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Anunna (from Sumerian meaning "pantheon";[2] Akk: Anunnaki, meaning "princely offspring" or "offspring of Anu"[3]) refers to the pantheon of deities whom the Sumerians venerated as early as c. 5500 BCE.[4]

Pantheon[]

Anunnaki

In the Sumerian textual corpus,[2] the highest gods in the Mesopotamian pantheon were AN (Sum: 𒀭) and his nine princely heirs. The High Anunna were depicted as white and blue-eyed, reflected in nobility statuettes unearthed from Sumer (The Origin of the Blue Eyes: The Ancient 'Gods' and Their Royal Descendants (2013)).

The Egyptian Ennead and Ogdoad respectively borrowed from the mythology of the Anunna. E. A. Wallis Budge (1904) compares the concept to a group of four pairs of primeval gods mentioned in the Babylonian Enûma Eliš, viz. Abzu and Tiamat, Lahmu and Lahamu, Anshar and Kishar, Anu and Nudimmud.[5] Budge proposed that the Egyptian Ogdoad is the original "company of gods" or pꜣwt nṯrw, represented by nine "axes", Ogdoad[6] (See Council of Nine).

Adam-Eve-Anunnaki

The motif of the Anunna can also be found in some of the earliest writings from the Horn of Africa—such as the apocryphal Book of Enoch. The manuscript was written in the Geʽez language, and contains the Book of Watchers (Written c. 300–200 BCE).[7] Erich von Däniken has given numerous presentations on the "Watchers" from the Books of Enoch. They are identified as "the Angels, the sons of Heaven…[6.2] and they came down on Ardis, which is the summit of Mount Hermon.[6.6] And they took wives for themselves and everyone chose for himself one each. And they began to go into them."[7.1]

Children of God[]

To the ancient Mesopotamians, their supreme God was known as "An" (Sumerian: AN Cuneiform: 𒀭 ).[8] His children were called Anunna. The Akkadians added -ki (meaning “Earth”, or “under”) which denotes that the princely Anunnaki, the “Children of Anu”, had come down to Earth.

Succeeding cultures used the first grapheme, i.e. A, in their alphabet to represent the supreme One, such as the letter aleph (Canaanite: 𐤀, Hebrew: אֱ), or alpha (Greek as in Alpha and Omega). The “Children of Anu” (Mesopotamian) eventually translated to “Children of El (𐤀𐩴)” in Canaanite culture. The Israelites later adopted El, as God,[9] to become Elohim אֱלֹהִים “sons of God”[10] (ie. Gen 6:4).

Xenology[]

Aldebaran in Taurus

According to the Lacerta File 1999 (Commentary), some millennia ago, extraterrestrials had come down to Earth described as "very tall humanoid species with usually blonde hairs and a very white skin".[ LF, Q&A 29 ] In The Lacerta Files they are called the "Illojiim" (Akk. Ilu,[11] Heb. Elohim) who hailed from a planet in Aldebaran[Note 1] (viewed in Taurus).[Note 2]

Sumerian reliefs of lords with bull-horned headdresses

The Sumerians venerated the Anunna in their reliefs and artifact engravings, with depictions of the star lords being adorned with bull-horned headdresses.

Notes
  1. Aldebaran is a star system, in perspective to the Pleiades, which can be viewed in Constellation Taurus, also known as the "Eye of the Bull".
  2. Star beings from Aldebaran and the Pleiades can also be found in Meso-american cultures. Compare with content from:

Supermen[]

Nordic

"His eyes were terrible, and I was afraid."[12]

NS Germany's racial ideology saw "Aryan peoples" as innately superior to other putative racial groups.[13] It is said that in certain of Adolf Hitler's writings, he spoke of meeting 'Supermen'. Upon going into an underground cavern he describes one where "His eyes were terrible, and I was afraid." Hitler was very much subservient to the directives of those so-called "Supermen"[12] (See also Supernormal). These efforts began with the Vril-Gesellschaft making contact with "beings from Aldebaran" in 1919.[14] Since then, it has been an ever quest to find the Supermen Nordics.

The so-called Third Reich was intended to set up a government which controlled all of Europe, and would later spread to other parts of the world. The Fourth Reich is the New World Order, another attempt in a surreptitious way to create a world dictatorship, or a world totalitarian system that is not much different from Adolf Hitler's vision of the New World Order that he spoke of in 1933.[12]

See also[]

  • 1Anunnaki (film)
  • Alien agenda
  • Nordics
  • Illojiim

References[]

  1. The Origin of the Blue Eyes: The Ancient 'Gods' and Their Royal Descendants (2013)
  2. 2.0 2.1 Oracc, Anunna (Anunnaku, Anunnaki) (a group of gods)
  3. Black & Green, 1992, p.34
  4. Wikipedia, Sumer, Origins
  5. Budge (1902), p. 287f.
  6. Budge (1904), p. 282
  7. Wikipedia, Book of Enoch
  8. Stephens, Kathryn (2013), "An/Anu (god): Mesopotamian sky-god, one of the supreme deities; known as An in Sumerian and Anu in Akkadian", Ancient Mesopotamian Gods and Goddesses, Open Richly Annotated Cuneiform Corpus, UK Higher Education Academy
  9. Smith, Mark S. (2002). The Early History of God: Yahweh and the Other Deities in Ancient Israel. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. pp. 32f, n. 45. ISBN 978-0-8028-3972-5.
  10. Smith, Mark S. (2008). God in translation: deities in cross-cultural discourse in the biblical world, vol. 57 of "Forschungen zum Alten Testament", Mohr Siebeck, ISBN 978-3-16-149543-4, p. 19.
  11. Clay 1923, 2006 reprint p. 101.
  12. 12.0 12.1 12.2 The Draconian/Saurian War Conspiracy, The Cosmnwo Documents, THE NEW WORLD ORDER: THE ALIEN CONNECTION by Xfile
  13. Anthony, David W. (2007). The Horse, the Wheel, and Language: How Bronze-Age Riders from the Eurasian Steppes Shaped the Modern World. Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-05887-3, pp. 9–11.
  14. The Aldebaran Mystery...? by Jim Nichols

Bibliography[]

External links[]

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