Tuesday, June 11, 2024

Sumerian, biblical Noah's Ark found?

Mount Ararat consists of two volcanic cones in Turkey near Yerevan, Armenia.
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British Museum Flood Tablet (Gilgamesj)
Ancient tablets from Sumer speak of a vessel that survived a worldwide flood helmed by Ziusudra (Eridu Genesis). We call it Noah’s Ark, a history appropriated by Hebrews from older sources.
  • Gilgamesh flood myth (Sumerian)
  • Flood myth
  • A much older Cuneiform tablet dating to 1646-1626 B.C., about 1,000 years before the Bible's Book of Genesis (In the beginning") is believed to have been written and known as the Epic of Atra-Hasis describing a great flood was discovered in 1898. J. P. Morgan acquired it and today it is in the Morgan Library & Museum.
Epic of Gilgamesh
It has been found, and here is the evidence, including photographs. Visit it without any need to climb a glacier to get to it. It sits in Turkey, 17 miles from Mt. Ararat at an elevation of 6,000-feet. It
  • is man-made,
  • was designed as a boat,
  • incorporates principles of advanced hydrodynamics,
  • has decks and interior chambers,
  • is the proper dimension,
  • is in the right geographical location,
  • is accompanied by large anchor stones,
  • has been visited by religious pilgrims for thousands of years,
  • is consistent with the Bible, the Koran, the Torah, and the ancient tablets from Sumer, and
  • is surrounded by mountains and villages with names from antiquity relating to the ark’s landing. 
Tartaria, mud flood, Mr. Nagy (althist.com)
This documentary was written and narrated by G. Edward Griffin in 1993 and features expert testimony by David Fasold, Donald Patten, Sam Windsor, and Marvin Luckerman. DVD source: Reality Zone (realityzone.com + VIDEO).

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