reach the Great Pyramid (the Ekur). Reaching it at night, he entered through

         “the locked doors which by themselves can open …”

A roar of welcome greeted him as he entered:

         “Divine Nergal,

         Lord who by night stole out, had come to the battle!

         He cracks his whip, his weapons clank…

         He who is welcome, his might is immense;

         Like a dream at the doorstep he appeared.

         Divine Nergal, the One Who Is Welcome:

         Fight the enemy of Ekur (Enlil’s headquarters / house in Nippur),

         lay hold on the Wild One from Nippur! …”

As Nergal joined the defenders of the Great Pyramid, he strengthened its defenses through the various ray-emitting crystals positioned within the pyramid:

         “The Water-Stone, the Apex-Stone, the…Stone, the…

         …the lord Nergal increased its strength.

         The door for protection he…

         To heaven its Eye he raised,

         Dug deep that which gives life…

         …in the House he fed them food. …”

Unable or unwilling to remove Marduk by force, the Anunnaki turned to Marduk’s brother Nergal and asked him to

         “scare Marduk off the divine seat …” (in Babylon).

 

A text named by scholars “The Erra Epos”, for in it Nergal is called… ER.RA…a derogatory epithet,…”The Servant of Ra.”…better called “The Tale of the Sins of Nergal for it puts the blame on Nergal for a chain of events with a catastrophic ending…

         “into the Esagil, temple of Heaven and Earth, he entered and stood before Marduk ...”

Marduk explained that he had to take matters in his own hands:

         “In the aftermath of the Deluge, the decrees of Heaven and Earth had gone astray.

         The cities of the gods upon the wide Earth were changed around;

         They were not brought back to their locations…

         As I survey them again, of the evil I am disgusted;

         Without a return to their (original) places,

         Mankind’s existence is diminished…

         Rebuild I must my residence which in the Deluge was wiped away;

         Its name (I must) call again …”

 

…failures on the part of Erra himself to account for certain divine artifacts–

        “the instrument of giving orders, the Oracle of the gods;

        the sign of kingship, the Holy Scepter which contributes brilliance to Lordship…

        Where is the Holy Radiating Stone which disintegrates all? …”

If he were forced to leave, Marduk said,

         “on the day I step off my seat, the flooding shall from its well cease to work…

         the waters shall not rise… the bright day to darkness (shall return)

         confusion shall arise… the winds of drought shall howl… sickness shall spread …”

After some more exchanges Erra offered to return to Marduk

         “the artifacts of Heaven and Earth …”

 

He assured Marduk there was nothing to worry about: he (Erra) would enter Marduk’s house only to

        “erect the Bulls of Anu and Enlil at thy gate …”

statues of winged bulls as were actually found at temple sites…

        Marduk heard this;

        The promise, given by Erra, found his favor.

        So did he step down from his seat,

        and to the Land of Mines, abode of the Anunnaki, he set his direction …”

Marduk agreed to leave Babylon. But no sooner he had done that than Nergal broke his word. Nergal / Erra ventured into the Gigunu, the mysterious underground chamber…and there Erra caused its “Brilliance” to be removed…as Marduk had warned,

        “the day turned into darkness, flooding was disarrayed,

        the lands were laid to waste, the people were made to perish …”

        “With anger (at Erra) they were filled …”

Erra’s father, reproached him:

        “Now that the Prince Marduk had stepped off, what have you done? …” 

 

        “,Go away! …’

he ordered Erra.

        ‘Take off to where no gods ever go! …’

        ‘Erra lost his voice …’

        ‘As to my warriors, they shall not go back’ …”

 

        “Kutheans who worshipped Nergal …”

 

The departure of Marduk from Babylon brought an end Ishtar’s conflict with him.; the rift between Marduk and Nergal…created an alliance between Ishtar and Nergal.

…verses in the Babylonian text…have a direct parallel in the biblical tale of the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah:

        “But when the son of Marduk in the land of the coast was,

        He-of-the-Evil-Wind (Erra) with heat the plain-land burnt …”

      

        “He (Nabu) the great sea entered,

        Sat upon a throne which was not his

        (Because) Ezida, the legitimate abode, was overrun …”

 

Enki stood by his firstborn son:

        “Now that Prince Marduk has arisen,

        now that the people for the second time have raised his image,

        why does Erra continue his opposition? …”

Finally, loosing his patience, Enki shouted at Nergal to get out of his presence. Leaving in a huff, Nergal returned to his domain. “Consulting with himself,” he decided to unleash the awesome weapons:

        “The lands I will destroy, to a deep dust-heap make them;

        the cities I will upheaval, to desolation turn them;

        the mountains I will flatten, their animals make disappear;

        the seas I will agitate, that which teems in them I will decimate;

        the people I will make vanish, their souls shall turn to vapor; none shall be spared. …”

 

We learn from a text…that it was Gibil, whose domain in Africa adjoined that of Nergal, who alerted Marduk to the destructive scheme hatched by Nergal…It was then that Gibil “these words to Marduk did speak” in regard to the

        “seven awesome weapons which Anu created..

        The wickedness of those seven against thee is being laid, …”

he informed Marduk. Marduk inquired of Gibil where the awesome weapons were kept. “O Gibil,,” he said,those seven—where were they born, where were they created?” To which Gibil revealed that they were hidden underground:

        “Those seven, in the mountain they abide, in a cavity inside the earth they dwell.

        From this place with a brilliance they will rush forth,

        From Earth to Heaven, clad with terror …”

But where exactly is this place? Marduk asked again and again; and all Gibil could say was that “even the wise gods, to them it is unknown.”

Now Marduk rushed to his father Enki with the frightening report.

        “To his father Enki’s house he (Marduk) entered …”

Enki was lying on the couch in the chamber to which he retired for the night. “My father” Marduk said,

        “Gibil this word hath spoken to me:

         of the coming of the seven (weapons) he has found out …”

Telling his father the bad news, he urged his all-knowing father:

        “Their place to search out, do hasten thou! …”

Enki spoke out strongly against the idea, urging steps to stop Nergal, for the use of the weapons, he pointed out,

        “the lands will make desolate, the people will make perish. …”

 

Nannar and Utu wavered as Enki spoke, but Enlil and Ninurta were for decisive action. And so with the Council of the Gods was in disarray, the decision was left to Anu.

Nergal had already ordered the priming of “the seven awesome weapons” with their “poisons.”,

        “Anu, lord of the gods, on the land had pity …”

It was then that Ninurta, attempting to dissuade Nergal from indiscriminate annihilation, used words identical to those attributed in the Bible to Abraham when he tried to have Sodom spared:

        “Valiant Era (Nergal),

        Will you the righteous destroy with the unrighteous?

        Will you destroy those who have against you sinned

        together with those who against you have not sinned? …”

The two gods argued back and forth on the extent of the destruction. More than Ninurta, Nergal was consumed by personal hatred:..he shouted

        “I shall annihilate the son (Nabu), and let the father (Marduk) bury him;

        then I shall kill the father, let no one bury him …”

Ninurta finally swayed Nergal.

        “He heard the words spoken by Ishum (Ninurta); the words appealed to him as fine oil …”

Agreeing to leave alone the seas, to leave Mesopotamia out of the attack, he formulated a modified plan: the destruction will be selective..to destroy the cities where Nabu might be hiding…to deny Marduk the greatest prize—the Spaceport,

        “the place from where the Great Ones ascend …”:

      

        “From city to city an emissary I will send;

        The son, seed of his father, shall not escape;

        His mother shall cease her laughter…

        To the place of the gods, access he shall not have:

        The place from where the Great Ones ascend I shall upheaval …”

Wasting no more time, Nergal then urged Ninurta that the two of them go at once into action:

        “Then did the hero Erra go ahead of Ishum, remembering his words;

        Ishum too went forth, in accordance with the word given, a squeezing in his heart …”

Their first target was the Spaceport, its command complex hidden in the “Mount Most Supreme,” its landing fields spread in the adjoining great plain:

        Ishum to Mount Most Supreme set his course;

        The Awesome Seven, (weapons) without parallel, trailed behind him.

        At the Mount Most Supreme the hero arrived;

        He raised his hand– the mount was smashed;

        The plain by the Mount Most Supreme he then obliterated;

        in its forests not a tree-stem was left standing …”

So with one nuclear blow the Spaceport was obliterated…Now it was the turn of Nergal…Guiding himself through the Sinai peninsula to the Canaanite cities by folllowing the King’s Highway, Erra upheavaled them.

The words employed by the Erra Epic” are almost identical to those used in the biblical tale of Sodom and Gomorrah:

        Then, emulating Ishum, Erra the King’s Highway followed.

        The cities he finished off, to desolation he overturned them.

        In the mountains he caused starvation, their animals he made perish …”

The verses that follow may well describe the creation of the new southern portion of the Dead Sea…:

        “He dug through the sea, its wholeness he divided.

        That which lives in it, even the crocodiles he made wither.

        As with fire he scorched the animals, banned its grains to become as dust …”

We find descriptions and recollections of the nuclear upheaval in other texts as well:

        “Lord, bearer of the Scorcher that burnt up the adversary;

        Who obliterated the disobedient land;

        Who withered the life of the Evil Word’s followers;

        Who raised stones and fire upon the adversaries …”

 

In a Babylonian text in which one king recalls the momentous events that had taken place “in the reign of an earlier king.”

        “At that time, in the reign of a previous king, conditions changed.

        Good departed, suffering was regular.

        The Lord (of the gods) became enraged, he conceived wrath.

        He gave the command: the gods of that place abandoned it…

        The two, incited to commit the evil, made its guardians stand aside;

        its protectors went up to the dome of heaven …”

 

The “Khedorlaomer Text”, which identifies the two gods by their epithets as Nergal and Ninurta, tells it this way:

        Enlil, who sat alone in loftiness, was consumed with anger.

        The devastators again suggested evil;

        He who scorches with fire (Ishum / Ninurta) and he of the evil wind (Erra / Nergal)

        together performed their evil.

        The two made the gods flee, made them flee the scorching …”

The target, from which they made the gods guarding it flee, was the Place of the Launching:

        “That which was raised towards Anu to launch they caused to wither;

        Its face they made fade away, its place they made desolate …”

Thus was the Spaceport, the prize of which so many Wars of the Gods had been fought, obliterated: the Mount within which the controlling equipment was placed was smashed; the launch platforms were made to fade off the face of the earth; and the plain whose hard soil the shuttle craft had used as runways was obliterated, and not even a tree left standing.

But the deed done by Nergal and Ninurta had not gone unrecorded, for it turned out to have a most profound effect on Sumer, its people, and its very existenceThe nuclear explosion gave rise to an immense wind, a radioactive wind, which began as a whirlwind:

        “A storm, the Evil Wind, went around in the skies …”

The desolation caused by the catastrophe is then described vividly, by such verses as these:

        “Causing cities to be desolate, (causing) houses to become desolate;

        Causing stalls to be desolate, the sheepfolds to be emptied;

        That Sumer’s oxen no longer stand in their stalls, that its sheep no longer roam in its sheepfolds;

        That its rivers flow with water that is bitter, that its cultivated fields grow weeds,

        that its steeps grow withering plants …”

In the cities and the hamlets,

        “the mother cares not for her children, the father says not ‘O my wife’…

        the young child grows not sturdy on their knee, the nursemaid chants not a lullaby…

        kingship has been taken away from the land …”

       

         “On the Land (Sumer) fell a calamity, one unknown to man:

         One that had never been seen before, one which could not be withstood …”

It was an unseen death,

         “which roams the street, is let loose in the road;

         it stands beside a man– yet none can see it;

         when it enters a house, its appearance is unknown …”

There was no defense against this

         “evil which has assailed the land like a ghost:…

         The highest wall, the thickest walls, it passes as a flood,

         no door can shut it out, no bolt can turn it back;

         through the door like a snake it glides, through the hinge like a wind it blows in.

         Cough and phlegm weakened the chest, the mouth was filled with spittle and foam…

         dumbness and daze have come upon them, an unwholesome numbness…

         an evil curse, a headache… their spirit abandoned their bodies …”

it was a most gruesome death:

         “The people, terrified, could hardly breathe; the Evil Wind clutched them, does not grant them another day…

         Mouths were drenched in blood, heads wallowed in blood…

         The face was made pale by the Evil Wind …”

       

         “Covered the land as a cloak, spread over it like a sheet …”

Brownish in color, during the daytime

         “the sun in the horizon it obliterated with darkness …”

        

         “Girt with dread brilliance it filleth the broad earth”

it blocked out the moon:

         “the moon at its rising it extinguished …”

Moving from west to east, the deadly cloud–

         “enveloped in terror, casting fear everywhere a great wind which speeds high above,

         an evil wind which overwhelms the land …”

It was

         “a great storm directed from Anu it hath come from the heart of Enlil.

         In a single spawning it was spawned… like the bitter venom of the gods; in the west it was spawned.

         Bearing gloom from city to city, carrying dense clouds that bring gloom from the sky …”

was the result of a

         “lightning flash, from the midst of the mountains it had descended upon the land,

         From the Plain of No Pity it hath come …”

Though the people were baffled, the gods knew the cause of the Evil Wind:

         “An evil blast heralded the baleful storm,

         An evil blast the forerunner of the baleful storm was;

         Mighty offspring, valiant sons were the heralds of the pestilence …”

As soon as the “awesome weapons” were launched from the skies, there was an immense brilliance

         “they spread awesome rays towards the four points of the earth, scorching everything like fire …”

       

         “The storm, in a flash of lightning created, a dense cloud that brings gloom. …”

followed by

         “rushing wind gusts… a tempest that furiously scorches the heavens …”

 

Several texts attest that the Evil Wind, bearing the cloud of death, was caused by gigantic explosions on a day to remember:

         “On that day

         When heaven was crushed and the Earth was smitten, its face obliterated by the maelstrom–

         When the skies were darkened and covered as with a shadow …”

Over Sumer, its passage lasting twenty-four hours—a day and a night…as in this…from Nippur:

         “On that day,, on that single day; on that night, on that single night…

         the storm, in a flash of lightning created, the people of Nippur left prostrate …”

The Uruk lament

         “The great gods paled at its immensity, gigantic rays reach up to heaven (and) the earth tremble to its core …”

As the Evil Wind began to “spread to the mountains as a net,” the gods of Sumer began to flee their beloved cities…Thus

         Ninhursag wept in bitter tears …”

as she escaped from Isin. Nanshe cried,

         “’O my devastated city…’  her beloved dwelling place was given over to misfortune …”

Inanna hurriedly departed from Uruk, sailing off toward Africa in a “submersible ship” and complaining that she had to leave behind her jewelry and other possessions…Inanna / Ishtar bewailed the desolation of her city and her temple by the Evil Wind

         “which in an instant, in a blink of an eye was created against the midst of the mountains, …”

and against which there was no defense…As the

         loyal citizens of Uruk were seized with terror. ..”

       

         “Rise up! Hide in the steppe! ..”

        

         “the deities ran off… they took unfamiliar paths …”

       

         “Thus all the gods evacuated Uruk;

         They kept away from it;

         They hid in the mountains,

         They escaped to the distant plains …”

In Uruk…

         “Mob panic was brought about in Uruk…. its good sense was distorted …”

…as the people asked questions:

         “Why did the gods benevolent eye look away?

         Who caused such worry and lamentation? …”

When the Evil Storm passed over,

         “the people were piled up in heaps… a hush settled over Uruk like a cloak …”

Ninki, we learn fromThe Eridu Lament”, flew away from her city to a safe haven in Africa:

         Ninki, its great lady, flying like a bird, left her city …”

But Enki left Eridu only far enough to get out of the Evil Wind’s way, yet near enough to see its fate:

        “Its lord stayed outside the city…

        Father Enki stayed outside the city… for the fate of his harmed city he wept with bitter tears …”

They watched the storm “put its hand” on Eridu. After the

         “evil-bearing storm went out of the city, sweeping across the countryside, …”

Enki surveyed Eridu; he found the city

         “smothered with silence… its residents stacked up in heaps …”

Those who were saved addressed to him a lament:

         “O Enki, thy city has been cursed, made like an alien territory! …”

…and Enki

         “stayed out of his city  as though it were an alien city. …”

        

         “Forsaking the House of Eridu, …”

Enki then led

         “those who have been displaced from Eridu …”

to the desert, “towards an inimical land”; there he used his scientific powers to make the “foul tree” edible.

 

From Babylon, a worried Marduk sent his father, Enki, an urgent message as the cloud of death neared his city:

         “What am I to do? …”

he asked Enki’s advice…and in line with the advice given by the two emissaries to Lot, the people fleeing Babylon were warned

         “neither to run nor to look back …”

They were also told not to take with them any food or beverage, for these might have been “touched by the ghost.”

         “Get thee into a chamber below the earth, into a darkness, …”

until the Evil Wind was gone…In Lagash,

         “mother Bau wept bitterly for her holy temple, for her city …”

Though Ninurta was gone, his spouse could not force herself to leave. Lingering behind, “O my city, O my city,” she kept crying; the delay almost cost her her life:

         “On that day, the lady– the storm caught up with her;

         Bau, as if she were mortal– the storm caught up with her …”

In Ur we learn from the lamentations (one of which was composed by Ningal herself) that Nannar and Ningal refused to believe that the end of Ur was irrevocable. Nannar addressed a long and emotional appeal to his father…

         “Ur was granted kingship– it was not granted an eternal reign.

         Since days of yore, when Sumer was founded, to the present, when people have multiplied–

         Who has ever seen a kingship of everlasting reign? …”

While the appeals were made, Ningal recalled in her long poem,

         “the storm was ever breaking forward, its howling overpowering all.

         Although of the day I still tremble, of that day’s foul smell we did not flee …”

As night came, “a bitter lament was raised” in Ur, yet the god and goddess stayed on…and Ningal realized that Nannar

         “had been overtaken by the evil storm …”

…Only next day, when

         “the storm was carried off from the city Ningal, in order to go from her city… hastily put on a garment, …”

and together with the stricken Nannar departed from the city they so loved. As they were leaving they saw death and desolation:

         “the people, like potsherds, filled the city’s streets;

         in its lofty gates, where they were wont to promenade, dead bodies were laying about;

         in its boulevards, where the feasts were celebrated, scattered they lay; in all of its streets,

         where they were wont to promenade, dead bodies were laying about;

         in its places where the land’s festivities took place, the people lay in heaps.

         The dead bodies, like fat placed in the sun, of themselves melted away …”

Then did Ningal raise her lamentation for Ur…

         “O house of Sin in Ur, bitter is thy desolation…

         O Ningal whose land has perished, make thy heart like water!

         The city has become a strange city, how can one now exist?

         The house has become a house of tears, it makes my heart like water…

         Ur and its temples have been given over to the wind …”

 

         “On the banks of the Tigris and Euphrates, only sickly plants grew…

         In the swamps grow sickly-headed reeds that rot in the stench…

         In the orchards and gardens there is no new growth, quickly they waste away…

         The cultivated fields are not hied, no seeds are planted in the soil, no songs resound in the fields …”

 

In the countryside the animals were also affected:

         “On the steppe, cattle large and small became scarce, all living creatures came to an end.

         The sheepfolds have been delivered to the wind…

         The hum of the turning churn resounds not in the sheepfold…

         The stalls provide not fat and cheese… Ninurta has emptied Sumer of milk …”

 

        “The storm crushed the land, wiped out everything;

         it roared like a great wind over the land, none could escape it; desolating the cities, desolating the houses…

         No one treads the highways, no one seeks out the roads …”

The desolation of Sumer was complete.

 

One text states, “The Legend of Naram-Sin

         “Although since the time of separation of mankind none of the kings have ever destroyed Arman and Ibla,

         the god Nergal did open up the path for the mighty Naram-Sin and gave him Arman and Ibla.

         He also gave him as a present Amanus, the Cedar Mountain, to the Upper-Sea …”

       

         “Ea from his abyss deep heard Gilgamesh and took pity then said:

         ‘Nergel, hear me now, open a most wide hole in your roof

         From whence can Enkidu waft like smoke up from your hot fires below.’

         Nergel heard Ea’s great voice and did cut a hole in his roof

         To let Enkidu’s spirit waft up from his hot fires below.

         Enkidu’s spirit did waft up …”

The recognition by Naram-Sin of Nergal’s power and influence well beyond Africa…

        “Although since the era of the rulership of man

        none of the kings ever destroyed Arman and Ebla,

        Now did the god Nergal open up the path for the mighty Naram-Sin.

        He gave him Arma and Ebla, presented him with the Amanus

        and with the Cedar Mountain and with the Upper Sea …”

Hammurabi Quotes From Texts, Sitchin Books, etc.

2r - Hammurabi relief in the US House of Representatives

Hammurabi stone relief in the chamber of US House of Representatives

 

(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 bluemixed-breed demigods in teal…)

 

Circa 1800 B.C., Hammurabi, the king renowned for his law code, ascended the throne in Babylon and began to extend its boundaries. According to his inscriptions the gods not only told him if and when to launch his military campaigns but were literally leading his armies:

         “Through the power of the great gods the king, beloved of the god Marduk,

         reestablished the foundations of Sumer and Akkad.

         Upon the command of Anu, and with Enlil advancing in front of his army,

         with the mighty powers which the great gods gave him,

         he was no match for the army of Emutbal and its king Rim-Sin …”

To defeat more enemies the god Marduk granted Hammurabi a “powerful weapon” called “Great Power of Marduk”:

         “With the Powerful Weapon with which Marduk proclaimed his triumphs,

         the hero (Hammurabi) overthrew in battle the armies of Eshnuna, Sabartu and Gutium…

         With the “Great Power of Marduk(alien technologies)

         he overthrew the armies of Sutium, Turukku, Kamu…

         With the Mighty Power which Anu and Enlil had given him

         he defeated all his enemies as far as the country of Subartu …”

Hannurabi treated Larsa…as an adversary, boasting that heoverthrew Larsa in battleand attacked its sacred precinctwith the mighty weapon which the gods had given him.”

Hammurabi was now demanding their (the goddesses) return to Babylon, from where Khedorla’omar had taken them captive (Larsa).

Khedorla Texts (partial)

         “To Sin-Idinna speaks thus Hammurabi regarding

         the goddesses who in Emutbal have been behind doors

         from the days of Kudor-Laghamar, in sackcloth attiree:

         When they ask them back from thee, to my men hand them over;

         The men shall grasp the hands of the goddesses;

         To their abode they shall bring them …”

Sin-Iddinam ruled the ancient Near East city-state of Larsa from 1785 BC to 1778 BC. He was the son of Nur-Adad, with whom there may have been a short co-regency overlap.

Hammurabi repeated the demand for the return of the goddessess to Babylon in yet another stiff message to Sin-Idinna, this time, sending it by the hand of high military officers. (text in Brittish Museum)

         “Unto Sin-Idinna thus sayeth Hammurabi:

         I am now dispatching Zikir-ilshu, the Transport Officer,

         and Hammurabi-bani, the Frontline Officer,

         that they may bring the goddesses who are in Emutbal.

         Thou shalt cause the goddesses to journey

         in a processional boat as in a shrine, that they may come to Babylon.

         The temple-women (mixed-breed attendees to the gods) shall accompany them.

         For food of the goddesses they shalt load pure cream and cereals unto the boat,

         and chosen soldiers to bring the goddesses to Babylon in safety.

         Delay them not; let them speedily reach Babylon …”

was seeking restitution for events that had happened long before his time, in the days of Kudur-Laghamar, the Elamite regent of Larsa.

Anu and Enlil finally accepted Marduk’s claim to supremacy at Babylon. Commemorating the fateful decision in the preamble to his law code, the Babylonian king Hammurabi put it in these words:

         “Lofty Anu (Anunnaki King), lord of themselves gods who from Heaven came to Earth,

         and Enlil, lord of Heaven and Earth who determines the destinies of the land,

         Determined for Marduk, the firstborn of Enki, the Enlil-functions over all mankind;

         Made him great among the gods who watch and see,

         Called Babylon by name to be exalted,

         Made it supreme in the world;

         And established for Marduk, in its midst, an everlasting kingship…”

Babylon, then Assyria rose to greatness. Sumer was no more…

Minor Gods Related to Marduk Quotes From Texts

(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)

 

Sarpanit / Sarpanitum Quotes From Texts

Sarpanit / Sarpanitum = Marduk’s ½ sister-spouse

         “In the Gate of Conciliation, I appeared with Marduk,

        In the Gate of Joy I kissed the foot of Sarpanitum (Marduk’s spouse),

        I was assiduous in supplication and prayer before them,

        I placed fragrant incense before them, …”

        “Who but Marduk revived him as he was dying?

        Besides Sarpanitum, which goddess bestowed his breath of life?

        Marduk can restore to life from the grave,

        Sarpanitum knows how to rescue from annihilation, …”

         (Hammurabi speaking:)

         “When he reads the record, let him pray with full heart to Marduk, my lord,

         and Zarpanit (Marduk’s spouse), my lady;

         and then shall the protecting deities and the gods,

         who frequent E-Sagil, graciously grant the desires daily presented before Marduk,

         my lord, and Zarpanit, my lady. …”

Ninehama Quote From Text

Ninehama = Marduk’s spouse

         “On that day, the storm forced people to live in darkness.

         In order to destroy Kuara, it forced people to live in darkness.

         Ninehama in her fear wept bitter tears.

         ‘Alas the destroyed city, my destroyed house,’ she cried bitterly.

         Asarluhi (Marduk) put his robes on with haste and….. …”

Marduk Quotes From Zecharia Sitchin’s Books

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…)

 

Marduk’s urgent message to his father, describing a near-calamity on the flight to Earth:

It has been created like a weapon;

It has charged forward like death…

The Anunnaki who are fifty it has smitten…

The flying, birdlike Supreme Orbiter it has smitten on the breast …”

In Marduk’s Babylonian re-written accounts of Sumerian history, he claimed that it was he who defeated Zu (Anzu) and regained the Tablets of Destinies instead of Ninurta:

         “I have crushed the skull of the god Zu. …”

The text reports a conversation between father and son…with a difficult question:

         “Enki answered his son Marduk:

         ‘My son, what is it you do not know?

         What more could I give to you?

         Marduk, what is it that you do not know?

         What could I give you in addition?

         Whatever I know, you know!’ …”

Ra as the engineer (“Extender of the Chord”) who built the “Protected Place” in the “Sacred Desert,” from which he could “ascend beautifully” and “traverse the skies”:

         “Thou extendest the chords for the plan, thou didst give form to the lands…

         Thou didst make secret the Lower World…

         Thou hast built for thee a place protected in the sacred desert, with hidden name.

         Thou risest by day opposite them…

         Thou art rising beautifully…

         Thou art crossing the sky with a good wind…

         Thou art traversing the sky in the celestial Barque…

         The sky is jubilating, the Earth is shouting joy.

         The crew of Ra do praising every day;

         He comes forth in triumph. …”

 

         “there did the boat-wrecking waters carry the espoused of Inanna…. …”

Having disapproved of the DumuziInanna love match from the beginning, Marduk no doubt was even more opposed to the union after the Pyramid Wars. The rape of Geshtinanna by Dumuzi—was thus an opportunity for Marduk to block the designs Inanna had on Egypt, by seizing and punishing Dumuzi.

As far as she (Inanna) was concerned, Marduk had caused her beloved’s death. And as the (Akkadian) text makes clear

         “What is in holy Inanna’s heart?

         To Kill!

         To kill the Lord Bilulu (Marduk)

Inanna armed herself with an array of weapons to attack the god in his hiding place…she confidently approached The Mountain, which she called E.BIH (Abode of Sorrowful Calling”). Haughtily she proclaimed:

         “Mountain, thou art so high, thou art elevated above all others…

         Thou touchest the sky with thy tip…

         Yet I shall destroy thee,

         To the ground I shall fell thee..

         Inside thine heart pain I shall cause. …”

As Inanna continued to challenge Marduk, now hiding inside the mighty structure (pyramid), her fury rose…

         “For the second time, infuriated by his pride,

         Inanna approached (the pyramid) again and proclaimed:

         ‘My grandfather Enlil has permitted me to enter inside The Mountain! …”

Flaunting her weapons, she haughtily announced:

         “Into the heart of the Mountain I shall penetrate…

         Inside the Mountain, my victory I shall establish! …”

She began to attack:

         “She seized not striking the sides of E-Bih and all its corners,

         even its multitude of raised stones.

         But inside…the Grest Serpent who had gone in his poison ceased not to spit …”

The record of the trial and sentencing of Marduk is available from a fragmentary text…begins where the gods had surrounded the pyramid. A god…a spokesman, addressed Marduk in his enclosure”;

         “the one who was evil he implored …”

Marduk was moved by the message:

         “Despite the anger of his heart, clear tears came into his eyes …”

The trial was held within sight of the pyramids, in a temple by the riverbank:

         “To the place of reverence, by the river,

         with him who was accused they stepped.

         In truth they made the enemies stand aside.

         Justice was performed …”

In sentencing Marduk the mystery of Dumuzi’s death posed a problem…Standing there, in sight of the pyramids, with Marduk fresh out of his hiding place, the solution dawned on Inanna, and she proceeded to address the gods:

         “On this day, the Lady herself,

         She who speaks truth,

         The accuser of Azag, the great princess,

         An awesome judgment uttered …”

There was a way to sentence Marduk to death without actually executing him, she said:

         “Let him be buried alive within the Great Pyramid!

         Let him be sealed there as in a gigantic envelope!

         In a great envelope that is sealed,

         With no one to offer him nourishment;

         Alone to suffer,

         The potable watersourse to be cut off. …”

The judging gods accepted her suggestion:

         “The mistress art thou…

         The fate thou decrreest: let it be so! …”

Assuming that Anu would go along with the verdict,

         “The gods then placed the command to Heaven and Earth …”

The E.KUR, the Great Pyramid, had become a prison; and one of the epithets of its mistress was, thereafter,

         “Mistress of the Prison …”

Marduk had air to breathe; but he had neither food nor water…doomed to die in agony.

The ancient “script” begins with an introduction of the actors. The first one

         “is Bel, who was confined in The Mountain …”

Then there is the messenger who brings the news of imprisonment to Marduk’s son NabuNabu hastens to The Mountain in his chariot. He arrives at a structure

         “that is the house on the edge of The Mountain

         wherein they questioned him …”

They are told that the agitated god is

        Nabu who from Borsippa comes.

         It is he who comes to seek

         after the warefare of his father, who is imprisoned …”

Actors then come out, and rush about…

         “they are the people who in the streets hasten;

         they seek Bel saying:

         Where is he held captive? …”

We learn from the text that:

         “after Bel had gone into The Mountain,

         the city fell into tumult …”

 

        “because of him fighting within it broke out …”

A goddess appears; she is Sarpanit, the sister-wife of Marduk. She is confronted by a messenger

         “who weeps before her, saying:

         ‘Unto The Mountain they have taken him.’ …”

He shows her the garments of Marduk (possibly bloodstained):

         “these are his raiment, which they took off him …”

Marduk

         “with a Garment-of-Sentence was clothed …”

 

         “That means: in a coffin he is …”

Sarpanit goes to a structure that symbolizes Marduk’s tomb. She sees a group of mourners. The script explains:

         “These are those who make lament

         after the gods had locked him up,

         separating him from among the living.

         Into the House of Captivity,

         away from the sun and light, they put him in prison …”

Sarpanit recites an appeal…

         “She prays to Sin and Shamish, saying:

         ‘Give life to Bel!’ …”

Offerings are made to Ishtar,

         “that she may show her mercy …”

The high priest appeals to the supreme god, to Sin, and to Shamash:

         “Restore Bel to life! …”

…who represents Marduk, clothed with shrouds which

         “with blood are dyed …”

speaks out:

         “’I am not a sinner!

         I shall not be smitten!’ …”

He announces that the supreme god has reviewed his case and found him not guilty.

The attention is diverted to a doorpost;

         “it is the doorpost of Sarpanit in Babylon …”

         “That is the head of the evil doer,

         whom they shall smite and slay …”

Nabu

         “comes back from Borsippa;

         he comes and stands over the evildoer and regards him …”

         “The one whose sin it was …”

is carried away in a coffin. The murderer of Dumuzi has paid with his life. Sarpanit reappears…

         “It is water for hand-washing

         which they bring after The Evildoer has been carried away …”

 

In all the sacred places of Bel torches are lit….The supremacy of Ninurta…is reasserted…the divine messenger Nusku (did)

         announce the (good) tidings to all the gods …”

         “How can they let him free,

         the one who cannot come out? …”

Nusku, the divine messenger, tell her (Sarpanit) that Marduk shall pass through SA.BAD, the “chiseled upper opening.” He explains that it is

         “A doorway-shaft which the gods will bore;

         Its vortex they will lift off, his abode they shall reenter.

         The door which was barred before him

         At the vortex of the hollowing, into the sides,

         a doorway they shall twistingly bore;

         Getting near, into its midst they will break through. …”

The Anunnaki realized that the shortest and quickest way to reach the starved Marduk was to tunnel a connecting shaft…a tunneling of a mere thirty-two feet…

         “burst open by a tremendous force

         Getting near, into its midst they will break through …”

Having broken through into the Grand Gallery, the rescuers led Marduk back the way they came. The entry from the Descending Passage was sealed up again, to be (later) discovered by Al Mamoon’s men.

(Ra) went into exile…in Egypt Ra acquired the epithet Amen, “The Hidden One.” Circa 2000B.C., he reappeared to claim again supremacy; for that, mankind ended paying a most bitter price.

Sargon in his old age made a big mistake: He took away soil from Babylon and built upon the soil another Babylon beside Agade…

         “On account of the sacrilege Sargon thus committed,

         the great lord Marduk became enraged

         and destroyed his people by hunger.

         From the east to the west he alienated them from Sargon;

         and upon him he inflicted as punishment that he could not rest …

        The soil from the trenches of Babylon he removed,

         and the boundaries of Akkad he made like those of Babylon.

         But because of the evil which he had committed,

         the great lord Marduk was angry, and he destroyed his people by famine…. …”

one text states:

He dug up the dirt of the pit of Babylon and

made a counterpart of Babylon next to Agade.

Because the wrong he had done the great lord Marduk became angry

and wiped out his family by famine.

From east to west, the subjects rebelled against him

and Marduk afflicted him with insomnia. …”

1,500 years later, the Weidner Chronicle (ABC 19) accounts for the Gutian period as follows:

        “NaramSin destroyed the people of Babylon,

         so twice Marduk summoned the forces of Gutium against him …”

Marduk gave his kingship to the Gutian force.

The Gutians were unhappy people unaware how to revere the gods,

ignorant of the right cultic practices … “

Utuhengal, the fisherman, caught a fish at the edge of the sea for an offering.

That fish should not be offered to another god

until it had been offered to Marduk,

but the Gutians took the boiled fish from his hand before it was offered,

so by his august command, Marduk removed the Gutian force

from the rule of his land and gave it to Utu-hengal …”

Unable or unwilling to remove Marduk by force, the Anunnaki turned to Marduk’s brother Nergal and asked him to

         “scare Marduk off the divine seat … (in Babylon).”

A text named by scholars The Erra Epos, for in it Nergal is called… ER.RA…a derogatory epithet,…The Servant of Ra.”...better called The Tale of the Sins of Nergal for it puts the blame on Nergal for a chain of events with a catastrophic ending…

         “into the Esagil (Marduk’s temple – residence in Babylon), temple of Heaven and Earth,

         he entered and stood before Marduk …”

Marduk explained that he had to take matters in his own hands:

         “In the aftermath of the Deluge,

         the decrees of Heaven and Earth had gone astray.

         The cities of the gods upon the wide Earth were changed around;

         They were not brought back to their locations…

         As I survey them again, of the evil I am disgusted;

         Without a return to their (original) places,

         Mankind’s existence is diminished…

         Rebuild I must my residence which in the Deluge was wiped away;

         Its name (I must) call again. …”

…failures on the part of Erra himself to account for certain divine artifacts–

         “the instrument of giving orders,

         the Oracle of the gods; the sign of kingship,

         the Holy Scepter which contributes brilliance to Lordship…

         Where is the Holy Radiating Stone which disintegrates all? …”

Marduk asked. If he were forced to leave,

         “on the day I step off my seat,

         the flooding shall from its well cease to work…

         the waters shall not rise…

         the bright day to darkness (shall return)

         confusion shall arise…

         the winds of drought shall howl…

         sickness shall spread. …”

After some more exchanges Erra offered to return to Marduk’s possession

         “the artifacts of Heaven and Earth …”

He assured Marduk there was nothing to worry about: he (Erra) would enter Marduk’s house only to

         erect the Bulls of Anu and Enlil at thy gate …”

statues of winged bulls as were actually found at temple sites…

        Marduk heard this;

         The promise, given by Erra, found his favor.

         So did he step down from his seat,

         and to the Land of Mines, abode of the Anunnaki, he set his direction …”

Marduk agreed to leave Babylon. But no sooner he had done that than Nergal broke his word. Nergal / Erra ventured into the Gigunu, the mysterious underground chamber…and there Erra caused its Brillianceto be removed…as Marduk had warned,

         “the day turned into darkness, flooding was disarrayed,

         the lands were laid to waste, the people were made to perish …”

        

         “With anger (at Erra) they were filled …”

Ea (Enki), Erra’s father, reproached him:

         “Now that the Prince Marduk had stepped off, what have you done? …”

         “Go away! …”

he ordered Erra.

         “Take off to where no gods ever go! …”

        Erra lost his voice …”

         “As to my warriors, they shall not go back. …”

The departure of Marduk from Babylon brought an end Ishtar’s conflict with him.; the rift between Marduk and Nergal…created an alliance between Ishtar and Nergal.

It was exactly when Abraham, accompanied by an elite military corps, left Harran,–the gateway to the Hittite lands—that the exiled and wondering Marduk appeared in Hatti lands.–...Marduk stayed there through the same twenty-four Fateful Years , the years that culminated with the Great Disaster…aging Marduk tells of his erstwhile wanderings and eventual return to Babylon:

           “O great gods, learn my secrets.

           As I girdle my belt, my memories remember:

           I am the divine Marduk, a great god.

           I was cast off for my sins,

           to the mountains I have gone.

           In many lands I have been a wanderer:

           From where the sun rises to where it sets I went.

           To the heights of Hatti-land I went.

           In Hatti-land I asked an oracle

           (about) my throne and my Lordship;

           In its midst (I asked):

           ‘Until when?’

           24 years, in its midst, I nested. …”

It was a place, we suggest, which the Bible called Kadesh-Barnea, and there Abraham stood with his elite troops, blocking the invaders’ advance to the Spaceport proper…it was intended to prevent the return of Marduk and thwart the efforts of Nabu to gain access to the Spaceport.

Marduk’s desire to make Babylon the heavenward naval in the four regions. It was to thwart this that the gods opposing Marduk ordered Khedorla’omar to seize and defile Babylon:

         “The gods…

         to Kudur-Laghamar, king of the land of Elam,

         they decreed: ‘Descend there!’

         That which to the city was bad he performed;

         In Babylon, the precious city of Marduk, kingship he overthrew;

         To herds of dogs its temple he made a den;

         Flying ravens, loud shrieking, their dung dropped there …”

After the bad deeds were done there, Utu / Shamash sought action against Nabu, who (he had said in accusation) had subverted the allegiance of a certain king to his father.

         “Before the gods the son of his father (came);

         On that day Shamash, the Bright One, against the lord of lords,

         Marduk (he said):

         ‘The faithfulness of his heart (the king) betrayed–

         in the time of the thirteen year a falling-out against my father (he had);

         to his faith-keeping the king ceased to attend;

         all this Nabu has caused to happen.’ …”

But at Dur-Mah-Ilani, according to the Babylonian text,

         “the son of a priest,

         whom the gods in their true counsel had anointed, …”

stood in the invaders’ way andthe despoiling prevented.”

Could the Babylonian text indeed refer to Abraham, the son of Terah the priest…?(high-priest of Ur)

2123 B.C. . Abraham was born in Nippur to his father Terah

2113 B.C. . Ur-Nammu (Ninsun’s mixed-breed son) enthroned in Ur, given guardianship in Nippur

Terah and his family move to Ur

2095 B.C. . Shulgi (Ninsun’s mixed-breed son) ascends throne after death of Ur-Nammu

Terah and his family leave Ur for Harran

2055 B.C. . Shulgi receives (uncle) Nannar’s oracles, sends Elamite troops to Canaan

2048 B.C. . Shulgi’s death ordered by Anu and Enlil

Abraham, seventy-five years old, ordered to leave Harran for Canaan

2047 B.C. . Amar-Sin (Shulgi’s son) (“Amarpal”) ascends the throne of Ur

Abraham leaves the Negev for Egypt

2042 B.C. . Canaanite kings switch allegiance to “other gods

Abraham returns from Egypt with elite corps

2041 B.C. . Amar-Sin launches the War of the Kings

2041 B.C., the year of the military expedition—also MU NE IB.RU.UM BA.HUL, “Year (in which) the Shepherding-abode of IB.RU.UM was attacked”`

Abraham protects the Spaceport in “The Kings’ War”

Ibbi-Sin (Shu-Sin’s mixed-breed son) put his trust again in Nannar and Inanna, installing himself in his second year as High Priest of Inanna’s temple in Uruk…In the fourth year of his reign he was told that

         “The Son in the west will arise…

         it is an omen for Ibbi-Sin: Ur shall be judged …”

In his fifth year, Ibbi-Sin sought further strength by becoming High Priest of Inanna at her shrine in Ur.. But that too was no help…As the sixth year began, the omens concerning destruction became more urgent and more specific.

         “When the sixth year comes,

         the inhabitants in Ur will be trapped, …”

Another omen said,

         “When for the second time, he who calls himself Supreme,

          like one whose chest has been anointed, shall come from the west. …”

That very year, as messages from the borders reveal,

         “hostile Westerners had entered the plain …”

of Mesopotamia; without resistance, they quickly

         “entered the interior of the country,

         taking one by one all the great fortresses …”

Marduk, as the omens had predicted, returned to Babylon for the second time.

         “In Hattiland I asked an oracle (about) my throne and my Lordship;

          In its midst (I asked); ‘Until when? …”

Then, in that twenty-fourth year, he received a favorable omen:

         “My days (of exile) were completed;

         To my city (I set my course);

         My temple (residence) Esagila as a mount (to raise / rebuild),

         My everlasting abode to (reestablish).

         I raised my heels (toward Babylon)

         Through…lands (I went) to my city

         her (future / well-being) to establish,

         A king in Babylon to (install)

         In the house of my covenant…

         In the mount-like Esagil

         By Anu created…

         Into the Esagil…

         A platform to raise…

         In my city…

         Joy. …”

        

         “chase away evil and bad luck…

         bring motherly love to Mankind. …”

It was then that the holy city was despoiled and its shrine, the Ekur (Enlil’s temple – residence in Nippur), desecrated. Ninurta accused the followers of Marduk of this evil deed; but it was not so; it was his ally Nergal / Era who had done it!

         “Erra , the pitiless one, entered the sacred precinct.

         He stationed himself in the sacred precinct, he beheld the Ekur.

         His mouth he opened, he said to his young men:

         ‘Carry off the spoil of Ekur, take away its valuables,

         destroy its foundation, break down the enclosure of the shrine!’ …”

When Enlil, loftily enthroned, heard that his temple had been destroyed, its shrine defiled, that in the holy of holies the veil was torn away”, he rushed back to Nippur.

         “Riding in front of him were gods clothed with radiance; …”

he himself,

         “set off brilliance like lightning as he came down from the skies;

         made the holy place shake …”

as he ascended to the sacred precinct. Enlil then addressed himself to his son, the prince Ninurta. to find out who defiled the sacred place. But instead of telling the truth, that it was Erra, his ally, Ninurta pointing the accusing finger at Marduk and his followers…

The Babylonian text asserts that Ninurta was acting without the required respect of meeting with his father:

           “not fearing for his life, he removed not his tiara …”

To Enlil

           “evil he spoke…

           there was no justice, destruction was conceived. …”

 

           “Enlil against Babylon caused evil to be planned …”

In addition to “evil deeds” against Marduk and Babylon, an attack against Nabu and his temple Ezida in Borsippa was also planned. But Nabu managed to escape westward

         “Fron Ezida…

         Nabu, to marshal all his cities set his step;

         Toward the great sea he set his course …”

…verses in the Babylonian text…have a direct parallel in the biblical tale of the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah:

         “But when the son of Marduk in the land of the coast was,

         He-of-the-Evil-Wind (Erra) with heat the plain-land burnt …”

        

         “He (Nabu) the great sea entered,

         Sat upon a throne which was not his

         (Because) Ezida, the legitimate abode, was overrun …”

Enki stood by his firstborn son:

         “Now that Prince Marduk has arisen,

         now that the people for the second time have raised his image,

         why does Erra continue his opposition? …”

Finally, loosing his patience, Enki shouted at Nergal to get out of his presence. Leaving in a huff, Nergal returned to his domain. Consulting with himself,he decided to unleash the awesome weapons:

         “The lands I will destroy, to a deep dust-heap make them;

         the cities I will upheaval, to desolation turn them;

         the mountains I will flatten, their animals make disappear;

         the seas I will agitate, that which teems in them I will decimate;

         the people I will make vanish, their souls shall turn to vapor;

         none shall be spared. …”

We learn from a text…that it was Gibil, whose domain in Africa adjoined that of Nergal, who alerted Marduk to the destructive scheme hatched by Nergal…It was then that Gibil these words to Marduk did speakin regard to the

         “seven awesome weapons which Anu created..

         The wickedness of those seven against thee is being laid, …”

he informed Marduk. Marduk inquired of Gibil where the awesome weapons were kept. O Gibil,,” he said,those seven—where were they born, where were they created? To which Gibil revealed that they were hidden underground:

         “Those seven, in the mountain they abide,

         in a cavity inside the earth they dwell.

         From this place with a brilliance they will rush forth,

         From Earth to Heaven, clad with terror. …”

But where exactly is this place? Marduk asked again and again; and all Gibil could say was that even the wise gods, to them it is unknown.Now Marduk rushed to his father Enki with the frightening report.

         “To his father Enki’s house he (Marduk) entered …”

Enki was lying on the couch in the chamber to which he retired for the night. “My fatherMarduk said,

         “Gibil this word hath spoken to me:

         of the coming of the seven (weapons) he has found out. …”

Telling his father the bad news, he urged his all-knowing father:

         “Their place to search out, do hasten thou! …”

Enki spoke out strongly against the idea, urging steps to stop Nergal, for the use of the weapons, he pointed out,

         “the lands will make desolate, the people will make perish. …”

Nannar and Utu wavered as Enki spoke, but Enlil and Ninurta were for decisive action. And so with the Council of the Gods was in disarray, the decision was left to Anu.

Nergal had already ordered the priming of the seven awesome weaponswith theirpoisons.”,

         “Anu, lord of the gods, on the land had pity …”

It was then that Ninurta, attempting to dissuade Nergal from indiscriminate annihilation, used words identical to those attributed in the Bible to Abraham when he tried to have Sodom spared:

         “Valiant Era (Nergal),

         Will you the righteous destroy with the unrighteous?

         Will you destroy those who have against you sinned

         together with those who against you have not sinned? …”

The two gods argued back and forth on the extent of the destruction. More than Ninurta, Nergal was consumed by personal hatred:..he shouted

         “I shall annihilate the son (Nabu), and let the father (Marduk) bury him;

         then I shall kill the father, let no one bury him. …”

Ninurta finally swayed Nergal.

         “He heard the words spoken by Ishum (Ninurta);

          the words appealed to him as fine oil …”

Agreeing to leave alone the seas, to leave Mesopotamia out of the attack, he formulated a modified plan: the destruction will be selective..to destroy the cities where Nabu might be hiding…to deny Marduk the greatest prize—the Spaceport, the place from where the Great Ones ascend…. …”

         “From city to city an emissary I will send;

         The son, seed of his father, shall not escape;

         His mother shall cease her laughter…

         To the place of the gods, access he shall not have:

         The place from where the Great Ones ascend

         I shall upheaval. …”

Wasting no more time, Nergal then urged Ninurta that the two of them go at once into action:

        “Then did the hero Erra go ahead of Ishum, remembering his words;

         Ishum too went forth, in accordance with the word given,

         a squeezing in his heart …”

Their first target was the Spaceport, its command complex hidden in the Mount Most Supreme, its landing fields spread in the adjoining great plain:

         “Ishum to Mount Most Supreme set his course;

         The Awesome Seven, (weapons) without parallel, trailed behind him.

         At the Mount Most Supreme the hero arrived;

         He raised his hand–the mount was smashed;

         The plain by the Mount Most Supreme he then obliterated;

         in its forests not a tree-stem was left standing …”

So with one nuclear blow the Spaceport was obliterated…Now it was the turn of Nergal...Guiding himself through the Sinai peninsula to the Canaanite cities by folllowing the King’s Highway, Erra upheavaled them.

The words employed by the Erra Epic are almost identical to those used in the biblical tale of Sodom and Gomorrah:

        “Then, emulating Ishum, Erra the King’s Highway followed.

         The cities he finished off, to desolation he overturned them.

         In the mountains he caused starvation, their animals he made perish. …”

The verses that follow may well describe the creation of the new southern portion of the Dead Sea…:

         “He dug through the sea, its wholeness he divided.

         That which lives in it, even the crocodiles he made wither.

         As with fire he scorched the animals,

         banned its grains to become as dust …”

We find descriptions and recollections of the nuclear upheaval in other texts as well:

         “Lord, bearer of the Scorcher

         that burnt up the adversary;

         Who obliterated the disobedient land;

         Who withered the life of the Evil Word’s followers;

         Who raised stones and fire upon the adversaries …”

In a Babylonian text in which one king recalls the momentous events that had taken place in the reign of an earlier king.”

         “At that time, in the reign of a previous king, conditions changed.

         Good departed, suffering was regular.

         The Lord (of the gods) became enraged, he conceived wrath.

         He gave the command: the gods of that place abandoned it…

         The two, incited to commit the evil, made its guardians stand aside;

         its protectors went up to the dome of heaven …”

TheKhedorlaomer Text”, which identifies the two gods by their epithets as Nergal and Ninurta, tells it this way:

         “Enlil, who sat alone in loftiness, was consumed with anger.

         The devastators again suggested evil;

         He who scorches with fire (Ishum / Ninurta)

         and he of the evil wind (Erra / Nergal) together performed their evil.

         The two made the gods flee, made them flee the scorching …”

The target, from which they made the gods guarding it flee, was the Place of the Launching:

         “That which was raised towards Anu to launch they caused to wither;

         Its face they made fade away, its place they made desolate …”

Thus was the Spaceport, the prize of which so many Wars of the Gods had been fought, obliterated: the Mount within which the controlling equipment was placed was smashed; the launch platforms were made to fade off the face of the earth; and the plain whose hard soil the shuttle craft had used as runways was obliterated, and not even a tree left standing.

But the deed done by Nergal and Ninurta had not gone unrecorded, for it turned out to have a most profound effect on Sumer, its people, and its very existence…The nuclear explosion gave rise to an immense wind, a radioactive wind, which began as a whirlwind:

         “A storm, the Evil Wind, went around in the skies …”

The desolation caused by the catastrophe is then described vividly, by such verses as these:

         “Causing cities to be desolate, (causing) houses to become desolate;

         Causing stalls to be desolate, the sheepfolds to be emptied;

         That Sumer’s oxen no longer stand in their stalls,

         that its sheep no longer roam in its sheepfolds;

         That its rivers flow with water that is bitter,

         that its cultivated fields grow weeds, that its steeps grow withering plants …”

In the cities and the hamlets,

         “the mother cares not for her children,

         the father says not ‘O my wife’…

         the young child grows not sturdy on their knee,

         the nursemaid chants not a lullaby…

         kingship has been taken away from the land …”

        

        “On the Land (Sumer) fell a calamity, one unknown to man:

         One that had never been seen before, one which could not be withstood …”

It was an unseen death,

         “which roams the street, is let loose in the road;

         it stands beside a man–yet none can see it;

         when it enters a house, its appearance is unknown …”

There was no defense against this

         “evil which has assailed the land like a ghost:…

         The highest wall, the thickest walls, it passes as a flood,

         no door can shut it out, no bolt can turn it back;

         through the door like a snake it glides,

         through the hinge like a wind it blows in.

         Cough and phlegm weakened the chest,

         the mouth was filled with spittle and foam…

         dumbness and daze have come upon them,

         an unwholesome numbness…

         an evil curse, a headache…

         their spirit abandoned their bodies …”

it was a most gruesome death:

         “The people, terrified, could hardly breathe;

         the Evil Wind clutched them,

         does not grant them another day…

         Mouths were drenched in blood, heads wallowed in blood…

         The face was made pale by the Evil Wind …”

        

         “Covered the land as a cloak, spread over it like a sheet …”

Brownish in color, during the daytime

         “the sun in the horizon it obliterated with darkness

         (Girt with dread brilliance it filleth the broad earth) …”

it blocked out the moon:

         “the moon at its rising it extinguished …”

Moving from west to east, the deadly cloud–

         “enveloped in terror, casting fear everywhere

         a great wind which speeds high above,

an evil wind which overwhelms the land …”

It was

         “a great storm directed from Anu

         it hath come from the heart of Enlil.

         In a single spawning it was spawned…

         like the bitter venom of the gods; in the west it was spawned.

         Bearing gloom from city to city,

         carrying dense clouds that bring gloom from the sky …”

was the result of a

         “lightning flash, from the midst of the mountains

         it had descended upon the land,

         From the Plain of No Pity it hath come …”

Though the people were baffled, the gods knew the cause of the Evil Wind:

         “An evil blast heralded the baleful storm,

         An evil blast the forerunner of the baleful storm was;

         Mighty offspring, valiant sons were the heralds of the pestilence …”

As soon as the awesome weaponswere launched from the skies, there was an immense brilliance

         “they spread awesome rays towards the four points of the earth,

         scorching everything like fire …”

        

         “The storm, in a flash of lightning created, a dense cloud that brings gloom …”

followed by

         “rushing wind gusts…

          a tempest that furiously scorches the heavens …”

Several texts attest that the Evil Wind, bearing the cloud of death, was caused by gigantic explosions on a day to remember:

         “On that day

         When heaven was crushed and the Earth was smitten,

         its face obliterated by the maelstrom–

         When the skies were darkened and covered as with a shadow …”

Over Sumer, its passage lasting twenty-four hours—a day and a night…as in this…from Nippur:

         “On that day,, on that single day; on that night, on that single night…

          the storm, in a flash of lightning created, the people of Nippur left prostrate …”

The Uruk Lament

         “The great gods paled at its immensity,

         gigantic rays reach up to heaven (and) the earth tremble to its core …”

As the Evil Wind began to spread to the mountains as a net, the gods of Sumer began to flee their beloved cities...Thus

         “Ninhursag wept in bitter tears …”

as she escaped from Isin. Nanshe cried,

         “’O my devastated city…’

         her beloved dwelling place was given over to misfortune …”

Inanna hurriedly departed from Uruk, sailing off toward Africa in a submersible shipand complaining that she had to leave behind her jewelry and other possessions…Inanna / Ishtar bewailed the desolation of her city and her temple by the Evil Wind

         “which in an instant, in a blink of an eye

         was created against the midst of the mountains, …”

and against which there was no defense…As the

         “loyal citizens of Uruk were seized with terror …”

        

         “’Rise up! Hide in the steppe!’

         the deities ran off…

         they took unfamiliar paths …”

        

         “Thus all the gods evacuated Uruk;

         They kept away from it;

         They hid in the mountains,

         They escaped to the distant plains …”

In Uruk…

         “Mob panic was brought about in Uruk….

         its good sense was distorted …”

…as the people asked questions:

         “’Why did the gods benevolent eye look away?

         Who caused such worry and lamentation?’ …”

When the Evil Storm passed over,

         “the people were piled up in heaps…

         a hush settled over Uruk like a cloak …”

Ninki, we learn from The Eridu Lament”, flew away from her city to a safe haven in Africa:

         “Ninki, its great lady, flying like a bird, left her city …”

But Enki left Eridu only far enough to get out of the Evil Wind’s way, yet near enough to see its fate:

         “Its lord stayed outside the city…

         Father Enki stayed outside the city…

         for the fate of his harmed city he wept with bitter tears …”

They watched the storm put its hand on Eridu. After the

         “evil-bearing storm went out of the city,

         sweeping across the countryside, …”

Enki surveyed Eridu; he found the city

         “smothered with silence…

         its residents stacked up in heaps …”

Those who were saved addressed to him a lament:

         “O Enki, thy city has been cursed, made like an alien territory! …”

…and Enki

         “stayed out of his city as though it were an alien city …”

         “Forsaking the House of Eridu, …”

Enki then led

         “those who have been displaced from Eridu …”

to the desert, “towards an inimical land”; there he used his scientific powers to make the foul tree edible.

From Babylon, a worried Marduk sent his father, Enki, an urgent message as the cloud of death neared his city:

         “’What am I to do?’ …”

he asked Enki’s advice…and in line with the advice given by the two emissaries to Lot, the people fleeing Babylon were warned

         “neither to run nor to look back …”

They were also told not to take with them any food or beverage, for these might have been touched by the ghost.”

         “Get thee into a chamber below the earth, into a darkness, …”

until the Evil Wind was gone…In Lagash,

         “mother Bau wept bitterly for her holy temple, for her city …”

Though Ninurta was gone, his spouse could not force herself to leave. Lingering behind, O my city, O my city,she kept crying; the delay almost cost her her life:

         “On that day, the lady–the storm caught up with her;

         Bau, as if she were mortal–the storm caught up with her …”

In Ur we learn from the lamentations (one of which was composed by Ningal herself) that Nannar and Ningal refused to believe that the end of Ur was irrevocable. Nannar addressed a long and emotional appeal to his father…Enlil’s reply was to say

        “Ur was granted kingship–it was not granted an eternal reign.

         Since days of yore, when Sumer was founded,

         to the present, when people have multiplied–

         Who has ever seen a kingship of everlasting reign? …”

While the appeals were made, Ningal recalled in her long poem,

         “the storm was ever breaking forward,

         its howling overpowering all.

         Although of the day I still tremble,

         of that day’s foul smell we did not flee …”

As night came, “a bitter lament was raised in Ur, yet the god and goddess stayed on…and Ningal realized that Nannar

         “had been overtaken by the evil storm …”

…Only next day, when

         “the storm was carried off from the city Ningal, in order to go from her city…

         hastily put on a garment, …”

and together with the stricken Nannar departed from the city they so loved. As they were leaving they saw death and desolation:

         “the people, like potsherds, filled the city’s streets;

         in its lofty gates, where they were wont to promenade,

         dead bodies were laying about;

         in its boulevards, where the feasts were celebrated,

         scattered they lay; in all of its streets, where they were wont to promenade,

         dead bodies were laying about;

         in its places where the land’s festivities took place, the people lay in heaps.

         The dead bodies, like fat placed in the sun, of themselves melted away …”

Then did Ningal raise her lamentation for Ur…

         “O house of Sin in Ur, bitter is thy desolation…

         O Ningal whose land has perished, make thy heart like water!

         The city has become a strange city, how can one now exist?

         The house has become a house of tears, it makes my heart like water…

         Ur and its temples have been given over to the wind. …

         On the banks of the Tigris and Euphrates, only sickly plants grew…

         In the swamps grow sickly-headed reeds that rot in the stench…

         In the orchards and gardens there is no new growth, quickly they waste away…

         The cultivated fields are not hied, no seeds are planted in the soil,

         no songs resound in the fields …”

In the countryside the animals were also affected:

         “On the steppe, cattle large and small became scarce,

         all living creatures came to an end.

         The sheepfolds have been delivered to the wind…

         The hum of the turning churn resounds not in the sheepfold…

         The stalls provide not fat and cheese…

         Ninurta has emptied Sumer of milk…

         The storm crushed the land, wiped out everything;

         it roared like a great wind over the land, none could escape it;

         desolating the cities, desolating the houses…

         No one treads the highways, no one seeks out the roads …”

The desolation of Sumer was complete.

The Year of Doom (nuclear holocaust)–2024 B.C.–was the sixth year of reign of Ibbi-Sin, the last king of Ur...

Anu and Enlil finally accepted Marduk’s claim to supremacy at Babylon. Commemorating the fateful decision in the preamble to his law code, the Babylonian king Hammurabi put it in these words:

         “Lofty Anu, lord of themselves gods who from Heaven came to Earth,

         and Enlil, lord of Heaven and Earth who determines the destinies of the land,

         Determined for Marduk, the firstborn of Enki,

         the Enlilfunctions over all mankind;

         Made him great among the gods who watch and see,

         Called Babylon by name to be exalted,

         Made it supreme in the world;

         And established for Marduk, in its midst, an everlasting kingship. …”

Babylon, then Assyria rose to greatness. Sumer was no more…

Marduk Quotes From Texts

Marduk = Enki & Damkina‘s eldest son & heir

 

(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 bluemixed-breed demigods in teal…)

 

Marduk Speaking in the 1st Person:

        “[The lord of Babylon] heeded Nebuchadnezzar [‘s prayer], [ ] befell him from heaven,

        ‘I command you with my own lips,

        ‘[A word of] good fortune do I send you:

        ‘[With] my [help?] you will attack the Westland.

        ‘Heed your instructions, [ ] (…)

        ‘I, [lord of Bab]ylon, will surely give you Elam,

        ‘[I will exalt] your [kingshp] everywhere.'”

 

As Marduk:

         “MARDUK was created in the heart of the holy apsu.

         Ea (Enki) begot him and Damkina (Alalu‘s daughter, Enki‘s spouse) bore him, father and mother; …”

        

         “In the heart of Apsu was Marduk created,

In the heart of holy Apsu was Marduk created.

He who begot him was Ea (Enki), his father;

         She who conceived him was Damkina (Enki‘s spouse), his mother. …”

 

Anu, Enlil, and Ea each presented him with gifts.

[ ] Damkina his mother exclaimed with joy at him;

She made him beam [inside (?)] his fine (?) house.

He (Marduk) appointed Usmu (Isumud), who had brought his greetings present as good news,

          To be vizier of the Apsu, to take care of shrines …”

         

          Erra / Nergal speaking:

          “’Like the sun, I scan the circumference of the world,

          ‘I am the wild ram striding forth in the steppe,

          ‘I invade the range and take up my dwelling in the fold,

          ‘All the gods are afraid of a fight, so the black-headed folk are contemptuous!

          ‘As for me, since they did not fear my name, and I have disregarded Marduk´s command,

          so he may act according to his wishes I will make Marduk angry,

          stir him from his dwelling, and lay waste the people!’

          The warrior Erra set out for Babylon, city of the king of the gods.

          He entered Esagila, (Marduk’s temple / residence) palace of heaven and earth and stood before him.

          He made ready to speak, saying to the king of the gods:

          Why has your precious image, symbol of your lordship, lost its brilliance?

          ‘Your lordly diadem, which made the inner sanctum shine like the outside tower, why is it dimmed?

          The king of the gods made ready to speak, saying to Erra, these words,

          ‘O warrior Erra, concerning that deed you said you would do,

          ‘Once, long ago indeed I grew angry, indeed I left my dwelling and caused the deluge!

          ‘When I left my dwelling, the regulation of heaven and earth disintegrated:

          ‘The shaking of heaven meant: the positions of the heavenly bodies changed, nor did I restore them,

          ‘The quaking of netherworld meant: the yield of the furrow diminished, being thereafter difficult to exploit.

          ‘The regulations of heaven and earth disintegrating meant: underground water diminished, high water receded.

          When I looked again, it was struggle to get enough.

          ‘Productivity of living offspring declined, nor did I renew it,

          ‘Such that were I a plowman, I could hold all seed in my hand.

          ‘I built another house and settled therein

          ‘As to my precious image, which had been struck by the deluge that its appearance was sullied,

          ‘I commanded fire to make my features shine and cleanse my apparel.

          ‘When it had shined my precious image and completed the task, ‘I donned my lordly diadem and returned.

          ‘Haughty were my features, terrifying my glare!

          ‘The survivors of the deluge saw what was done,

          ‘Shall I raise my weapon and destroy the rest?

          ‘I sent those craftsmen down to the depths, I ordered them not to come up,

          ‘I removed the wood and gemstone and showed no one where,

          ‘Now then, warrior Erra, as concerns that deed you said you would do,

          ‘Where is the wood, flesh of the gods, suitable for the lord of the universe,

          ‘The sacred tree, splendid stripling, perfect for lordship,

          ‘Whose roots thrust down an hundred leagues through the waters of the vast ocean to the depths of hell,

          ‘Whose crown brushed Anu´s heaven on high?

          ‘Where is the clear gemstone that I reserved for [ ]?

          ‘Where is Ninildum (unidentified), great carpenter of my supreme divinity,

          ‘Wielder of the glittering hatchet, who knows that tool,

          ‘Who makes it shine like the day and puts it in subjection at my feet?

          ‘Where is Kunig-banda (unidentified), fashioner of god and man, whose hands are sacred?

          ‘Where is Ninagal, wielder of the upper and lower millstone

          ‘Who grinds up hard copper like hide and who forges tools?

          ‘Where are the choice stones, created by the vast sea, to ornament my diadem?

          ‘Where are the seven sages of the depths, those sacred fish,

          who, like Ea (Enki) their lord, are perfect in sublime wisdom, the ones who cleansed my person?

          The warrior Erra heard him….. [ ]

          He made ready to speak, saying to noble Marduk, ‘[ craftsmen ], ‘[ tree ],

          ‘Clear gemstone [from] its place will I bring up.’

          When Marduk heard this, he made ready to speak, saying to the warrior Erra:

          ‘(When) I rise from my dwelling, the regulation of heaven and earth will disintegrate,

          ‘The waters will rise and sweep over the land,

          ‘Bright day will turn to darkness, whirlwind will rise and the stars of heaven will be…

          ‘Ill winds will blow and the eyesight of living creatures will be darkened,

          ‘Demons will raise up and seize [ ],

          ‘They will …. the unarmed one who confronts them!

          ‘The gods of hell will rise up and smite down living creatures,

          ‘Who will keep them at bay till I gird on my weaponry once more?

          When Erra heard this, he made himself ready to speak, saying to noble Marduk:

          ‘O noble Marduk, while you enter the house, fire cleanses your apparel and you return to your palace,

          ‘For that time I will govern and keep strong the regulation of heaven and earth,

          ‘I will go up to heaven and issue instructions to the Igigi (Anunnaki for space transport of goods) gods,

          ‘I will go down to the depths and keep the Anunna gods in order.

          ‘I will dispatch the wild demons to the netherworld,

          ‘I will brandish my fierce weaponry against them,

          ‘I will truss the wings of the ill wind like a bird’s.

          ‘At that house you shall enter, O noble Marduk,

          ‘I will station Anu and Enlil to the right and left, like bulls.’

          Noble Marduk heard him, the words which Erra spoke pleased him. …”

        

         “Did noble Marduk give up, not at the appointed time?

He plotted to lay waste the lands and destroy their people!”

 

Ea the king considered and said these words,

‘Even now that noble Marduk has arisen from his dwelling, he did not command those craftsmen to come up.

‘How can images of them, which I made among mankind,

‘Approach his sublime divinity, where no god has access?

‘He himself gave those same human craftsmen great discretion and authority,

‘He gave them wisdom and perfect dexterity,

         ‘They have made his precious image radiant, even finer than before’, …”

 

         “Because they were angry with each other, and noble Marduk [ ] put [ ],

         ‘The star of Erra is shining bright and its radiant…. of warfare.

         ‘His awe-inspiring brilliance will….. and all people will perish.”

 

Marduk as Planet Nibiru Renamed by Marduk:

         “Ea (Neptune / Enki), his triumph over his enemies secured,

In his sacred chamber in profound sleep he rested.

He named it “Apsu” (Sun), for shrines he assigned (it).

In that same place his cult hut he founded.

Ea (Enki / Neptune) and Damkina, his wife, dwelled (there) in splendor.

In the chamber of fates, the abode of destinies,

A god was engendered, most potent and wisest of gods.

In the heart of Apsu (Sun) was Marduk (Nibiru) created,

In the heart of holy Apsu (Sun) was Marduk (Nibiru) created.

He who begot him was Ea (Neptune), his father;

         She who conceived him was Damkina, his mother …”

        

         “ in his holy palace Ea (Neptune) slept.

Over the abyss, the distance, he built his house and shrine

and there magnificently he lived with his (Enki‘s) wife Damkina .

          In that room, at the point of decision where what is to come is predetermined,

he was conceived, the most sagacious, the one from the first most absolute in action.

          In the deep abyss he was conceived,

          MARDUK was made …”

        

         “Bel (Marduk), cleverest of the clever, sage of the gods, was begotten.

And inside Apsu, Marduk was created;

Inside pure Apsu, Marduk was born.

Ea (Enki) his father created him, Damkina his mother bore him …”

 

Asarlui / Asarluhi / Asalluhi Quotes From Texts

Asarlui / Asarluhi / Asalluhi = Marduk, Enki‘s eldest son

“son of the abzu”, Enki‘s domain

Marduk As Asarlui:

        “prince Asarlui, the most precious one, is a warrior,

         born a noble prince, a leopard who seizes prey.

         He is like an onrushing storm battering the rebel land …”

       

        “Asar-alim-nuna, the son of the abzu, has erected a house in your precinct,

         O house Kuara, and taken his seat upon your dais… the house of Asarlui in Kuara …”

 

Marduk As Asalluhi:

        “by the wisdom of Ea (Enki) and Asalluhi, …”

 

Marduk As Asarluhi:

Asarluhi is named as “son of the abzu” and “eloquent one of the abzu.” The “abzu” is simply the Sumerian word for abyss. The most important temple in Eridu was known as the E-abzu, or “Temple of the Abyss”, which was the cult center of the god Enki.

        “Kuara, the beloved city which you have chosen in your heart, lives in joy because of you.

        The generous-hearted (Royal) Prince (Enki) named you with the name Asarluḫi …”

       

        “On that day, the storm forced people to live in darkness.

         In order to destroy Kuara, it forced people to live in darkness.

         Ninehama (Marduk’s spouse) in her fear wept bitter tears.

         ‘Alas the destroyed city, my destroyed house,’ she cried bitterly.

         Asarluhi put his robes on with haste and …….”

       

        “Just as when Enki, the wild bull of Eridug (Eridu), arrives;

        as when the mother of the E-maḫ, Damgalnuna (Ninki), arrives;

        as when Asarluḫi, the son of Eridug, arrives; …”

       

         “when I go to where Lord Enki is honored,

         when I go to where Damgalnuna …… is honored,

         when I go to where Asarluḫi …… is honored …”

 

Nimrod’s origins, and those of the god Marduk, can be traced back to the early dynasties of ancient Sumer and to the cult center of Eridu which was the original city of Babylon. After the fall of the Tower and after the division of the languages the memory of Nimrod was preserved in many different names. In the village of Kuara, very near to the city of Eridu, Nimrod was remembered as the god Asar-luhi. Here is a portion of a Sumerian “Hymn to Asarluhi“, in which the ‘Asar‘ figure is again equated with Marduk:

August sage, firstborn son of Enki, he gives …… to all who are born.

Profoundly intelligent, as wise as his father, possessed of understanding,

Asarluhi (Marduk) penetrates everything…

Lordly son of the abzu, endowed with holy wisdom, he is Marduk, the bringer of counsel.

Tall in stature, he can survey all the divine powers of heaven and earth.

         Son endowed with a broad understanding,

whose movement is that of an animal with large horns in the reed-beds;

Asarluhi, mighty deluge determining great fates, unleashed and knowing no course whatsoever!

When great An (Anu) shared out the divine powers (alien technologies)

for heaven and earth, incantations fell to your lot.

Scanning all mankind with a glance, god of benign features, with an attractive physique;

most skilled metalworker, creating masterpieces; counselor and judge,

whose word in the august sanctuary is unalterable and whose character is sublime:

I shall exalt him in song and glorify his name.

Eloquent one of the abzu, great minister of Eridug, lordly Asarluhi!

The enkum and ninkum priests, the abgal and abrig priests,

the …… priestesses and the …… all pay attention when you open your holy mouth.

Daily as they go forth, they circumambulate (?) you.

Cleansing the purification rites with pure hands and pure tread, holy in every respect,

you are the supervisor of the purification priests of E-abzu.

Kuara, the beloved city which you have chosen in your heart, lives in joy because of you.

The generous-hearted Prince (Enki) named you with the name Asarluhi …”

 

            “Asarluhi, mighty deluge determining great fates, unleashed and knowing no course whatsoever!”

 

Azag Quotes From Texts

Azag = Marduk, Enki‘s eldest son & heir

         “Ninurta: she has born him a warrior who knows no fear — the Asag (Marduk),

          a child who sucked the power of milk without ever staying with a wet-nurse, a foster-child,

O my master — knowing no father, a murderer from the Mountains, a youth who has come forth from ……,

          whose face knows no shame; impudent of eye, an arrogant male, …”

         

         “My master, this same creature has erected a throne dais: it is not lying idle.

Ninurta, Lord, it actually decides the Land’s lawsuits, just as you do.

Who can compass the Asag’s (Marduk) dread glory?

Who can counteract the severity of its frown?

People are terrified, fear makes the flesh creep; their eyes are fixed upon it.

          My master, the Mountains have taken their offerings to it. …”

         

         “Ninurta, it is confident that it can lay hands on the powers received by you in the abzu (Enki‘s domain).

Its face is deformed, its location is continually changing;

          day by day, the Asag (Enki‘s son Marduk) adds territories to its domain. …”

        

         “The besetting Asag is beyond all control, its weight is too heavy.

Rumors of its armies constantly arrive, before ever its soldiers are seen.

This thing’s strength is massive, no weapon has been able to overturn it.

Ninurta, neither the ax nor the all-powerful spear can penetrate its flesh,

          no warrior like it has ever been created against you …”

        

         “ The lights of the Mountains did not gleam in the distance any longer.

People gasped for breath (?); those people were ill, they hugged themselves, they cursed the Earth,

          they considered the day of the Asag’s birth a day of disaster …”

        

         “Someone from afar came to meet it, brought news for the tireless one,

         the one who never rests, whose wings bear the deluge, the Car-ur (terrible weapons).

What did it gather there …… for Lord Ninurta?

It reported the deliberations of the Mountains, it explained their intentions to Lord Ninurta,

it outlined (?) what people were saying about the Asag …”

        

         “Ninurta, Lord, full of fearsomeness, who will hurry towards the Mountains,

proud Hero without fellow, this time you will not equal the Asag!

          Ninurta, do not make your young men enter the Mountains …”

        

         “The Asag leapt up at the head of the battle.

For a club it uprooted the sky, took it in its hand; like a snake it slid its head along the ground.

It was a mad dog attacking to kill the helpless, dripping with sweat on its flanks.

Like a wall collapsing, the Asag fell on Ninurta the son of Enlil.

Like an accursed storm, it howled in a raucous voice; like a gigantic snake, it roared at the Land.

It dried up the waters of the Mountains, dragged away the tamarisks,

tore the flesh of the Earth and covered her with painful wounds.

It set fire to the reed-beds, bathed the sky in blood, turned it inside out; it dispersed the people there.

          At that moment, on that day, the fields became black potash,

across the whole extent of the horizon, reddish like purple dye — truly it was so!

(nuclear war, Ninurta & Nergal vrs. Marduk and Nabu) An (Anu) was overwhelmed, crouched, …”

        

          “Enlil has said:

‘As the Deluge i.e. Ninurta, before whom the venom has piled up, attacks the enemy,

let him take the Asag by the shoulder, let him pierce its liver, let my son enter with it into the E-kur.’ …”

         

          “Ninurta, Enlil‘s seal-bearer, go to it!

Do not tarry. My master: the Asag has constructed a wall of stakes on an earthen rampart;

the fortress is too high and cannot be reached, …… its fierceness does not diminish …”

        

         “The weapon covered the Mountains with dust, but did not shake the heart of the Asag …”

        

         “Like a bird of prey the Asag looked up angrily from the Mountains.

He commanded the rebel lands to be silent and …….

Ninurta approached the enemy and flattened him like a wave (?).

          The Asag’s terrifying splendor was contained, it began to fade, …”

        

          “Ninurta‘s splendor covered the Land, he pounded the Asag like roasted barley, …”

          “When he had brought the Asag which he had slain to the condition of a ship wrecked by a tidal wave, …”

         

          “From today forward, do not say Asag: its name shall be Stone …”

 

          Inanna speaking:

          “On this day, the Lady herself, She who speaks truth,

           The accuser of Azag, the great princess, An (Anu) awesome judgment uttered. …”

 

Overwhelmed by the merciless onslaught, Azag called on his followers to show no resistance:

          “The arisen Enemy to his wife and child called; against the lord Ninurta he raised not his arms.

          The weapons of Kur with soil were covered (hidden away); Azag them did not raise …”

By nonresistance tactics, Azag escaped defeat.

          “The scorpion of Kur Ninurta did not annihilate …”

 

Bel Quotes From Texts

Bel = sometimes Marduk, sometimes Enlil (as older Bel)

Marduk As Bel:

         “Cyrus held the hands of Bel (The Lord) Marduk

       

         “Nabu, who comes, stands over, and watches. :

         He is the criminal who is with Bel …..

         Because he is with Bel (Marduk).

         Tashmetu (Nabu‘s spouse), who bows down with him.

         She has come to greet him.

         The Lady of Babylon, who does not go to the Akitu temple.

         She is the governess of the temple …”

        

          “is the criminal who was present with Bel (Marduk).

          They Ashshur (Ashur) ………… they have killed the daughter of Anu …… …”

 

         “an eternal line of kingship, whose rule Bêl (Marduk) and Nabu love,

         whose kingship they desire for their hearts’ pleasure. …”

 

Enlil As Bel :

          “If it belongs really to Bêl (Enlil), it would have been marked with the spade …”

        

          “(O Ninip) is thy heart; a worshipper of Bel (Enlil) whose might upon thy great deity is founded, …”

 

Bilulu Quotes From Texts

Bilulu = Marduk sometimes, old lady sometimes

Marduk had caused her beloved’s (Dumuzi) death.

         “What is in holy Inanna‘s heart?

          To Kill! To kill the Lord Bilulu (Marduk). …”

 

         “How truly she proved the equal of Dumuzid, avenging him;

         by killing Bilulu, Inanna proved equal to him! …”

 

Merodach Quotes From Texts

Merodach = Marduk, eldest son & heir to Enki

Supreme god, sun god, son of Enki and Damgalnuna / Ninki

        “but in the mighty force of the great Merodach going before me

         I engaged in battle with them; I effected their overthrow; …”

       

         “in the service of Assur (Marduk’s son), the great god my Lord

         and the great Merodach going before me,

         by the powerful aid which the Lord Assur extended to my people, my servants and my soldiers …”

 

        “the great Merodach going before me (insuring victory), …”

 

Urac / Uras Quotes From Texts

Urac / Uras = sometimes Marduk, Enki‘s eldest son

                                sometimes Nammu, Anu‘s consort

                                sometimes Ninhursag, Anu‘s daughter

Marduk As Uras:

         “To Uras, the strong, the almighty, the supreme, the firstborn of the gods,

         the lusty warrior, the unique one, whose onset in battle is unrivaled,

         the eldest son, the crusher of opposition, the firstborn of Ea (Enki),

         the powerful warrior of the angels …” —–

(Igigi, those in orbit who transport from Earth to Mars to Nibiru, & back)

        

         “I (Ashurnasirpal) took the city of Calah (in hand) anew.

         The old mound I changed.

         I deepened (it) as far as the level of the waters.

         To a depth of 120 tikpi I consolidated (it).

         The temple of Uras my lord upon the middle of it I founded.

         At that time I made an image of the same Uras which did not previously exist in the inventiveness of my heart,

         even a colossus of his great divinity, with the best of mountain-stone and fine gold.

         I accounted him my great divinity in the city of Calah.

           His festivals I ordained in the months Sebat and Elul.

            His sanctuary which had not been built I designed.

         The holy of holies of Uras my lord I constructed firmly in the midst of it.

         The temple of Beltis (Ninlil), Sin (Nannar / Sin), and Gula (Bau),

         the image of Ea (Enki) the king (and) the image of Rimmon (Adad)

         the master of heaven and earth I erected …”

 

        “Uras, the hero, the destroyer of evil men and foes, who discloses all that is in the heart; …”

 

        Uras the warrior, the hero of the great gods,

         the king who in reliance upon Assur and Uras the gods …”

       

         “Uras the warrior-god (and) hero of the great gods, the avenger of his fathers, …”

 

        “Tiglath-pileser the valiant hero, the holder of the scepter unrivaled

         who completes the mission of the supreme (gods).

        Uras and Nergal have given their forceful weapons and their supreme bow

        to the hands of my lordship.

        Under the protection of Uras who loves me …”

       

        “elephants I brought to my city Asur.

        Under the protection of Uras who loves me …”

Eridu Quotes From Texts

Eridu, Enki’s Patron City “Home of the Faraway”

 

(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 bluemixed-breed demigods in teal…)

 

Eridu – . 1st city on Earth, Enki’s city

 

. Eridu, “Place of the Waters”, “Home of the Faraway”

. Enki’s temple was built there; it was re-built many times in history.

. It was approximately 3,800 B.C. when man’s first civilization, after the flood, began in Eridu.

 

Kingship in Eridu

When kingship was first handed down from Heaven (the concept of kingship),

the city of Eridu was chosen as the seat of kingship.

In Eridu, Alulim (mixed-breed) ruled for 28,800 years as king and Alalgar ruled for 36,000 years.

The two kings ruled a total of 64,800 years and then kingship was removed to Bad-tibira. …”

        

         “My son had for himself a House built;

         The lord Enki Eridu like the mountain on Earth he raised;

         His House, in a beautiful place he built.

         To the place, Eridu, no one uninvited can enter

         In it’s sanctuary, from the Abzu the Divine Formulas (disc knowledge on all things) Enki has deposited …”

 

Ninki, we learn from The Eridu Lament”, flew away from her city to a safe haven in Africa:

        “Ninki, its great lady, flying like a bird, left her city …”

But Enki left Eridu only far enough to get out of the Evil Wind’s way, yet near enough to see its fate:

        “Its lord stayed outside the city…

         Father Enki stayed outside the city…

         for the fate of his harmed city he wept with bitter tears …”

 

They watched the storm “put its hand” on Eridu. After the

         “evil-bearing storm went out of the city, sweeping across the countryside ,…”

 

Enki surveyed Eridu; he found the city

         “smothered with silence…its residents stacked up in heaps …”

Those who were saved addressed to him a lament:

         “O Enki, thy city has been cursed, made like an alien territory! …”

…and Enki

         “stayed out of his city as though it were an alien city …”

         “Forsaking the House of Eridu, …”

 

Enki then led

         “those who have been displaced from Eridu …”

to the desert, “towards an inimical land”; there he used his scientific powers to make the “foul tree” edible.