gobekli tepe - genesis of the gods (66 page)

Read gobekli tepe - genesis of the gods Online

Authors: andrew collins

Tags: #Ancient Mysteries

BOOK: gobekli tepe - genesis of the gods
7.89Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
33
. Ibid.

CHAPTER 30. RISE OF THE ANUNNAKI

1
. Schmidt,
Göbekli Tepe,
206–7.
2
. Black, “The Sumerians in Their Landscape,” 41–62.
3
. Ibid.
4
. Horowitz,
Mesopotamian Cosmic Geography,
316 (K. 2873:3–4). See also Katz,
The Image of the Netherworld in the Sumerian Sources,
for a full review of this topic.
5
. Hennerbichler, “The Origin of Kurds,” 64–79
.
6
. Horowitz,
Mesopotamian Cosmic Geography,
316 (K. 2873:3–4).
7
. Jastrow,
The Religion of Babylonia and Assyria,
558.
8
. Sayce, “Two Accadian Hymns,” 130.
9
. Warren,
Paradise Found,
127, 166, 170.
10
. Barton,
Miscellaneous Babylonian Inscriptions,
5.
11
. See, for example, Miller,
Har-Moad,
2, 179, 194.
12
. Sale,
The Koran,
1833, vol. 2, 15, note a.
13
. Ibid.
14
. Ibid.
15
. Ibid.
16
. Garsoïan, “Taron as an Early Christian Armenian Center,” 65.
17
. Ibid.
18
. Miller,
Har-Moad,
20, 179, 194.
19
. Jastrow,
Religion of Babylonia and Assyria,
558.
20
. Sayce, “Two Accadian Hymns,” 130.
21
. See Wiggermann, “Mythological Foundations of Nature,” 279–306.
22
. Ibid.
23
. O’Brien with O’Brien,
The Genius of the Few,
37.
24
. Ibid., 43.
25
. Barton,
Miscellaneous Babylonian Inscriptions,
4.
26
. Ibid., 16.
27
. Ibid.
28
. O’Brien with O’Brien,
Genius of the Few,
46.
29
. For a full account of Zenob Glak’s story, see Seth,
Armenians in India,
and Avdall, “A Hindoo Colony in Ancient Armenia,” 181–86.
30
. O’Brien with O’Brien,
Genius of the Few,
48–49.
31
. Izady,
The Kurds,
18–19.

CHAPTER 31. THE MAKING OF HUMANKIND

1
. Leick,
Göbekli Tepe,
s.v. “Igigi,” 85.
2
. Ibid. For the full story see “Atrahasis 1,” in Dalley,
Myths from Mesopotamia,
9–17. See also Brown,
The Ethos of the Cosmos,
140.
3
. “Atrahasis 1,” in Dalley,
Myths from Mesopotamia,
9.
4
. Ibid., 10.
5
. Ibid., 14–15.
6
. Ibid., 15.
7
. Ibid., 15–16.
8
. Josephus, “The Antiquities of the Jews,” vol. 1, 1, 2.
9
. Barton,
Miscellaneous Babylonian Inscriptions,
16.
10
. Olyan,
Asherah and the Cult of Yahweh in Israel,
70–71.

CHAPTER 32. THE COMING OF THE WATCHERS

1
. Movsisyan,
The Sacred Highlands,
29–30. See also Houtsma,
Encyclopedia of Islam, 1913–1936,
s.v. “Bingöldagh.”
2
. “Bingöl Dagları,” Wikipedia,
http://ca.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bing%C3%B6l_Da%C4%9Flar%C4%B1
(accessed January 15, 2014).
3
. E-mail communication between Jonathan Bright and the author dated October 20, 2012.
4
. Charles, trans.,
The Book of Enoch or 1 Enoch,
1 En. 8:1, 3.
5
. Various references in 1 En. For a full examination of the Watchers’ physical traits see Collins,
From the Ashes of Angels,
46–56, and the references therein.
6
. Eisenman and Wise,
The Dead Sea Scrolls Uncovered,
153–56, see 4Q543, Manuscript B, Fragment 1.
7
. Graves and Patai,
Hebrew Myths,
106.
8
. Charles, trans.,
The Book of Enoch or 1 Enoch,
1 En. 69:12.
9
. Ibid., 1 En. 69:6.
10
. Milik,
The Books of Enoch,
306, 307, 313, quoting extracts from the “Book of Giants.”
11
. Eisenman and Wise,
The Dead Sea Scrolls Uncovered,
153–56, see 4Q543, Manuscript B, Fragment 1.
12
. Charles, trans.,
The Book of Enoch or 1 Enoch,
2 En. 1:4–5.
13
. “Human Figures, Wild Animal Reliefs Unearthed in 11,000-year-old Gobeklitepe Tumulus,” Hurriyet Daily News, November 10, 2006,
www.hurriyetdailynews.com/default.aspx?pageid=438&n=human-figures-wild-animal-reliefs-unearthed-in11000-year-old-gobeklitepe-tumulus-2006-10-11
(accessed January 15, 2014).
14
. Schodde, trans.,
The Book of Enoch,
1 En. 13:10.
15
. O’Brien with O’Brien,
The Genius of the Few,
48–49, 108–9.

CHAPTER 33. MOUNTAIN OF THE WATCHERS

1
. Baty, trans.,
Enoch the Prophet,
1 En. 2:7–8.
2
. Baty,
Enoch the Prophet,
xv.
3
. Ibid.
4
. Ibid.
5
. Hewitt,
Primitive Traditional History,
25.
6
. Baty, trans.,
Enoch the Prophet,
xv; 1 En. 2:21.
7
. Bochart,
Geographia sacra,
vol. 1, ch. III, p. 23, who states that Jerome (347–420 AD) used the place-name Armon in connection with Armenia. No citation is given.
8
. Ibid. The author writes that Aquila and Symmachus, second century translators of the Old Testament, both used the place-name Armona in connection with Armenia. No citation is given.
9
. Ibid., vol. I, ch. III, p. 22.
10
. Jer. 51:27.
11
. Smith,
Smith’s Bible Dictionary,
s.v. “Armenia,”
www.ccel.org/ccel/smith_w/bibledict.txt
(accessed January 15, 2014).
12
. Christian Abraham Wahl as quoted in Rosenmüller,
Biblical Geography,
149. Unfortunately, Rosenmüller fails to provide a full citation for Wahl’s statement, recording only that it derives from “
Asien,
p. 807, note.”
13
. Tavernier,
Viaggi nella Turchia, nella Persia, e nell’ Indie,
vol. 1, 16. See also Carari, “A Voyage round the World (1699),” 350–51.
14
. Tavernier,
Viaggi nella Turchia, nella Persia, e nell’ Indie,
vol. 1, 16.
15
. Shea and Troyer,
The Dabistán,
vol. 1, 150; vol. 3, index.
16
. Yates,
Hindustání and English,
s.v. “Míná,” 518a.
17
. Ibid., s.v. “Mínú,” 518b.
18
. Ibid., s.v. “Jhil,” 194b. See also Gilchrist,
The Hindee Moral Preceptor,
s.v. “jul,” 163.
19
. Lipinski, “El’s Abode,” 43, and all references therein.
20
. Ibid.
21
. Ibid.
22
. Ibid., 44.
23
. Ibid., 46.
24
. Coomaraswamy, “Khwaja Khadir and the Fountain of Life in the Tradition of Persian and Mughal Art,” 157–67.
25
. Lipinski, “El’s Abode,” 46.
26
. Ibid., 46.
27
. Ibid., 47, quoting 1 En. 17:2.
28
. Ibid., quoting 1 En 17:7–8.
29
. Ibid., 48, quoting 1 En 32:2–3.
30
. Ibid., 48.
31
. Charles, ed.,
Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha,
“Apocalypse of Moses.”
32
. Lipinski, “El’s Abode,” 48.
33
. Ibid., 49–55.
34
. Ibid., 55–56.
35
. Ibid., 57.
36
. Peiser, “Eine babylonische Landkarte,” 361–70. For a full description and account of the clay tablet, see Horowitz,
Mesopotamian Cosmic Geography,
20–42.
37
. Horowitz,
Mesopotamian Cosmic Geography,
22.
38
. Ibid., 33.
39
. Private communication between Gagik Avagyan and the author dated June 10, 2013.
40
. Private communication between Gagik Avagyan and the author dated June 8, 2013.

CHAPTER 34. WALKING WITH SERPENTS

1
. Valentyn Stetsyuk, “Introduction to the Study of Prehistoric Ethnogenic Processes in Eastern Europe and Asia: The Anthropological Type of Autochthon Europeans and Their Language,” Alternative Historical Linguistics,
http://alterling2.narod.ru/English/AO21ab.doc
(accessed January 15, 2014).
2
. Shtrunov, “The Origin of Haplogroup I1-M253 in Eastern Europe,” 7, 9.
3
. Gimbutas,
The Prehistory of Eastern Europe,
28, 31–32.
4
. Graves and Patai,
Hebrew Myths,
106.
5
. Mallowan and Rose, “Excavations at Tell Arpachiyah 1933,” 1–178.
6
. Molleson and Campbell, “Deformed Skulls at Tell Arpachiyah,” 45–55.
7
. Mallowan and Linford, “Rediscovered Skulls from Arpachiyah,” 52.
8
. Molleson and Campbell, “Deformed Skulls at Tell Arpachiyah,” 49–50.
9
. Ibid., 50.
10
. Ibid.
11
. Ibid.
12
. Ibid., 51–52.
13
. Ibid., 52.
14
. Gilbert and Cotterell,
The Mayan Prophecies,
118–25, quoting José Diaz Bolio,
The Rattlesnake School
and
Why the Rattlesnake in Mayan Civilization
.
15
. Charles, trans.,
The Book of Enoch or 1 Enoch,
1 En. 69:6.
16
. Peregrine,
Encyclopedia of Prehistory,
s.v. “Arpachiyah (Tepe Reshwa).”
17
. Bressy, Poupeau, and Yener, “Cultural Interactions during the Ubaid and Halaf Periods,” 1560–65.
18
. Charvát,
Mesopotamia before History,
51.
19
. Milik,
The Books of Enoch,
306, 307, 313, quoting extracts from the “Book of Giants.”
20
. O’Brien with O’Brien,
The Genius of the Few,
48–9, 62–3.
21
. Segal,
Edessa,
p. 2 n. 4, 106.
22
. Çelik, “An Early Neolithic Settlement in the Center of Şanlıurfa, Turkey,” 4–6.
23
. Segal,
Edessa,
p. 2 n. 2.
24
. Personal communication between Hakan Dalkus and the author dated February 7, 2012.
25
. Ibid.
26
. Keightley,
The Fairy Mythology,
25.
27
. Ibid.
28
. The relationship between the Watchers and the Persian Peri and Jinn is a matter discussed at length in the author’s book
From the Ashes of Angels
. See, for example, pages 100–101, 198–201, 271–72.
29
. See, for example, the account of the birth of Noah in Avigad and Yadin,
A Genesis Apocryphon
.

CHAPTER 35. A QUIET CORNER OF EDEN

1
. “Yeghrdut,” Wikipedia,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yeghrdut_monastery
(accessed January 16, 2014).
2
. Murad Hasratyan,
Christian Armenia Encyclopedia,
s.v. “Yeghrduti Monastery,” 313–14.
3
. Oskian,
Die Klöster von Taron-Turuberan,
s.v. “Yeghrduti.”
4
. Madatyan, “Srbaluys myuron,”
http://araratian-tem.am/media/Myuron.doc
. If you’re unable to access this link, go to “Wayback Machine” at
http://archive.org/web/
and type in “
http://araratian-tem.am/media/Myuron.doc
” and press enter. The document will automatically download.

Other books

Bearded Women by Teresa Milbrodt
Narrow Dog to Carcassonne by Darlington, Terry
Royal Airs by Sharon Shinn
The People Traders by Keith Hoare
Lens of Time by Saxon Andrew
The Killer in My Eyes by Giorgio Faletti