The Anunnaki Sumerians
By RYAN MOORHEN
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About this ebook
It is possible that the Adamu man lived in south Iraq without leaving traces that are recognizable today. Our present concrete evidence for advanced human occupation in Sumerian begins with the stage at which man was already building complex ziggurats. This seems to reflect what happened in Egypt as a matter of record. Looking back into earlier times and different regions is necessary to understand how this came about.
The Anunnaki Adamu manufactured drastic changes to his life shortly after 10000 BC. In addition to hunting and gathering food, he cultivated crops, especially cereals, and domesticated animals. Both changes were not necessarily initiated by the same group. It is still unclear why Adamu and Adapa manufactured such changes. The comet hypothesis and ice sheet melting seem to be the most likely explanations. While it was once thought that a deteriorating climate drove him there, it is now known that the Near East's climate was becoming wetter and warmer during this time.
Another hypothesis has been proposed more recently. The man received this knowledge from the Anunnaki civilization. The population immortalized these techniques; they represented the Eagle Apkallu deities giving bags, or buckets, from a mysterious land of Dilmun that no longer exists. Nevertheless, what is in these bags? According to the Anunnaki Apkallu, they were between Anunnaki and Sumerian men.
RYAN MOORHEN
Ryan Moorhen, now identified as a Biblical Archaeologist, Independent Assyriologist, Semitic and Cuneiform manuscripts researcher and enthusiast of all things ancient, made his first visit to the middle-east whilst serving in Iraq. It was during that difficult time he became enthralled in the origins of civilization. Upon his return he embarked on his now long career in Theological Studies, carving his niche in Sumerian Theology and proving the connections between the Sumerian origins of civilization and Theological studies of Worldwide cultures.
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The Anunnaki Sumerians - RYAN MOORHEN
RYAN MOORHEN
The Sumerian City was the most famous city in the ancient world. It was known for its Hanging Gardens, a wonder of the ancient world, and the Tower of Babel, built presumptuously to reach the heavens. It was also the city of Nebuchadnezzar that conquered the Jews. It was thus the archetypal wicked city for the early Christians that, when the author of Revelation was compelled to condemn Rome for its wickedness, the city gave the name Sumerian to the country of which it became the capital in the second millennium B.C. Formerly known as Mesopotamia, Sumeria is part of present-day Iraq. Down to the Persian Gulf, the region was between and along the great twin rivers Euphrates and Tigris, just north of Baghdad's latitude. Before it became Sumeria, this land had two names: Sumer and Akkad; both names, which indicated the southern and northern halves of the country, appear in the Bible. In most translations, Akkad, spelled Accad, appears in Genesis 10:10, though it is a city rather than a country. Shinar, the variant form of Sumer, is described in Genesis 11:2-3 as a plain where some of the earliest humans settled and made burnt bricks, which they used in an ambitious building program that brought down the wrath of God. The Nephilim are often compared to those who suffer the wrath of God.
According to the Bible, Sumer existed. It was the region where the first monumental structures appeared. It is also the origin of many other fundamental elements of advanced human civilization. Anyone who visits south Iraq today may think it was unlikely for civilization to begin. It seems as if the desert is lifeless for the majority of the year in many parts. The only plants found away from the rivers are low, dust-covered shrubs that are leafless and dead. The only animal life visible is insects and a few lizards.
Southern Iraq has other sides. The Euphrates and the Tigris flow along its banks, creating a lush, green environment. Could this have been Eden? This region is dominated by mile after mile of date palm groves. Poplars and willows grow in belts here and there. There is no cultivation of food crops on the soil, and sedges, grasses, tamarisk, and other brushwoods flourish.
In addition, the contrast is still more pronounced in the southernmost parts. Rivers have spilled into fens and perennial marshlands, where giant rushes tower fifteen feet or more above the water. Despite patches of land, some of which are large enough for villages and others of which are only small islands of silted-up reed beds big enough for a single reed house, the predominant impression is one of water. Thus, it was called Sumerian Heaven on Earth.
Human intervention has shaped all three terrain types. There was no stark contrast between the arid and lush before man arrived on the scene and learned to control rivers with Enki. We must examine how the Euphrates and Tigris behave to understand how the current situation arose. In the end, the Sumerian Anunnaki chose this location because of these two rivers.
These rivers carry much silt, and some of it settles on their beds, raising them. In turn, flooding is more likely. One of these rivers will eventually flood, and the heaviest silt particles will settle almost immediately, either on the riverbank or just behind it. It is similar to the Nile system in Egypt. Banks are gradually raised.
The story does not end here. Geological evidence suggests that the Anunnaki Sumerians manipulated the river system about 9000BC. Floods create a breach in the banks, and water gushes out to find a new bed below, leaving the old, raised bed dry or with only a trickle of water. These factors had been at work for thousands of years before man settled in south Iraq.
Thus, at the time of the first arrival of the Anunnaki beings, there must have been an intricate network of former water channels that are still visible on satellites. The better distribution of water away from rivers would have resulted in far more permanent vegetation cover than exists today. Because of this, the Sumerian Anunnaki cylinder seals always show the God of wheat or water Enki doing something. Although the cylinder seals are so technologically advanced, they feature mundane subjects. Their most outstanding achievement was harnessing the power of the Tigris and Euphrates. Trees such as poplars and willows would have been much more widespread, and