4 results for "8894bedeaeccb62b487e574e12c64ba5"
>>41122509
>>41122385
>>41122398
>>41122509

http://www.bibleorigins.net/Pre-biblicalOriginsofEdensSerpentinMesopotamianMyths.html

http://www.bibleorigins.net/SerpentNingishzidaBibliography.html

>Mesopotamian gods who bore the Sumerian epithet ushumgal "great serpent" or "dragon": An/Anu, Ningishzida/Gishzida, Dumuzi/Tammuz, Inanna/Ishtar, Enlil/Ellil, Enki/Ea and Marduk/Merodach

The people around Baal Hermon were devoted to snake worship and were subsequently called Hivites, from Hivia, "serpent." Ancient authors say that there were many Baltória (Beth-el, the house of God) on Hermon and Mount Lebanon...
>Fallen angels make a pact on Mount Hermon. Among the pagans, it was a place of oaths; there are remains of temples and hints of fallen remains.
>Anunnaki were associated with Hermon in Sumero-Akkadian mythology.
>Phoenicians considered the mountains in Lebanon divine.
Philo's Phoenician History states that Thoth-Hermes-Mercury founded the mysteries, confused myths and history, and introduced the worship of snakes and dragons.

Philo quotes a Phoenician priest.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sanchuniathon

The priest writes that the information was consistent with
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hierombalus
>Sanchuniathon on the Jews, explaining that the latter received his information from Hierombal, who was a priest of the god Ieuo (Yahweh), and that Hierombal dedicated his work to Abibal, king of Berytus, and was approved by the king's scholars.

It stood hidden within all pantheons, and has many names.
The Scythians identified it with Perseus (and said he was a snake-footed creature) and considered him their father.

The Aztecs and Mayans have the same idea.

https://earlywritings.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=11221

All myths, religions, fairy tales, and histories are permeated with reptiles.

Angels looked like dragons.
>>18007374
The people around Baal Hermon were devoted to snake worship and were subsequently called Hivites, from Hivia, "serpent." Ancient authors say that there were many Baltória (Beth-el, the house of God) on Hermon and Mount Lebanon...
>Fallen angels make a pact on Mount Hermon. Among the pagans, it was a place of oaths; there are remains of temples and hints of fallen remains.
>The Anunnaki were associated with Hermon in Sumero-Akkadian mythology.
>The Phoenicians considered the mountains in Lebanon divine.
Philo's Phoenician History states that Thoth-Hermes-Mercury founded the mysteries, confused myths and history, and introduced the worship of snakes and dragons.

Philo quotes a Phoenician priest.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sanchuniathon

The priest writes that the information was consistent with
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hierombalus
>Sanchuniathon on the Jews, explaining that the latter received his information from Hierombal, who was a priest of the god Ieuo (Yahweh), and that Hierombal dedicated his work to Abibal, king of Berytus, and was approved by the king's scholars.
The Temple of Solomon was built by the Phoenician Hiram (a legendary figure in Freemasonry), whose predecessor was also named Abibaal.

Solomon's Temple was built in the image and likeness of the Temple of Melqart-Hercules.
It stood hidden within all pantheons, and has many names.
The Scythians identified it with Perseus (and said he was a snake-footed creature) and considered him their father.

The Aztecs and Mayans have the same idea.

https://earlywritings.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=11221

All myths, religions, fairy tales, and histories are permeated with reptiles.
The most famous creatures.

Angels looked like dragons.
>>angels with angel wings
they don't exist

Yaldabaoth/Chnoubis/Abraxas is real

"Once upon a time, they say, a serpent lived in the sky and flew all over the world; everyone was afraid of him, and some even bowed to him. When God learned that he was being worshiped, he took his wings away, he fell from the sky into the Dnieper and swam away. The idolaters ran along the shore and shouted: "Perun, Perun, swim to the shore." He swam to the island, and a deep hole opened up for him; he disappeared there. From that time on, the island was called Perun." The problem of correlating the image of Perun and the Serpent requires separate consideration (for example). For skeptics, we will cite several more illustrative testimonies about the serpentine nature of Perun. Slavic insertion in "Conversation of St. Gregory Theologian on the Slaying of the City" (11th century): "<...> He calls the river a goddess and the beast living in it, calling it a god, performs demands. One worships Dyya, and the other Divia." Divia is clearly associated with the goddess of the river, and Dyy with the "beast" living in the river. Zeus under the name Dyy (Diy) is known to Russian scribes from the translation of Amartolos, which was shown by Galkovsky. It is assumed likely that Dyy, "Zeus" living in the river, is none other than the "snake beast Perun" from Novgorod and Ukrainian legends. From ethnography: among the population of the Kupyansk district of the Kharkov province. there was a notion that "the prophet Elijah rides across the sky in a fiery chariot, to which four fiery dragons are harnessed, in his hands he holds four fiery arrows, with which he strikes demons in all four directions" [8]. Here are a couple more Indo-European parallels. The ancient Greeks knew of the cult of Zeus in the form of a snake - this is Zeus Ktesias. And the Indian Indra pursued his enemy Vajranga in the form of a Serpent.
The Reptilian Conspiracy
https://earlywritings.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=11221

https://earlywritings.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=9066

>The people around Baal Hermon were devoted to snake worship and were later called Hivites, from Hivia, snake. Ancient authors say that on Hermon and Mount Lebanon there were many Baltória (Beth-el, the house of God)...
1. On Mount Hermon the fallen angels make a pact. It was a place of oaths for the pagans, there are remains of temples and hints of fallen ones remaining
2. The Anunnaki were associated with Hermon in Sumero-Akkadian mythology
3. The Phoenicians considered the mountains in Lebanon to be divine (it is obvious why)

>Adonai was associated with The Great Serpent, Agathodaimon (c.400 BC). The Egyptian Anguipede (c.75 AD?) form was derivative from (Egyptian) Agathodaimon, and manufactured on hundreds of gems
>Another problem is posed by recurring inscriptions describing Chnoubis as the conqueror of giants… In a complex ‘Hebrew’ exorcism performed in the name of the Hebrew God, attributed to the Egyptian magus Pibechis, the Hebrew god Sabaoth is invoked and hailed as ‘he who destroyed the giants with lightning’. Several parts of this text are inspired by Rabbinic tradition, confirming how deeply rooted the theme of giants and of Chnoubis gigantorekta was in Judaic doctrine. … The identification of Chnoubis with the Hebrew god explains the title ‘he who broke (or stifled) the giants’: the divinity of Elephantine, Chnum, was the god who brought the Nile flood, who ruled over water and all liquid elements, and therefore had also sent the Flood. The Bible frequently mentions Yahweh's dominion over the waters, [p.66] particularly the Red Sea and the Nile.
>we will only focus on the variation which states that the destroyer of giants was the god with the form of a snake.